Tag Archives: Roger W. Smith

Proust on “bad” music

 

Détestez la mauvaise musique, ne la méprisez pas. Comme on la joue, la chante bien plus, bien plus passionnément que la bonne, bien plus qu’elle s’est peu à peu remplie du rêve et des larmes des hommes. Qu’elle vous soit par là vénérable. Sa place, nulle dans l’histoire de l’Art, est immense dans l’histoire sentimentale des sociétés. Le respect, je ne dis pas l’amour, de la mauvaise musique, n’est pas seulement une forme de ce qu’on pourrait appeler la charité du bon goût ou son scepticisme, c’est encore la conscience de l’importance du rôle social de la musique. Combien de mélodies, du nul prix aux yeux d’un artiste, sont au nombre des confidents élus par la foule des jeunes gens romanesques et des amoureuses. Que de “bagues d’or”, de “Ah! Reste longtemps endormie”, dont les feuillets sont tournés chaque soir en tremblant par des mains justement célèbres, trempés par les plus beaux yeux du monde de larmes dont le maître le plus pur envierait le mélancolique et voluptueux tribut – confidentes ingénieuses et inspirées qui ennoblissent le chagrin et exaltent le rêve, et en échange du secret ardent qu’on leur confie donnent l’enivrante illusion de la beauté. Le peuple, la bourgeoisie, l’armée, la noblesse, comme ils ont les mêmes facteurs porteurs du deuil qui les frappe ou du bonheur qui les comble, ont les mêmes invisibles messagers d’amour, les mêmes confesseurs bien-aimés. Ce sont les mauvais musiciens. Telle fâcheuse ritournelle que toute oreille bien née et bien élevée refuse à l’instant d’écouter, a reçu le trésor de milliers d’âmes, garde le secret de milliers de vies, dont elle fut l’inspiration vivante, la consolation toujours prête, toujours entrouverte sur le pupitre du piano, la grâce rêveuse et l’idéal. tels arpèges, telle “rentrée” ont fait résonner dans l’âme de plus d’un amoureux ou d’un rêveur les harmonies du paradis ou la voix même de la bien-aimée. Un cahier de mauvaises romances, usé pour avoir trop servi, doit nous toucher, comme un cimetière ou comme un village. Qu’importe que les maisons n’aient pas de style, que les tombes disparaissent sous les inscriptions et les ornements de mauvais goût. De cette poussière peut s’envoler, devant une imagination assez sympathique et respectueuse pour taire un moment ses dédains esthétiques, la nuée des âmes tenant au bec le rêve encore vert qui leur faisait pressentir l’autre monde, et jouir ou pleurer dans celui-ci.

— Marcel Proust. “Eloge de la mauvaise musique,” Les plaisirs et les jours, Chapitre XIII

 

Detest bad music, but do not despite it. As it is played, and especially sung, much more passionately than good music, it has much more than the latter been impregnated, little by little, with man’s tears. Hold it therefore in veneration. Its place, nonexistent in the history of art, is immense in the sentimental history of nations. The respect — I do not say love — for bad music is not only a form of what might be called the charity of good taste, or its skepticism; it is also the consciousness of the importance of music’s social role. How many tunes, worthless in the eyes of an artist, are numbered among the chosen confidants of a multitude of romantic young men and girls in love. How many “bague d’or,” how many “Ah! reste longtemps endormi,” whose pages are turned tremblingly every evening by hands justly famous, drenched with the tears of the moist beautiful eyes of the world, whose melancholy and voluptuous tribute would be the envy of the purest musicians — ingenious and inspired confidants that enable sorrow and exalt dreams and, in exchange for the ardent secret confided to them, give the intoxicating illusion of beauty. The people, the bourgeoisie, the army, the nobility, all of them, just as they have the same mail carriers, purveyors of afflicting sorrow or of crowning joy, have the same invisible messengers of love, the same cherished confessors. Bad musicians, certainly. Some miserable ritournelle that every well-born and well-trained ear instantly refuses to listen to receives the tribute of millions of souls, guards the secret of millions of lives for whom it has been the living inspiration, the ever ready consolation always open on the piano-rack, the dreamy charm and the ideal. Certain arpeggios, a certain “rentrée,” have made the soul of many a lover vibrate with the harmonies of Paradise or the voice of the beloved himself. A collection of bad Romances worn with constant use should touch us as a cemetery touches us, or a village. What does it matter if the houses have no style, if the tombstones are hidden by inscriptions and ornaments in execrable taste? Before an imagination sympathetic and respectful enough to silence for a moment its aesthetic scorn, from this dust that flock of souls may rise holding in their beaks the still verdant dream which has given them a foretaste of the other world, and made them rejoice or weep in this one.

