Conrad sends his best wishes to all his readers for the festive season and thanks you all for reading his blog this year. He's been a bit poorly so is taking a break from writing his blog during December. Please keep reading his past blogs and sending comments in. There will be the usual list of countries where his readers live, around New Year time. The list is longer this year. Recently there have been large readership numbers in Russia and USA and ongoing readership from around the world. A big thank you from Conrad.
The Edinburgh music critic and journalist, Conrad Wilson, writes about classical music/ opera, food and wine in Scotland and from around the world. He writes about his life as a music critic, his travels to opera houses at home and abroad and the many musicians he's encountered along the way. He reviews DVD films of performances you may not have been able to attend. His wine reviews can help you to keep up-to-date with the good things available in wine shops and supermarkets.
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Saturday, 10 December 2016
Friday, 11 November 2016
The History Boys
Authors, claims Alan Bennett in his latest section of the enthralling landscape of his life, can feel threatened by their biographers, be they official ones or unofficial - and maybe rightly so, it is tempting to add.
As attitudes to biography change, and modern biographies tend to grow longer and longer, the need for such outsize books - just look at the size of some of them - seems conspicuously to lessen, their existence increasingly a matter of self-indulgence on the part of the biographer and publisher. Who is reading them and why? What makes them seem threatening? Somerset Maugham famously said that modern authors led dull lives, unworthy of biography, and he sternly resisted the idea of a biographer writing a book about him book about him.
So when a distinguished living author responds to his official biographer, as John Le Carre has just done, by writing an answer in the form of a witty and artfully structured autobiography, you begin to wonder what is going on.
Has he been taking humorous revenge on his widely admired but clearly serious official biographer, who was commissioned to write a substantial book about him to which he himself presumably gave his blessing? Did he secretly dislike the finished product?
Being an alert and long established novelist, and as a one-time British spy, Le Carre has more than once proved prickly, but whether his biographer has displeased him in some way is hard to say. I have refrained from reading the official biography because it has not grabbed my attention strongly enough. There are other books I have been more eager to read recently than this one, including Le Carre’s own very funny and enjoyable response to it.
As a music critic, however, I remain on the fringe of the debate. Music critics are seldom themselves the subject of official biographies and never has one been written, or likely to be written, about me. In such a situation I am a bystander seeking a message. Do I get it from Alan Bennett in his admirable new diary? Entitled Keeping On Keeping On, this is certainly something I can recommend, which does not shrink its responsibilities.
As a music critic, it is true, I have responsibilities of my own. What about these? I do not give interviews. Biographers do not write about me. Once, having a drink with a Glasgow magazine editor, I found myself chatting to him about my critical philosophy, taking my customary care to be guarded. But not guarded enough. A month or so later a printed interview appeared in the magazine in which not a word was accurate.
“Silly ass” I said to myself, to have let this happen to me. “Should I I have expected otherwise?” But, though it was a long time ago, and was no more than a minor irritation which cost me an hour of my time it only cost me a tiny prick of annoyance and an hour of my time, I took pains to ensure it did not happen again.
When the same happens to a celebrity like Alan Bennett, who gives interviews frequently, there are various ways he can deal with it, as he does in his latest diary, in broadcasts, in books and plays and sermons, or simply by clenching his jaws to modify its effect on him.
“Modifying the effect” is perhaps not a bad way of describing it, whether it is political, as it is quite likely to be, or quietly despairing. Though he can be repetitious, which irks some of his readers, I do not find this bothers me greatly. We are all repetitious in our own ways and Bennett’s repartee, even if familiar, can be something to savour.
So I don’t count it against his new book that he sometimes seems to lay himself open. When Edward Heath, on the other hand, wrote his musical memoirs some years ago, I can remember an altercation in which, in my review,I accused him of telling the same anecdote twice in the same book. He was clearly displeased, though I am not sure with whom, when he found out and reacted instantly, demanding that his publisher remove the offensive repetition. The publisher wrote to me and The Scotsman about sorting it out. Where exactly had the mishap happened? I scanned the book and drew a blank.
Realisation slowly dawned. The repetition was not there. Were Heath’s anecdotes so dull that I imagined I had read this one twice? Would I find it somewhere i a different book? Was he accusing me of falsehood? Had I been careless in my reviewing of the irascible prime minister?
I never discovered. He never wrote to me personally. Maybe he was too busy. Maybe he found his answer. But it was a reason to remember that references need to be checked. It just seemed a pity that it had to be Edward Heath. Music critics have to be wary.
What might Alan Bennett have done? Though I do not think he knows much about music - a common failing among authors - the question has not reduced my liking for his admirable new book.
