Basque Music, Poems Featured at Monday Night Performance – Sheridan Media



Music from the Basque people will be performed Monday night at the Johnson County Library in Buffalo.

Presented by Worlds of Music and the Johnson County Historical Society, the band OSPA will perform music of the Basque country and of the Basque immigrant communities of the American West, focusing on Basque community dance music and songs and poems from a 19th century Basque troubadour.

David Romtvedt will also present from The Tree of Gernika, a book of translations by Romtvedt that includes thirty-nine poems and songs that includes the title song “The Tree of Gernika” which has long served as the unofficial national anthem of the Basque Country and of Basque communities worldwide.

Supported in part by a grant from the Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund, a program of the Department of State Parks and Cultural Resources.

The presentation will be Monday night beginning at 7:30 at the library, and the public is invited to attend.


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Play music while shielding against viruses


“This device is also accompanied by a mobile app that can inform users of instant air quality information. The whole set of Airvida T1 enables everyone to enjoy both clean air and fresh music wherever they go.”

People have increasingly shown concerns over air-related issues and Airvida T1 claims to address those worries.

Through ible’s unique Breathing Pathway Eco Ion Technology, Airvida T1 produces negative ions which can attach to approaching harmful airborne particles and turn them into bigger and heavier chunks that will then fall to the ground.

By this mechanism, it can remove 99.9 percent of pollen, allergens, PM2.5, and 99.7 percent of viruses including COVID-19. 

Instant Air Quality Index

Airvida T1 comes with the Airvida Connect app that offers instant AQI (Air Quality Index), PM2.5, and pollen information based on users’ locations.

The app sends a notification about air quality every morning to prepare users for the air pollutants and allergens they may encounter during the day. 

The Airvida Connect app.

Despite its purifying activities, the music-listening experience of Airvida T1 is surprisingly not compromised. It adopts hybrid active noise-canceling technology to let users focus on their tune without the disturbance of external noises. 

Airvida T1 also provides speedy and stable connectivity to users’ smartphones through the latest Bluetooth 5.3. In addition, Airvida T1’s consumer-focused design makes it fit various occasions. 

Each earbud weighs only 9.5 grams and is comfortable to wear for hours. The battery can last for five hours when both air purifying and music playing operate (more than 24 hours when only turning on the air purifying function). 

Startup Shows Off Pillow That Detects Snoring and Automatically Adjusts Your Head


“With Motion Pillow, metal music becomes classical music.”

Nose Metal

Snorers, rejoice! A startup has developed a pillow that they say detects snoring while a user is sleeping, and then physically moving their head in a bid to stop the ghastly noise, hopefully allowing snorers’ partners to get a good night sleep without the need for a mouthguard or headgear-laden machines.

The device, dubbed the Motion Pillow, seems pretty cool. According to the company’s absolutely wild ride of a website, it first uses machine learning to detect the sound of the users’ snoring, perfecting its profile over time.

When it detects snoring during the night, the pillow jumps into action, inflating to adjust the position of the user’s head. If the snoring subsides, the pillow deflates. Everyone, romantic partners especially, are happy.

“With Motion Pillow,” reads the startup’s site, which additionally claims that 93.7 percent of users experienced reduced snoring in clinical trials, “metal music becomes classical music.”

High Tech Dad

While reviews online are scarce, we did find one on a site called High Tech Dad that gave a glowing assessment of the device.

“From testing with my wife for about a week, I can say her snoring was not only reduced in volume but also in frequency,” le tech daddy in question wrote in praise of Motion Pillow. “This innovative device detects snoring and then magically inflates airbags inside the memory foam pillow to gently raise the snorer’s head slightly to prevent or reduce snoring.”

Magical-sounding indeed! And while our allegedly high tech father figure is aware of the product’s above-average-for-a-pillow price tag, he seems to think it’s worth it.

“While is it a bit pricy,” the techno daddio offered, “being able to get a better sleep, either as the snorer or the person next to them is worth the price.”

In any case, we’ve yet to try it, but it was a 2023 Consumer Technology Association Innovation Awards Honoree. Plus, snoring is a legitimate issue for a lot of folks — couples especially — out there. If you’ve got roughly 400 extra beans in the bank and either you or your partner struggle with, as Motion Pillow would say, “nose metal,” we wouldn’t blame you for giving it a whirl.

More on good sleep: Crypto Guy Says He’s Doing Fine After Losing Billions of Customers’ Money, Getting Plenty of Sleep

Costume designer Mitchell Travers on country music style


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If you’ve been reaching for cowboy boots and hats lately, you’re not alone. With the long-awaited return of Yellowstone and debuts of spinoffs like 1923 and 1883, designers and consumers alike have been inspired to shop functional, well-made clothes with a western flair. Among the list of shows making waves is Showtime’s latest miniseries, George & Tammy, starring Michael Shannon and Academy Award winner Jessica Chastain as legendary country artists George Jones and Tammy Wynette.

Watch George & Tammy on Showtime

So, what are we wearing? Subscribe to Reviewed’s weekly Style Check newsletter to get the answers from stylish people.

As an intimate portrait of the life and love of Jones and Wynette, the series also serves as an interrogation of some of their most iconic style statements. Below, costume designer Mitchell Travers shares his top points of inspiration from four decades of fashion and how he chose to honor the work of these country music icons.

