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No. 98
July/August 2010
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PRODUCT EVALUATION TEAM
PET Picks Prime CDs

Just A Band: 82

Sweet Electra

Utopia

One Eskimo

FINDING YOUR WAY

A
 LABYRINTH often gets confused with a maze. But the latter is usually a bewildering arrangement of walls or hedges or rows of corn where it is difficult, and sometimes almost impossible, to find your way out.

In a labyrinth you can't get lost. Indeed, navigating through it can calm anxiety and give vent to powerful and often disturbing emotions.

Writing in the Financial Times of London, a hospice chaplain named Lizzie Hopthrow recounted how she came upon a labyrinth on the floor of Canterbury Cathedral some years ago and was impressed by the power of the space.

She writes that working one's way through the spiral walk has a spiritual element. She has introduced the practice to hospice patients who often find that the walk helps them deal with anguish and dread.

Helen Curry at the Chartres Cathedral labyrinth near Paris, built around 1200
Helen Curry at the Chartres Cathedral labyrinth near Paris, built around 1200
It is not clear where the labyrinth originated, but it appears in several religions. Chaplain Hopthrow explains that a person enters into a spiral walk and goes from the left side of the brain, which is always analyzing and fretting, into the right side where imagination and creativity exist.

"You can take something that you need to let go of into the labyrinth," she says, "and at the center you can experience peace. For many it's a meditation and it makes them calmer."

The labyrinth is an ancient pattern—a spiral with one path that leads to the center and out again. In a labyrinth, unlike a maze, you always know you will emerge  and  this is especially comforting, allowing the stroller to let  go and experience relief and reassurance. It can be a spiritually and emotionally liberating experience.

To find an accessible labyrinth in your area, consult the Labyrinth Society online. Happy trails.

 

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Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos
Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos

James Levine conducts Leon Fleisher
James Levine conducts Leon Fleisher

Summer ’10 At Tanglewood

T
HEY'RE crossing their fingers and holding their breath at Tanglewood, America's premier summer music festival at Lenox, Massachusetts. The Boston Symphony Orchestra has lined up an ambitious agenda: three major Mahler symphonies and a good deal of Mozart, including a full-scale performance of his charming opera The Abduction From the Seraglio.

Due to health problems James Levine will not be making any appearance at Tanglewood this summer. The 66-year-old maestro is still recovering from lower-back surgery in April.

The festival has already sustained a major disappointment: Levine's predecessor at the helm of the BSO, Seji Ozawa, announced that because of post-operative recuperation he is withdrawing from an all-Brahms program featuring pianist Peter Serkin (July 24) and the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra's performance of Ravel's Daphnis et Chloé (July 25).

There is compensation in the person of cellist Yo-Yo Ma and his Silk Road Ensemble who will mark their 10th anniversary with a special program reflecting the diversity of the group, combining Near and Far Eastern styles  with Western and non-Western instruments (August 8).

A powerful battalion of superstar violinists is lined up to wow the famously appreciative Tanglewood audiences: Pinchas Zukerman (July 11), Hilary Hahn (August 7), Arabella Steinbacher (August 8), Joshua Bell (August 21) and Gil Shaham (August 22).

Among the leading guest maestros returning this summer will be the perennial favorite, the esteemed Spanish conductor Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, who celebrated his 75th birthday here last year.

Over the Fourth of July weekend he will conduct the youthful Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra in a program featuring works by Falla, El amor brujo; Albéniz, Suite española, Iberia; Rimsky-Korsakov, Capriccio espagnol, and Debussy, La Mer.

Simon and Garfunkel, who have played only a handful of tours together since 1970, announced that they will perform in the Shed on July 27. More information at www.bso.org.

 

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Hurray For One-Acts

Bob Jaffe
Bob Jaffe

James Frangione
James Frangione
Dan Lauria
Dan Lauria
Kristen Johnston
Kristen Johnston

I
 WISH there were more offerings of one-act plays. A well-conceived, skillfully directed one-act is often a gem of theatrical magic, offering a vivid apercu into  another  world of context and emotion. Even if not rendered in the happiest way, a short work has the advantage of being just that—short.

There are workshops at studios and acting schools throughout the country and many of these are regularly available to an appreciative public. But they are not well publicized .

In Great Barrington, Massachusetts, I chanced upon the estimable Berkshire Playwrights Lab and what a treasure it is.

Founded by top-flight producers and directors, the BPL usually invites the public to preview full-length dramatic works in progress. As the gala opening event of the 2010 season, it decided to go the way of new one-act plays and what a blissful decision this was.

The founders and artistic directors—Joe Cacaci, Jim Frangione, Bob Jaffe and Matthew Penn—will present six free readings by both emerging and established playwrights followed by open discussions with the creators.

What is remarkable about this off-off-Broadway venture is the quality of actors it attracts. At the recent one-act gala such well known theatre, film and TV actors as Treat Williams, Elizabeth Franz, Kristen Johnston and Dan Lauria acquitted themselves admirably. It has to be a thrill for any playwright—struggling, emerging or accomplished—to have a pro of the highest order interpreting their works in progress.

I particularly enjoyed a wickedly funny satire of 12-step rehabilitation programs  by Kelly Masterson. Directed by Joe Cacaci, Treat Williams plays a recovering alcoholic subjected to the stringent and corrosive coaching of a soi-disant therapist played by Elizabeth Franz. Without diminishing our sympathy for authentically troubled addicts, the play points up a good deal of the cant and psychobabble  accompanying the path to recovery and abstinence.

I also was pleased by Groundwork by Tom Minter, a Becket-like exercise in social awkwardness and  difficult communication. As directed by Bob Jaffe and performed by Dan Lauria and Jay Thomas,, the piece underscored the vacuousness and uncertainty at the heart of so many human encounters.

If you are anywhere near the area this summer, make it a point to reserve well in advance. www.Berkshireplaywrightslab.org.

 

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PRODUCT EVALUATION TEAM
PET Picks Prime CDs

}82 is the second release by Kenya’s talented Just A Band. Talented because the three members of collective—they live in the same house—created this album despite power blackouts three days a week. Blinky, Dan and Jim were born in 1982, hence the name of the album. Akwaaba, 49 minutes, $9.99, at http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/82/id353037040.

Sweet Electra}Sweet Electra released its third album, When We Abandoned Earth, sung in English and Spanish. The duo of Nardiz Cooke on vocals and Giovanni Escalera on keyboards and guitar is backed by four musicians. They’re based in New York and is just now making a name in the music world. $11.99. See www.sweetelectra.net.

Utopia}Utopia is a new album from Lokesh, DJ from San Francisco. The album crosses dimensions of electronic music and world music that grips you and keeps you. "Music without boundaries in a world without borders," Lokesh asserts. He was into electronic music in his native India. After settling in the Bay Area as a software engineer, he rediscovered his passion for music. $11.99.

One Eskimo}One Eskimo is a Brit band that gives us a nice smooth pop sound. Their CD of the same name is highly recommended and available right now at Amazon.com for $7.98.

 

 

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