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  • Jürgen

    Member
    12/01/2024 at 08:17 in reply to: Wanderlust

    A band that impressed me deeply is “Voice of Baceprot”. The group was founded in 2014 by singer and guitarist Firda Marsya Kurnia, bassist Widi Rahmawati and drummer Euis Siti Aisyah, initially as a cover band (Metallica, Red Hot Chili Peppers and other). Because of the contradiction between their music and their religious attitudes – all three members of the band wear a hijab when performing – the musicians were criticized by several conservative Muslims in their hometown, but received a lot of support from other circles. The musicians’ parents also initially forbade the girls to make music. Their desire to play music has helped them break traditional chains. Very remarkable.

    https://youtu.be/WPVo_QyS0Hw?si=iOKjvNyk2JakU7JF

  • Jürgen

    Member
    12/01/2024 at 08:12 in reply to: Wanderlust

    Fadhilah Intan is a 25 year old singer who comes from Surabaya, a city in the eastern part of Java:

    https://youtu.be/4fbdXJ_vcDs?si=_BWJycgBrNt_zbs1

  • Jürgen

    Member
    12/01/2024 at 08:11 in reply to: Wanderlust

    Jakarta

    The metropolis Jakarta, located on the island of Java, is the capital of Indonesia and has around 10 million inhabitants. This makes Jakarta the largest city in Southeast Asia. Due to various problems in Jakarta, a new capital called Nusantara is being built on the island of Borneo, which is scheduled to be inaugurated in 2024.

    Indonesia itself is largely part of the Asian continent, but its part on the island of New Guinea belongs to the Australian continent. The country is spread over a total of 17,508 islands with the main islands of Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi and New Guinea. More than half of the population lives in Java. So there is a lot to discover.

    https://youtu.be/vLeDFO-zeYI?si=UviY1o2UI15lbHQJ

  • Hi Jung,

    I found diary excerpts from two musicians that you might like 😁:

    Beethoven

    Beethoven kept a diary from autumn 1812 to 1818. He confides feelings, thoughts and plans to him, but also notes down quotes and general wisdom. The entries do not record memories, they are more like self-talk. Here is an excerpt from 1815, a time of crisis and disorientation:

    (The translation of Beethoven’s diary excerpt is a little bit difficult: he wrote in a very old-fashioned style and uses terms whose meaning in the English language I don’t know exactly. I let googletrans do most of the job. I hope the whole thing makes sense. His handwriting: see photo below )

    „Let everything that is called life be sacrificed to the sublime and a sanctuary of art! Let me live, even with aids; if they can be found.
    If possible, bring the ear machines (note: hearing aid) to maturity and then travel. You owe this to yourself, to people and to him, the Almighty. This is the only way you can develop everything that needs to remain closed within you.
    A small courtyard - a small chapel - the song written by me in it, performed in honor of the Almighty, the Eternal, the Infinite. So may the last days pass - and of future humanity. Handel, Bach, Gluck, Mozart, Haydn's portraits in my room - they can help me claim toleration.
    My decree: just stay in the country. (…) Easily rented an apartment from a farmer, certainly cheap at this time [in winter]. Sweet silence of the forest! The wind, which comes on the second beautiful day, cannot keep me in Vienna because it is my enemy.“
    (Source reference: Bayerischer Rundfunk Klassik - Emerich Kastner, Julius Kapp (Hg.) Ludwig van Beethovens sämtliche Briefe. Leipzig 1923)

    Bach

    Johann Sebastian Bach: The secret diaries of the Thomaskantor in Leipzig

    The diaries, which were recently discovered in the Bach Archive Leipzig, shed new light on Bach’s time in Leipzig. They not only cover his musical activities, but also provide insight into his personal life, thoughts and feelings.

    In the diaries, Bach describes in detail his work as St. Thomas cantor and the challenges he had to face. He reports on the rehearsals with the St. Thomas Choir and the Gewandhaus Orchestra, on the performances of his works and the audience’s reactions. It is fascinating to read how Bach composed his music and how he dealt with the musical trends and currents of his time.

    But it’s not just the musical aspects that are highlighted in the diaries. Bach also provides insight into his family life and his relationships with his children and wife. It becomes clear that Bach was not only a brilliant composer, but also a loving father and husband.

    The diaries also shed new light on Bach’s personality. They show a man who worked hard but also struggled with self-doubt and insecurities. Bach describes his fears and worries, but also his joys and successes. It’s an intimate look into the inner life of one of the greatest composers of all time.

    The Bach Archive Leipzig is planning an exhibition in which the diaries will be presented to the public. It will be a unique opportunity to experience the great composer’s thoughts and feelings up close and gain a deeper insight into his life.

    (Source: MUSIK HEUTE KLASSIK-NEWS-JOURNAL, September 2023)

  • Jürgen

    Member
    09/01/2024 at 10:35 in reply to: What does a work of art do for you?