11 November 2016
Monday, 31 October 2016
Gripping from the start
Having abandoned Nutshell, Ian McEwan’s latest novel supposedly written by Hamlet in his mother’s womb, I have turned my attention more rewardingly to the third volume of Alan Bennett’s compendious diaries, now out and written more enticingly from London, Yorkshire, and abroad.
Though McEwan compounded my problem by updating what happens to Hamlet - not without wit, it must be said - Bennett is plain sailing in comparison, his 800 pages, squeezed into my Kindle with no added weight. The result is a vast and enthralling landscape of the most recent portion of his life. It is a subject to which I shall return, but not the only one.
For I have also been reading Sir Peter Hall’s candid autobiography, amusingly entitled Making an Exhibition of Myself, written in the wake of his exhaustive National Theatre diaries and beginning his story back at the beginning. In other hands this could have proved hard work but Hall did not go into a theatrical life for nothing. The son of an impoverished railway station master in East Anglia, he tells the tale of his career vividly, writing of his Cambridgeshire schooldays when, among other things, he learned the piano and served as a church organist, practising - more than a little scared - alone in a darkened church at night before having to lock the premises and creep home.
Though Philip Larkin said he preferred to begin reading autobiographies halfway though, “when the chap has grown up and become more interesting,” Hall is interesting from the start, which is what you would hope. He makes clear how soon, despite all the obstacles, he was drawn into the theatrical life, firstly at school, and then gradually succeeding in adulthood. It is very much the book I would have wanted from him - alert, perceptive, edgy to the point of paranoia - and it follows his trail to the top with a sense of wonder that it is actually happening. How in the end he won international fame is, as they say, un-put-downable.
Alan Bennett in his latest diaries admits to a Larkin complex about autobiographies and confesses that he reads them backwards. Their opening chapters - like those of many outsize modern biographies as well - can indeed be heart sinking, even when their authors have something to say. Happily, Sir Peter Hall, though he now suffers in his eighties from from dementia in a London retirement home, was not like that.
Though I may yet return to the new McEwan - while being aware for now that, as several of his previous novels have done, that it merely irritates me - I am giving myself no guarantees. His monologue from the womb has proved increasingly hard work. We shall see.
31 October 2016
Tuesday, 25 October 2016
Wine choice: Petit Chablis
Petit Chablis, I used to think, was cheap Chablis, its flavour drab in comparison with the real thing and its price unreasonably high for what it was. In supermarkets it could seem something to avoid, especially if it was going to be a present for somebody for whom the word “petit” might only arouse suspicion and seemed to me a good example of a name making perhaps higher claims for itself than it should have done.
But things appear to be changing. Sainsbury, Tesco, M&S and Waitrose are all stocking Petit Chablis that tastes better, or so I would say, than it used to, at least to my palate.
Though I would not go so far as to claim that it is now a safe buy - there are still some sour, sharp-edged ones around - the Petit Chablis now in these stores is worth tasting, and holds a deservedly prominent place on their shelves. At around £9 or £10 a bottle, the price of the Sainsbury (“Taste the Difference”) and Tesco Finest versions looks about right, though M&S at £12 and Waitrose at £11 may perhaps seem verging on the greedy.
It may not be classic Chablis as we know it and love it, but it is better than some of the more anonymous white burgundies widely available, makes a good aperitif and goes well with the food - turkey if you are already looking ahead to Christmas - you mean to eat with it.
If this is a new, more ambitious development, so much the better for that. If not, buy some anyway while current stocks last. You could do much worse. The white burgundy to be wary of at present is Macon-Villages. There is a lot of it around, too much of it depressingly dull.
25 October 2016
But things appear to be changing. Sainsbury, Tesco, M&S and Waitrose are all stocking Petit Chablis that tastes better, or so I would say, than it used to, at least to my palate.
Though I would not go so far as to claim that it is now a safe buy - there are still some sour, sharp-edged ones around - the Petit Chablis now in these stores is worth tasting, and holds a deservedly prominent place on their shelves. At around £9 or £10 a bottle, the price of the Sainsbury (“Taste the Difference”) and Tesco Finest versions looks about right, though M&S at £12 and Waitrose at £11 may perhaps seem verging on the greedy.
It may not be classic Chablis as we know it and love it, but it is better than some of the more anonymous white burgundies widely available, makes a good aperitif and goes well with the food - turkey if you are already looking ahead to Christmas - you mean to eat with it.
If this is a new, more ambitious development, so much the better for that. If not, buy some anyway while current stocks last. You could do much worse. The white burgundy to be wary of at present is Macon-Villages. There is a lot of it around, too much of it depressingly dull.