Stepping back in time with vintage country western style

Designing on-screen—and on-stage—styles for Chastain and Shannon was no easy feat, given the still-dedicated fans of the two historic singers the actors portray. “Building the costumes for this took a tremendous amount of research,” says Travers. “Anytime you’re working with a built-in fan base, it’s really important that you understand them and respect what came before you.” That research involved watching every recorded interview he could find of the duo, watching copious documentaries about ‘60s country music culture and interviewing stylists and tailors that dressed Jones and Wynette. Travers even did deeper research through conversations with Georgette Jones, daughter of the famed couple. 

What results is a careful study of what Jones and Wynette wore on stage and in their private moments, what their fans wore to their concerts and the role of color and style in mythmaking. Travers’ costumes are not just a historic recreation, but a lesson in how performance wear can be incorporated into even the most simple everyday outfits. “There’s a fearlessness that comes from country music that I think we could take a lesson from,” says Travers. “Rock and roll gets a lot of credit for having its own aesthetic, but I think country is an equal match.”

Recreating Tammy Wynette’s iconic looks for a modern audience

Dressing Jessica Chastain as the “Stand By Your Man” songstress meant that Travers went deep into a Tammy Wynette wormhole while working on this project. It was essential to the designer that he wasn’t just looking at photographs and videos, but really trying to get a grasp on who Tammy Wynette actually was. “I wanted to understand the different performances because listening to Tammy sing ‘Stand By Your Man’ through different eras of her life—it’s a different song that takes on very different meanings for her. It was really important to get to know the song like she got to know the song.”

An equally complex understanding of Wynette’s sense of personal style was also deeply important to Travers. Plagued by health issues throughout much of her later life, the way Tammy Wynette chose to dress was often a reflection of a fraught relationship with her own body. “It was really important to understand how she saw her body,” says Travers. “She was obviously a very sensual woman. She loved really simple styles that had a little bit of form and a little bit of skin, but never anything racy.”

For the screen, Travers portrays Wynette in dynamic costumes including monochromatic ensembles with glamorous textures for stage performances and classic silhouettes with timeless style during intimate scenes. Each costume serves as a time capsule of period-appropriate trends combined with Wynette’s own perspective, highly stylized and designed for visual impact.

Interested in adding some Tammy-inspired style to your wardrobe? Start with a classic ruffle dress like the Dokotoo Women’s Deep V Neck Ruffle Long Sleeve Floral Print Mini Dress. Available in 35 feminine prints in women’s sizes XS to XXL, the dress features ruffle details, a chic mini length, along with full, billowing sleeves that’ll add drama to any look. Pair the dress with leather cowboy boots and dainty accessories for a look that’s classic county without being too on-the-nose. Fans of the dress suggest sizing up for extra comfort and coverage, but the majority of the over 18,000 reviews are overwhelmingly positive.

From $40 at Amazon 

It’s hard to imagine a country performance that doesn’t incorporate fringe, but according to Travers, it’s a style element that Wynette really only relied upon in her later years. “One of the stylists I’d spoken with did a lot of work with Tammy in the nineties and he was telling me that everything had fringe. And it’s funny when you look at those photos—she was really in her fringe era.” 

If a fringe era feels right for you, look no further than the Twist & Shout Vegan Shacket from Blank NYC. This jacket comes movement-ready with dynamic fringe across the back that extends down both sleeves. Pair the jacket with jeans and sneakers for an easy day look, or wear it with a form-fitting dress for an evening look that’s stylish and contemporary. Shop the Twist & Shout jacket in six colors in women’s sizes XS to L.

$128 at Free People

For a twist on a classic blouse, try the Reclaimed Vintage Inspired cropped embroidered shirt with collar from Asos. Made in a cropped style with an oversized collar and puffed sleeves, pair this sweet top with denim and boots for a western flair or with a high-waisted dirndl skirt for a more demure elegant style. Shop the shirt in women’s sizes 0 to 12.

$46 at Asos

Bold and dedicated: George Jones’ undeniable style

In speaking with the image-makers who dressed Jones, Travers discovered just how committed the singer was to crafting his own idea of country-star style. One of Jones’ tailors recalled an instance where the star came into the shop and ordered 30 identical suits in different fabrics and colors. “He was definitely a man who took a lot of pride in his appearance,” says Travers. “A legendary story that I was told from Peanutt Montgomery himself is that they used to have go-bags ready for George. Outfits that were put together just in case they got on a plane or a bus.”

And yet, the most interesting point of entry to Jones’ dynamic wardrobe wasn’t when he was at the height of his fame, but in the moments when he was challenged. “Who is George Jones without the color-coordinated rhinestone-embroidered suits?” asks Travers. “Or, what is Tammy like when she’s making a birthday cake for the kids?” The intimate moments that were hidden from the public are where Travers had the most fun with this project, resulting in a cadre of costumes that feature Jones’ classic and famous performance style contrasted by well-made basics for off-stage moments.

To sprinkle some of Jones’ country flavor into your own clothes, Travers suggests investing in dependable wardrobe stalwarts. “I think having really great, well-made staples can give your closet a long way to go; staples that you can put basics around like your go-to coat, your go-to belt and your go-to boots. That’s the sort of stuff that makes it really feel like a signature.” 

