I'm Done
Sunday, July 31, 2016
Rosemary and I returned from a three day trip to our older
daughter’s home in Lillooet BC. The air
was pure and very hot (over 40) and the people very friendly. I cooked so the
food was relatively good. We slept well. Waking up in the morning and going
outside in our daughter’s almost one acre property was a liberating kind of
activity particularly when we stared at the mountains on either side. Her
house is smack in the middle and parallel to the Fraser Canyon. The silence was
palpable except when large trucks and 4x4s with their diesels roared by.
We went to an activity called We Love Lillooet and I met Margaret Lampman the mayor (a most pleasant woman) and
Wendy Fraserthe editor of the local Lillooet News (another most pleasant woman). It occurred to me
that one day I might want to live in Lillooet except for one important vacuum
that for me exists in most small towns of our province.
I was born in a large city, Buenos Aires and lived for
many years in another, Mexico City. I am used to traffic rumble, smog and other
negative amenities of the big city. But I am also attracted to big city culture
– the arts. I like theatre, dance visual arts, large and very good libraries.
I was aware that Lillooet had lots of arts and crafts
with a major on the second part of that – the crafts. But would I ever be able
to see a Picasso exhibition or witness a Bach Mass with all the trimmings of
period instruments? Would I be able to go to concerts of new music and music of
the avant garde?
In Lillooet I would miss my Arts Umbrella Dance Company
performances and all the other dance activities of Vancouver. I would miss some
of the theatre (perhaps not all of those musicals). I would miss the culinary
variety of an ethnically proliferated restaurant culture.
Netflix, and communicating with my friends with facebook
would not be to my liking without something more.
And yet I have a troubling confession to make that has
been made almost acceptable by the statement of my friend, Vancouver composer,
John Oliver.
I told him at a recent concert by the divine cellist
Marina Hasselberg (a solo cello recital) that I could not abide with one more performance
of Bach’s Concerto for 2 Violins in D minor, BWV 1043. With a smile he said to
me, “You are done with it.” That is true I thought. I further told him that if
it weren’t for the fact that I would drive Rosemary crazy I would play all my
very many Piazzolla CDs all day and nothing else. His comment (one I would
concur with) was, “I don’t understand why so many attempt to interpret
Piazzolla. He is and was an original.”
Last night I listened to a fine Lester Young record and
one with Gerry Mulligan, Stan Getz and Paul Desmond (all together!). It struck
me that I want to go less to concerts, and theatre and dance, an art exhibits and
very definitely any photography ones. What could be wrong?
I feel stressed out if I know I have to go somewhere on a
particular day of the week or some near evening. I want to get into bed to read
and enjoy the morning papers with Rosemary over a Spartan breakfast-in-bed.
Former Vancouver Magazine art director Rick Staehling may
have been ahead of my time (and his) when in the 80s my rock columnist friend
Les Wiseman and I would go to the Commodore (with all kinds of comp tickets)
for really good punk concerts and to see bands from all over the world.
Staehling would tell us , “I prefer to buy the CD.” I am beginning to
understand.
Does Lillooet beckon?
Does Lillooet beckon?