25 October 2016
Tuesday, 18 October 2016
Wine choice: Arneis
Arneis is a white Italian wine quite hard to find in Britain and not always easy in Italy either. Nor, when you do find it, is it always at its best. More often than not it is a disappointment, and the mystique surrounding its name a little puzzling. Yet good Arneis does exist and, when bought absolutely fresh, can be delightful.
Naked Wines, the East Anglian suppliers who now operate in tandem with Majestic - have recently added a good one to their list. The problem is that though it is certainly Italian and white and easily sipped, it does not taste very like Arneis, at least to my palate. Its identifiable undertones are missing.
Yet Italians speak proudly of Arneis and call it their white Barolo, while admitting that the Piedmont grape is difficult to grow. The name, quite aptly in the circumstances, means “little rascal.” Therefore is the one from Naked Wines really worth pursuing? Costing £8.99 a bottle, it is not the cheapest of Italian whites, but people are clearly buying it because new stocks of the 2015 vintage are awaited.
The wine conforms with the usually admirable Naked Wines policy of supporting new and independent winemakers, which is perhaps why it is not immediately recognisable, with the new taste concealing the old. Think of it perhaps as an alternative to something like Gavi and you might be on the right track, in which case you would enjoy it's fulness and brightness of flavour.
I bought two bottles, and would consider buying it again.
17 October 2016
Naked Wines, the East Anglian suppliers who now operate in tandem with Majestic - have recently added a good one to their list. The problem is that though it is certainly Italian and white and easily sipped, it does not taste very like Arneis, at least to my palate. Its identifiable undertones are missing.
Yet Italians speak proudly of Arneis and call it their white Barolo, while admitting that the Piedmont grape is difficult to grow. The name, quite aptly in the circumstances, means “little rascal.” Therefore is the one from Naked Wines really worth pursuing? Costing £8.99 a bottle, it is not the cheapest of Italian whites, but people are clearly buying it because new stocks of the 2015 vintage are awaited.
The wine conforms with the usually admirable Naked Wines policy of supporting new and independent winemakers, which is perhaps why it is not immediately recognisable, with the new taste concealing the old. Think of it perhaps as an alternative to something like Gavi and you might be on the right track, in which case you would enjoy it's fulness and brightness of flavour.
I bought two bottles, and would consider buying it again.
17 October 2016
Saturday, 8 October 2016
Online opera awards
As the 2016 Edinburgh Festival recedes into obscurity, I have been compiling a personal list of online opera awards, dating forward from 1947, when as a schoolboy I attended my first festival events The memories linger on, and it is time I listed them.
Opera, for eighteen nights out of 21, was originally the pride of the festival,as it was, and usually still is, of all the great international festivals. It is sad that in Edinburgh it no longer holds that dominant position but here, for what they are worth, are my nominations for my first online opera awards, complete with the names of the festival directors and opera companies who was responsible for them.
If you have memories, let me share them now. But note that, for me, they are petering out.
The online opera awards:
Verdi A Masked Ball, Glyndebourne (Rudolf Bing)
Verdi The Force of Destiny, Glyndebourne ( Rudolf Bing)
Rossini Count Ory, Glyndebourne (Ian Hunter)
Strauus Ariadne auf Naxos/Le Borgeois Gentilhome, Glyndebourne (Ian Hunter_
Hindemith Mathis der Maler, Hamburg State Opera (Ian Hunter)
Stravinsky The Rake’s Progress, British premiere, Glyndebourne (Ian Hunter)
Bellini La Sonnambula (Callas) La Scala Milan (Robert Ponsonby)
Janacek Katya Kabanova, Prague Opera (Lord Harewood)
Strauss Intermezzo, Bavarian State Opera (Lord Harewood)
Berg Lulu, Stuttgart Opera (Peter Diamand)
Stravinsky The Rake’s Progress, Scottish Opera festival debut (Peter Diamand)
Stravinsky The Soldier’s Tale, Scottish Opera (Peter Diamand)
Henze Elegy for Young Lovers, Scottish Opera (Peter Diamond)
Rossini Cenerentola, La Scala Milan/Edinburgh Festival Opera (Peter Diamand)
Prokofiev The Fiery Ange, Frankfurt Opera (Peter Diamand)
Zinnernann Die Soldaten, Deutsche Oper am Rhein (Peter Diamand)
Bizet Carmen, Edinburgh Festival Opera (Peter Diamand)
Monteverdi The Coronation of Poppea, Zurich Opera (Peter Diamand)
Handel Aiodante, LA Scala, Milan (John Drummond)
Britten Death in Venice, Scottish Opera (John Drummond)
Verdi Don Carlos, Covent Garden (Brian McMaster)
Beethoven Fidelio, Scottish Opera (Brian McMaster)
Wagner The Ring, Scottish Opera (Brian McMaster)
Please send me some responses.
