The Volumes on Vitality: Part Two

Water Music

The next post is rather long & bleak, so here’s a pleasant break before really delving into the deep end. Here’s to a relaxing weekend; next post is on Monday!

“Shenandoah” arr. by unknown

Fairly certain this arrangement is a stylistic melding of two different arrangements for SATB (soprano, alto, tenor, bass) versions repurposed for this men’s group called Chanticleer.

The song first appeared in writing as “Shenadore” in The New Dominion Monthly in April, 1876. The author, Captain Robert Chamblet Adams, indicated that he had first heard the song around 1850.  W.B. Whall reprinted it in his 1910 book Ships, Sea Songs and Shanties Collected by W.B. Whall, Master Mariner. The lyrics tell the story of a canoeing voyageur, or fur trader, who was in love with the daughter of a Native American chief.

This earliest known version of the song likely originated with French Canadian voyageurs who traded with Native Americans around the Great Lakes starting in the 16th century. The voyageurs gave weapons, tools, and money in exchange for animal furs, especially beaver pelts. They often sang while they paddled their canoes along the Mississippi River and its tributaries, including the Missouri, in the quest for furs.

“The Blue Danube Waltz” arr. by Johann Strauss II

I remember first hearing this one in 2001: A Space Odyssey; still one of my favorites of all time. I think Kubrick purposefully picked this song as the Sea of Tranquility is where the obelisk is found for the first time by spacefaring humans. In the next post, at the end, I’ll lightly touch on water as a fuel source; I like to imagine Kubrick was aware of this technology & wanted to symbolically portray it both musically & geographically, as far as the moon goes, which is also symbolically synonymous with the seas & the tides.

Written to celebrate the River Danube that flows through Vienna, it was premiered as a choral piece on February 13, 1867 at a concert of the Vienna Men’s Choral Association. Its initial performance only got a lukewarm response and Strauss is reputed to have said “The devil take the waltz, my only regret is for the coda – I wish that had been a success!” Strauss adapted it into a purely orchestral version for the World’s Fair in Paris that same year, and it this form that it is best known today.

“Boat on Tai Lake” arr. by Dr. Reed Criddle

I honestly have had the hardest time finding historical notes about this piece; I’ve tried for about 5 years now since first hearing this song with no luck whatsoever.

Tai Lake is a lake in the Yangtze Delta and one of the largest freshwater lakes in China. The lake lies in Jiangsu province and significant part of its southern shore forms its border with Zhejiang.

“Across the Western Ocean” arr. by Celius Dougherty

I only know this song because I was a choir nerd as a kid (can you tell yet?) & sang this piece as a solo. I think the lyrics are depressingly beautiful, the opening line is timeless: “oh the times are hard & the wages low,” how much more needs to be said?

Penniless in the wake of a potato famine in their homeland, one and a half million Irish people immigrated to the United States between 1846 and 1850. Their passages were frequently paid by relatives who had already settled in America. Crossing the Atlantic by packet ship was inexpensive, especially for those who traveled from English ports, due to trade competition between America and Britain. The journey took at least six weeks on the overcrowded vessels. Famine, disease, and shipwreck caused an estimated one of every five immigrants to die at sea.

Thanks for reading & hopefully listening to these awesome pieces of music!

P.S. leave a comment! Tell me of your goals, expectations, concerns for 2022; I hope to create an area where it can all be hashed out.

P.P.S. are there water restrictions where you live too?

© 2022 Zakariyas James. First shared here at theruminationcompilation.wordpress.com.

The Volumes on Vitality: Part One

The Summer Solstice

For the next few posts, I’ll be devoting time to discussing water in a multi-part series we’ll call “The Volumes on Vitality”.

In the Northern Hemisphere, where I’m writing this from, the first day of summer starts tomorrow!

When I was really young, my mother made a point to use my summer breaks from school in hotter-than-hell Arizona to take trips to Ethiopia as that’s where she’s originally from; she would always say it’s a trip to see extended family & to see how the rest of the world lives with my own eyes.

Even though it lies north of the equator, due to large mountain ranges & high elevation most of Ethiopia is subject to two rainy seasons: a short one that lasts from February to April, and a longer one that lasts from mid-June to mid-September. I essentially skipped the summer season over five times just by traveling to a place where the four season schematic is not descriptive of the climate-I jokingly call this a life hack from time to time.

On the other hand, my father’s side of the family is from a tiny town called Wardell, Missouri of about 390 people per the last U.S. census where “natural gas [came]…in 1966 or 1967 and a sewage system was installed in 1976. Although public water had been available since 1962, each individual had to install his own cesspool or septic tank,” as Eva Welch wrote in “History of Wardell”. (The Mr. & Mrs. W.O. James mentioned at the end of paragraph 6 are my great grandparents.)

When I review my ancestral roots, I always marvel at the similarities my two families displayed in regards to their experiences with water even though they were genuinely worlds apart, 7,858 miles to be exact.

On one side, I see Amharas walking with jugs of water on their backs for miles & on the other, I see Americans doing the same thing; the only real difference is the timeframe in which these events took place.