— Marcel Proust, “In Praise of Bad Music,” Pleasures and Regrets, Chapter XIII

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

  February 2025

more new vocabulary

 

new vocabulary,, March 25 2024 – February 1, 2025

 

I keep looking up words. I am continually surprised at how many words I don’t recall having encountered before, or the meaning of which I am not sure about.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   February 2025

on Johnson’s memory

 

He discovered a great ambition to excel, which roused him to counteract his indolence. He was uncommonly inquisitive; and his memory was so tenacious, that he never forgot any thing that he either heard or read.

— James Boswell, Life of Johnson

 

I can proudly say, without exaggeration, that this is also true of me.

 

— Roger W. Smith

    December 2024

a New York sunset

 

See my post:

a New York sunset

 

— Roger W. Smith

a letter to editor re the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

 

Regarding the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, see my post:

letter to editor

 

— Roger W. Smith

  November 2024

Handel, But as for His people

 

 

https://rogersgleanings.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/22-But-as-for-his-people.mp3?_=1

 

 

chorus

from Israel in Egypt

But as for His people, He led them forth like sheep: He brought them out with silver and gold; there was not one feeble person among their tribes. (Psalm lxxviii: 53; Psalm cv: 37)

I remember when I first heard Israel in Egypt. It is hard to believe that it was around fifty years ago.

I love this chorus. The harmonizing at the words “he led them …,” repeated several times — alternating between soprano and bass voices — is magnificent.

Plus a marvelous fugue.

If one could distill a drop of Handel, I might choose this brief passage.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

  November 2024

 

*****************************************************

See also my post

Handel, “Israel in Egypt”

an exchange with a friend

 

Each of Traubel’s volumes may stand alone, the present no less than the three that preceded it. You may open it anywhere and begin reading, for this work needs no such logical or chronological sequence as is customary in a work of formal interpretation or biographical narrative. Its logic is the delightful and limber illogic of conversation, in which one thing by chance recalls another in the daily meeting of two friends with a storehouse of memories. — Sculley Bradley, introduction to Horace Traubel, With Walt Whitman in Camden, Volume 4; January 21-April 7, 1889 (Southern Illinois University Press, 1959)

The following are some texts and emails from me and my friend’s replies. The exchange occurred in March 2024.

I think they throw light on issues related to memory and what one values in people.

There is a certain discursiveness in the exchange, which is to be expected and in fact welcomed in such exchanges (not unlike those which Walt Whitman had with his Boswell, Horace Traubel).

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   October 2024

*****************************************************

ME

My post about my high school math teacher went viral.

Like any individual, there were other interesting things about him as a person: little things that are fun to remember.

A person is not just a spreadsheet.

You can quote me on that … do you think it will rank with nice guys finish last?

 

ME

Eccentric people and their eccentricities, the little things we observe about ordinary people, are not beneath our notice

My high school math teacher, Mr. Badoain, besides being a great teacher, was quite a character.

George Eliot’s characters are often ordinary, unremarkable, and often eccentric people.

She shows implicitly that they are not beneath interest or unworthy of consideration; or their preoccupations and habits.