A dependable pair of boots is the ideal place to begin building a George Jones-inspired wardrobe. Try on The Cartwright from Tecovas for size, which uses a classic cowboy boot design that will look just as elegant decades from now. Available in soft calfskin, bovine, or goat leather in men’s whole and half shoe sizes 7 to 15, these boots aren’t just attractive, but they’re functional too. Don’t be afraid to rough them up as work boots, or dress them up with a pair of bootcut jeans for a classic country twist. Fans of the boots praise their soft leathers and short break-in period.

$275 at Tecovas

If there’s one style lesson to be learned from George & Tammy, it’s that the fellas can have as much fun with their clothes as women. The Coofandy Men’s Western Cowboy Embroidered long Sleeve Button Down Shirt offers a classic embroidered western shirt profile in 32 different colors and patterns in men’s sizes S to XXL. With a shirt this bold, it might be best to tone down the rest of your ensemble so the embroidery can really shine. Keep things simple with a pair of black jeans and boots. Don’t be afraid to throw a blazer on top so the shirt’s embellishments can be more of a treat that peaks through rather than overwhelm the entire look.

From $30 at Amazon

We get it: An embroidered western shirt might be too much of a commitment. But there are easier ways to add Jones’ classic style to your wardrobe—like donning a well-tailored suit in a non-traditional color. It may be a far cry from the Nudie suits that George Jones made famous in the 1960s, but we love the Paisley & Gray Slim Fit Suit Separates Coat from Men’s Wearhouse. The medium-hued brown is a total throwback while still feeling entirely contemporary. Pair the coat with the matching Slim Fit Suit Separates Pants to complete the ensemble. Opt for a simple vibe with a classic white oxford shirt, or go with a bolder print to make more of a statement. Shop the blazer in men’s regular sizes 36 to 56, and the pants in men’s waist sizes 29 to 52.

$190 at Men’s Wearhouse

$80 at Men’s Wearhouse

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Prices were accurate at the time this article was published but may change over time.



We’re hoping to show how mischievous and fun Western classical compositions are, says musician Lars Fischer


On January 9, the Consulate General of Switzerland in Mumbai and the Poona Music Society will present an evening of opera, art song, and chamber music, titled ‘Monteverdi to Sondheim’, as a New Year’s gift to lovers of Western classical music in Pune.

The five performers – tenors Lars Fischer and Sandeep Gurrapadi; soprano Antonia Thwaites; violinist Martha-Maria Mitu and pianist Chiara Naldi – come from different countries, Switzerland, Italy, Romania, the US, the UK, and India.

“We are very excited to be here and to share our passion and love for this music with the audience,” says Lars Fischer. In an emailed interview, he speaks about the range of emotions that can be explored through the pieces during the performance and how mischievous and fun Western classical Masters could be. Excerpts from the interview:

Q. Western classical music is a niche segment in India. How did you design this concert for the Pune audience?

Fischer: A member of our group, Sandeep Gurrapadi, has done many concerts of Western classical music in India. From his experience, the audience was highly interested and excited by the music. However, names such as Beethoven and Mozart are not household names yet as there aren’t many live examples of what their music felt and sounded like. On the occasions when they are performed, it’s usually a very serious matter. So we’re hoping to showcase how mischievous and fun their compositions were.

Q. How did you decide on the pieces for the evening?

Fischer: Initially, we were leaning towards a deep dive into a more obscure repertoire that would have been artistically pushing a boundary. But, this then, would have only catered to an audience that was actively seeking out this sort of music. We, eventually, found a middle ground by having a mix of widely appealing pieces, along with some more overlooked 20th and 21st-century composers. We’re hoping to present a programme that has something for everyone to get immersed in.

Q. What is the spectrum of stories or emotions that the selection of pieces explores?

Fischer: The stories and emotions are manifold and reflect all aspects of human existence: joy, laughter, friendship, love, heartbreak, sadness, impending death, and even a little of what might be after. Though most of the music is several centuries old, the stories are relevant and relatable still today.

The event will be held at Mazda Hall, Pune, on January 9, 2023, from 7 pm onwards and at the Royal Opera House in Mumbai on January 13.



NewJeans reigns in K-pop girl group popularity rankings for January, BLACKPINK follows


NewJeans, BLACKPINK, IVE, LE SSERAFIM, TWICE, Girls’ Generation, (G)I-DLE, Red Velvet, aespa, and Oh My Girl, are the top 10 most famed girl groups in K-pop as of big data collected through the duration of December 8, 2022, to January 8, 2023. A mixture of 2nd, 3rd and 4th generation teams, it is a vibrant list full of different concepts with varied releases and multiple viral moments. Let’s take a look at the reasons why some of these names have come out on top.

ADOR’s first and one of the most talked about debuts of 2022 came through with the quintet, NewJeans. Comprising members Minji, Hanni, Danielle, Haerin, and Hyein, they introduced the world to their concept through their debut eponymous mini-album which included four songs, each of which received rave reviews from the audience, especially for their pre-release singles ‘Attention’ and ‘Hype Boy’. The month of December saw them releasing a pre-release track named ‘Ditto’, which followed a comeback with ‘OMG’ in January. Thus, the girl group grabbed the top position on the January reputation rankings, consistently managing to be the aces. 