Large bodies of water are prevalent aspects of both parties & their stories of success, failure & demise. Wardell itself lies about 10-14 miles from the Mississippi River & Ethiopia itself is home to the Nile River; both are foundational in the formation of various cultures to date like the people of Egypt & the people of the Sioux nation in America & both have storied histories of both floods & droughts.

This summer, besides moving from one state to another with my fiancé & two cats, I plan on being a bit more aware of water & the things water accompany. This blog aside, I’ve been finding myself in a recurring position where I utilize water & begin thinking about these molecules strung together perfectly that create this world we inhabit, in all its variety. A repetitive motion of, “water my plant, think about water, realize I have other plants to water, repeat process” that admittedly hasn’t done much other than help me recall memories where I’m at a body of water with family & friends or I think about humanity in general.

I encourage whoever is reading, the next time you use water, think about the water for a bit. “Where has it been?” “Where will it go?” The next time you take a sip, think to yourself, “what else did it give further life to, before me?”

Thanks for reading.

P.S. leave a comment! Tell me of your goals, expectations, concerns for 2022; I hope to create an area where it can all be hashed out.

P.P.S. are there water restrictions where you live too?

Links to review: https://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/san-diego-county-water-authority-proposes-5-2-increase-citing-inflation-and-energy-costs/2957211/

© 2022 Zakariyas James. First shared here at theruminationcompilation.wordpress.com.

The New Three R’s:

Rates, Restrictions & Representation

I’m a product of the mid-90’s; a measured concept of early education at that time was “reading, writing & arithmetic”. Admittedly, I’m a novice writer, an impatient reader that skims more than I should & mathematics are a language I don’t understand all too often-calculators are translators in my eyes.

But I think there are new ideological frameworks available as rubrics from here on out.

Economically, on, June 13th, 2022, “The S&P 500 slumped nearly 4%, entering a bear market territory, meaning the broad benchmark index has now dropped more than 20% from its most recent high. The S&P 500 had briefly entered a bear market last month but was able to pull back, a feat it was unable to accomplish this time around.”

Obviously, it is now more than safe to say “rates” will be on many minds as life with a dollar that doesn’t stretch like it used to starts to feel like the body not stretching the same it way did last year either, just sad all around.

Socially, we’re at a point now where the social credit system is more than simply a TV trope or a concept far away in “the East”; within the last year or so, I’ve watched, with others, the slow refinement of how consumers can interact with creators on various platforms.

From removing the option to like/dislike content, to flooding spaces with bots that can mimic a genuine account & up/downvote content enmasse (at the least) & outright removing creators from platforms or removing consumers from platforms, our ability to have meaningful interaction unencumbered with rules outside of the framework of the language itself will dissipate faster than the pennies pinched & dollars stretched.

On another hand busy trying to make ends meet since the last recession, both economically & socially, the concept of rate of infection is now at the forefront of policymakers, market makers & the commonwealth’s mind, no matter how much we try to focus on any other issue, pertinent or not. Like many others, I have built an irregular habit of staying up-to-date on various diseases of elevated concern as determined by the World Health Organization. How long will I & others find themselves looking at case rates & articles upon articles of issues close in proximity & far outside our scope of contact?

Lately, I’ve been restricting myself in ways more than likely concerning or amusing for an outsider looking in; from being painfully mindful of spending habits while looking at the impulse aisle goodies to skipping certain sources of protein in lieu of elevated zoonotic disease spreading across the continental U.S.

Self-imposed restrictions are always subject to scrutiny by the masses; how often do we find content online or in mainstream media demeaning or berating individuals for fasting, abstaining from sex, going gluten free, etc. even the abstinent voter is still in 2022 admonished at a rate greater than the corporations who time & time again find themselves indisposed indefinitely during tax season. Sure, we as the commonwealth griped a bit here & there to no avail but I dare you to buy a “I didn’t vote” sticker this weekend & see how that goes.

State-imposed restrictions are another matter.

To date, a number of governing bodies are exercising emergency powers either challenged as excessive by way of unlimited scope of control through ambiguous language or excessive due to social determinations that the powers are no longer needed. The average Joe can complain about the ruling Joe’s orders all day & night but there is no true amount of scrutiny involved in this process, as we have seen thus far considering emergency powers from 2001 still abide.

In a world of staggering uncertainty, I question how well you & I are represented & considered in the determinations & processes that spur on action. Very often, regardless of external circumstances, I question how well I represent myself given the fact that I learn more about my goals, dreams, fears, desires as I age or they simply shift with experience & preference.

Will we be better represented in this coming world or will we find our representation by authoritative & legislative bodies simply shift with experience & preference?

P.S. leave a comment! Tell me of your goals, expectations, concerns for 2022; I hope to create an area where it can all be hashed out.

Links to ponder that’ve come out since posting this:

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/24/roe-v-wade-overturned-by-supreme-court-ending-federal-abortion-rights.html

https://www.dw.com/en/water-scarcity-eu-countries-forced-to-restrict-drinking-water-access/a-62363819

https://www.england.nhs.uk/london/2022/08/25/routine-hiv-testing-rolls-out-to-all-emergency-departments-in-london/

© 2022 Zakariyas James. First shared here at theruminationcompilation.wordpress.com.