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| #21772 - 28/10/2016 04:05  Re: Mellemrummet
[Re: RoseMarie] |  
| 
|   veteran
 | Registeret:  04/04/2008 Indlæg: 3512
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Her Jim Morrisons requiem, oden til Brian Jones som døde to år før han selv skulle findes liggende i et parisisk badekar, som en tilbagevenden til fostertilstandens urmusik, på vej til møde med muserne på signaltrommens allersidste beat… 
 Digtet her ligger i samlingen ”Wilderness, the lost writings of Jim Morrison”, som er en mosaik af fine prosadigte, arbejdet der dannede grund for en inciterende musik der stadig fylder mange af os med beundring. I alt 7 frydefulde albums, 1600 sider med lyrik/digte, anekdoter, historier, essays og manuskripter, blev det til.
 I prologen ridses enkelte forhold op i et forklarende lys. Selv ville jeg sikkert have nydt også at kunne snage lidt i tankerne fra hans tidligere notesbøger (fra High School/College-tiden), men det var nok meget smart tænkt, netop at overlade det til folk selv at åbne dørene gennem poesien, hans værktøj – forholdt vi os alle mere konsekvent til selve arbejdet nogen efterlader sig, ville denne fjollede idoldyrkelse der årligt konsumerer så mange sind, muligvis ha’ været betydeligt mindre, hvortil kommer at tusinder af politikere og journalister nok måtte finde sig et andet arbejde, Donald & Daisy ingen undtagelse! Det er i al fald fuldt forståeligt at så mange kaster sig i døden fra berømmelsens tinde.
 Vidunderligt er det at vandre i Wilderness’ tankeslotte, hans egne delt med os:
 
 Ode to LA
 while thinking of
 Brian Jones, Deceased
 
 I’m a resident of a city
 They’ve just picked me to play
 The Prince of Denmark
 
 Poor Ophelia
 
 All those ghosts he never saw
 Floating to doom
 On an iron candle
 
 Come back, brave warrior
 Do the dive
 On another channel
 
 Hot buttered pool
 Where’s Marrakesh
 Under the falls
 the wild storm
 where savages fell out
 in late afternoon
 monsters of rhythm
 
 You’ve left your
 Nothing
 to compete w/
 Silence
 
 I hope you went out
 Smiling
 Like a child
 Into the cool remnant
 of a dream
 
 The angel man
 w/Serpents competing
 for his palms
 & fingers
 Finally Claimed
 This benevolent
 Soul
 
 Ophelia
 
 Leaves, sodden
 in silk
 
 Chlorine
 dream
 mad stifled
 Witness
 
 The diving board, the plunge
 The pool
 
 You were a fighter
 a damask musky muse
 
 You were the bleached
 Sun
 for TV afternoon
 
 horned-toads
 maverick of e yellow spot
 
 Look now to where it’s got
 You
 
 in meat heaven
 w/the cannibals
 & jews
 
 The gardener
 Found
 The body, rampant, Floating
 
 Lucky Stiff
 What is this green pale stuff
 You’ve made of
 
 Poke holes to the goddess
 Skin
 
 Will he Stink
 Carried heavenward
 Thru the halls
 of music
 
 No chance.
 
 Requiem for a heavy
 That smile
 That porky satyr’s
 leer
 has leaped upward
 into the loam.
 
 - Jim Morrison.
 
 Mvh
 Simon
 
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| #21782 - 30/10/2016 17:19  Re: Mellemrummet
[Re: RoseMarie] |  
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|   veteran
 | Registeret:  04/04/2008 Indlæg: 3512
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Her en fin historie fra en poetisk skribent og gudsbenådet skuespiller, der desværre døde alt for tidligt, nøjagtig som hans gode ven Dylan Thomas o.a. gjorde, men som alligevel overlever i vort indre i kraft af enestående oplevelser i enten teatret eller på lærredet, hans genius og karismatiske personlighed, som især stikker igennem i interviews. Man må i øvrigt nyde godt af hans vittige og til tider ironiske tankelandskaber i den vidunderlige ’The Richard Burton Diaries’ (edited by Chris Williams), bogen som vennen – og heldigvis nulevende – Robert Hardy anser for værket Richard Burton så alligevel fik skrevet, ja dvs. ved siden af to andre fine små historier, nemlig ’A Christmas Story’ og ’Meeting Mrs. Jenkins’. Men altså, her én til smilebåndet, og ikke mindst for de af os der kender situationen med at vente på fruen…
 