8 October 2016
Friday, 7 October 2016
Pressing on
It all began, through a tiny but remembered fluke of fate, during my boyhood. My parents were employing a house painter, a quiet, vigilant, proudly self-educated working man with a book invariably in the pocket of his whites, to do some decorating for them. One day, on my return from school during his tea break, he asked me what books I liked reading. I mentioned Richmal Crompton’s William books and the Arthur Ransome series and Arnold Bennett’s Clayhanger. He said that sooner or later I should press on and give DH Lawrence a try - “there’s plenty of good reading in there.”
Time passed, but an opportunity came when I spotted an orange Penguin paperback of Sons and Lovers in my father’s bookcase. Could that form my starting point? It looked like a challenge, but I faced it with interest and progressed to The Rainbow, and then to the enthralling but less famous Aaron’s Rod, the story of a miner who becomes a flautist, walks out on his family, and moves to Italy where he is killed by a bomb.
As a teenager who was on the brink of moving into music, I liked Aaron’s Rod very much. I liked The White Peacock, written earlier, rather less, deeming it too abstract for me, and Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Lawrence’s last and most notorious novel, was of course still banned in Britain, though I knew of its reputation and bought a Left Bank edition of it while doing my National Service with the RAF in Paris, as well as seeing a French film starring Danielle Darrieux, with Erno Crisa as Mellors and the fine English Shakespearian actor Leo Genn sitting in a wheelchair as the crippled Sir Clifford Chatterley. My Lawrence fixation was clearly gaining strength.
By 1960, after a sensational trial at the Old Bailey, Lady Chatterley finally gained her liberty in a new Penguin edition which sold three million copies. I thought it a better book than it has been traditionally made out to be. But what authority could a young music critic have been said to possess on the subject? I went on reading. Lawrence was a writer who, thirty years after his poignantly early death from tuberculosis in France, really mattered to me because I trusted him and today still respond to him the way I always have.
As Geoff Dyer, author of a modern study of Lawrence entitled Out of Sheer Rage has argued, you do not need to be a rigid literary academic to admire him or hate him. He wrote books about places in Italy and elsewhere which remain relentlessly alive, incessantly restless, unstoppably irascible, with an emphatically vivid vocabulary full of jabbing words which, for me at least, continue to flash and shine in my private firmament.
After crossing the Alps on foot with Frieda, his future wife and maverick cousin of the doomed air-ace Manfred von Richthofen, Germany’s “Red Baron,” he began his comprehensive Italian adventure by spending months on Lake Garda before switching to Liguria and Tuscany and from there ever southwards until, for his last three Italian years, he settled in Sicily, financed as always by his writing - as Frieda put it with apparent admiration, “he is just a big fountain pen,” though he was also a more cumbersome typewriter.
During the First World War he travelled unwillingly back to Britain, with periods in London, Kent, Cornwall, but only just dropping in at his native mining community of Eastwood near Nottingham, which he loathed, just as he loathed every aspect the war itself, from which, for health reasons, he was never called into.
Yet the Lawrence trail, which ultimately ringed the world, became more and more famous. From the Alps to Taormina, you will always find the long Italian portion of it somewhere along the line and, I hope, it will make you rejoice, even if all you do is read about it.
But read about it anyway. That is how I started, thanks to a literate Edinburgh workman well over half a century ago.
Lawrence’s books remain part of me and, in modern electronic Kindle editions, they travel with me everywhere, weightlessly and occupying no space. It feels good to have them safely in this form, and to have his jagged, darting, prodding prose in versions so easily accessible - and, incidentally, nowadays free to order on line.
7 October 2016
Time passed, but an opportunity came when I spotted an orange Penguin paperback of Sons and Lovers in my father’s bookcase. Could that form my starting point? It looked like a challenge, but I faced it with interest and progressed to The Rainbow, and then to the enthralling but less famous Aaron’s Rod, the story of a miner who becomes a flautist, walks out on his family, and moves to Italy where he is killed by a bomb.
As a teenager who was on the brink of moving into music, I liked Aaron’s Rod very much. I liked The White Peacock, written earlier, rather less, deeming it too abstract for me, and Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Lawrence’s last and most notorious novel, was of course still banned in Britain, though I knew of its reputation and bought a Left Bank edition of it while doing my National Service with the RAF in Paris, as well as seeing a French film starring Danielle Darrieux, with Erno Crisa as Mellors and the fine English Shakespearian actor Leo Genn sitting in a wheelchair as the crippled Sir Clifford Chatterley. My Lawrence fixation was clearly gaining strength.