BLACKPINK

Members Jisoo, Jennie, Rosé, and Lisa of the YG Entertainment girl group BLACKPINK have been a force to be reckoned with as they take over the world, one step at a time. Following the release of their second studio album ‘BORN PINK’, the girl group embarked on a global tour across USA, and Europe and has now set foot in Asia starting with Thailand. BLACKPINK maintained their second position on the popularity chart this month as the girlies move around the world and become bigger than ever. With the possibility of them headlining the popular music festival, Coachella, this year, the quartet will surely continue to remain among the headlines.

IVE

“Narcissistic, my god, I love it”, IVE has had nothing short of a fabulous year in 2022 as they took over the world with their continuously hit releases. Following a viral breakout with ‘Eleven’, the fans awaited with bated breath to note what charming song would they bring to the table next. And the girls delivered with not just one, but in fact two catchy releases which have gone on to become favourites of K-pop fans worldwide. Their songs have ensued dance challenges and given rise to trends thanks to their top-notch fashion styles, making them take up the third spot on the popularity list for the month of January.

LE SSERAFIM

HYBE’s power-packed rookies have not had an easy year, however, they have continued to make sense of it all with a release that successfully showcased their skills. Grabbing the fourth spot, LE SSERAFIM has continued to stay relevant and amazing. Their latest, ‘ANTIFRAGILE’, has wowed the audiences thanks to a visually pleasing performance angle and the fabulous synchronisation the girls have displayed throughout the promotions. They are ready for a Japanese release next and the fans are awaiting a new side of their charms.

TWICE

The top 5 may have been a little incomplete with their presence as the nine-membered group continues to spread their influence. Having renewed their contracts with JYP Entertainment, TWICE is ready to launch a year full of hit releases starting with their next English single, followed by an album, their 12th EP, in March. The group is looking forward to coming back with their charms through ‘Moonlight Sunrise’ which is hopefully celebrated with another tour. 

Top 30 most popular girl groups in January 2023

The first month of the year has been in the favour of the K-pop girl groups and we hope the same continues to the end. Here’s a look at the list of the 30 most happening ones whose popularity has been the best.

  1. NewJeans
  2. BLACKPINK
  3. IVE
  4. LE SSERAFIM
  5. TWICE
  6. Girls’ Generation
  7. (G)I-DLE
  8. Red Velvet
  9. aespa
  10. Oh My Girl
  11. MAMAMOO
  12. Apink
  13. LOONA
  14. ITZY
  15. fromis_9
  16. cignature
  17. Girl’s Day
  18. WJSN
  19. Kep1er
  20. Brave Girls
  21. STAYC
  22. EXID
  23. APRIL
  24. MOMOLAND
  25. Dreamcatcher
  26. woo!ah!
  27. NMIXX
  28. LABOUM
  29. Ladies’ Code
  30. Brown Eyed Girls

While 2022 became known as the year of the girl groups, we look forward to another super prosperous year!

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Hear “Nostalgia” by singer Carly Butler – Aipate


Carly Butler is a burgeoning singer-songwriter you should get to know. The Los Angeles-based Atlanta native is a professionally trained musician who holds a Bachelors Degree in Music & Voice.

She exhibits her talent one song a time. Her latest release is an indie-pop track called “Nostalgia”. The song exemplifies her dream pop/R&B sound which will be fully served on her upcoming EP.

“Nostalgia” captures the feeling of being in an emotional crisis. Listen to it and follow Carly Butler on Instagram.



The paradox of Alan Watts


There’s an advert for cruise holidays on television at the moment. It’s all dolphins and dining halls and laughing women flashing their teeth. Above the tinkly swelling music is a familiar voice. It’s the kind of clear English accent that might remind you of a compelling history teacher or vicar. ‘I wonder, I wonder, what you would do if you had the power to dream any dream you wanted to dream,’ he says. ‘You would, I suppose, start out by fulfilling all your wishes, love affairs, banquets, wonderful journeys. And after you’d done that for some time, you’d forget that you were dreaming.’ 

The voice belongs to Alan Watts. He’s a strange choice for a cruise advertisement. Watts was a sixties hippie, a Zen Buddhist pop philosopher who sought to soothe the anxieties of the newly tuned in. Competitively priced holiday packages are not, you’d have thought, a central part of Zen Buddhist teaching. Dig out the full quote and you’ll find that Watts’s words have been edited to remove their true meaning. But nobody really cares. 

Watts died 50 years ago this year. Yet British googlers still search for him more often than they do Justin Welby. Van Morrison has written songs about Watts and Johnny Depp is reportedly a follower. The creators of South Park, ​​Trey Parker and Matt Stone, were so taken with Watts that they created a DVD animation series to accompany his lectures. Watts’s voice has been used for a sleep aid app, his little slivers of eastern wisdom interspersed into endless loops of ambient music. In 2017, an indie game called Everything was released using snippets of Watts’s lectures as part of the score. Players controlled a developing universe, directing planets, flowers and atoms as Watts spoke about the nature of the world. 

Watts seems perfect for the internet age, even if he died before it. His lectures can easily be broken up into little minute-long chunks, perfect for the limited attention spans of the screen-addled masses. His ideas, too, speak to that typical westerner who likes to describe him or herself as spiritual but not religious. The type of person who dislikes organised religion but thinks there might be something beyond the mortal realm.

