March 12, 2010

Pegasus II  coming in 2014
Shadows coming in 2013

Bleeeeerg etc

 

It has not been a good week, barring skylarks.  You heard about Monday on Monday.  Computer Men said they would return yesterday, bearing Peter’s computer and my printer, but they have decided they are coming tomorrow.  They will, I hope, be able to return me to printability* here at the mews, but I have a Friday more Fridayish even than usual tomorrow, and so I will not be available to enable them to dedragon** the cottage desktop of its various little ways, like denying exit from the nuraddin address*** and refusing to open Windows all the way, so an open window scampers around the monitor like someone playing hopscotch.  Nor can they investigate why the Walkperson refuses to take both CDs of an opera instead of merely overwriting the first with the second.  Hey, it’s the same title, isn’t it?  And the ‘disc 2’ probably gets lost after the repetition of the credits, containing as they usually do sixteen sopranos, a counterbassoonist, and the kookaburra for the mad scene at the end of the second act.  I want my Gluck.†

            Tuesday I bollixed my voice lesson.  Whimper.  I half knew I was going to;  I was way too tired, I’d found two small but sordid inconsistencies in PEGASUS that I had to solve in exactly the same amount of space they were made in—your publisher will probably let you get away with resetting a very occasional line at the page proof stage, but that’s the limit—and the awful truth is that the five-star marketing plan is scaring me.††   So I went in there jumpy, distracted and underrehearsed, and sang like a person who was jumpy, distracted and underrehearsed, and it was pretty discouraging.†††

            Wednesday I went to Ditherington bell practise for our first meeting on the sad new schedule of only second, fourth and fifth-if-any Wednesdays . . . except that it didn’t happen.  Niall, Denis and I showed up . . . and spent an hour and a half ringing handbells—Niall never goes anywhere without his handbells—in a freezing cold transept because there was no one else there.  I went home, emailed Marilyn and Wild Robert, saying, what happened?, and got a really annoyingly chirpy email back from Marilyn with a copy of the email she had sent all of us about the fact that there was only one Ditherington practise this month.  Which Niall and I had both failed to write down.‡  Denis isn’t on Marilyn’s list;  his honour remains unimpugned. 

            And I didn’t have a guest post.‡‡

            Today because Colin cancelled and there were no handbells this evening‡‡‡ I decided to give myself a half day off from reading proofs and finish, or semi-finish, or get through draft 2B of, Frost and Fire and Ice to take to Oisin tomorrow:   I will probably die of a broken heart if I frumple two music lessons in a row.

            I’m a good girl:  I hit ‘save’ a lot.  I’d been working three hours or so, and was getting pretty tired, but I was also near the end of draft 2B and was feeling reasonably chirpy—ready for a hurtle, a cup of tea, and a return to page proofs.  I was pretty sure when Oisin played it back to me tomorrow I’d go, yerp, what was I thinking of, at intervals, but that’s okay.  I had something down to work with, and there were actual bits of it I likedAnd I’d quite recently hit ‘save’ when I got an error message saying that Windows had a fit of the vapours coming on and was going to close Finale down.  Yah boo sucks, I said, as it went KACHUNG off the corner of the piano, but, no big deal, I prodded it with a stick after a minute and woke it up again.  And started resignedly putting the last few minutes’ work in again.

            And noticed that there was kind of more missing than I was expecting . . .

            It had eaten my entire afternoon’s work, despite the fact that I had ‘saved’ about ten minutes before the crash.§

            I wasted about fifteen minutes trying to find a ‘contact us’ on the Finale web site that was a ‘contact us’ instead of a come on for lists of dealers and how you can follow them on Twitter and Facebook§§ or join their blog—GAAAAAAAAH—and then I emailed Oisin and a Wise American Friend, both of whom have suggestions for the possibility of ferreting the saved version from the bowels of the beast . . . but I still had to hurtle, read proofs, and write a blog entry, and I’m also a coward.  A, furthermore, incompetent coward. 

            Maybe I’ll try their suggestions now. 

            Maybe I’ll just go to bed.§§§           

* * *

* To the extent that I am ever ungleblarging printable

 ** Debug is nowhere near powerful enough  

*** System Administrator says you’re a bad person and must not be allowed to run at large among the innocent populace 

† I want my Gluck Orfeo with my Marilyn Horne and my other Gluck Orfeo with my Janet Baker—if the Walkperson can’t cope with 2 CDs of one opera it’s really going to have palpitations if I expect it to take on more than one recording of the same opera. 

