Saturday, September 27, 2008
lilitu sighed
as the dark moon was come
ready my pets
soon we fly
---
Everything on Earth
cycles together, we are
a brief mutation.
An experiment
in natural selection,
but still imperfect.
---
Vague symbolism
abounds deep in the heart of
deepest darkest man
---
Bring me a wheel of
oaken wood and a rein of
polished leather my dear
---
A note announces
That a Lion is coming
Wind rises for storm
---
Laying in the yard
In my birthday suit, so bare
And all becomes one
---
Eve in the garden
lush greens and all kinds of beasts
But, where is Adam?
---
Hallucinations
Gardens drip colours
Leaking into forms
Laputa - the Castle in the Sky
Okay, I'm still ploughing through the piece that I'm going to post over at the cinema blog. Whilst I haven't been paying much attention, I suspect that I get a different crowd there and here. I get so few comments there, it's hard to know. So I'll just quickly fill you in on this music and the flick that inspired it.
The composer is a fellow called Hisaishi Jo. He does all the soundtracks for the animation flicks of Miyazaki Hayao (Spirited Away) and Takahata Isao (Only Yesterday) as well as the existentialist gangster flicks of Beat Takeshi (Hana-Bi). Call me old fashioned but I like music that fills me with emotion. If it can make me cry it gets the brass ring. I'm talking about Puccini with Madame Butterfly, Sakamoto Ryuichi with The Last Emperor, and Hisaishi Jo with just about anything. I'm a big fan.
This piece here is the main theme for The Castle In The Sky (Tenku No Shiru Laputa). And yep, it's an animated kid's film. But it's a kid's film like Brideshead Revisited is a soap opera. To dismiss it by the genre doesn't really do it justice. And to describe this film is easier said than done. That's why I'm taking so long at the cinema blog, ha ha.
First up, Castle In The Sky is full of floating and flight. But it's not so much inspired by flying as it is by the dreams one has of it, if you can dig it. We've all flown, I expect. Was it like your dream of flying? Exactly. Miyazaki has obviously pondered the difference and put it into his films.
It's also about a triumph of nature over human ambition. This is another common theme in Miyazaki movies. The piece of music I posted here most fully kicks into prominence in the scene where our hero and heroine walk through the eden-like wonderland of the lost Laputa. We are treated to long joyful walk through an idyll populated by birds, butterflies and curious aquatic creatures. Miyazaki rarely misses a chance to put birdlife in his movies. He has nothing if not an eye for nature. And it's a particularly reverent eye. Miyazaki is confirmed Shintoist. If you wondered what Shinto is, believe it or not you already know. It that's confusing, you need merely watch Miyazaki.
The other constant theme of Miyazaki's flicks is that of the transient nature of things. All of his films involve loss. Here paradise is found and then lost again. And this is as it should be. Nothing can be held onto forever. Indeed even when our two first discover Laputa we know that it cannot last. And we know this thanks to Hisaishi Jo's marvellous soundtrack which is simultaneously happy, triumphant, melancholy, and wistful.
But really the can't-quite-put-your-finger-on-it complex variety of emotions that Miyazaki and Hisaishi convey with their marvellous collaborations is beyond my prose. Frankly I thought the haiku did a far better job.
So thanks folks. I'll be honest and say that this was something of a self-indulgent experiment. But I thought it was worth it by way of a change. And you never know, something may occur to me again, and I'll break up the routine then. It's not just me, you know. If you have some bright idea, do tell. No promises, but I'm always up for it. Yoroshiku.
---
It's so very still,
everyone sleeping but me,
waiting for the rain
---
morning in the rain forest
slowly, ethereal wonders repeat
---
reflections ripple
bird now aloft
wonders
does fish have mountains too
---
The first drops of rain
On a cold and lifeless earth
Brings a fury of growth
Drips,drops fall gently
Seasons start, slowly reaching
Growing, expanding, alive
---
Alone, I think of you.
Images run through my mind,
memories or dreams?
---
The composer is a fellow called Hisaishi Jo. He does all the soundtracks for the animation flicks of Miyazaki Hayao (Spirited Away) and Takahata Isao (Only Yesterday) as well as the existentialist gangster flicks of Beat Takeshi (Hana-Bi). Call me old fashioned but I like music that fills me with emotion. If it can make me cry it gets the brass ring. I'm talking about Puccini with Madame Butterfly, Sakamoto Ryuichi with The Last Emperor, and Hisaishi Jo with just about anything. I'm a big fan.
This piece here is the main theme for The Castle In The Sky (Tenku No Shiru Laputa). And yep, it's an animated kid's film. But it's a kid's film like Brideshead Revisited is a soap opera. To dismiss it by the genre doesn't really do it justice. And to describe this film is easier said than done. That's why I'm taking so long at the cinema blog, ha ha.
First up, Castle In The Sky is full of floating and flight. But it's not so much inspired by flying as it is by the dreams one has of it, if you can dig it. We've all flown, I expect. Was it like your dream of flying? Exactly. Miyazaki has obviously pondered the difference and put it into his films.
It's also about a triumph of nature over human ambition. This is another common theme in Miyazaki movies. The piece of music I posted here most fully kicks into prominence in the scene where our hero and heroine walk through the eden-like wonderland of the lost Laputa. We are treated to long joyful walk through an idyll populated by birds, butterflies and curious aquatic creatures. Miyazaki rarely misses a chance to put birdlife in his movies. He has nothing if not an eye for nature. And it's a particularly reverent eye. Miyazaki is confirmed Shintoist. If you wondered what Shinto is, believe it or not you already know. It that's confusing, you need merely watch Miyazaki.