    Hi Chris,

    if you should ever travel to Paris again, I can only recommend a visit to the Louvre (if you haven’t already visited it, what I suspect now). I’m not necessarily a great art connoisseur or expert and actually visited the Louvre just to have been there once. But afterwards I was still impressed. Not so much by the Mona Lisa (a small painting behind bulletproof glass) and the modern art paintings, but by the old paintings that fill entire walls. Most of them are rather dark and boring in photos (we colloquially call this kind of thing „Old Ham“: „Alter Schinken“). But once you’ve stood in front of these huge paintings, where people and animals are depicted almost on a 1:1 scale, it’s very impressive. It’s a bit like experiencing the Renaissance or the Middle Ages live. Contemporary witnesses from days gone by. To be honest: Some of these paintings are really weird and kind of creepy, but back then there was no television or horror movies. If you love painting with a roller, maybe this is the right thing for you. 😀

    Yes, Montmatre and the artists’ quarter are very impressive. You can spend a lot of time there.

    https://youtu.be/MufP60vnLnU?si=12hdEltKI7BsHgJn

  • Jürgen

    Member
    06/01/2024 at 08:10 in reply to: Wanderlust

    A beautiful round trip to the sights of Singapore. One day is certainly very short if you want to see everything at your leisure. As an alternative to the subway route described below, there is a hop-on hop-off bus route. A double-decker bus whose upper level has no roof. A nice and relaxed way to get to know the city.

    https://youtu.be/M8auD-4bGk0?si=l3UK_CHaO8p1k2cx

  • Jürgen

    Member
    06/01/2024 at 08:08 in reply to: Wanderlust

    This song was recorded in 1999 by the band Aphelion in Singapore. Unfortunately, I have found very little information about the band.

    https://youtu.be/2clwfbaNxnc?si=w79XSUWTUNRPICj4

  • Jürgen

    Member
    06/01/2024 at 07:41 in reply to: Wanderlust

    And what does the modern music scene in Singapore sound like today? It’s all there, pop, cozy rock, metal. Very western style.

    https://youtu.be/jOikXTX5A9E?si=k-67wrPX7pk6gUoU

  • Jürgen

    Member
    06/01/2024 at 07:37 in reply to: Wanderlust

    Of course, the Singapore music scene also had its own stars and starlets, which few of us have ever heard of:

    https://youtu.be/kTRxF_71blA?si=0weHGWllmcId0ODb

  • Jürgen

    Member
    04/01/2024 at 08:57 in reply to: Wanderlust

    Some beat bands of the time played purely instrumental guitar music. That reminds me a little of the Shadows.

    https://youtu.be/TbJcn-qUXOk?si=Lats6R-za3AxR8UU

  • Jürgen

    Member
    04/01/2024 at 08:56 in reply to: Wanderlust

    However, if we take a step back from the traditional music of Singapore and the present – and approach one of our favorite decades – we will be surprised to find that when the Beatles flew to Manila in 1966, they were not bringing the rock and beat music of the western 60s to Asia, but that this kind of music had arrived there long before even a single Beatles foot set foot in Southeast Asia.

    https://youtu.be/Tk0h10d5SYE?si=w9KL6-VYcnyXHa-Y

  • Jürgen

    Member
    03/01/2024 at 22:42 in reply to: What does a work of art do for you?

    Hi Jung,

    Art is the way into reality and another person’s imagination. And sometimes this path leads into unknown worlds and certainly leaves many things open. Hints and allusions, perhaps sometimes questions that the artist has asked himself and that he would like to pass on to the world. Maybe it’s often just the pure fun of creative work, without a lot of ulterior motives and considerations. There are works of art that make me curious and make me think. Pictures that I wouldn’t necessarily hang on my wall at home. This certainly includes the works of surrealists like Dali. I always found Dali’s works very interesting, just like the surrealist landscape paintings by the painter Hans Werner Sahm. Both have understood how to bring the perspectives of everyday life into new dimensions. To put abstract concepts such as time, dream or space in a new relationship to our human perception and thinking.

    But I’m actually a fan of representational painting, such as landscape painting, which captures a special moment, forever remembering a blink of an eye in the flow of time and preserving it for posterity. Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that I have loved taking photographs since I was young and this has shaped my perception of the world. This is my form of art. Maybe I didn’t answer your question, but isn’t life itself and the world we live in a masterpiece that is worth remembering forever? Each of us carries a piece of this puzzle within us, and perhaps if we put enough of these pieces together, as happens in art and music, we expand our understanding of the world.

  • Hi Jung,

    the attached photo in the last chat shows a handwritten note by Beethoven. I would like to copy the text for you and translate it, but: Beethoven has a very nice handwriting, but I can’t read it either 😀.

    The script is written in old German. I can decipher individual words, others remain a mystery to me. My grandparents learned this while they were still at school, my parents could also read it, but my generation has already lost this knowledge. The Old German script emerged sometime in the Middle Ages and continued to develop until modern times. The last version that my grandparents also learned was the so-called Sütterlin script. I once attached the Sütterlindeutsch script as a picture below.

    I wasn’t able to find out exactly what language and script Bach used (in a short time). According to his place of birth and the time in which he lived, he must have spoken East Middle High German. Perhaps he also used Latin in his speech and writing, or at least a mixture of Latin and High German. This was common in educated circles at the time. However, I would probably have had difficulty understanding him and I wouldn’t have been able to read his handwritten notes. But I understand his music and that’s enough for me. Music as a universal language. This still works today and across cultures. I have attached a handwritten note from Bach. If I find any additional material as part of the planned exhibition in Leipzig, I can send it gladly to you.

    Bud, thanks for the feedback. I also find it very exciting to find out who the people were that we otherwise only know as famous composers. Beethoven’s hearing loss had probably already progressed when he wrote his diaries. I imagine he was already suffering from depression and probably felt very lonely, isolated and bitter.

  • Jürgen

    Member
    05/01/2024 at 07:48 in reply to: Wanderlust

    Hi Tom,

    yes, it’s a repetition, but still nice. I remember that the train station in Basel is signposted in three languages: Italian, French and German. Romansh is also spoken in the canton of Graubünden. Speaking many languages is a blessing. I wish you a happy new year too.

  • Jürgen

    Member
    03/01/2024 at 18:46 in reply to: Wanderlust

    Hi David and Bud,

    thanks for the information. I remember reading that „Give My Regards to Broad Street“ was said to be a flop at the box office and that there were few good reviews. No sex, no violence and lots of British humor, huh? One more reason to watch the film. 😀

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