            I can’t remember now when I watched the much-hyped Met production of Orfeo ed Eurydice on Sky.  Recently.  I do try to be colour/gender/poundage blind—if someone can sing and act I will avert my attention from the fact that they won’t see forty or a size twelve again, and are playing a tubercular seventeen-year-old.  But the k d lang look wasn’t doing our short-Coke-machine-shaped Orfeo any favours, whose acting also had a strong Coke-machine flavour.  However I would have encompassed all of this—since she did have a big, thick, rich—one might almost say chocolaty—voice . . . until we got to Che Faro Senza Eurydice^, an aria so familiar that even people who wouldn’t know an opera if it bit them on the leg^^ often recognise^^^, when she kumquatted the ending.  What?  —Yes, my reaction exactly.  WHAT?  You mess with Che Faro, I hunt you down and kill you.  A Metropolitan Opera mezzo can’t possibly be unable to hit a top F, for pity’s sake??+  So what happened?  Goblins in the TV crew? 

^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brGYq97Of6w 

^^ And often assume it wants to when it’s only trying to, you know, play . . . 

^^^ What is that?  —Wasn’t it that ad for drain cleaner?  

 + Even I have a top F, although no one in their right mind would call my voice thick, rich or chocolaty.  I’ve been trying to ignore questions of range because as soon as I’m aware of being above C-above-middle-C I start closing myself down from sheer funk.  But Blondel pointed out this week that as soon as I have a reliable G I can sing Dido’s Lament.  Oh.  Okay.  Goal.  Goals are good.  Meanwhile, speaking of goals and Gluck, I have a new one:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paride_ed_Elena

            I am shamefully unfamiliar with all but about four of Gluck’s operas—the fact that he seems to have written almost as many as Handel is a trifle daunting—and I knew nothing about Paride ed Elena till Radio Three played one of Paride’s arias the other day which stopped me dead in my tracks.  Want.  To.  Sing.  That.   It will be good if I can manage to find the frelling music;  it’s not something that rolls to the top of your average search engine. 

†† And then there’s stuff like the latest edition of SUNSHINE which I’ll show you as soon as I have a copy in my hot little hand.  But due to Screw Ups By Persons Who Shall Remain Nameless^, this is having to be pushed through at the speed of a hellhound after a hellbunny, and I fall over too easily.  This evening I got an email from my editor saying, hi, we need this cover text now.  I sent it back to her in about an hour.  But I’m still shaking like a leaf.

^Neither me, Merrilee, nor the editor in charge, which is all you need to know 

††† And it may be just as bad next week, because I’ll only have just turned in the PEGASUS corrections on Monday, and will still be looking around trying to see where I left my life.  I did tell Blondel that my so-called life has spells like this.  But the week after that I’m planning to be brilliant.  Um . . . 

‡ We ring too many handbells.  Really it’s bad for you. 

‡‡ I have mentioned this on the forum, but just so no one gets the wrong idea, NO, even if no one sends me any guest posts between now and the 2nd of November, I am not going to keep printing bits of PEGASUS on Wednesdays and Saturdays. 

‡‡‡ So last night was a good thing really. 

§ And while this is not in the same category of meltdown, as I was typing that sentence, my email pinged.  And when I went a few minutes later to look and see if anything cool was coming in^ I discovered that someone I have already put on my ‘blocked senders’ list has frelling come through again, as he/she has done several times already.  What the bleeding (*&^%$£”!!!!!! 

^ The Tyranny of the Ping 

§§ Bite me 

§§§  And furthermore Philip Langridge died.  He actually died last Friday, but I didn’t hear about it till Monday and only caught up with the obituary yesterday.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2010/mar/07/philip-langridge-obituary

            He was, speaking of acting singers, an actor.  Last time I saw him he was scaring you silly as the witch [sic] in Hansel and Gretel:  an opera I’ve never had much use for, partly because it’s usually played for a high smarm level.  Not this one.  More Bluebeard’s Castle than Goldilocks.  I have him on CD singing Britten’s Peter Grimes and the weak, venal captain in Billy Budd . . . both of which are so brilliantly evoked I find them hard to listen to:  I like the occasional speck of dawn in my unrelenting darkness.  I love Britten, but he was maybe a little too good at the snake pit that is humanity. 

            I never met Langridge, nor know anything about him but what I heard in a few interviews, but I feel like I’ve lost a friend.

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