Watts hints at the something of Buddhism but never commits to the religion in its full form. For him, the point of faith is liberation; liberation from anxiety and from stultifying western individualism. His credo was individualistic, however, in that he simply picked the bits of faith he liked. The more you listen to his lectures, the more you’ll feel the effects of a kind of sugar-rush philosophy. He was criticised in his lifetime for a lack of commitment to basic Zen practices such as meditation. One can imagine his listeners discovering a sense of clarity as Watts spoke, only to feel it fade as they went back to their everyday lives.

Watts was born on 6 January 1915 in Chislehurst; his father worked for the Michelin tyre company and his mother Emily was a housewife. His maternal grandfather had been a missionary in the Far East and had left Emily a residual Christianity as well as an appreciation for the Orient. Watts’s biographer, Monica Furlong, writes that his mother and her desiccated faith most influenced him: ‘It was not so much that Emily herself had taken on rigid beliefs – she might have been much more cheerful if she had – as that she had been force-fed with them, and had lived with an uneasy and half-digested religion ever since.’ Watts would later say that he had nothing approaching an Oedipus complex, knowing his mother to be kind and generous and yet he felt a sense of unease towards her. 

Emily had decorated the family’s sitting room with objects brought home by her father from his missionary work; an Indian coffee table, Korean and Chinese vases and Japanese cushions. Part of the Watts mythology is that he suffered sickness as a child and was engulfed in an oriental fever dream. He was sent to an Oxfordshire prep school in his early teens. ‘A school for aristocrats,’ Watts said, ‘attended by relatives of the royal family, of the imperial House of Russia, of the Rajas of India, and sons of industrial tycoons. There was even a boy who had been buggered by an Arab prince.’ Sexuality seems to be a constant in Watts’s childhood. Part of his dislike for his mother was a sense that she was uneasy with her own body. Another was her obsession with his childhood constipation. Inevitably he hated both his prep school and later King’s College Canterbury, for their ‘militarism and… subtle, but not really overt, homosexuality’.

At 15 he applied to the London Buddhist Lodge, run by the eccentric QC Christmas Humphreys, who would one day become a judge at the Old Bailey. Watts learnt from Humphreys a sort of courtroom style of speech, a syntax that implies logical coherence even when lacking, and a cadence that leaves the listener feeling as though he is being carried along by an inevitable argument. In 1936, at the age of 21, Watts met the Zen Buddhist scholar D. T. Suzuki. Along with Humphreys, it was ‘these three men as much as any who introduced Buddhism to the English-speaking world in the 1940s and 50s,’ according to Buddhist journal Tricycle

The following year Watts married Eleanor Everett, the daughter of another influential Zen Buddhist from Chicago, and in 1938, Watts and a pregnant Everett left for America. The couple settled into a middle-class New York circle of painters and psychoanalysts but an unhappiness set in. Peculiarly, given his interest in Buddhism, Watts enlisted in an Episcopal seminary in Illinois and attempted to combine elements of Christianity with eastern philosophy. ‘I chose priesthood because it was the only formal role of western society into which, at the time, I could even begin to fit,’ he wrote. He was ordained in 1944 and continued his ill-fitting ministry for another six years. His life in the Church, and his personal life, fell apart when his wife began sleeping with a man ten years her junior. Watts allowed her young lover to move in, a shocking decision for a priest even by modern standards. Eventually, Watts agreed to annul their marriage on the grounds that he was a ‘sexual pervert’. 

Like so many 20th century outsiders and wanna-be mystics, he moved to California. He began broadcasting lectures from a San Francisco radio station and soon developed a following, finding a new lover in the poet Jean Burden as well as marrying another woman in 1950, Dorothy DeWitt, with whom he had five children, to add to the two he had with Everett. He would later divorce DeWitt too, justifying his decision by saying that ‘dutiful love is, invariably, if secretly, resented by both partners to the arrangement,’ adding that partners could learn to live with the suffering but that ‘such wisdom may also be learned in a concentration camp’.

Watts’s philosophy is difficult to define. He spoke in aphorisms, linguistically clear but conceptually fragmented reflections on the contradictions of human experience. He rejected the idea of the individual and spoke of the ‘European dissociation’, the feeling of oneself as an outsider in a hostile world. Instead, he argued, we are all the universe and any sense of one’s own desires or exertions are merely an expression of the singular universe unfolding. 

In one lecture, Watts explains: ‘As you cannot conceive, possibly, of the existence of a living body with no environment, that is the clue that the two are basically one… You are both what you do and what happens to you.’

It is a strange argument, You can easily imagine an environment without humans. How is it then that nature and human experience can be described as one and the same? But his pronouncements aren’t designed to be logically analysed. It’s a philosophy of vibes. 

Over the next decade he drifted in and out of academic institutions, wrote his most popular book The Way of Zen and grew his standing on the lecture circuit. In 1958 he returned to Europe to promote his book but found England weary and uninviting, especially the Cambridge theology department where he was welcomed as something of an oddball. In Switzerland he was introduced to Carl Jung, with whom he discussed the collective unconscious, an idea, he noted, that was similar to the Buddhist alaya-vijnana. Watts spent much of his time in Zurich with a ‘hopelessly psychotic’ woman called Sonya, a dalliance that even Watts regretted, according to his biographer Furlong.

Morality, for Watts, goes the same way as the individual – a false and restrictive concept dreamed up by wayward westerners. Ethics, Watts said, is ‘a part of the universe, it’s a way of playing the human game. But the thing itself is really beyond good and evil.’ 