 Richard Burton’s ‘The Trials Of Travel With Liz'
 
 Travelling with Elizabeth Taylor is a kind of exquisite pain. Let me explain why this is: I am ferociously over-punctual, whereas Elizabeth is idolently the opposite. I love Elizabeth to the point of idolatry, but - let's repeat that 'but' - she will unquestionably be late for the Last bloody Judgement. And, infuriatingly, she is always breathtakingly on time. She actually misses no train, or plane or boat, but of course misses the fact that her husband has had several minor heart attacks waiting for her while he shifts a shivering Scotch to his quivering mouth to his abandoned liver, waiting, waiting, waiting for her to come out of the lavatory.
 And the hooters howl or somebody says, 'All aboard' or 'last call for flight 109 to Los Angeles,' and not standing there is my stupendously serene lady, firmly believing that time waits for no man but her. In a sense I am one of the original boys who watched the train go by and lusted for London and, indeed, I finally caught that train and never went back and never will.
 Elizabeth is not the only one of her sex who thinks that a hair's breadth is half a mile wide. I have a sister-in-law who for years has been catching the 10.55 from Paddington to Port Talbot, resolutely believing that it's the 9.55. She has never understood why the train is always an hour late. But travel has become to us, as to most itinerant professionals, a part of our lives. We have been forced by habit to become doomed nomads, incapable any more of being sweet stay-at-homes, sweet lie-a-beds, forced to work around the world. We find nowadays that staying in any one place for more than - shall we say - three months is intolerable. And there is no place we've been to that we don't love.
 We love New York (but not in June) and Los Angeles and London and Paris and San Francisco and Puerta Vallarta and Gstaad and that rough country of my heart, Wales, and even Ireland, though the land is so unharsh that it gives a cragged moored felled fenned man like me a touch of the creeps.
 We sit around in the middle of the night wherever we are and dream of places we have been to - my wife is a bad sleeper and worries about spiders and mosquitoes - and in the middle of the night is sometimes an open forum as to where you would like to be now. And she says, or I say, perhaps in Paris, 'Wouldn't you sell your soul for an ordinary drugstore where you can have hamburgers or coleslaw or corned beef hash with an egg on top?'
 And then again we're in New York and again we awake at the dying time of night and dream of a bistro in Switzerland or some of the remoter regions of France unspoiled by Michelin or a trattoria in Italy nestling at the foot of a hill at the top of which is a magnificent church and there is a turbulent red wine and salami and cheese that crumbles in the hand, falling down its own face like a landslide. We separate countries into foods.
 Then there is, of course, the press. I mean photographers. If they are not there to meet us off the plane or train or boat, I lament the end of our careers. If they are, I blame Elizabeth for being too notorious. What can you do? What can she do? You're damned if they're there and you're damned if they're not.
 However, travelling with Elizabeth has its compensations. She loves it. Porters and stewards and even stewardesses reward her with enormous over-attention and therefore I get a little on the side. Customs men from Port Said to Porto Santo Stefano grace her with a kiss on the hand. Grim men at Chicago and Dover wish her well. I remember once going into a restaurant, a famous one, in the South of France, and there were so many cars outside that we couldn't pull up to the entrance. We had two of our dogs with us. They ran ahead and up the steps into the restaurant. We had forgotten that dogs are forbidden in the place. The head waiter came out in a passion of outrage looking like an impersonation of Peter Ustinov impersonating a head waiter and with a shuddering admonitory finger was about to order them out when suddenly he saw Elizabeth and the cosmic gesture of dismissal turned, in a flash, into the most sycophantic leering smile of welcome that it has been my privilege to see. I laughed for the rest of the day. So much so that I allowed them to overcharge me. After all, one hundred dollars for two bowls of soup and two quenelles de brochet and two mille-feuilles is going a bit far, I think. They fed the dogs too. By hand. Very sweet. We've never been back.
 But back to the drawbacks. how would you like to have a shoe of your wife's stolen off her foot by some fanatical fool at an airport - one of several thousand fools on this particular occasion - and feel the urgency of the crowd toppling you inexorably, it seemed at the time, into a trampled and affectionate death? How would you like to pass your small daughter over the heads of the madding crowd to a friend, all of us shouting in a language we didn't know? How would you like your wife to be hit in the stomach by a paparazzo because he wanted an unusual photograph? It happened, you know. No jokes. Honest to God, he hit my wife in the stomach. I wasn't there or I would have long ago walked Death Row. Or how would you like to travel from Paris to Geneva with two nannies, four children, five dogs, two secretaries, a budgerigar, and a turtle who has to be kept permanently in water, and a wildcat, and 140 bags and Rex Harrison edging his way through the narrow bag-seiged foyer screaming in a low mutter - this was in the Lancaster Hotel in the Rue de Berri - 'Why do the Burton's have to be so filthily ostentatious?'
 Well, I'll tell you, it's a tough old ride, but I wouldn't swap the privilege of travelling with Elizabeth for anything on earth
 
