From this to what?

From this to what?
Very post war baby!

Sunday, 26 April 2009

Clive James on the Susan Boyle phenomenon!

Whatever our thrill at Susan Boyle's performance, it remains the case that audiences expect cosmetic beauty, says Clive James.
By now every media commentator in Britain on every subject including global warming has delivered his or her opinion about Susan Boyle, the woman of unremarkable appearance who went on Britain's Got Talent and proved to have such a remarkable voice that an aria from Les Miserables acquired the celestial overtones of a solo passage from a cantata by Bach and even such exalted arbiters of taste as Piers Morgan and Simon Cowell were reduced to helpless protestations of awe.
Limping along two weeks behind the action, I can only hope, as I add my groat's worth of opinion to a mountain range of accumulated wisdom, that I have something to say which might prove useful.
All the obvious things have been said. But it is sometimes worth asking whether all the obvious things that have been said are quite true.
Barely had the last ringing note of Susan Boyle's beautiful voice faded in the air before the first media commentators were out of their box to lash Piers Morgan and Simon Cowell for their coarseness in having concurred, with their facial expressions, in the loutish mirth of the studio audience that had greeted Susan Boyle before she began to sing.
I looked at the footage carefully and I'm bound to say that I didn't find either Mr Morgan or Mr Cowell looking any more crass than usual.
They seemed to me to be striving to be polite while they contemplated her admittedly unshowbizlike appearance, just as she seemed to me to be striving to be polite while she contemplated them - two men whose faces are surely fated to inspire laughter, in the way that faces do when they belong to the kind of man who is deeply, sincerely concerned with the impression he is making.
Mr Morgan, at some stage early in his career, decided that an air of irrepressible shrewdness should be basic to his image, and after many hours of training before the shaving mirror he managed to perfect a look of penetrating scepticism.
Poet's voice
Mr Cowell, for his own part, has a set of teeth so uncannily perfect that you can see why he has to spend so much time in America, the only country that will admit such a display of radiant gnashers through customs without X-raying the rest of the body they are attached to, to see if any part of it is made of enriched uranium. Yet Susan, face to face with these two improbably refulgent paragons, was unfazed, and launched without hesitation into her song.
Within four bars she had established herself as a talent. As Seamus Heaney, a great critic of his art as well as a great practitioner, has told us, we recognise a true poet's voice immediately by its inherent strength, its integrity, its coherence and its clarity.
We recognize a true singer's voice in the same way. Susan Boyle has got it, and even the more oafish members of the studio audience, who could have come by time travel straight from the Roman Colosseum on a day when children were being fed to the lions, were instantly won over. When Susan finished, there was a fitting tumult.
The next bit, however, was harder to interpret than some of the commentators let on. They assumed that Mr Morgan and Mr Cowell had no advance knowledge that Susan would have a voice. I suppose it's possible, although I must say it seems unlikely to me. I spent 20 long years working in the front line in television studios and I seldom saw circumstances in which a surprise of such magnitude could be kept secret.
But really it doesn't matter much whether the two men were choosing their words of praise on the spot, without acting, or whether they had had time to think the words up. What mattered was what they said, and it was very instructive.
Mr Morgan was the more blatant in letting the world know that he was stunned. The message from both men was that they had expected Susan's performance to be as nondescript as her appearance was lacking in glamour.
Sense of entitlement
By emphasising these previous low expectations, they underlined their subsequent large-heartedness in praising her to the skies.
Many commentators were able to spot that both men were suffering from an overdeveloped sense of entitlement, in which, while expecting the rest of us to admire them because they were so ready to admit they had been wrong, we would not despise them for having held such low expectations merely because the lady was not a glamour puss.
With those commentators I was in agreement. The conceit shown by Mr Morgan and Mr Cowell was deeply off-putting and if I had been on a special judging panel to judge the judges I would have told both of them to beware, because a name made from giving opinions in a television studio is a name written in water.
There is no more perfect recipe for self-delusion than to suppose that being a television personality is some kind of achievement in itself. The best insurance to stop it happening is to keep a recording of say, Beethoven's 7th Symphony nearby in order to remind yourself of what an actual achievement is.
Susan was a lot closer to the world of achievement, as opposed to the world of mere celebrity, than the two men. But right here is the area where the commentators have not yet gone, and ought to. Because the laws of nature had not been repealed, only momentarily jolted, and it remains a law of nature that appearance is a factor even in the world of serious singing.
The judges of Britain's Got Talent know quite a lot about the technicalities of putting a song over in a way that Ant and Dec might say wow to, but they don't know much about serious singing, which is a different thing.
Unlikely stimulus
The facts, alas, say that in every opera house in the world the chorus contains at least half a dozen people with voices as good as Susan's, and most of them won't become stars, so all the hoo-hah about Susan's sudden stardom was at least partly illusory, based on the dangerous notion that overnight prominence on television will always change reality permanently.
In the opera house, music ought to matter more than anything but it remains true that one of the reasons people flock to hear Anna Netrebko and Elina Garanca singing together is that they look the part almost as well as they sing it.
Things shouldn't be that way, but strangely enough they have become more and more that way in the last forty years, during the very period when feminism as a train of thought has done so much to educate us about the restrictive nature of expectations based on pulchritude.
When I first started attending Covent Garden in the early 1960s it was still quite common for the soprano to be an unlikely stimulus for the tenor's cries of passion. Today, most of the sopranos look like film stars. It could be said that the more our primitive male prejudices are broken down, the more we all become free. But one of the consequences of freedom is that ticket buyers are free to choose, and it is likely to remain a fact that ticket buyers of both sexes will choose to see the imported dreamboat.
Susan might very well, after this, get a job in the chorus and even sell a lot of records, but if the press expects more than that it could be adding yet another chapter to a long story in which discoveries have been shoved onto the boards to fulfil a role in a fairy story which is fated not to turn out well.
So unless all concerned are very careful there might be a worse injustice on its way for Susan than getting laughed at when she was first exposed to the audience of a show that depends on a regular supply of contestants who are there to be made a fool of. She might be trapped by an even more pitiless expectation: that she will go on being a big star beyond the point where she became a star because she didn't seem as if she could.
Susan's future has undoubtedly been altered but we can only hope it has been altered for the better. At whatever level of musical theatre, there is no automatic equality.
It all depends on people having unequal characteristics, and one of those is appearance, in which there is no justice. In view of that fact, a man might try not to bellow with scorn when he sees a woman he regards as a frump. And then, when he evolves into a man a bit better than that, he can try not to look quite so smug when he congratulates himself for admitting that the frump has done something remarkable, and so on.
I was there to see my generation of males being educated by feminism. I was one of the males who most needed education, and I am all too aware that the process is endless, and can have many setbacks. To many women, our purportedly civilized West still looks like a man's world. Perhaps it always will, and one of the things that freedom has confirmed has been a man's freedom to remain prejudiced.
But in Afghanistan right now there are women risking their lives to protest against religious laws that could mean they would never be allowed to leave the house without their husband's permission.
We might think that nothing could be worse that Mr Morgan generously assuring Susan, and I quote his sensitive words, "Without a doubt, everyone was laughing at you." But it's a free country, we were free to judge the judges, and Susan had her moment of triumph, which she carried off with far more grace than she was shown.

