Bombing in Boston – words cannot express…

Just heard about the bombing at the Boston Marathon and trying to process – if that’s even possible – and make sure that various friends and relatives who live in the area are okay. We just got word that our niece Nora M. (not our niece Nora F. who goes to school at U Mass in Amherst) is in her office building downtown, which is under lock down. From what I can tell, one of the bombs went off about five minutes from where my best friend from high school lives in Back Bay (I visited her there last fall and we walked on a beautiful day to the T station near what is now a bomb scene.

I remember fondly watching the Boston Marathon  when I lived in Boston in the early 1980’s – and the thought of a bombing going off in that crowd is a little too real.  I was thinking about the marathon today after hearing it would include a special tribute to the victims of the Sandy Hook school shooting in Connecticut. I am at a loss for words.

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The Boston Marathon Logo

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Catch today’s lusty Carmina Burana in Des Moines! Spring! In-the-Tavern! Love!

Marin Alsop conducts the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in Baltimore in 2007.
One more chance to see/hear the excess and spectacle of Carmina Burana in Des Moines today! (And I get one more chance to sing in it.) The DM Register review (see below), which I largely agree with, was favorable. It mentions that the guys one-upped the women – which is true, in part because they had more parts to sing and sang them very well!!  (To my surprise, I found myself quite envious of the guys…call it “#14-envy” – #14 is a particularly challenging but way cool number the men sing.)

And check out this interesting 2012 NPR story by Scott Simon about Carmina Burana – http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6471891 – that includes some amusingly unorthodox Death Metal, Rap and Electronic versions – and a very interesting interview with Maestro Marin Alsop, music director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (the first woman to hold this poisition with a major American orchestra, I gather.) Alsop conducted a new (2012) recording of Carmina Burana with the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra on the Naxos label

DES Moines Register Symphony review: ‘Carmina Burana’

Symphony review: ‘Carmina Burana’

3:08 AM, Apr 14, 2013 | by Michael Morain |

The audience got what it came for Saturday when the Des Moines Symphony and a mass choir delivered a rousing performance of Carl Orff’s blockbuster “Carmina Burana.” The nearly full house at the Des Moines Civic Center felt the visceral blast of 330-some musicians singing, playing instruments, and pounding on a drum the size of a small car.

The bodies on stage outnumbered the populations of more than 400 towns in Iowa.

So it’s a good thing those bodies had talent. They produced both the steamroller power of the work’s signature song, “O Fortuna” – made famous in countless movies and advertisements – as well as the earthier delights in the other two dozens songs about spring and love and drinking. (Orff set the music to a series of 13th century Latin poems he found in a secondhand book store.)

The orchestra has performed “Carmina” before, with guest conductors, but this was maestro Joseph Giunta’s first crack at it. He pulled it together well, with a strong sense of pacing and polished bombast. The score isn’t as technically difficult as some, but it takes a steady hand to get 330 people on the same page.

He had help from Drake University orchestra conductor Akira Mori, who prepared his students to play with the pros, and Drake choral conductors Aimee Beckmann-Collier and Linda Vanderpool, who rehearsed four different university choirs, including one that includes community voices. Barbara Sletto coached the Heartland Youth Choir, which held its own even amid the roar.

The women’s voices produced a supple, lively tone in the early flirty passages (“Salesman! Give me colored paint to paint my cheeks”) but the men one-upped them with a precisely rendered round of drinking songs. Their unaccompanied section (“If a boy and girl linger together”) was especially good.

The dramatically gifted baritone Robert Orth carried most of the solos with natural ease, as if Latin was his first language. He struggled at times to be heard but still managed to make himself understood, even wobbling back and forth during his bit as a drunken priest.

The talented soprano Carrie Ellen Giunta, who happens to be married to the conductor, sang best during her highest and most exposed solo (“Sweetest boy”). And the tenor Christopher Pfund made the most of his brief appearance as a swan – or former swan – lamenting its life while roasting on a spit. It’s one of the tenor’s specialities; he’s sung the role more than 150 times on three continents.

