29 April 2012

Week 18: 'To make the music as a part of yourself ... your way of doing'

Wonder spawned in: 2008
Wondered into being by: Edgar Meyer (bass) and Bela Fleck (banjo)
Wonderspan: 6 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full-screen icon and turn the sound r i i i i i g h t UP!

Today's way of loving is virtuosity - an individual's outstanding skill or facility, usually for playing a musical instrument.  And you get there, it seems, by loving music to a degree beyond anything anyone would recognise as reasonable.  Thanks to Jonathan B for sending this clip our way - Bela Fleck and Edgar Meyer make the air glad:
Extra...

There's an abundant harvest of extra musical wonder for you to enjoy this Monday morning...

Here's one of Keith Jarrett's many scintillating, soulful improvisations (and if he looks like he's making love, maybe he is - let's not interrupt him):
Next, a beautifully-made 15-minute documentary by Wandering Eye showing how an engineer works with a musician to make the sound really shine.  The guitarist Ricardo Gallen plays the Prelude from Bach's Partita No. 3 in E Major for solo violin; the engineer is fellow guitarist Norbert Kraft.
If you're not yet emotionally exhausted, or if you are, here's Anoushka Shankar's sitar following her father's vocal improvisations with the ease of a smile - amazing:
And if you liked that there's more from Anoushka here, with even more joy and smiling - it really gets cooking, this one: www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CnhcGpmH9Y

And here's Bela Fleck back with his own playful reworking of the same Bach E Major prelude we heard earlier.  Bach was a pretty unhappy individual for a lot of his life, his music often aches with sadness, but there's a deeper, half-hidden gladness there, too.  This is, I wonder, a kind of half-secret joy that many introverted people know.  It is as if they see and feel wonder all around them but struggle to make it known in the social world, where all the rules are different.  Every now and again Bach produced a piece that feels just like a blast of sun in winter, the sort of rare phenonenon the weather forecasters had no idea was coming.  He couldn't have known that someone would invent the banjo but I think he would have loved it:
And finally, here's something more oddball.  Ethel Smith was a virtuoso organist who made her name in films.  Here she is playing 'Tico Tico' in 1944's Bathing Beauty.
What virtuoso musicians would you include here?  Leave a comment or send an email to justplaindavid@waysofloving.com 

Next week - more joy, and we get political with it... see you then, wonderlovers.

22 April 2012

Week 17: 'It was pulsing, an unaccountable bit of brilliance.'

Wonder spawned in: a few million years ago
Wondered into being by: God, evolution, whatever makes the weather (circle at least one)
Wonderspan: 5 min

While hunting for fish on the coast of Mexico, the traveller Craig Childs spotted an unusual spot of colour on the seabed.  'It was pulsing,' he wrote, 'an unaccountable bit of brilliance, and it had no apparent form other than light itself. … It looked like a floating prism no more than a few inches long.’ [from  Animal Dialogues]

When he lifted the creature in his cupped hands for a more thorough wondering-at, he could see tiny organs contracting and relaxing beneath the translucent skin of its entirely boneless body.  And, most intriguing of all, its surface ‘pulsed gently’ with shimmering colour.  What Craig Childs had found was one of the smaller species of squid

Some of the extraordinary characteristics of squid and their cephalopod cousins are made possible by its quirky anatomy, particularly its brain.  The nervous system of a cephalopod is highly distributed, with two thirds of its neurons outside its central brain organ.  Its brain is, in effect, stretched right out to its skin, where it can electrochemically and instantaneously transform millions of iridescently pigmented openings to create complex patterns of colour.  A squid or octopus can look at its surroundings and camouflage itself in just a few seconds.  It can also use the colours to send signals. In some species of squid, males can sidle up to females and use one half of their bodies to put on a come-hither light show while displaying 'clear off' to a rival suitor on its other side.

In her Orion article, 'Deep Intellect: Inside the Mind of the Octopus', Sy Montgomery meets an octopus in an aquarium.  She explains that the larger species of octopus, if they’re feeling friendly (and they do have moods), will want to meet you. They do this by wrapping their tentacles gently around your arms, so as to taste and feel you at the same time.  They will turn their head towards you -- they know exactly where your eyes are -- and look right at you.  Come back the following week and the octopus will remember whether or not it liked you.

This is more than a spooky likeness of intelligence -- it is the real thing.  Here's an octopus learning how to open a jar, for example.  In another experiment, researchers hid a crab in the middle of three nested, perspex boxes, each with a liftable lid fitted with a different kind of complex latch. They then popped the lot into an aquarium and watched an octopus feel each latch with its tentacles and learn how to open it.  Octopuses will play, too.  Sy Montgomery cites a research paper which found that some individuals would use their propulsion jet to squirt a plastic bottle around their tank, apparently just for something to do.  This makes octopus intelligence comparable to that of the few other playful animals, such as crows, dogs and chimpanzees.  Another weirdness is the creature's adaptability --  if an octopus escapes from a tank it will run away to find somewhere to hide. Yes, run on eight legs across the floor, even if that's its first experience on dry land.