By 1960, after a sensational trial at the Old Bailey, Lady Chatterley finally gained her liberty in a new Penguin edition which sold three million copies. I thought it a better book than it has been traditionally made out to be. But what authority could a young music critic have been said to possess on the subject? I went on reading. Lawrence was a writer who, thirty years after his poignantly early death from tuberculosis in France, really mattered to me because I trusted him and today still respond to him the way I always have.
As Geoff Dyer, author of a modern study of Lawrence entitled Out of Sheer Rage has argued, you do not need to be a rigid literary academic to admire him or hate him. He wrote books about places in Italy and elsewhere which remain relentlessly alive, incessantly restless, unstoppably irascible, with an emphatically vivid vocabulary full of jabbing words which, for me at least, continue to flash and shine in my private firmament.
After crossing the Alps on foot with Frieda, his future wife and maverick cousin of the doomed air-ace Manfred von Richthofen, Germany’s “Red Baron,” he began his comprehensive Italian adventure by spending months on Lake Garda before switching to Liguria and Tuscany and from there ever southwards until, for his last three Italian years, he settled in Sicily, financed as always by his writing - as Frieda put it with apparent admiration, “he is just a big fountain pen,” though he was also a more cumbersome typewriter.
During the First World War he travelled unwillingly back to Britain, with periods in London, Kent, Cornwall, but only just dropping in at his native mining community of Eastwood near Nottingham, which he loathed, just as he loathed every aspect the war itself, from which, for health reasons, he was never called into.
Yet the Lawrence trail, which ultimately ringed the world, became more and more famous. From the Alps to Taormina, you will always find the long Italian portion of it somewhere along the line and, I hope, it will make you rejoice, even if all you do is read about it.
But read about it anyway. That is how I started, thanks to a literate Edinburgh workman well over half a century ago.
Lawrence’s books remain part of me and, in modern electronic Kindle editions, they travel with me everywhere, weightlessly and occupying no space. It feels good to have them safely in this form, and to have his jagged, darting, prodding prose in versions so easily accessible - and, incidentally, nowadays free to order on line.
7 October 2016
Tuesday, 4 October 2016
En route again
The words were uttered by DH Lawrence during his time in Taormina. Today the town is a fashionable, precipitous Sicilian seaside resort to the north of Syracuse, though in the three years he spent there with Frieda it was a very different, less glitzy place. Yet the villa they rented, the Fontana Vecchia, was congenial, their breakfast bacon came from Malta, and it remains one of the Lawrence addresses to which people are still irresistibly lured.
It was the furthest point on his long Italian trail, beyond which he could only change direction. By then the ailing author’s death in Vence, in France’s Alpes Maritimes. lay not far off. He needed mountain air, he had been advised, more than he needed the seaside.
But he still had places to go, and the strength to go to them, and he was still writing with relentless gusto. One January night in Taormina he and Frieda awoke in darkness, filled a thermos of tea, packed what they described as their mobile kitchenino, and walked down the hill to the railway station for an improvised trip to Sardinia. At dawn they caught a local train to the wrecked town of Messina, destroyed by a mighty earthquake in 1908 with thousands of dead, before changing in pouring rain to the single-track Palermo express with a 32-hour voyage to Sardinia - “lost between Europe and Africa” “
as Lawrence put it - in prospect.
No journey, even the later one with Lawrence’s death at the end of it, was ever too daunting for them. It was their lifestyle, to which the possibility of a family parenthood was always irrelevant. When they got back to Sicily, Lawrence wrote Sea and Sardinia, one of his best books, in his most tirelessly vigorous prose and went on eating Maltese bacon.
In Sardinia they docked in Cagliari, where in 1990 the World Cup final between England and the Netherlands would result in a draw and Bill Bufford, innocently representing Granta Magazine was beaten up by the carabinieri during a nasty clash between the Italian police and the public. For the Lawrences, striding up the steep hill from the harbour to find a hotel for the night, things were less eventful. Next day they steamed by puffer train to the centre of the island to continue their adventure.
A decade after Lawrence’s death, during the Second World War, Taormina became the home - as well as Gestapo headquarters - of the ruthless Albert Kesselring, Germanys’ Nazi commander in Italy, from which he was eventually driven out by the start of the Allied thrust northwards from Sicily through Anzio (scene of the admirable new novel by Sebastian Faulkes) and Monte Cassino, the area from where so many of Edinburgh’s resident Italians came.