“Carmina” was written in 1937, the same year the Des Moines Symphony began as a combined ensemble of Drake and the community at large. Saturday’s concert (which repeats Sunday) honored that connection further by opening with a performance of Brahms’ “Academic Overture,” again with a mix of students and pros. It sounded as sunny as anything on the university’s admissions brochures.

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Spring construction report from the bike trail in downtown Des Moines

Grays Lake

Gray’s Lake (above)….For fantastic “zoomable”  Des Moines area trail maps see: http://www.dsmbikecollective.org/mapcentral!

We really haven’t gotten that perfect spring weather for biking yet (except for last Monday, when temps rose to the 70s, but then plummeted a day later and it got rainy). But last Saturday under overcast skies and with a cold wind, we did our first ride of the spring on our favorite loop through Beaverdale/Drake neighborhood to South of Grand to downtown Des Moines and back to Beaverdale/Drake, which includes bits of several officially-named trails (Walnut Creek, Bill Riley, Meredith, John Pat Dorian and the Inter-urban).

Each spring, we’re braced for various construction projects that may hamper our journey but the three c0nstruction projects we came upon all had handy detours that takeyou around the bridge construction at 63rd and Grand);  past the closed footbridge west of I-Cubs Stadium; ); and around the construction at the Botanical Center.  It also was nice to see that last year’s construction on the west side of the Riverwalk by Court Avenue appears to be done (or at least done enough that you can now ride along this stretch of the trail by the river.)

A more detailed look at our favorite 18-mile loop: We ride from our Drake/Beaverdale neighborhood house south from the Franklin Library to 56th Street, then south through the woodsy trail around there to 63rd street and Grand; then east along another wooded trail  to Waterworks Park and Gray’s Lake, past I-Cubs stadium and the East Village downtown;, then back north along the river along the Dorrian trail (which I always confuse with the Neal Smith trail further north) to the trestle bridge that leads west to MLKing Blvd;and then uphill on the Urbandale trail and over to 38th Street (or so) and south to our house. Our ride was about 18 miles.

 

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Villages (of Van Buren County) Folk School – places to go summer of 2013

It’s been awhile since I last visited the charming Villages of Van Buren County in southeast Iowa but this month’s issue of Iowa Farm Bureau’s Family Living (which my husband edits) had some good suggestions of places new and old to visit there:

Villages Folk School – Opened in 2009, this place  (which appears to be on 1st Street in the village of Bonaparte) offers weekend classes in “traditional arts and crafts” from rug weaving and blacksmithing to artisan bread baking. There are some weekend classes in pastel painting and out-of-town students can stay at the pretty Mason House Inn in Keosauqua. Another option is the Bonaparte Inn, an 1890’s building in Bonaparte.

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One more plug for Carmina Burana – April 13, 14 in Des Moines!

“O Fortuna” in the Carmina Burana manuscript

Time for one last plug of the performance of Carmina Burana by the Des Moines Symphony and about 225 singers from Drake University choirs (including me, in the Drake University Chorus) this weekend at the Civic Center downtown.  The Saturday show is at 7:30 p.m.; the Sunday show at 2:30 p.m. And as Ed Sullivan would say, it’s going to be “a realllly biiigggg show!”

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Maggie Maggie Maggie – Memories of Thatcher’s England

Hard to believe that Margaret Thatcher has died, although she has been long gone from the public stage and eye. I wasn’t a fan of her policies – I worked for the rival Labour Party in 1980 as an intern for a young MP named Jack Straw who went on to become a household name himself. And back then, we used to march through the streets during one rally or another  chanting ” Maggie, Maggie, Maggie, Out, out, out.” But I did admire her courage and determination. And this photo (below) of Maggie berating Jack has hung on my office wall for some 30 years.