To Sy Montgomery, an octopus is too clever to be an ‘it’, but must be a ‘he’ or a ‘she’:
‘No sci-fi alien is so startlingly strange.  Here is someone who, even if she grows to one hundred pounds and stretches more than eight feet long, could still squeeze her boneless body through an opening the size of an orange; an animal whose eight arms are covered with thousands of suckers that taste as well as feel; a mollusk with a beak like a parrot and venom like a snake and a tongue covered with teeth; a creature who can shape-shift, change color, and squirt ink.’
The larger squid show similar intelligence to octopuses, but the largest octopus comes nowhere near the size of the larger species of squid.  The Humboldt squid can be as long as a human and given the chance would happily chew on one.  They hunt in packs, first corralling fish into dense shoals then flashing a rapid red-and-white pattern just as they pounce.  Their tentacles prickle with hundreds of cats-claw barbs for harpooning the flesh of their prey before dragging it to a hard ‘beak’ for crushing and ingesting.

But a Humboldt is far from the largest kind of squid.  The famous giant squid of sea stories like 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea is real.  It lives about 3km down, where it loves the extreme cold, the huge aquatic pressure and the pitch darkness.  Amazingly, the first film of a live giant squid was only accomplished eight years ago; before then the only evidence they existed was occasional washed-up remains, giant squid beaks inside the stomachs of dead sperm whales and the tall tales of sailors.  But in 2004, Japanese scientists lowered a lump of bait, a camera and a light into the depths on a 3000-metre cable and waited until, eventually, a giant squid wrapped its body around the meal.

Even this monster is not the largest of the squid.  The most massive of all – as far as anyone knows – is the colossal squid, which is the world’s biggest invertebrate.  A female could weigh up to a ton and measure 18 metres (59ft) in length, which is two thirds as high as a fully grown oak tree; its tentacles (so we might imagine) must be as thick as the branches.  For me, the most exciting feature of the colossal squid is its eye -- the biggest and beadiest of any animal in the world at just over a foot in diameter.  It’s all the better to see you with, my dear.  Deep water squid also have the longest penises relative to body size of any mobile animal; all the better to... well, you know the rest.

You might think that, given the hostile conditions for life 3,000m beneath the sea’s surface, the deep-sea squid would cast lonely figures in the darkness.  But the fauna at that depth is actually the richest of any ecosystem on Earth (including the rainforest).  Yet, so marine biologists say, we know more about the moon than the deep sea, because even with the latest submersible technology it’s so hard to get down there and it’s completely dark.  The giant and colossal squid are among possibly millions of deep-sea species.

The massive squids’ only significant predator (apart from each other) is the sperm whale.  But rather than behave like sensible prey and try to swim away, a giant squid will pick a fight with an attacking whale by wrapping tentacles around its head.  The whale responds by rising closer to the surface.  Eventually, as the water gets a little warmer the squid can’t maintain its oxygen levels in its blood.  When it gets sleepy and falls off the whale tucks in.  Even so, the whale is likely to be a little worse for the encounter, too: older sperm whale heads are scarred all over by tentacle suckers and barbs, testifying graphically to the do-or-die tenacity of its prey. Presumably the squid's attacking technique sometimes works in its favour otherwise it would not have evolved.

But the most remarkable thing about the cephalopods is, perhaps, what so intrigued Craig Child's -- their incredible facility for changing colour and form.  Let's finish with the octopus - here's a short film of the creature's camouflage and other defences.  Pause the video at between 10 and 15 seconds in and see if you can spot him.

Extra...

Here's the rest of the two Ted.com talks by David Gallo, a very enthusiastic marine biologist talking about the spooky world of the deep sea.
Thanks to Joanna W for suggesting squid for a Monday wonder, and to James P for pointing me in a useful direction for the research.

15 April 2012

Week 16: 'Voilá la vérité'

Wonder spawned in: 1926
Wondered into being by: Nadia Sibirskaia (Actor) and Dimitri Kirsanoff (Director)
Wonderspan: 2 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full-screen icon - the film has good music but also works without the sound.

This week, two minutes of the silent 1926 film Ménilmontant.

From the YouTube notes:
'Starring Nadia Sibirskaia as a French girl whose parents are murdered before her eyes; looking for love in the wrong place she becomes pregnant out of wedlock, is homeless and starving, and suddenly finds kindness in the most unlikely of places.’
I haven't been able to find any more of the film online but P. Adams Sitney's provides a bit more info at filmreference.com.  Thanks to GoldenSilents for uploading the video to their YouTube channel
 

'Voilá la vérité' ('And here's the truth') - a headline in the old man's newspaper.

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If you're subscribed to www.waysofloving.com by email and have missed some weeks, it could be because the emails are being treated as spam.  An email goes out every Sunday night or Monday morning without fail (so far without fail, anyway!)

8 April 2012

Week 15: 'I would like to apologise to many of my friends for being so occupied...'

Wonder spawned in: 2011
Wondered into being by: The Sun, the Earth, and Ole Salomonsen
Wonderspan: 5 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full-screen icon.