The other constant theme of Miyazaki's flicks is that of the transient nature of things. All of his films involve loss. Here paradise is found and then lost again. And this is as it should be. Nothing can be held onto forever. Indeed even when our two first discover Laputa we know that it cannot last. And we know this thanks to Hisaishi Jo's marvellous soundtrack which is simultaneously happy, triumphant, melancholy, and wistful.
But really the can't-quite-put-your-finger-on-it complex variety of emotions that Miyazaki and Hisaishi convey with their marvellous collaborations is beyond my prose. Frankly I thought the haiku did a far better job.
So thanks folks. I'll be honest and say that this was something of a self-indulgent experiment. But I thought it was worth it by way of a change. And you never know, something may occur to me again, and I'll break up the routine then. It's not just me, you know. If you have some bright idea, do tell. No promises, but I'm always up for it. Yoroshiku.
---
It's so very still,
everyone sleeping but me,
waiting for the rain
---
morning in the rain forest
slowly, ethereal wonders repeat
---
reflections ripple
bird now aloft
wonders
does fish have mountains too
---
The first drops of rain
On a cold and lifeless earth
Brings a fury of growth
Drips,drops fall gently
Seasons start, slowly reaching
Growing, expanding, alive
---
Alone, I think of you.
Images run through my mind,
memories or dreams?
---
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Art to Music to Poetry - all whispered in Chinese
And now for something completely different.
My favourite composer (who I shan't name yet) is a curious cove. He does both soundtracks and his own work. His soundtracks are inspired by some really singular directors. And the music he writes to accompany these images are perfectly wonderful. His own work on the other hand, can't quite compete. All of the music is his, sure enough, but somehow when he is inspired by others he produces his best stuff.
The piece I've linked to here is inspired by some very intense cinematic visuals and themes. When I hear this music the film and its emotions come rushing back to me. I wondered what, if anything, people who hadn't seen the film, would make of this music. 'Make' by way of a tangible effort to convey their thoughts (by haiku, natch). Would it resemble the film? Or something else altogether? Perhaps something completely unconnected to that which originally inspired it?
To this end, I'm going to leave everyone in the dark as to where this came from. If you do happen to recognise it, I - a) salute your taste in film, ha ha, and b) ask that you not give the game away (feel free to write some haiku, nothing could please me more, but don't name the film, director, composer, etc.) At the end of the week I'll enlighten everyone as to who, what, where, etc.
I've provided two links here. One is a heavy (5Mb) mp3 file that will play on any computer with any number of software. The other is a light (0.5Mb) mp4 file which is an mpg variant that will play on quicktime and most video software.
Enjoy boys and girls, and see you you in the comments pages. Yoroshiku.
My favourite composer (who I shan't name yet) is a curious cove. He does both soundtracks and his own work. His soundtracks are inspired by some really singular directors. And the music he writes to accompany these images are perfectly wonderful. His own work on the other hand, can't quite compete. All of the music is his, sure enough, but somehow when he is inspired by others he produces his best stuff.
The piece I've linked to here is inspired by some very intense cinematic visuals and themes. When I hear this music the film and its emotions come rushing back to me. I wondered what, if anything, people who hadn't seen the film, would make of this music. 'Make' by way of a tangible effort to convey their thoughts (by haiku, natch). Would it resemble the film? Or something else altogether? Perhaps something completely unconnected to that which originally inspired it?
To this end, I'm going to leave everyone in the dark as to where this came from. If you do happen to recognise it, I - a) salute your taste in film, ha ha, and b) ask that you not give the game away (feel free to write some haiku, nothing could please me more, but don't name the film, director, composer, etc.) At the end of the week I'll enlighten everyone as to who, what, where, etc.
I've provided two links here. One is a heavy (5Mb) mp3 file that will play on any computer with any number of software. The other is a light (0.5Mb) mp4 file which is an mpg variant that will play on quicktime and most video software.
Enjoy boys and girls, and see you you in the comments pages. Yoroshiku.
Friday, September 12, 2008
Flying free above,
Colours of the earth and sky
Soar on the summer's breeze
---
I jumped from a tree
and landed right on my arse.
How do I evolve?
---
artful swallows on the wing
never doubt
the rain's eternal promise
---
Darting here and there
Frozen in space and time
for all to see the beauty
---
A picture reminds
Of childhood wonders abound
Nature, in her awe
---
Watching swallows fly
mad roller coaster riders!
Up, down, all around
---
momma bird calls: fly
baby bird replies: I will try
leap and fly away
Saturday, September 6, 2008
plato drank deeply
the naked flame
knowing shadows lie
---
weather cooling now
grilled veggies, shrimp, hamburgers
and Sam Adams Beer
---
The flames kindle my imagination
There a face, there a dinosaur
---
trans-FORM flames,
track lights for bodies levels
like a thunderbolt.
---
Cold and dark at bay.
Warm now but in the morning
Footprint in the ash.
---
Huddled together
Backs to the wind and weather
The gift of fire warms
---
Fire, crackles and spits
Images rise and fall free
Near, the air is warm
---
Throw all my papers
on the fire of frustration
smiling as they burn
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)