Beethoven The Bodhisattva

It’s one of THOSE topics. One of those things that literally anyone will talk about whenever you mention you’ve got an affinity for classical. “Oh, I love Beethoven!” Well, yeah. We all do. We all also love breathing. There’s a Peanuts strip about this (though I think there’s a Peanuts strip about everything), where Lucy asks Schroeder what the meaning of life is. He screams “BEETHOVEN” and then launches into a piano piece.

It’s funny, because it’s such a simple answer. Normally, the answer to that question is extremely convoluted. You hear things like “Helping others – but not to the point where you hurt yourself – unless—” or “making your own corner of the world a little better,” or “do no harm.” But those are usually given with lengthy, almost religious sermons about exactly what that means. Can the answer be as simple as “BEETHOVEN?” I think so. I also think the answer is simple because there is no “answer,” as we usually think about it. But that doesn’t really work, because there has to be a lengthy, weird discussion about just what I mean by that.

Back to Beethoven.

There’s a bit in The Salmon of Doubt where Douglas Adams introduces a recording of Bach’s “Brandenberg Concertos.” Among other things, he takes a minor swipe at Beethoven – and this is about the only thing I can ever say negative about Adams. He says that Beethoven shows us what it means to be Beethoven, but Bach shows us what it means to be human. I’m not so sure about that. Bach shows us what it means to be struggling with creativity, when you’re so confined by your circumstances that you have to work in a certain way for fear of some pretty severe repercussions. And yeah, that’s human. Who hasn’t felt that way? But that’s pretty solidly experiential human. That’s just what we see in our day-to-day lives. Is there anything deeper? Can someone like me, someone who’s pretty solidly materialistic, dare to say that?

Yep. Yep I can.

There lives in each of us a thread of commonality with each other and everything around us. It’s the universe, and not in the New Age way – not in the Neil DeGrasse Tyson, we’re-all-stardust way. We are the universe, and the universe loves to be us. Everything we experience is tied into the universe and, with each passing moment, the universe grows in a way that was impossible before. And that takes into account the good and the bad. Every moment of anxiety you have, every time I think about what it is I’m going to do in the future, that is just as important, just as significant, as the best of times – say, when you’re in the living room of your house puttin’ the moves on a lady. That is just as important, just as necessary, just as bloody vital as anything else in your life, or anything else that’s happening at that time. And I’m not sure Bach gets there.

I’m not saying Beethoven gets there all the time. The man’s work was extensive and staggering in breadth and subject matter, and everyone knows Beethoven, even if they don’t know they do. In that regard, he’s like Shakespeare, who’s just as relevant to being human – living in the universe – as Beethoven was. (And continues to be.) But what I am saying is that the Ninth symphony – the magnificent piece of work that looks out through the ages and, almost scoffing, says, “Go ahead. Try and dethrone me.” – gets there. In this piece, Beethoven gets it. He not only gets it, but he wants to make us get it. In the Ninth, Beethoven is a bodhisattva.

From the opening bars, those airy notes that tell you something is coming, something very strong and powerful, and you’d better be ready for it, the symphony knows exactly what it’s doing. Bach and Mozart revel in their intellectuality – and they should. Watch Bernstein talking about Mozart’s 40th and try to not be impressed. But the intellect is only part of the experience of life – it’s a fraction. The emotionality of life makes up a huge swath that a lot of people – myself included – are fairly reticent to talk about. Beethoven, in the Ninth, explores it. He expresses it through a form of communication I cannot fathom using. Putting the depth of this stuff into notes – translating it from one dude’s mind to making sure that everyone in the orchestra can express it, that’s something. And it’s all there, the warning of the first movement. The airyness gives way to mass. You start to feel the thrill of the piece, the joy of creation as expressed by a human being who has been there, done that, returned to tell the tale, and, though he can’t hear what you’re going to say to him, knows exactly what’s going to be said.

And then the second act. Gone is the airiness. The spiritual is put to the side, and we explore the material. Here, Beethoven understands the importance of the flesh and blood, and tells you that. He says, “Don’t be concerned about the spiritual for now. Let the percussion fill the fibers of your muscles. The counterpoints, the peaks and valleys, this is all something you know, isn’t it?” You’re taken on the waves of the experience of the universe, and, though if you’re just reading this, you might think I’m very, very high right now – I’m not. Sit in a room. A quiet room, one with minimal lighting and very high quality speakers. Put this on. Pay attention to the first movement, then think – think – about what the second movement is adding to it. For the spiritual is incomprehensible to the mind, but the material is right there in front of you if you pay attention to it.