Let's talk about the weather in space, where it's sunny with clear skies but always windy.

The Sun is spinning off a stream of electrically charged particles that spiral outwards in waves like a flamenco-dancer's skirt.  The particles form fronts of space weather travelling at a million kilometers per hour.  This is the solar wind.

The solar wind would be harmful to life were it not for the Earth's magnetic field, which emanates from the excitation of matter in the planet's spinning, molten core.  The field's force lines form their own shape, like a giant iris flowering around the Earth.  Its sun-side petals push most of the solar wind outwards, around the planet and off into space, but the field also pulls some of the wind back towards the Earth just below each pole.

Electrons from the solar wind striking particles in the Earth's upper atmosphere give them an electrical charge, which they can then dump by emitting light.  So, although it's not normally visible to the naked eye even at night, a constant glow, called a diffuse aurora, hangs above the poles.

But the solar wind is gusty, too.  Squalls of particles buffet and compress the Earth's magnetic field, affecting how it pulls them them towards the Earth.  On a windy day in space, the solar wind billows the upper atmosphere as if it were a linen sheet hanging out to dry.  If we happen to be in the right place, we get to watch the solar gusts create green, red, yellow, blue and purple waves of light in the sky.  The colour depends on whether oxygen or nitrogen particles are being struck, and how high in the atmosphere they are.  These light shows are the northern lights (aurora borealis) and southern lights (aurora australis).

A space breeze becomes a storm when the sun releases solar flares and/or throws out large dollops of highly energised matter from its corona.  When these storms reach Earth they cause radio 'scintillation' and electrically excite power lines, electronics and a whole host of other stuff we rely on.  In the largest solar storm on record in 1859, telegraph operators were able to carry on a conversation with all the power turned off, by using only the excitation of the cables by the electrons from the solar wind.  These storms also interfere with the magnetite (a magnetised mineral) which homing pigeons and several other animal species use to navigate.

These storms also squeeze and weaken the Earth's magnetic field, which then brings the solar wind down to the atmosphere at much lower latitudes.  In the geomagnetic superstorm of 1989, people were watching aurorae in Texas, for example.

The field is measured constantly based on data from a few geomagnetic monitoring stations dotted about the planet.  The readings from last month show a 100 nano-Tesla dip in the field strength on 9 March, which classifies that day's space weather as an 'intense' storm.  This was caused by the sun throwing off two large waves of plasma earlier in the month. It would have been a good night for aurora-watching if Europe had been facing away from the sun at the time.

From space the aurorae appear as huge halos around the poles - here's a short video of the International Space Station crossing the southern lights.  (There are more aurora videos from NASA here but do come back!)

It's harder to find good video of the aurorae from the ground but one man, Ole Salomonsen from Tromso in Norway, spent six months taking 50,000 stills of the northern lights and splicing them together into this film to reflect as closely as possible their real-time movement.  He writes:
'In the video I have put together a collection of slow moving auroras in the woods, over the mounatins, in the city, in the foreshore, reflected in the sea, with some of the most spectacular and strongest auroral outbreaks seen in many years. Included here is a coronal outbreak, in which I am particularly happy to present, since it is very difficult to get on stills, even worse on "film".
'I could never have done this without the fantastic understanding and help from my girlfriend. This has been an insanely time-consuming project. Both hours after hours out in the cold, but also all the hours in post-processing during late nights has led to a severe lack of sleep.  Also, I would like to apologize to many of my friends for being so occupied the last months. Looking forward to spend more time with you all now.'
Today Ole (and vicariously, also his girlfriend Veronica) bring a little northern wonder into our offices (it's probably better without the sound, by the way):
Receive aurora alerts for the UK or out-nerd your friends by making your own auroral detector! Sign up at http://aurorawatch.lancs.ac.uk

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And can you help, please?

Later in the year I want to feature some street musicians/dancers/artists on waysofloving.com - I'm particularly interested in unusual forms - musicians playing unusual instruments, for example.  If you have any suggestions - good quality sound/image if poss - then please let me know.  Email justplaindavid@waysofloving.com.  Ta v much.

And please spread the love - tweet, like on Fbook etc.

1 April 2012

Week 14: 'The most amazing shapes!'

Wonderdate: 2011
Wondered into being by: Sophie Windsor Clive and Liberty Smith
Wonderspan: 2 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

Two tourists canoeing down Ireland’s longest river, the Shannon, are surprised by a huge murmuration of starlings at the point of their migration.  A murmuration, so named for the wave-sound of the flock's beating wings as it lurches and swoops, can be up to a million birds strong.  A study (says the BBC) has found that the murmuration's movements are due to each starling independently following just three rules.  The first two – fly at the same speed and stay close to your neighbours – collects the birds into a ball.  The third – steer clear of objects, predators and potential threats – creates the swirling motion we see.  The study claims that each starling only needs to keep an eye on its seven nearest neighbours while following these rules – simple!
Thanks to Becky H for suggesting this one!  More about migrations later on in the year...