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Danish Modern in Elk Horn Iowa – sounds about right

Haven’t been to Elk Horn, an all things Danish town in western Iowa for years. When we lasted visited, we had young kids interested in touring the town’s famous windmill. Now there’s an exhibit of Danish Modern furniture at  Elk Horn’s Danish Immigrant Museum that looks well worth a visit. We have some remnants of my parents’ Danish Modern stuff from my childhood home in Michigan here in Iowa – but some of the choicer pieces, that now go for big bucks, are long gone, sadly. Used to love spinning around in our Arne Jacobsen swan chairs, which I didn’t know at the time were destined to be design classics. As Mad Men’s next season approaches, we’re all being primed to see more Danish Modern 1960’s classics. The show Danish Modern: Design for Living runs thorugh Jan. 5 so there’s plenty of time. see dkmuseum.org. We just watched a very good Danish movie last night, as fate would have it, “A Royal Affair” which was about a very interesting period in Danish history during the late 1770’s.

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Here’s a copy of my Peru story in April issue of Delta Sky magazine

photo(29)I am hoping this will work  and you can click here and see the travel story I did about our recent trip to Peru for Delta Sky Magazine! Unfortunately there isn’t an online version and this copy is black and white, not in full color.  You can find the story if you have an iPad, using the Fly Delta iPad app.

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deltaskyperutravelstory2

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Poland (Gdansk, Krakow) and Prague bound! Maybe Berlin too.

Gotyk HouseIt looks like we’re going to Poland in July – yes, Poland. Three years ago, two Polish teenagers from Gdansk stayed with us in Des Moines and our son later stayed with one teen’s family in the northern seaport of Gdansk. They were a lot of fun and we promised we’d visit some day. So when my husband got word that he’ll be going on a business trip to tour farms in the Ukraine-Moldova-Romania, we looked at map to see where I could meet up with him after his trip and there was POLAND! We’re very excited to see our friends and the gorgeous city they live in – which we’ve heard so much about. We’re also going to Krakow – which was one of our son’s favorite places when he visited Poland. And on to Prague – where we hope to rendezvous with friends from London. I may also throw in a solo trip before all this to…another place I’ve never been: Berlin. (We went to Munich and Bavaria to visit American friends living there in 1989 and I distinctly remember taking a train on a day trip to Saltzburg that was later going on to Prague. Prague! That sounded interesting but it wasn’t an option back then because this was just before the wall came down and as I recall we still needed some special documents to travel to Eastern Europe. No more.)

So far I’ve found two good small hotels, reasonably priced:

Gotyk House in Gdanska small  b&b in what’s reportedly this seaport city’s oldest house, built in 1541.  (see illustration above)

Karmel hotel in Krakow – in Kazimierez, the former Jewish quarter/ghetto dating back to the 1500’s. (I should feel right at home…although the Jewish ghetto has been replaced by what is now a trendy area, I’m told. And of course, the vast majority of the 60,000 Jews in the ghetto were murdered by the Nazis.) In addition to Auschwitz, we plan to visit Oskar Schindler’s factory. Apparently the nearby concentration camp Birkenau is even worse than Auschwitz. We visited Dachau years ago in Munich.

Royal Capital City of Kraków
Stołeczne Królewskie Miasto Kraków

Main Market Square, Wawel Castle, Barbican, St. Mary’s Basilica, St. Peter and Paul Church, Collegium Maius

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“Once” “Alvin Ailey” coming to Des Moines in 2014!! And more good stuff!

The Civic Center of Greater Des Moines has done it again – it’s bringing some great shows to the city starting in fall 2013 and into 2014. This year, in February, we got  the national traveling tour of  the “Book of Mormon.” In 2014 we’re getting the one musical I REALLY wanted to see – “Once” – which comes April 22-27, 2014 (maybe I’ll go for my birthday on the 26th…I took my husband for his Feb. birthday to Book of Mormon). “Once” is the stage adaptation of the 2006 movie, which had such great songs by Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová – Thank you thank you! Friends who saw it on Broadway raved!

Other great shows:

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater – March 18, 2014 (photo below)

– Matthew Bourne’s Sleeping Beauty – sept. 27-28, 2013

– Porgy and Bess – april 1-6, 2014

– American Idiot (the Green Day -inspired rock opera) Jan. 24-25, 2014

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