In 1964 he married Mary Jane Yates King and struck up another affair with a Jungian analyst, June Singer. Watts’s performance as a father was by his own admission poor: ‘By all the standards of this society I have been a terrible father… I have no patience with the abstract notion of “the child”.’ At the age of 18, he offered each of his children a tab of LSD and guided them through the experience. Thanks Dad. 

The collapsing of the individual and the universe into a single entity gave Watts all sorts of get-outs. On psychedelics, he seemed at first reluctant to endorse them, saying that mystical experience is too easy if it ‘simply comes out of a bottle’. But the reticence soon subsided because, he said, such concerns rest on a ‘semantic confusion as to the definitions of spiritual and material’. It’s all one, so what does it matter if you meditate your way to enlightenment or simply blitz your brain with several tabs of acid? 

Watts would eventually go on to become a central part of the American counter-culture. In 1967 he brought together the ecologist Gary Snyder, Timothy Leary, author of The Psychedelic Experience, and the paedophile beat poet Allen Ginsberg at the so-called Houseboat Summit. That meeting would come to define the psychedelic utopianism of late-sixties drop-out America, encouraging the young and disaffected to abandon the institutions of modern society and also to take a lot of drugs. In the typically paranoid style of both utopians and those addled by LSD, Ginsberg and Leary warned that a ‘new fascism’ was planning to lock them all up and that the hippie movement faced a ‘concentration camp situation’. Snyder, a close friend of Watts, later said that his writing had become staid, that Watts was going in philosophical circles and failing to meet his potential. 

A fellow Buddhist priest, James Ishmael Ford, met Watts in 1969 at a Zen monastery in Oakland. He was unimpressed:

I was enormously excited to actually meet this famous man, the great interpreter of the Zen way. Wearing my very best robes (OK, I only had two sets, one for warm weather, the other for cold), I waited for him to show up; and waited and waited. Nearly an hour later, Watts arrived dressed in a kimono, accompanied by a fawning young woman and an equally fawning young man. It was hard not to notice his interest in the young woman who, as a monk, I was embarrassed to observe, seemed not to be wearing any underwear. I was also awkwardly aware that Watts seemed intoxicated.

There is a sense of knowing in Watts, a kind of overt character contradiction in which he played the raconteur eastern mystic. Aldous Huxley described him as ‘a curious man. Half monk and half racecourse operator,’ a description that Watts reportedly enjoyed. He happily called himself a ‘spiritual entertainer’. In The Book on the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are, Watts writes that the idea of ‘“just little me” who “came into this world” and lives temporarily in a bag of skin is a hoax and a fake.’ He too seemed to see himself as something of a fake, keen to tell his listeners that he was little more than a mischief maker. The result was often a sense of absurdity. In one lecture he attempted to make a serious point, before veering off into self-promotion: ‘If you read the Bible, which is a very dangerous book, as I’m going to be demonstrating in Playboy this December…’ The audience laughed almost as hard as Watts.

By the early 1970s, he had moved to Druid Heights, a hippie commune just north of the San Francisco bay, and was sinking a bottle of vodka a day. Descriptions of his life are sad and chaotic; he was still able to deliver his lectures but when it came to questions from the audience he appeared confused and unable to answer. His first child Joan recounted coming to meet him before one of his lectures and finding Watts hopelessly drunk. He agreed to let her drive him to the lecture but insisted that they stop to buy more vodka. When asked why he drank so much, Watts replied ‘When I drink I don’t feel so alone.’ 

In 1973, Watts died at Druid Heights aged 58. He had been waiting to give evidence in his son’s trial for drug and other offences, something he found deeply distressing. His wife, who also had a drinking problem, mostly brought on by Watts, believed he had been practising a Zen breathing technique and had managed to leave his body but was unable to return. He was found at 6 a.m. By 8.30 a.m., a team of Buddhist monks had placed his body on a funeral pyre at a nearby beach. Shortly before his death, he had written to his third wife saying that ‘the secret of life is knowing when to stop’.

Today, Watts’s legacy is studiously continued by his son, Mark. He is the director of the Alan Watts Organization and, together with five other employees, they digitise Watts’s extensive catalogue of lecture recordings. They are also responsible for licensing this content so that it can appear in adverts and podcasts and Netflix documentaries. 

The organisation says on its website that it exists, in part, to protect ‘Alan’s material from over-use and monetization by profiteers’. The same material that was used in that cruise holiday advert. Mark Watts himself has appeared in a car advert, extolling the genius of his father while flogging the new Volvo X90. Those who wish to listen to the complete Alan Watts collection need only hand over $360. Or, if that appears too steep, you can instead purchase the ‘essential lectures’ for a mere $80. Much like Watts Snr, there’s something hucksterish about the whole enterprise. I don’t doubt the sincerity of his son – he has dutifully tried to preserve his father’s recordings – but he has also successfully made a career out of his father’s legacy. 

For a man who bemoaned individualism, Watts’s treatment of his wives and children was staggeringly selfish. He seemed at times to see them as playthings and at worst irritating obstructions. Yet throughout his life, there is little sense of menace. He does not seem to have been a cruel man, only lost. 