25 March 2012

Week 13: ‘They will live a little bit better but in the same situation’

Wonder spawned in: 2010
Wondered into being by: Slavoj Žižek for the RSA and illustrations by Cognitive Media.
Wonderspan: 11 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

The improvising intellect of the Slovenian cultural philosopher Slavoj Žižek ranges so extensively that he’s often accused of contradicting himself, as if being consistent is just a bit boring, or perhaps as if wild truth, if we ever saw her, would wear every clashing colour she could find.

Well, here is a classic Žižek iconoclastic blast at Starbucks' absurd claim to be helping us to 'buy into' a better world every time we buy their coffee.  He also has a pop at mainstream charities for using the hoarded wealth of the rich to 'keep the poor alive' while leaving the conditions of oppression (and our disproportionate wealth) unchanged.  Instead, he argues for his own brand of misanthropy as a more authentic way of loving than is charity:
'There is a certain type of misanthropy which is much better as a social attitude than this cheap charitable optimism.'
Is he wrong?  Even Greenpeace encourages us to get their branded credit card so you can ‘defend our world while you shop’.  Well, some charities* (perhaps those without large fundraising and marketing departments) are warier of buying into the norms of mass culture and are trying to tackle the root causes of a problem rather than just make it easier to live with.  But they can't afford to chug you in the street and probably wouldn't even if they could.

So here’s Žižek’s talk, with pictures (discuss… leave a comment!)…

Extra…

And if that’s got you going then you might like this clarion call for us to recognise our common empathy as a foundation for a future in which we generally make less of a mess of things:
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* = like the one I work with and which I am too weak-willed not to mention here - Alternatives to Violence Project


18 March 2012

Week 12: 'You wanna battle me?'

Wonderdate: 2005
Wondered into being by: Tight Eyez et al
Wonderspan: 6 mi
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

This week we're in Los Angeles, its South Central district.  It's the most dangerous neighbourhood in the city and one of the most violent in the industrialised world.  Four people are murdered there every week, usually by gunshot, and many more are seriously injured in street violence include drive-by shootings.  Victims are typically Latino and Black people in their late teens and early twenties.

In South Central, some young people have turned to dance as a way of prising some freedom and dignity from the oppressive injustices of their environment.  For many, their dance groups are an alternative to joining one of the territorial gangs.

One such group do their street dancing in clowning make-up.  Each dancer crafts a mask to suit their own personality.  The clowns were started by 'Tommy the Clown' Johnson, a local birthday party entertainer who combined an outrageous clown costume with the cutting edge hip-hop style of the 1990s.  He found himself mentoring teenagers to do the same and went on to organise huge face-offs or 'battles' between the various dance 'tribes'.
 
An early member of Tommy's clowns was Tight Eyez.  He explained in David LaChapelle's documentary film Rize how dancing had helped save his community from becoming empty vessels for commercial culture to fill:
‘We’re not gonna be clones of the commercial hip-hop world... because that's been seen for so many years.  … [A]nother generation of kids with morals and values ... won’t need ... what’s being commercialized or tailor-made for them...  And we're of more value than any piece of jewellery... or any car or any big house that anybody could buy.’
Tight Eyez went on to pioneer krumping.  Krumpers turn the energy of the violence that runs through the neighbourhood into a cathartic dance.  In krump sessions the dancers throw each other against a fence or wall or squirm on the floor as if they are being beaten; they get bruised but no-one gets really hurt.  The dance movements are aggressive, extremely energetic and all improvised.  As the energy rises, the dancers reach a state of ecstasy called 'getting buck', when all the pent-up energy is released into the dance.

In the clip, we see the clowns and the krumps battling it out, overseen by their universally respected host, Tommy the Clown.  Tight Eyez features too - he's the guy who starts off his callout by smashing a chair into the stage.

These dances are among the most vivid ways I've seen people loving freedom.

Extra...

Here's Tight Eyez a few years later in a face-off with a guy called Retro, who's a turfer (smooth, mechanical cybernetic-type techno-dystopian... ohh, I dunno what it is exactly).

11 March 2012

Week 11: 'I know... because I've counted all the ants''

Wonderdate: 2003
Wondered into being by: Evolution, plus Deborah Gordon
Wonderspan: 20 min (ooh, cheating)
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

So this is a 20 minute wonder but I'm hoping that by 10 or 11 you'll be hooked.  If you're not, please accept my apologies as you return to your important work.

So, surely a social colony of any kind needs some kind of leadership - from an insect queen, for example, or a soviet of workers councils, or a David Cameron?  Well, ants manage with just a simple, constant instruction set, repeating over and over in each individual with no central control at all.

Deborah Gordon has watched ants for 20 years and finds that while an individual has very little of anything you could call cognitive ability (the queen included), as a colony they become intelligent problem-solvers.  The ants rely on patterns of contact with others in order to know what to do next, and that appears to be enough.  It's completely haphazard but because of their numbers (10,000 or so in a colony) the repeated pattern gets them all where they need to be... eventually.  So, no chief executive, no workers councils, no edicts or directives or commandments, no wavy-handy consensus decision-making, no hotline to God; for ants, anarchy works.