And then the sudden shift to the third movement. What can we get from this? What the hell is going on here? Just as we’re riding the high of the material, we go back to this? This is like a slow version of the first movement! In fact, isn’t that what Alex called it in A Clockwork Orange? The slow bit from Ludwig Van? Well, it is. But it’s also something more than that. It’s what happens when you start fusing the spiritual and the material. It’s a prelude. It’s that plateau right before nirvana, where you look out at where you’ve come from – the valley below – and you think, “So it’s come to this.” It’s serene in its own rite, but it’s also a bit unnerving. The suddenness is something like when you first hit the Rockies after driving through Kansas. You want to shout out in glee, but you can’t, because you know that doing so would ruin the pristine view. (Well, moreso than it’s been ruined by that guy from Wisconsin doing 30 in a 55.) So you may be thinking this is when Beethoven wanted his listeners to chill out – maybe take a nap. You’re wrong. It’s vital. It’s just as vital as experiencing your anxiety and your fears.

Then, as the third movement winds down with an even – somehow – more low-key section, it begins to pick up. The combination of material and spiritual is complete. The sun has risen over the Rockies and – silly you – you were totally, utterly wrong in thinking that you’ve seen the best of what there is to see.

The entire orchestra picks it up. We hear the percussion rumbling as if a heavy thunder on the Plains, the strings providing the sonic pillow and comfort, the brass providing the rain. The airs of the first movement return – there’s yet more to come. You’re not ready for it – you’re never ready for something like this – but, by God, they’re on their way. The orchestra takes on a more playful note. Threads from previous movements reappear. You start to recognize certain things, and something’s nagging you. Something’s biting at the back of your head and, like forgotten song lyrics, you can’t quite put your finger on what it is.

And then – voila! – hallelujah! – the famous refrain. That bit that everyone and their mother knows. Yes. It’s that bit from Die Hard. It’s that thing that makes this symphony so popular: The start of the choral section. It is triumphant. It transcends mere humanity, and it shows us exactly what we can be, if only we would dare to be it.

This, by the way, is the part that was based on what I’ve heard is a fairly mediocre poem celebrating the ideals of the Enlightenment. You probably know that term because it was driven through your head in AP European History. It’s that period of intellectual growth that brought us, in many ways, to where we are today. It was, in many ways, a second Renaissance – though while the first one recaptured some of the glory of the Roman Empire, this second one made it new. It made it fresh. On the threshold of the Napoleonic Wars, after the ideals of the French Revolution soured, and way before the dark, demonic clouds of the World Wars gave birth to a breed of cynicism that looked down upon early cynics as being too cheerful, we had idealism. That philosophy that, yeah, we can know everything. We can do everything. We can unite everyone by raising them up. You know what else? We can make everything knowable to everyone, and we’re gonna put it all in dictionaries and encyclopedias. And it’s gonna be the best thing ever.

It is that idea, that premise, that is the common ground of the Ode to Joy. “All men become brothers” is a phrase in it. Yeah, it’s dated. It sounds something like what a hippie would say. But, you listen to the chorus, and, if you’re not thinking about Die Hard, then you get it. You understand that it is a possibility. You, by listening to this symphony, by letting it into your soul and into your mind, have become not just a passive listener, but a participant.

When I saw this performed in Nashville, there was a woman in front of me who looked at her husband – and I figured this out – about three times a minute. Once every twenty seconds, on average. The frequency increased during the chorus, and especially the finale, when everything coalesces into a glorious, sublime noise unlike anything you’ve ever heard before. It doesn’t matter if you can’t speak a word of German. Beethoven does the work for you. He puts everything in the music, forces the talented vocalist to do the work so that you may have even an inkling of what he’s talking about.

This isn’t a piece for the harpsichord, to be performed in a small setting and enjoyed with a fine wine. This is something that you should take with you every day of your life, every moment of your life. You are alive, and, whether you attribute that to religion or a series of stuff, that is pretty damned amazing. And Beethoven gets that. He wants you to understand it. In his scowling, bodhisattva regard, he looks out from history and says, “Even when I’m deaf, I hear these notes. I hear these notes because I look out in front of me, at the world, and I consider what has led me to this moment, and I am stricken with wonderment at it all. Aren’t you?”