His real skill was a sort of easy profundity, one that appeals especially to young western minds chafing against the world. Take this section from The Joyous Cosmology, a book about how LSD helped Watts discover the link between western science and eastern philosophy, in which he criticised the: 

compartmentalisation of religion and science as if they were two quite different and basically unrelated ways of seeing the world. I do not think this state of doublethink can last. It must eventually be replaced by a view of the world which is neither religious nor scientific but simply a view of the world.

The confidence with which Watts makes these grand philosophical statements is breathtaking. But sometimes this inclination towards sweeping statements ends up sounding absurd. Early on in his autobiography, Watts writes: ‘One of the major taboos of our culture is against realising that vegetables are intelligent’. He then goes on to tie panpsychism with evolutionary theories about the advantage of sweetness in fruit. It’s all brilliantly wacky. 

His philosophy is also reductionist. Those things you thought separate and discrete are really just one and the same. It’s reassuring. Watts breaks down boundaries and tells the believer: things are simpler and more unified than you might think. And you are one of just a few who truly understand.

Yet his relationship with Zen Buddhism was almost as distant as the one with his family. Many current Buddhists now consider Watts’s understanding of their faith to be limited, even wrong in places. James Ishmael Ford recounts a lecture he attended with another Buddhist priest who was asked about Watts:

The priest sighed. Apparently he had heard this question before. And then said, ‘I know there’s a lot of controversy about Alan Watts and what he really understood about Zen.’ He paused. And then added, ‘But, you know. Without Alan Watts, I wouldn’t be here’.

That’s perhaps his real legacy. Watts managed to bring Zen Buddhism, however mangled, to the western world. It was through him that the casually interested were first switched on to eastern thought. But the tragedy of Watts was that in trying to avoid the horrors of stale old England, he became an early version of the new western man: more attuned to his own inner life and more unhappy because of it. Despite that, he managed to make a decent living. Only in the West can you drop out and cash in. 

Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach celebrates 10th anniversary



In a sold-out concert Tuesday, the society will present string octets by Mendelssohn and Bruch.

A home for future superstars of music, a place for schoolchildren and the elderly alike to find cultural nourishment, and a rehearsal space where young string quartets could be coached to ascend from the quotidian to the empyrean. 

Is that too much to ask from a modest chamber music concert series based in Palm Beach? 

Not according to Vicki Kellogg, who founded the Chamber Music Society of Palm Beach, or to Ahmad Mayes, the organization’s executive director. 

The society plans a special concert Tuesday to mark its 10th anniversary, and with a budget in the black and the successful launch of a second concert series far from home, organizers are thinking big about the years ahead, including finding a space for the society that could also operate as an educational center. 

“We don’t have huge productions, and we run this organization very, very tightly,” Kellogg said Friday. “We’re very fortunate.” 

The sold-out concert, set for 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Norton Museum of Art, features two string octets; that is, chamber music pieces for eight players. The two octets each are scored for four violins, two violas, a cello and a double bass.  

Performing the violin parts will be celebrated violinist James Ehnes and Arnaud Sussmann, artistic director of the CMSPB, along with Amy Schwartz-Moretti and Grace Park; the violists will be Paul Neubauer and Brian Chen; Nicholas Canellakis will handle the cello duties; and Blake Hinson will play bass. 

The program consists of the best-known of all such pieces, the Octet (in E-flat, Op. 20) by Felix Mendelssohn, who wrote the work in 1825, when he was just 16 years old. By contrast, the other octet is a product of advanced age: The little-known Octet (in B-flat, Op. posth.) by Max Bruch was written in 1919 and completed in early 1920, when the German Romantic composer was 82. Bruch died later that year. The Octet was not performed until 1937, and it had to wait until 1996 to appear in published form.  

The Chamber Music Society hosted its first concert in November 2013 at Mar-a-Lago when the classical guitarist Milos Karadaglic presented a recital of music chiefly by South American composers. Since then, it has presented more than 100 artists, the society says, including internationally known performers such as Ehnes and the Israeli pianist Inon Barnatan, plus members of major symphonic ensembles including the Cleveland and Philadelphia orchestras, and the New York Philharmonic.  

Last year, the society inaugurated the Boscobel Chamber Music Festival at the Boscobel House and Gardens, a historic early 19th-century house museum site north of New York City. The Emerson String Quartet, which is ending its career this year after 47 years, was featured in that festival, which drew about 1,000 people. A second festival is planned for this coming September, and it, too, will feature a major string quartet as a centerpiece of the music-making. 

“Chamber music has always been my greatest love as a musician, and in my day there weren’t that many chamber music societies,” said Kellogg, who studied the violin at Juilliard with Dorothy DeLay, at the New England Conservatory with Joseph Silverstein, and at Indiana University with Ruggiero Ricci. The Chamber Music Society at Lincoln Center had just been formed when Kellogg was a student in New York (she now sits on its board), and lions of the genre such as the Guarneri Quartet were the biggest names on the chamber music scene. 

The chamber music genre has its origins in aristocratic circles, but by the mid-18th century, music for small forces of instrumentalists — violin sonatas, piano sonatas, string trios and quartets — grew rapidly in popularity by finding a ready market in a new urban middle class that was interested in playing music at home. The great Viennese triumvirate of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven took chamber music to a much higher level as they poured some of their most profound thoughts into the forms. 