That said, every now and then one ant must turn to another and ask: 'Hey mate, do you know what it's all for?'

4 March 2012

Week 10: 'All of a sudden you'll hear the sound.'

Wonderdate: 1981
Wondered into being by: Wilhelmenia Wiggins Fernandez
Wonderspan: 4 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.  In fact, you'll need to turn it up.

Good morning.  You are in love with another's song and long to hold onto it to hear it again and again.  This must be Paris.

And so it is.  In the 1981 film Diva, a young postman, Jules, is rapt with the song of African American opera singer Cynthia Hawkins.  She has never allowed anyone to record her sing but he lets his love make a thief of him.  While she performs the aria from Catalini's La Wally, he secretly records her (shadowed by 'le cool' Taiwanese gangsters who will give the film its plot by trying to steal and sell the tape).  Overwhelmed by the beauty of her song, he is undone.  At the end of the film, Jules plays the recording to Cynthia in her dressing room as part-confession, part-gift.  She is shocked, feels violated by his theft, then falls under the spell of the moment.  They find themselves holding each other, dancing gently to her music.

La Wally is an opera about love as necessary and impossible as Jules'.  When Wally's father tells her she must marry the man he has chosen for her rather than his enemy (whom, of course, she is in love with), she resolves to flee and sings the defiant lament heard in this aria.  Translated into English by Enzo Michelangeli, its opening stanza is this:
Well then? I'll go far away,
as goes the echo from the pious bell
there, amid the white snow;
there, amid the golden clouds;
there, where hope is, hope,
regret, regret, and sorrow!
In Diva, Cynthia Hawkins' character is played by real-life opera singer Wilhelmenia Wiggins Fernandez, whom we are about to hear.  Her full, bassy voice fills the aria with the passion and it literally cries out for.  Other renditions, even though beautifully accomplished, can seem thin by comparison.  And here they are, Jules and Cynthia:
(it makes me cry)


Extra...

When he finds just the right spot at dusk to sing for his love, this performer is so accoustically adept that his song seems to come from within the air itself... and he is in his season right now for those with ears to hear and eyes to see...
Meanwhile in Antarctica, scientists are drawn in to the weird, white-noise singing of waddell seals and lie flat on the ice to get that bit closer to what is just beyond reach:
'You think in your mind that you're on land and all of a sudden you'll hear the sound coming up through the floor, you'll hear the shucks and the whistles and the booms that come and you realise there's a whole world underneath you.'
Thanks to Sunniva T for suggesting this one (from Herzog's film)...
This Monday morning we are in love with another's song!

26 February 2012

Week 9: 'Why do you keep your door open?' 'Why not? It’s my home.'

Wonderdate: 2012
Wondered into being by: Anthony Pisano and Mark Cersosimo
Wonderspan: 6 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

Hello wonder-lovers

Last week we were in Tiananmen Square with the extraordinary footage of a solitary person facing down the the Chinese army armed with nothing but passion.  In his way he was proclaiming, 'This is my home.'

This week we are on the other side of the world - in more ways than one - with other stories about loving home.  We begin in New York, where old-timer Anthony Pisano talks about his place to filmmaker Mark Cerosimo, who introduces his beautifully made piece like this: 
'On an unseasonably warm November night in Manhattan on our way to get ice cream, we stumbled upon what appeared to be a vintage shop, brightly lit display window and all.  As we began to walk in, a man sitting out front warned us that we were welcome to explore, but nothing inside was for sale. Our interests piqued, we began to browse through the collections the man out front had built throughout his life. This is a story of a man and his home.'
Anthony Pisano's place is not just a home but also his own way of loving life:
'A lot of people say, "Why do you keep your door open?" Why not?  It’s my home. … And I’ve made so many friends. ...  A life is [that] you talk with people, you touch them in a sense.'
And so here he is:

Extra...

Meanwhile in the Phillipines, 'Solar Demi' is letting the light into the shanty using old Coke bottles and a bucket of bleach:
(Thanks to Sarah G for suggesting that one)
And in London, Stan Middleton and his family head down the Thames on their live-aboard puppet barge in this photo-portrait.
How many ways of loving there are for a Monday morning!  And if you like this then do share the love by telling your friends, whether they be present, absent, estranged, entirely long-lost or even virtual, such as those found on Fbook and the like.

19 February 2012

Week 8: 'This man just went out and he said, Stop.'

Wonderdate: 2007
Wondered into being by: No-one is sure whom
Wonderspan: 6 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.
Here is a wonder of a completely different kind.

In June 1989 Chinese activists flooded Tiananmen Square in Peking (now Beijing) in a pro-democracy protest which had snowballed over several days.  The Chinese government sent in the troops, who fired into the crowd, according to Kate Adie who was right on the spot at the time.  They killed 'hundreds, possibly thousands of people', reports the BBC.  By the next day a curfew had been imposed and the Chinese army rolled down the city's main street in a column of tanks to show that its ignominious loss of control had come to an end.  People were left full of anger and despair, says Kate Adie.