As Germany unified, there was a special performance in Berlin. Bernstein conducted it. For this one time, the words of the chorus were rewritten to be “freedom” instead of “joy.” “Freiheit” instead of “freude.” It was an immediate way to put salve on a wound that was over thirty years old, and it would take many, many years – and some would say that it’s still in the process – before that wound was fully healed. But, while I wasn’t there, I’d imagine that, for the 17 minutes that this portion of the symphony was being performed and broadcasted, there was some sense that everything was going to be all right. That a wrong was going to be righted.

There’s a story about a Zen priest. This priest lived near a village, and people knew him. He begged, and he did his Zen thing. One day, a boy who lived on a farm near the village was given a horse for his birthday. The villagers all said how great this was, but the priest said, “We’ll see.” The next year, the boy fell from the horse and broke his leg so badly that it never healed. The villagers all said how awful this was, but the priest said “We’ll see.” When the boy was older, and the precinct’s men were being recruited for war, the boy was exempt because of his bad leg. Everyone said how great this was, but the priest said, “We’ll see.”

The priest understood the universe, you see. He knew that good, bad, they’re all the same. They are the universe, and to separate them is to try and do something pretty silly. Beethoven, though I don’t think he ever sat zazen, understood this as well. The joy – the chorus, the marriage of Enlightenment to music – that comes after the fusion of spiritual and musical ends. After that’s complete, then we get to experience what it all means.

That is what the Ninth means. And that is what Schroeder meant when he shouted “BEETHOVEN.”

My suggested recording: The super long, sublimely-paced, Gunter Wand arrangement. Trust me.

Portland and Whitman

It’s been a crazy summer. After a lot of soul-searching and debating, I decided to quit my job at GNRC and move out to Portland, Oregon. GNRC was very good to me and, though the never-ending clashes with TennCare and the Department of Human Services were truly mind-numbingly mental, I don’t think I can say anything bad about the administration at GNRC, or my supervisor and coworkers. All were great to work with and – probably due to the nature of their work – amazingly supportive and all-around cool people.

But to every thing there is a season, and after three years, I decided that I needed to grow some more – in writing, career, and general self. So, I decided to follow the greatest American tradition of them all and pack up shop and move West. (Kind of. I’ve still got a bunch of stuff in storage in Nashville.)

Along the way, I stayed with family in St. Louis, MO and Grand Lake, CO. I stayed with a friend in Colorado Springs, CO. I stayed at a Best Western in Boise, ID where I probably drank an entire pot of black coffee before leaving. Colorado is an amazingly beautiful state and, more than once, I thought about just stopping there and trying to find work in Denver. I mean, it’s… well, you need to go.

But anyway, I headed West again and finally arrived in Portland. I stayed with my buddy, Jon Lim, for a few days and then found a room for rent in a small but nice house in a leafy, quiet neighborhood. There’s no internet at the house, but, all things told, that’s probably not the worst thing. I mean, I’m going to have to get Internet access at some point, but that’ll wait until I get my job situation sorted out.

Which brings me to the real fun, introspective stuff! I’m trying to get a foot in the door in the tech sector, bringing my pretty decent knowledge of HTML and CSS, along with my intermediate-I’ll-need-some-reminders knowledge of Ruby and Rails, and then my I-can-print-“Hello World” knowledge of Javascript. Portland’s a great town for that, and I’m excited about some opportunities with New Relic, and then some open applications with Simple, Urban Airship, and a couple other places. (The list will no doubt grow as the week progresses.)

AND THEN, I had the honor to work on Katie Hogben’s book for a musical-in-progress. It’s based on a Robert Louis Stevenson short story, and I have no doubt that you’ll be seeing it in the West End and Broadway soon enough. Of course, by “work on,” I mean I provided some editorial assistance, finally putting to work all the workshop experience I’ve accumulated at UT, UKC, and elsewhere. And, wouldn’t you know it, it’s been invigorating. I’ve always known that creativity is the best way to keep myself in good spirits, whether it’s writing my own fiction, editing others’, or working on a movie –  but sometimes, it’s good to remind yourself of that.