But the Lawrence villa in Taormina still stands in a street beyond the public esplanade at the top of the town, where Lawrence had thought the sight of the plumes of smoke emerging from Mount Etna had looked so sinister. Geoff Dyer, in his study of Lawrence, Out of Sheer Rage, wrote of a split level restaurant on the precipice, which Sue and I would also visit during our time in Taormina, when one floor stood empty and the other was serving customers a far from fresh local white wine with a misleadingly inviting name.
We were on our honeymoon and in quest of the Lawrence villa. The town, with its scenic Greek amphitheatre, was now effortlessly attractive. We found the villa, and so, on another occasion, did the modern American travel writer Paul Theroux, who commemorated its Lawrentian connection in a creepy little novella entitled The Stranger at the Palazzo d’Oro, set in the town’s best hotel.
Continuing In Lawrence’s wake, Sue and I tramped the streets and down to the station to take a train to Syracuse - familiar to Lawrence - via squalid Catania, birthplace of the exquisitely Chopinesque bel canto composer Vincenzo Bellini at the foot of Mount Etna.
We had reached Sicily from Rome via a week in Paestum, with its spectacular Greek temples, pine groves, and buffalo fields, before crossing to the island on the railway ferry, the long-promised bridge across the straits not yet having been built - it still hasn’t. We returned north via lunch in Rome to the hill town of Todi in Umbria, where we sheltered from rain in shop doorways and warily walked the ramparts. Lawrence’s Italian trail has many strands.
3 October 2016
It was the furthest point on his long Italian trail, beyond which he could only change direction. By then the ailing author’s death in Vence, in France’s Alpes Maritimes. lay not far off. He needed mountain air, he had been advised, more than he needed the seaside.
But he still had places to go, and the strength to go to them, and he was still writing with relentless gusto. One January night in Taormina he and Frieda awoke in darkness, filled a thermos of tea, packed what they described as their mobile kitchenino, and walked down the hill to the railway station for an improvised trip to Sardinia. At dawn they caught a local train to the wrecked town of Messina, destroyed by a mighty earthquake in 1908 with thousands of dead, before changing in pouring rain to the single-track Palermo express with a 32-hour voyage to Sardinia - “lost between Europe and Africa” “
as Lawrence put it - in prospect.
No journey, even the later one with Lawrence’s death at the end of it, was ever too daunting for them. It was their lifestyle, to which the possibility of a family parenthood was always irrelevant. When they got back to Sicily, Lawrence wrote Sea and Sardinia, one of his best books, in his most tirelessly vigorous prose and went on eating Maltese bacon.
In Sardinia they docked in Cagliari, where in 1990 the World Cup final between England and the Netherlands would result in a draw and Bill Bufford, innocently representing Granta Magazine was beaten up by the carabinieri during a nasty clash between the Italian police and the public. For the Lawrences, striding up the steep hill from the harbour to find a hotel for the night, things were less eventful. Next day they steamed by puffer train to the centre of the island to continue their adventure.
A decade after Lawrence’s death, during the Second World War, Taormina became the home - as well as Gestapo headquarters - of the ruthless Albert Kesselring, Germanys’ Nazi commander in Italy, from which he was eventually driven out by the start of the Allied thrust northwards from Sicily through Anzio (scene of the admirable new novel by Sebastian Faulkes) and Monte Cassino, the area from where so many of Edinburgh’s resident Italians came.
But the Lawrence villa in Taormina still stands in a street beyond the public esplanade at the top of the town, where Lawrence had thought the sight of the plumes of smoke emerging from Mount Etna had looked so sinister. Geoff Dyer, in his study of Lawrence, Out of Sheer Rage, wrote of a split level restaurant on the precipice, which Sue and I would also visit during our time in Taormina, when one floor stood empty and the other was serving customers a far from fresh local white wine with a misleadingly inviting name.
We were on our honeymoon and in quest of the Lawrence villa. The town, with its scenic Greek amphitheatre, was now effortlessly attractive. We found the villa, and so, on another occasion, did the modern American travel writer Paul Theroux, who commemorated its Lawrentian connection in a creepy little novella entitled The Stranger at the Palazzo d’Oro, set in the town’s best hotel.
Continuing In Lawrence’s wake, Sue and I tramped the streets and down to the station to take a train to Syracuse - familiar to Lawrence - via squalid Catania, birthplace of the exquisitely Chopinesque bel canto composer Vincenzo Bellini at the foot of Mount Etna.