Then something extraordinary happened...  We've all seen this on telly but usually only very briefly - here's the longer footage:
Although there are plenty of claims about who he was, and a few about who the driver was, I can’t find any reliable information about either or what happened to them afterwards.  Does anyone know?

12 February 2012

Week 7: ‘Under the mango tree … everything did start from here, it’s a great place to be.’

Wonder spawned in: 2010
Wondered into being by: Baaba Maal and friends; Playing for Change
Wonderspan: 9 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound

For this week's way of loving we're travelling to Kirina in Mali, where we ask Baaba Maal and his musician friends to suffuse our north European February with a little warmth.

The setting for this musical wonder is the shade of the local mango tree.   Thanks to its hardiness and dense canopy, a large mango tree forms a natural space for important meetings in many an African village.  Baaba Maal begins by giving thanks to the village elders for inviting the musicians to join them under the tree, before beginning his song, Dreams of Kirina.

Femi H suggested this clip.  She wrote:
'Jan 2010.  I had been depressed.  Not feeling able to live creatively... and the message that my African ancestors (i.e all of our ancestors) had no vision, no creativity before Europeans came, was troubling me.  Miraculously, I  picked up Ben Okri's book, A Tale of Regeneration and Love, that had been lying in my room for years unopened.
'He wrote in a magical way — of a 'fabled' West African forest village, of an enchantment and beauty that inspired the thing that destroyed it and the creative regeneration that would take place.  Extraordinarily, the forest people in the village he wrote of were all gifted and devoted artists.  Astoundingly magnificent sculptures would be found in different parts of the forest. These were left overnight anonymously.   Each sculpture would resound and carry a deep meaning for the whole village and thus would guide the people — personally, social or spiritually.
'Reading this inspired my sense of possibility. Then just as I finished the book, a friend sent me this YouTube, which would show that Okri's fabled place was alive in the village of Kirina in Mali.  We see the famous Malian singer, Baaba Maal, who himself had assumed that the village of Artists he'd heard of as a boy was a myth, until he was brought there to sing (by Playing for Change) and meet the people.  Here he is in the village wearing the most beautiful  flowing gold robe and performing this wonderful song, surrounded by the village elders and all.'
So here they are: Baaba Maal and friends...
Extra...

Street musicians around the world sing and play Ben E King's Stand By Me for Playing for Change.
In this audio clip, Ben Okri talks about the 'Ife Head', an ancient artwork whose rarefied beauty and subtlety of form proved to Europeans that cultures in pre-colonial Africa had been at least as complex and sophisticated as those of Europe.

5 February 2012

Week 6: ‘For an hour or so they continue to wind themselves around one another.’

Wonder spawned in: 2009
Wondered into being by: David Attenborough with the BBC Natural History Unit, from Life in the Undergrowth
Wonderspan: 4 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

In one of the most remarkable and beautiful mating rituals in the animal world, two leopard slugs do what they must do, unaware that the humankind's favourite naturalist voyeur, David Attenborough, is watching from behind a hedge somewhere and whispering sensuously into his microphone the deeper meaning of every wriggle.  Here are ‘two danglers on a snot trapeze’, as one YouTube commentator put it, but for these four short minutes, you might yet wish you'd been born a slug.
Extra...

Microcosmos: The grass people (1996) was the first film to use a revolutionary macroscopic camera technique to bring the viewer closer to the world of invertebrates than ever before.  David Attenborough has familiarised us all with this now but at that time, these little lives had never been seen so big.  For an hour the big screen at Hyde Park Picture House in Leeds, where I saw the film in 1997, showed massive ladybirds dodging humungous raindrops in slow motion, a jumbo jet of a bee with the audience flying right behind it, and this clip of two snails glancing across a crowded forest and falling for each other.  As they got down to it, the crowded cinema released a quiet, involuntary moan of pleasure.  You'll soon see why.... slightly embarrassing though it was for all concerned.  The film is by Claude Nuridsany and Marie Pérennou and here is the two-minute clip:

29 January 2012

Week 5: ‘I felt so full of running.’

Wonderdate: 1954
Wondered into being by: Roger Bannister and John Landy
Wonderspan: 10 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

Hello wonder-lovers.  Last week we heard that the Olympics opening ceremony will be based on 'wonder', which is a spooky coincidence because our Monday morning wonder this week has an olympic theme, sort of.  What are the chances?  The wonder schedule here says we got there first, but if they want the credit I'm sure that'll be ok.

This week's wonder is in two parts.  First up is Roger Bannister’s own commentary on the race in Oxfordshire in which he became the first person to run a mile in under four minutes.  This 1954 film is a grainy remembrance of a world first, accompanied by the crowd, increasingly frenzied with will-he-won't-he anticipation as the athletes pick up the pace with each lap.
Just six weeks after Bannister’s achievement, the Australian John Landy, who had been running faster and faster mile races for some time, ran his own sub-four-minute mile.  Finishing a hefty 1.5 seconds quicker than Bannister, Landy took the world record from him.

