Unknown's avatar

About Durrell Bowman

Delivery Driver, Occasional Musician, and Former Academic (Ph.D. in Musicology)

Lady Gaga

From what I’ve seen and heard, Lady Gaga’s videos, persona, and weird fashion sense are somewhat more interesting than her actual music. In a sense, that’s rather a lot like early- to mid-1980s’ Madonna, but Madonna then gradually became a better musician and by the late 1980s was quite involved in her songwriting and, especially, the business side of her career. The main difference is that Lady Gaga is a more accomplished musician from the get-go. So, it will be interesting to see if she can make artistic changes and updates from where she is now and continue to do interesting things for a substantial fan base in five, fifteen, or twenty-five years—like Madonna did.

Lady Gaga’s androgyny and frantic, digitally-manipulated presentations also seem to me to be influenced by such late-1990s’ artists as Marilyn Manson (although she’s named after the 1984 Queen song, “Radio Ga Ga”), and Manson was, of course, one of the most intelligent interviewees in Michael Moore’s 2002 film Bowling for Columbine. All of these musicians are really quite smart (Madonna apparently has the same IQ as I do!), and if the music/academic establishment didn’t remain so biased against popular music, other smart people would realize that such artists are at least as interesting to think about (even musically) as contemporary, experimental, so-called “art” music and earlier “classical” music. However, musicology will never get to the point of considering “21st century music” to include Lady Gaga, because it still doesn’t even consider “20th century music” to have included the Beatles! (I’ve just written a blog posting about some of the problems in musicology, and this subject played right into that.)

“The Social Network” (2010)

I like good movies much better than I like Facebook, even a good movie about Facebook. Even if only 20% of The Social Network is “true” (and it’s probably more like 60%), Mark Zuckerberg and Sean Parker are still grade-A douche-bags. I liked screenwriter Aaron Sorkin’s comment to Stephen Colbert last evening that he doesn’t use Facebook and would rather call someone about having just had a great cupcake. Good one!

The movie was competently directed by David Fincher (Seven, The Game, Fight Club, Panic Room, Zodiac, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, etc.), but despite its hi-tech sheen and recent setting, it’s really just an old-fashioned morality tale about greed and selling out your friends. (See one theater over for Wall Street 2.)

The Social Network covers the early years of Facebook (2003-04) extremely well, as adapted by Sorkin from Ben Mezrich’s nonfiction novel The Accidental Billionaires (2009). The soundtrack is suitably hi-tech and somewhat coldly electronic, by Trent Reznor (Nine Inch Nails) and Atticus Ross.

Facebook is NOT web 2.0: it is, at best, web 1.5. In a related matter, people who don’t want to hear about cupcakes (or somebody making lasagna for dinner, painting their bedroom, or becoming single) should check out the professional career-networking website LinkedIn.

Classicized Rock (Music and Culture – Podcast 1)

I’ve just launched my series of Video Podcasts, called “Music and Culture.” Podcast No. 1 is entitled “Classicized Rock: Heavy Metal, Progressive Rock, and Chamber Music.” A full, podcast version (MPEG-4, for iTunes, iPhones, etc.) will be available from my website. The complete presentation is 30 minutes long. However, I’ve also posted it on YouTube in two, slightly-edited halves: Part 1, Part 2.

“Classicized Rock” is about selected heavy metal and progressive rock bands (Black Sabbath, Genesis, Rush, and Metallica) and some of their songs (“War Pigs”, “The Fountain of Salmacis”, “The Spirit of Radio”, and “Master of Puppets”) adapted into classical chamber music (involving early music, pianos, violins, and cellos) by Rondellus, Ingve Guddal and Roger T. Matte, Rachel Barton, and Apocalyptica.

“Chloe” (2009)

I watched Atom Egoyan’s Chloe (2009) yesterday, and I plan to watch Nathalie (the 2003 French original), so that I can compare them. An arguably-sensationalist “hotness” factor is certainly there (lesbian sex scene and all, in a story aspect apparently excluded from Nathalie), but something about Chloe didn’t really gel for me, probably at least partly because Egoyan didn’t write the screenplay.

It’s too obvious that Chloe (“escort” Amanda Seyfried) has not actually seduced the daddy (classical music professor Liam Neeson) but, rather, is manipulating the mommy (gynaecologist Julianne Moore). However, the characters are not well enough established for us to care about them (or any of this) all that much. Without stronger characters in place, everything seems somehow “clinical,” but not in the weirdly-compelling way of Egoyan’s best original screenplays (such as 1989’s Speaking Parts) or even his 1997 adaptation The Sweet Hereafter. I also could not keep myself from thinking about whether or not they had completed filming Chloe before Natasha Richardson (Neeson’s wife) died after a skiing accident in Quebec. In fact, they apparently had to re-write parts of the film to account for Neeson’s absence, but he then returned for a couple of days after her death in order to complete certain scenes.