 - Richard Burton.
 
 mvh
 Simon
 
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| #21790 - 31/10/2016 15:47  Re: Mellemrummet
[Re: Simon] |  
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|   bor her
 | Registeret:  02/05/2009 Indlæg: 1015
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Hej Simon Tak for lyrik og musik, eventyr og go'e fortællinger ... og kluklatter ved din beskrivelse af glæden ved årstidens træer    Håber din finger klarer tøffeluheldet ;))  Med ét gik op for mig, hvilke eventyr og fortællinger, der helt grundlæggende har været fundamentet i min glæde ved ord- og fortællekunsten. Så indlysende og selvfølgelige er de og har alligevel slet ikke figureret på min liste. Det er dog så stor en mangel, at de nu må indføjes helt udenfor nummer. De skulle begge ha' ligget tidligt på listen, fordi de har været der siden barndomstidens mælketand :)) De to er selvfølgelig Astrid Lindgren og H.C. Andersen. To der nok debuterede i mit liv på nogenlunde samme tid. Samtidig var der også eventyr af Asbjørnsen&Moe og brødrene Grimm, der for mig kom til at betyde noget i kraft af næsten små opførte skuespil som fortælleteknik ... og jeg elskede det og har også taget det med mig i livet. Men det er nu alligevel Andersen og Lindgren, som på ingen måde må forbigåes i tavshed. "Børnene i Bulderby" var introduktionen af Astrid Lindgren, derefter Pippi og Emil. Pippi var jo nok den, der betød mest, fordi meget skete og sker i mig, når jeg præsenteres for en fortælling og et menneske, der vender tingene på hovedet. Med H.C. Andersen var det lidt anderledes. Ham har jeg næsten aldrig selv læst, i hvert fald ikke som barn. Ham har jeg altid fået fortalt og har lyttet mig til. Først i den nære familie, senere da jeg som 6 årig fik en grammofonplade med seks eventyr fortalt af Louis Miehe-Renard, Klods Hans, Hvad fatter gør, Svinedrengen, Springfyrene, Hyldemor og Stoppenålen. De tre første blev mine yndlingsAndersen, og hele pladen blev hørt igen og igen, og mere og mere ridset og knasende i lyden :))) Ove Sprogøe har her lidt af det samme som Louis Miehe-Renard, måske ikke helt så levende, men alligevel næsten.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8ioQrWEjjM Eventyrlige hilsner RoseMarie
 Redigeret af RoseMarie (31/10/2016 15:49)
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