Seven weeks on and many millions of people around the world tuned in their radios (and a few TVs) for a race billed as the Miracle Mile, in which these two rivals would battle it out.  At the time they were still the only athletes to have run a mile in under four minutes.  Would Landy’s ferocious pace wear his rival out, or would one of Bannister’s blistering finishes win through?  Find out here, and hang on at the end to hear each man pay generous tribute to the other.
Extra…

Landy stops to help competitor and still wins the race.  Now that's a way of loving.  Just extraordinary!

22 January 2012

Week 4: 'My favourite part!'

Wonder spawned in: 2010
Wondered into being by: All we know is he's called Jonathan
Wonderspan: 5 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

He's now three, having started his art at eight months if you don't include (though let's) nine months in the womb using his umbilical cord like an ipod loaded with upmarket, Wigmore Hall stuff thanks to his mum.  And, while many child prodigies can be slightly grave, you'll see from Jonathan's grand finale that he's really just one of us.
Big thanks to Julie S for suggesting this one; her housemate teaches conducting and plays this clip to all his students.

And if you have a wonder to suggest, leave a comment...

15 January 2012

Week 3: 'We float like a mote of dust in the morning sky.'

Wonder spawned in: 1970s
Wondered into being by: Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan
Wonderspan: 2 min reading + 5 min film
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

If all had been as it should, the T S Eliot Prize for Poetry event in London this last weekend would have included Alice Oswald reading from her new, long poem, Memorial - one of the ten shortlisted works.  But in December she decided to withdraw, followed in short order by another shortlisted poet, John Kinsella.  Why?  Because when the Arts Council withdrew funding for the Poetry Book Society, which organises the Prize, a hedge fund firm called Aurum stepped in.  Many other arts organisations - the National Theatre and the Tate, for example - are turning to similar companies for help and perhaps it is good that wealthy firms are sharing some of their profits with the arts.  But Alice Oswald and John Kinsella believe that what they are trying to do through their poetry, and what hedge funds do, are pushing in different directions.

Alice Oswald explained her decision in a Guardian article, where she also described what she believes poetry can do to/for us: 'I think it's often assumed that the role of poetry is to comfort, but for me, poetry is the great unsettler. It questions the established order of the mind. It is radical, by which I don't mean that it is either leftwing or rightwing, but that it works at the roots of thinking. It goes lower than rhetoric, lower than conversation, lower than logic, right down to the very faint honest voice at the bottom of the skull.'

The setting for Memorial is the human tragedy of the Trojan War.  The poem sketches the ordinary men who were killed in the war, each at the moment of his death.  The text shimmers with Alice Oswald's keen feeling for the aliveness of things, and its fragility.  Poetry like this gives us all something important, in that it stands up for, and appeals to, our common feeling for what can make us more humanely human. But to receive this gift is, I think, also to be disturbed, if it leads to a growing awareness of forces that overwhelm (our) lives today.  To use Alice Oswald's word, a poem that is 'honest' to its own truth calls us to account for how 'honest' we are being in the way we live as individuals and as societies.

As for hedge funds, few people properly understand them, me included, but they are rightly notorious for representing a particularly aggressive, greedy form of gambling on the world's financial markets.  Hedge funds make a few rich people very rich indeed.  However varied their executives' personal ethics may be, the character of the business itself is to pursue profit as if other people and the planet really didn't matter.  For example, Aurum's 'philosophy' is 'to generate superior risk adjusted returns over the long-term investment horizon', which seems like a bleached way of saying they exist only to to make as much money as they possibly can for as long as they possibly can.  Like most hedge fund outfits, Aurum gives a small fraction of its profits to charity but appears to have no ethical policy for its investments.

So a poem might excite a sense of wonder and challenge us in our humanity, and we might need this when thinking about whether to endorse the sponsorship of a hedge fund,  yet that means questioning not only the mind's 'established order' but that of society as a whole.  But as Alice Oswald notes in her article, 'It is increasingly difficult to articulate any kind of unease about a system that puts profit before ethics and makes protest a criminal act.'  In other words, perhaps: it is seen to be increasingly out of step with reality to allow the tug of a poem to prevail over the demands of a certain economic system, even one leading to increasing injustice and violence. 

For its part, the Poetry Book Society's website omits to mention that two poets pulled out of the Eliot Prize shortlist for reasons of ethics, but its presiding judge, the poet Gillian Clarke, has written a response to Alice Oswald.  Here, she respects her fellow poet's stand but also argues pragmatically that the Prize 'cleans the money' it receives from Aurum by taking it from the rich and giving it to poetry. Her argument will appeal to those who believe the ends justify the means, but does not seem to recognise that the way we do things matters.