I see this intuitively, and critics have said as much.

 

ME

so ….

when my mother used to throw salt over her shoulder

and Mr. Badoian had a poster on the classroom wall of his idol, Sophia Loren

Such peculiarities, eccentricities would not be neglected by a Nabokov or Bernard Malamud.

I am thinking of novels by Nabokov and Malamdud that I read: Nabokov’s “Pnin” about an eccentric Russian professor teaching at a college (Wellesley?) like Nabokov did … Malamud’s “A New Life,” based on his experience as an adjunct professor teaching writing.

 

MY FRIEND

Your interest in others is very clear.

Even though many of the people I’ve met, at work or elsewhere, don’t make a strong connection and probably know nothing about me other than my resume stuff, my experience is different from yours, and that’s why I found your comment odd (“people don’t care about you beyond the spreadsheet items” – this is sort of what you said).

 

ME

Life throws you into all kinds of relationships in terms of closeness. There are a lot of people whom I have become associated with and got to know well — saw on a regular basis, such as relatives and in-laws or coworkers, who obviously knew the fundamental facts about me, since they were well acquainted with me on that level, but who were not interested in or curious about me or my interests; and might not be able to say (this was often the case) where I went to college or what I studied; and how I wound up coming to NYC (or from where), or what my interests were … they would, of course, have formed some overall impression of me.

And after knowing them for a long time — or in the case of say coworkers — a pretty long time, they could tell you little about me.

Almost everyone is of interest to me, period, with a few exceptions.

 

MY FRIEND

I’ve just run through many good friends in my mind and can’t think of one who doesn’t appreciate the little things or who judges people by their resumes.

ME

Of course, a person’s history and accomplishments are important.

But a lot of people think the little things are of no importance.

George Eliot’s characters are “insignificant’ often petty people .. she shows that their little concerns and lives are not insignificant.

I can think of so many people I met, often in the workplace … friends of mine and my wife … friends of friends, etc., etc. … and so often what I remember best and what brings them to life is/was their idiosyncrasies, neuroses (in many cases), likes and dislikes, opinions about this and that.

Of course, I also remember a lot of an informational nature: their life history … I make a point about asking about this … I almost never forget.

Things from the past that might be regarded as trivial are fixed in my mind. I can go way back in my memory and its vivid and distinct in my mind .. the people, their particulars, what they said.

You can see such a memory working in Tolstoy’s “Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth.”

 

MY FRIEND

Understand re the spreadsheets now — I don’t think of resumes being saved on spreadsheets — they’re mostly for data — so that’s why I was confused. You meant people aren’t their bios or resumes, right?

But as I think about it, they’re really a combination. The things about your mother’s throwing salt over her shoulder or your math teacher’s peculiarities are interesting and helped to make them what they were, but there’s a lot in the resumes that’s important too. Together, the resume and the traits/quirks/whatever make people interesting.

“Disowned: Caleb Congdon and the Society of Friends, 1790”

 

Stephen Hamilton, ‘Disowned – Caleb Congdon and the Society of Friends, 1790 ‘

 

Posted here, with the permission of the author is the following article: Stephen Hamilton, “Disowned: Caleb Congdon and the Society of Friends, 1790”

Both Stephen Hamilton and Roger W. Smith are direct descendants of Caleb Congdon.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   October 2024

Caleb Congdon and the War of 1812

 

Caleb Congdon and the war of 1812

 

See Word document above

Caleb Congdon (1767-1832)  of New Bedford, Massachusetts was an ancestor of my mother, Elinor Congdon Handy.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

  October 2024

Isaiah 40

 

Isaiah 40

text – Word document above

 

https://rogersgleanings.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Aksel-Schiotz-Comfort-ye-from-Messiah.mp3?_=2 https://rogersgleanings.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/3-Every-valley-shall-be-exalted.mp3?_=3

 

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

  October 2024