We had reached Sicily from Rome via a week in Paestum, with its spectacular Greek temples, pine groves, and buffalo fields, before crossing to the island on the railway ferry, the long-promised bridge across the straits not yet having been built - it still hasn’t. We returned north via lunch in Rome to the hill town of Todi in Umbria, where we sheltered from rain in shop doorways and warily walked the ramparts. Lawrence’s Italian trail has many strands.
3 October 2016
Saturday, 1 October 2016
South to Sicily
I first visited Sicily to write about some concerts the Scottish Chamber Orchestra was giving there with Barry Tuckwell as hornist and conductor. It was not a major tour but more the sort of event where things go wrong, which makes them interesting to write about. So I accepted the invitation, hoping to find something to say.
There was nothing special about the playing, other than a professional amount of polish. But it was an invitation it might have seemed churlish to turn down. Palermo, for me as for most of the players, was somewhere new.
There were things to could do between concerts. It was a good city for walking. Tall, narrow streets were topped, southern style, by lines of washing and cleavages of blue sky. A restaurant associated with Prince Giuseppe di Lampedusa, distinguished author of Sicily’s historical novel The Leopard, had a mushroom menu it was impossible to resist, with one course of wild funghi after another, cooked in various inviting ways. And there were, before going there, the strains of Tuckwell playing Mozart. For a music critic who was also a food scribe, things looked not unpromising.
But yes, things also went wrong or failed to materialise . The vast Teatro Massimo, where the Mafia reputedly wielded power and whose opera company had given Peter Diamand a rough time when he invited it to the Edinburgh Festival, was temporarily closed, with nothing to offer musical visitors on a night off.
Messina, next stop on the tour, remained scarred by the memory of vast earthquake and tsunami in 1908 when, both there and on mainland Italy, up to 200,000 people were killed between Mount Etna in one direction and Stromboli in the other.
Even the orchestra’s arrival in Palermo had been disrupted by the loss in transit of evening clothes, necessitating the opening concert being performed in jeans. And my penthouse hotel room, as I discovered, had been booked by a local pop group for rehearsals and was filled with equipment. Not for another ten years would I see Sicily again, in very different circumstances. It was a long wait.
1 October 2016
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Into Italy
You can do worse, it has been suggested, than read the works of DH Lawrence - though FR Leavis, Cambridge’s abrasive Lawrentian sage, would have put it more affirmatively than that. Could you, he might have asked, ever do better?
On trips to Italy, where for a time Lawrence travelled restlessly, I feel I have been reading him for most of my life, not least during the twenty years I was lucky enough to own a tiny property in the mountains above Lake Como, where my Lawrence fixation was linked with another one involving Alessandro Manzoni, whose passion for the Italian north inspired his substantial historical novel The Betrothed. It is a book, I was to discover, as enthralling as Lawrence’s famous reflections on the trek he made just over a century ago with Frieda, his future wife, from southern Germany across the temperamental Alps to the sunny security of Lake Garda at the age of 27, examining wildflowers and eventually munching figs as he progressed.
Manzoni, dedicatee of Verdi’s Requiem, placed his indelible stamp on Italian literature with the adventures of Renzo and Lucia, the young lovers around whom he assembled The Betrothed, and I have delved into this panorama of old Italian life again and again on trips when a music critic should do more with himself than devour the works of Donizetti.
My targeted village was no international tourist spot - it was a workplace, not only for me but for the cheesemakers, creators of the Taleggio now sold by Sainsbury, who were among its other inhabitants. The place never quite became my home, which indisputably remained Edinburgh, especially when people, spotting me in the Queen’s Hall, approached me with a jovial shout of “Back from Tuscany.”
I was conscious that, with its fireflies on warm nights, its platefuls of polenta, its attractive self-containment, home was what in fact my abode in Lombardy could easily have become, if I had allowed it to. I paid Italian tax, had a local bank account, and was registered as a resident. Though friends and relations frequently came calling I never stooped commercially to sub-letting it. But if I had truly lived there, I would no longer have been able to go there. I would be there already. I wanted to retain the joy of being a visitor.
My village’s name was Introbio and I prized it because it was so simply itself. I knew from reading Manzoni that an attack on its ancient fortified tower, during a period of north Italian strife, had prompted him to launch a chapter of The Betrothed with the words “Introbio has fallen.” But each summer when I was there, villagers from far and wide - from neighbouring Primaluna and Pasturo or from Barzio and Ballabio along the valley - commemorated its historical rescue from adversity by ascending mile after mile to a triple conical peak, the Pizzo di Tre Signori, highest in the area called the Valsassina, for a sprawling outdoor service of thanksgiving.