I was surprised that long-time Egoyan collaborator (and fellow Canadian) Mychael Danna’s score was so “traditional orchestral” sounding, because what he does best is electronic-keyboard and/or ethnic-world music fusions with western instruments. It’s almost as though Danna did not find the story compelling enough to bother. It was nice to see “gentrified” Toronto, but Neeson’s character being a classical music professor (based in New York City, for some reason, although this is not very well explained), the use of a Beethoven recital (in Toronto) by the main characters’ son, etc. seemed fairly gratuitous. It was also perfectly obvious (too perfectly obvious to me) that it was going to be Egoyan’s classical-pianist sister Eve playing the “Moonlight Sonata” (and not just the easy first movement!) on the soundtrack, almost as if standing in for the conspicuous absence from this film of Egoyan’s actress-wife Arsinée Khanjian. Presumably, these things may have been to balance (in a low-key Canadian way) the fact that the film’s three primary actors are not Canadians (although R.H. Thomson and others have supporting roles), and the references to the Canadian (London, ON) band Raised by Swans, which Egoyan had already used in his 2008 film Adoration, may have been for similar reasons.

Haydn’s “Creation”

Mennonite Mass Choir (with Menno Singers) performed Haydn’s “Creation” last weekend. I’ve been having my doubts about Menno Singers (Rachmaninoff Vespers was very “rocky” back in March, and I skipped the vast majority of the “Creation” rehearsals), but it was pretty good, actually. It helped for the end result that it’s (1) relatively easy for most of the singers, (2) accompanied/doubled by orchestra, and (3) verging on insufferably joyous, and (4) that I’m definitely feeling appreciated by the conductor (Peter Nikiforuk) and by the weaker tenors (of which there are 7 women in a section of only 18 in a choir of 150 voices). The soloists are Mennonites all: Stephanie Kramer (whom I’ve known for a long time, from Elora, etc.), young tenor and conductor Brandon Leis (whom I briefly sang beside in the St. John’s Elora church choir), and Daniel Lichti (of WLU, etc. and about whom I wrote an article for the “Encyclopedia of Music in Canada”). When I was asked by the weaker tenors to “section lead” them, that put me about six feet from Dan, and he glanced at me a couple of times, as if to say: “What the hell is this voice doing in this choir?” Good question!

my summer work term

I needed a summer work term to complete my computer programming studies, and all I had in Kitchener-Waterloo (Ontario) was one interview at Research In Motion (i.e., the Blackberry) that didn’t lead to anything. However, a suitable position showed up on the e-mail list of the American Musicological Society. It’s a paid internship that’s 50% writing programme notes and doing web versions of those notes (incl. links, images, media, etc.) for the Bowdoin International Music Festival (which is mostly Romantic era chamber music) and 50% working on web/database programming for the AMS. So, it’s a highly weird combination of musicology and computers.

Bowdoin College is in Brunswick, Maine (25 minutes north of Portland, a.k.a. a little over two hours north of Boston), and the BIMF and AMS both have their offices on its campus. I do two weeks of work from here (Kitchener) starting next week, then I’m there for nine weeks (June 14 to August 13). The pay is OK, they’re also putting me up for free at a quite nice residence hall on the campus, they paid my visa and health insurance costs and gave me gas money to get there and back, and I also get two free tickets for every festival concert.

Classical Music Snobs

I believe that classical music snobs who think that Top 40 pop hits and the Grammy awards really mean anything re “popular culture” should be forced to listen to “Eine kleine Nachtmusik” repeatedly.

choral singing

Last weekend, I sang in a chamber choir concert of Brahms’ “Liebeslieder and Neue Liebeslieder Waltzes” in the Oakville Chamber Ensemble. It went quite well, but it was a rather short concert, given how many hours we rehearsed. We have another concert coming up in May.

I also agreed to sing in a Haiti fundraiser concert on Feb. 20 (7:30 at St. John the Evangelist, Kitchener) of Victoria Requiem and various other high Renaissance pieces, despite the fact that the Victoria is already being performed by an expanded version of Tactus the SAME EVENING in nearby Guelph. I have serious doubts about such a program for a fundraising event, as a fundraising concert should be primarily for the relevant cause and to provide a concert that a lot of people would enjoy, not be an excuse for someone to present a concert that he wanted to present anyhow. However, the rehearsal/concert week is Reading Week at Conestoga College, so I figured this was a way to do something reasonably useful for a little while that also provides a break from my computer studies.

We also have Rachmaninoff’s Vespers with Menno Singers on March 6, and I have a little solo bit at the beginning. The concert should be pretty good. 8pm, St. Matthew’s Lutheran Church, Kitchener.

computers vs. musicology

I wish there were suitable musicology jobs to which I could apply during my three-week break from studies in computer applications development. However, there aren’t any, so by early 2010 I will probably promote “Plan B” (computers) to “Plan A.”

If anyone has even a slightly good argument for why I should do any further work as a so-called “independent” (i.e. unemployed) scholar in musicology (which will probably never lead to anything ever again) instead of learning, say, XML and Java (which would nicely supplement my studies and make me even more employable), I’d love to hear it.

Computer Applications Development

Re my just-started “Plan B” studies in Computer Applications Development at Conestoga College, I kicked ass on some recent course assignments and lab work, over the weekend worked on a tough-to-accomplish one-page resume (difficult given that my academic CV is nine pages long), yesterday went to a Research In Motion co-op job info session at the college (also with free pizza and soft drinks, and we each got a deck of cards with Blackberrys on them!), and today am going both to a career fair (where I hope to meet people from a couple of relevant companies: RIM, Desire2Learn, and RealNetworks) and to a session with the college’s IT Dean for those of us in computer programs, but who are older (“mature”).