May Holiday

Well not in Scotland so I'm shipping down to Austwick on Wednesday for a week leaving Frank holding the fort here! I hope to get a number of house related tasks done so it is ready for guests at the end of May, the local street market and cuckoo festival!
Attended the Unison LGBT Scottish Committee meeting on Saturday in the City Chambers Edinburgh with inspiring words crafted to the wall in the Mandela Room - "for to be free is not merely to cast off one's chains, but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others". I think it helped with our deliberations and decisions!

Thursday, 16 April 2009

Our Bush

Well the bush that was! Had a feast of gardening down over the Easter holidays in Austwick, not returning in time for a GETRA evening meeting on 16th! Andy was able to come up from Berkshire, a six hour drive, to stay for the Easter weekend and as you can see we were not idle! Andy treated the hedge cutting as "therapy" and I think named every thorn and cut after "colleagues" at work! A stress relief exercise! A somewhat compulsory visit to the pub on Friday got us no further than the main door as it was packed but not to be put off we returned on the Saturday afternoon for a drink and booked in for the Sunday roast lunch! What great weather it was too so the gardening and outdoor pursuits were rewarded by a long lunch and linger in the beer garden talking with visitors and taking in the sunshine!
This pyracantha bush had become a health and safety issue as Andy had fell trying to get past the damn thing, reached out to save himself and sustained cuts and thorns for his effort, so it had to go! Able to get rid of it in the morning fires, so burnt before the neighbours would be up and about! As I said I lingered until Thursday for garden furniture to be delivered and Tim to come back and finish the tree cutting, this is still to be done as again no show. Had a Settle firm come and measure up the house for vertical blinds so waiting for the estimate for this and of course the kitchen is still in the planning stages. In short getting there!

http://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profiles0601/pruning_pyracantha.asp

Friday, 3 April 2009

Happy Easter


While not prescribing to the religious connections, I do wish everyone a "Happy Easter" perhaps I need to keep a routine that is marked in someway by events, I could of course become a pagan and do it that way! However our visit to Austwick was eventful as Frank developed a chest infection and was really not well for the first three days or so. Ironic that the "official" marking of him giving up smoking was 1st April and he has had recurring chest infections and coughing bouts ever since. After some insistence he has a GP appointment but not until 30th April. Why is it that GP's seem to work part time now? Of course they can afford to work part time on the money we are giving practices for every consultation and procedure they undertake. We did manage to get the garden cleared up, had a fire of the debris, dug and fertilised the dormant vegtable patch that is destined for the tatties and generally cleaned the house. The big news is that the kitchen designer came and showed us a fantastic kitchen concept at a fantastic price of £24K - so unless we win the lottery it will not happen! While we were down we managed a couple of visits to the "Game Cock Inn" for the French night meal special and a drink with most of the staff of their night off! Some reward for the work we did and Eric the owner asked if we would work for him as he had a busy Thursday night - we headed to Kirkcaldy instead!
Back in Kirkcaldy and it is so depressing! The High Street shops seem to be falling as a result of the credit crunch and closing so consequently the folk are looking glum!
ANyway back to Austwick perhaps with Gordon again, but probably on my own, to continue the gardening and house-keeping. Hope the weather forecast is going to the kind!