“The average person doesn’t know anything about chamber music. They get their first taste of classical music with Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony or [Tchaikovsky’s] ‘1812 Overture,’ and then they seem to segue to opera, maybe because it’s the closest thing to Broadway musicals,” Kellogg said, adding that when she invited a new acquaintance to a chamber music concert, “she had to Google ‘what’s chamber music?’”  

But when they encounter it, that’s a different story. 

“When they come to chamber music, they find something that really feeds the soul,” she said. 

The society has crafted a three-year strategic plan with a new mission statement that is broader than just a desire to present great concerts, Mayes said Friday. 

“The mission, if you boil it down, is creating transformation, connection and inspiration,” he said. 

That means the performer in a chamber music setting is “an extremely important vehicle to a connected society,” Mayes said. “When I ask people why they come to our concerts, they tell me that this is already happening.”   

Central to that notion is diversity and inclusion, said Mayes, who came to the CMSPB in 2021 from his post as education director for the Cincinnati Symphony, the first major American orchestra to appoint a diversity and inclusion officer. The current effort to widen the field of classical music to include previously marginalized voices such as women and people of color, both as performers and writers, is the biggest story in the industry today.   

“Our job right now is to seek out performers and seek out composers that will represent the community we hope to attract,” he said. That’s a long-term project, he added, and he hopes that observers will look at the society 50 years from now and see that progress. 

“We want to be more connected to the society of the day, and less of a museum or a ‘preservatory,’ more of a reflection of society as it currently is,” Mayes said, which includes an informal approach at the concerts that “allows the art to be appreciated for what it is without the (societal) constructs that have been built around it over time. 

“It’s building a community, so that when someone comes to our concerts, they feel like they belong, that it’s not a stuffy experience. The other day, Arnaud told the audience, ‘You can clap whenever you want to,’ and I loved that,” he said. 

In a bid to diversify its audience, the CMSPB’s February concert is a performance by violinist Charles Yang and pianist Peter Dugan, multi-genre artists whose program, “Ravel to the Beatles,” explores the connections between a host of musical styles. Yang and Dugan’s concert is set for 7 p.m. Feb. 15 at the Norton Museum. 

The Norton is the primary concert venue for the society these days, but the organization would like one day to be concertizing in a home of its own, where it could present and expand its educational outreach. Mayes said the group currently does about seven to eight school visits each season, but wants to triple that in the years ahead. 

Kellogg also would like the society to commission new works, and wants to add more video capability, also for educational purposes. 

“And then, of course, I’d love to have a place, a home for us,” she said, where schoolchildren could come and learn from the musicians. “We’d love to have a young artists’ program, a rising stars program for the person who is just getting ready for the mainstage.”  

Ultimately, a director of education would be hired and the society could also host visits from eminent violin makers, she said. 

In short, a great deal of outer-directed activity for a music that at its heart is the most intimate and private in the art form. A “dear friend” of Kellogg’s put the difference between chamber music and other genres this way: 

“’There’s entertainment, and then there’s ‘inner-tainment,’” she said. 

IF YOU GO 

Tuesday’s 10th anniversary celebration at the Norton Museum of Art is sold out. Tickets are available for the Charles Yang-Peter Dugan concert, titled “Bridges: Ravel to the Beatles,” set for 7 p.m. Feb. 15 at the Norton. Tickets are $75. Visit www.cmspb.org or call 561-379-6773 for more information.  

Orville Peck celebrates his birthday back home in South Africa



South African singer, Orville Peck.

Photo: Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

  • Country music star Orville Peck is celebrating his birthday in Limpopo.
  • The South African born singer calls it his “favourite place on Earth”.
  • Peck previously told News24 he misses South Africa a lot.

One of the world’s hottest country music superstars is celebrating his birthday back home.

Orville Peck is known for his fringed mask and whiskey smooth voice. Since the release of his debut album, Pony, in 2019 he’s become a global sensation. He’s worked with well-known stars like Beyoncé, Harry Styles, and Diplo.

Very few know that the tattooed mystery man is from South Africa and was born in Johannesburg.

“My family left South Africa in 2002 because my father got a job opportunity in Canada. We were really struggling financially. We are all very, very proudly South African, and it was really difficult for us to leave. I think my whole family sort of had it in the back of our heads that we would always go back someday because it’s our home,” Orville previously told News24’s Bronwyn McKay in an exclusive interview.

He added, “It’s still my favourite place I’ve ever lived. Maybe I’m biased. I miss the food. I miss game drives. I miss wildlife. I grew up loving animals so much and spent many, many memories as a child going to the Kruger and the Pilanesberg.”

Diplo and Orville Peck.

Photo: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images via AFP)

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That is exactly how the muso decided to start off the new year and celebrate his birthday. Posting a photo of himself in Mbabat, Limpopo, he wrote, “Hello, howdy and thank you for all the kind birthday wishes. I got to spend it in my favourite place on earth – out in the bushveld. Love y’all Xo OP [SIC].”

Peck told News24 that his favourite homemade treats include biltong, koeksisters, and milk tart. “I love biltong, and, actually, my brother makes his own biltong, which is really, really good. I love koeksisters, and my mother makes an amazing milk tart! I also have a potjie pot in my house. Everyone thinks it’s like a witch’s cauldron when they come over; they don’t understand what it is.”

How old is Peck? Well, that’s a secret he’ll never tell.

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