Which brings me to one of the major ideas I had recently. My buddy, Jeff Chiu, the Man With Firey Fists, recently nabbed a sweet room in a cool flat with Sione Aeschliman, editor, writer, and owner of one of the most charmingly neurotic dogs I’ve ever come across. I met up with the two of them yesterday – Sunday – for brunch at a place called The Songbird Cafe (please, hold the Bioshock Infinite jokes) and briefly discussed – among other things – what it takes to be a freelance editor.

Well, I know I’ve got the technical chops for it. So I thought about it, and realized that, hell, I’d been thinking about doing that as a side gig for a long time, so screw it – why not? So I’m going to take a look at the start-up costs for an LLC in Oregon and post my sign for some freelance work while also getting work (I mean, it’s a given, right?) in the tech sector.

So, why am I even looking for work in the tech sector? Why not just pursue editing full-time? Well, because I really do love me some programming. I was talking to a friend about it one day and brought up the stunning realization I had that, one night, I found myself working on a website at 11:30pm when I had work the next morning. I mean, that doesn’t happen. Even my fiction is highly scheduled to only be written in the early morning, so this new development shocked even me!

So, I’m sitting here in a strangely warm cafe called Stark Street Station, drinking some fine, locally roasted coffee, listening to my Tom Waits Pandora station and it’s hitting home: If nothing else, I’ve at least made it this far. I’ve gone and attempted the move to a pretty straight-up different town, am trying to find work outside my comfort zone, and, despite the occasional intrusive thought boiling up from the depths of my brain, I feel pretty good about it.

I think of the line from one of Brad Warner’s books that says something to the effect of: Take a look at your life – wherever you’re at, that’s where you really want to be at that moment.

I also think of this bit of Walt Whitman:

“Long enough have you dream’d contemptible dreams,
Now I wash the gum from your eyes,
You must habit yourself to the dazzle of the light
and of every moment of your life”

Adventures in Coding, Pt. 2

My last post about my coding adventures was destroyed by my negligence. Let’s hope this doesn’t suffer the same fate.

So last night, since I was able to work on the computer without a stormborn power outage, I fired up the second lesson of my Ruby on Rails class. The first lesson was centered around generating a new app, which led into a breakdown of all the bits and bobs of Ruby – gems, gemfile, some brief examples of code, all that stuff – as well as the essentials of uploading app frameworks to GitHub and Heroku.

The second one is building pages.

HTML and CSS, as I was telling someone, rely a lot on creating pages and stylesheets as if they are each different documents. Essentially, that doesn’t change with Ruby, but Ruby makes it a lot more convenient – and fast, I think. Whereas in HTML and CSS, I’d find myself opening a new document in Sublime Text, then editing it through that, and saving it as either .html or .css, Ruby has a command:

[current directory] $user generate controller Pages [name of page]

So, typing that into Terminal gives you a shiny, new, blank html page to work with. After editing the pages controller file in the database – changing definitions and actions so the app directs to the correct pages – you can have a url point to “home” rather than “home.html”.

This makes me grin. I don’t know why – exactly – but I had wondered why some pages allow that to work without a file extension, whereas others don’t. And it’s all through the power of Ruby. [Collective “Ooooh” and “aaaaah”]

Further, all the messing around with copying and pasting navigation bars, logos – well, everything that’s not the page-specific content, really – can be accessed using partials. Partials are bits of code that look like:

<%= render ‘[containing folder/filename (i.e. ‘header’)]’ %>

What that’s doing is telling the page to render a certain bit of code at a certain location, and spit that out on a page. You do that by putting the above code on a layout page, which controls the default view of every page.

Everything that’s not defaulted into a page is plopped into that layout by

<%= yield %>

From what I saw last night, that looks like it’s included by default when you generate a new page controller. But if you’re reading this, and you know that’s wrong. Let me know!

So, basically, all you have to do when you generate a new page is write in the HTML for the content of the page.

My God, it’s so easy!

(That said, I think I’ll still keep using <a href=”…”></a> for links. <%= link_to ‘…’ ‘…’> just feels wrong.)

Of course, there are the details to work out, like defining the pages and controllers, and all of that, but man. I get why people scoff at Ruby, but it seems like doing so would be like looking down on people for driving a car when they could be riding a horse. (Or flying across the country when they could be driving…)

So excited, you guys! Just wish I could rewatch these videos to hammer in the ideas, but nooOOoOOooOOooOOo. I should be working. Thanks, The Man.