With Sue in quest of Lawrence
Twilight in Italy, the first of DH Lawrence’s collections of Italian travel essays, would spring to mind, even though it was about a different, though not dissimilar, Alpine pass, further to the east. While Sue, whom I was soon to marry, posed with me on one occasion for a snapshot as if we were Lawrence and Frieda tramping the the Pfitserjoch in less settled weather, observing “the crucifix in the mountains,” as Lawrence called it at the start of his book, and dallying at rustic refuges in prediction of episodes from Women in Love, his greatest novel, the circumstances of their renowned walk came invariably into focus.
Even a minor accident, when I slipped and fell while being followed down a narrow track by a random cow with a Mahlerian bell clanging on its neck and was nearly flattened beneath its feet, was all part of the picture.
Previously, on our first overland traversal of the Alps, Sue had driven me south from Alsace with a small cargo of furniture in alarming snow and fog over the top of the St Gotthard Pass before spending a night in a fire-lit chalet run by the Nestle chocolate family as a guest house. There, with a small group of Americans, we had eaten thick veal chops and fresh rosti potatoes for our supper on the heights above the flashy ski resort of St Moritz before descending next day to the small Italian town of Chiavenna, where one of our village friends used to go to have his hair cut, and from there to Lake Como.
But it is the Lawrence route which has now become glamorous showbiz, his long mountain hike evoked on film by Catherine Brown, a British authority commissioned a year or two ago by the BBC Culture Show to follow the track, in company with a fellow Lawrentian, the lanky Geoff Dyer, author in 1997 of Out of Sheer Rage: In the Shadow of DH Lawrence, an oblique but hilarious study of the man. At one point while writing his book Dyer had resolved, he said, not to write it, but he did so all the same, choosing its title from Lawrence’s Collected Letters where, “out of sheer rage, ” Lawrence had been contemplating the idea of a short biography of Thomas Hardy.
As Lawrence, reputedly a man of infinite anger, had asserted, he had no real wish to write about Hardy. Dyer took this as his cue and, scribbling with manic virtuosity, had progressed with his own book.
In Catherine Brown’s filmed re-enactment of Lawrence’s Italian journey, there were unexpected problems to contend with. She had never made a film before and, with a cameraman lugging his big movie camera up the track like a cross-bearer, found it all much harder than expected. The weather was erratic. Her climbing boots leaked. She had a hangover induced by an Alpine liqueur and was feeling dehydrated. But in Lawrentian terms the adventure represented Eternity with a capital “E.” The film, ripened by references to his vivid vocabulary, would endure until the world ended.
She and Dyer were expected to converse on foot about Lawrence’s vexed sense of humour, which she believed in and said definitely existed. She quoted examples but the BBC’s film director was not amused. After several takes, clearer evidence was demanded.
As a side issue there was the knowledge that, en route, Lawrence and Frieda had encountered two young male friends, with one of whom Lawrence went botanising while, in a mountain shed, Frieda had a secret fling with the other. Now this was something with dramatic, possibly even humorous, potential. But when, to Lawrence’s discomfort, she divulged the truth to him a day or two later, they had reached the perilous top of the pass in darkness five miles higher and things were not looking good for Frieda’s safety.
Lawrence’s book and its incidents are now gorgeously evocative and visual, still savoured and avidly pored over, the whole experience re-enacted in the film and on a travel page of the Financial Times featuring Brown and Dyer in transit, accessible on the internet.
The original walk was a far cry from Lawrence’s native mining community of Eastwood near Nottingham, which he wanted to destroy brick by brick, and in two subsequent collections of essays - Sea and Sardinia, with its emotive opening words, “Comes over one an absolute necessity to move,” and in its successor Etruscan Places - move was what he undoubtedly did, while asking people continually where he should move to.
But before then, from high in the Alps, his descent to Lake Garda with Frieda went without mishap. They rented a house set back from the lake. They ate figs. Later they would continue south to Tuscany and ultimately to the coastal resort of Taormina in Sicily, with its views of smoking Mount Etna. There, for three years, they rented another house, the Villa Fontana Vecchia, on the edge of what is now the via David Herbert Lawrence, where the premises with their identifying plaque would later be occupied by a local Sicilian and his nonagenarian mother who, as a girl, had once delivered Lawrence’s letters.
What remains of his furniture - a sofa and the desk at which he furiously wrote and did translations -- is reportedly still there.
Sue and I honeymooned in Taormina in 1995. Following the Lawrence trail has become high-edge travel, an ongoing, unending reality for all who do it, and, with Sue, I remain exultant to have done a few small bits of it.
30 September 2016
Watch this space...
Conrad has been writing a long blog on a topic close to his heart ... which will be appearing very soon.
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