This week's Monday morning wonder comes from the world of science rather than that of poetry, but concerns the same fundamental question of whether a personal sense of wonder might inspire passions that would if they could change the way society works.  That is, can wonder recover a feeling for what life is really about and so help to throw a question mark over some of our more damaging, deadening norms? During the 1970s, Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan bet that it could when they co-created the pioneering popular science TV series, Cosmos

At the time the whole planet was held in ‘a perpetual hostage crisis called the Cold War’, says Ann Druyan, and then, perhaps as now, we the peoples felt increasingly frightened by the future.  In this vein, Cosmos hoped not only to raise public awareness of science but to excite collective imagination and humility about our place in the universe.  Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan believed that if we could find ‘our own part in [the] great story’ of the universe, then we might see the grandstanding and brinkmanship of the cold war as the hubris of a species that did not yet know itself. Wonder, then, powered as it is by awe and hope, might become a quietly redemptive force.

And Ann Druyan and Carl Sagan shared both the same political concerns about the cold war and a strongly poetic feeling for the wonder which runs like a seam of gold through the exploratory project of science.  For Carl Sagan this started when he was a kid: ‘I went to the librarian and asked for a book about stars ... And the answer was stunning. It was that the Sun was a star but really close. The stars were suns, but so far away they were just little points of light ... The scale of the universe suddenly opened up to me. It was a kind of religious experience. There was a magnificence to it, a grandeur, a scale which has never left me. Never ever left me.'  The sun is a star and it's just there!

Bringing this feeling for wonder to their work, Ann and Carl brought the cosmos to life for millions of people.  Without dumbing things down, the authors peppered the script with playful metaphors, such as when Carl Sagan sums up cosmic evolution in a few words: 'If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch you must first invent the universe'.  The same serious purpose still suffused the project, though: 'I believe our future depends powerfully on how well we understand this cosmos in which we float like a mote of dust in the morning sky.'  Incredibly for a science programme, Cosmos became the most popular series in the US from 1980 to 1990.

Meanwhile, off air the couple were arrested multiple times for nonviolent direct action against nuclear weapons installations including the Nevada test site.  Sagan resigned from a military research job in protest at the Vietnam war.  He was also one of the five co-authors of the first scientific paper showing that a nuclear war would result in a ‘nuclear winter’, in which most of the higher taxa of the Earth's ecosystem, including humans, would be wiped out.  Rather as Alice Oswald is doing now, Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan were taking their own honest stand against the violations of their times.

So are you ready for a little cosmic wonder?  Here's how Cosmos opens:
More Carl Sagan later in the year, but not as you know him.

Extras...

But if you have a little more time, you might like to hear Carl Sagan talking about the human meaning of the Earth:
...and this spooky/dreamy/eerie piece by Vangelis called Albedo 0.39 about the properties of Earth as seen from space.  'Albedo' is the reflective property of a body’s surface in space. In other words, it’s how much light the Earth reflects back into space forever – the chance of being seen by aliens or gods.
And if you have a wonder you'd like to share, why not add it to our growing collection... Click on comments below to deposit something or other.


Source credit for 'I went to the librarian...' quote: Keay Davidson (1999), 'Carl Sagan, A Life'

31 December 2011

Week 2: ‘It’s gonna be cool’

Wonder spawned in: 2010
Wondered into being by: Danny MacAskill
Wonderspan: 8 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

Here’s a man who can ride a bicycle along a wall…. the side of one.  And in this film his fellow wonders – the bicycle and the Scottish hills – are proud to co-star.

From the YouTube comments:
  • ‘And on the eighth day God created Danny.’
  • ‘I hate it when people compare Danny MacAskill and God.  I mean c'mon he's good and all... but he's just no Danny MacAskill.’
But can he mend a puncture?  Joanna W, who proposed this wonder, says it doesn’t matter.  Here he is (with apologies for the dreadful advert at the beginning):
Click below to leave a comment or share a wonder of your own.  Go on, brighten us all up.

Week 1: Cosmic Zoom


Wonder spawned in: 1968
Wondered into being by: Eva Szasz for the Canadian Film Board
Wonderspan: 8 min
To experience this wonder at its best: Click on the full screen icon and make sure you can hear the sound.

First, a quick twirl round the universe, won’t take long. Are you familiar with Picture Box, the 1970s schools TV programme that tried to widen kids' horizons? Every week, TV is wheeled into classroom, Picture Box takes us beyond our world, TV wheeled out of classroom. Picture Box rolled us across the American desert with a ball of tumbleweed, sloshed us down Canadian white-water rivers to the sea in a hand-carved canoe and, in this film we're about to see, whisked us to the top and bottom of the universe, before dropping us off right where we started.  My world was particularly small then, called ‘Warwickshire’, and if it wasn’t for Picture Box I’d have thought the whole universe was just one long road of quaint gardens, each with a Range Rover parked outside.  And it's Picture Box that gave me the idea for this little project, so if you're sitting comfortably...
Extra…

And if you liked that, you should also look inside your fridge. As suggested by Sunniva T, here’s Monty Python’s polymath comic Eric Idle taking us for another cosmic spin (with green-screen graphics that were cutting-edge stuff when the film was made):
Want to share something wonderful?  Click on the comments link below and tell us all about it.

12 November 2011

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