20070121

Weekend rumble

I was resting on the sofa, minding my own business, when...

"A moderate earthquake shook eastern South Korea on Saturday, but no injuries or damage were reported.

"The 4.8-magnitude quake hit about 9 p.m. local time and was centered 14 miles west of Gangneung, a coastal city about 150 miles east of Seoul."

We live halfway between Gangneung and Seoul and we felt and heard this quake for several seconds. It came in two different waves and lasted for maybe 15 seconds overall. It was felt in Seoul, also.

"Unlike quake-prone Japan, South Korea is considered relatively safe from earthquakes. Saturday's was one of the strongest temblors to hit South Korea since 1978, when a 5.2-magnitude quake hit."

This was our second Asian quake experience. The first was in Taipei.




20070116

Alice Coltrane, 1937-2007

And just a few months ago, she'd returned to the stage...

Alice Coltrane, the jazz musician who was closely linked with the music of her late husband, legendary US saxophonist John Coltrane, has died at the age of 69, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Citing a spokesman for the family, the Times said Coltrane died Friday at West Hills Hospital and Medical Center in West Hills of respiratory failure. She had been in frail health for some time.

Though known for her contributions to jazz and early New Age music, Coltrane, a convert to Hinduism, was also a significant spiritual leader and founded the Vedantic Center, a spiritual commune located in the Los Angeles area, the paper said.

For much of the last nearly 40 years, Alice Coltrane was also the keeper of her husband's musical legacy, managing his archive and estate. Her husband, one of the pivotal figures in the history of jazz, died of liver disease on July 17, 1967, at the age of 40.

A pianist and organist, Alice Coltrane was noted for her astral compositions and for bringing the harp onto the jazz bandstand, the paper said. Her last performances came in the fall, when she participated in an abbreviated tour that included stops in New York and San Francisco, playing with her saxophonist son, Ravi, according to the report.

She was born Alice McLeod in Detroit on August 27, 1937, into a family with deep musical roots. Her early musical career included performances in church groups as well as in top-flight jazz ensembles led by Lateef, guitarist Kenny Burrell and saxophonist Lucky Thompson. After studying jazz piano briefly in Paris, she moved to New York and joined the quartet of Terry Gibbs.

"As fascinating -- and influential -- as her later music was, it tended to obscure the fact that she had started out as a solid, bebop-oriented pianist," critic Don Heckman told The Times Saturday. "I remember hearing, and jamming with, her in the early '60s at photographer W. Eugene Smith's loft in Manhattan. At that time she played with a brisk, rhythmic style immediately reminiscent of Bud Powell."


She left Gibbs’ band to marry Coltrane and began performing with his band in the mid-1960s, replacing pianist McCoy Tyner. She developed a style noted for its power and freedom and played tour dates with Coltrane’s group in San Francisco, New York and Tokyo. She would say her husband’s musical impact was enormous.

“John showed me how to play fully,” she told interviewer Pauline Rivelli and Robert Levin in comments published in “The Black Giants.”

“In other words, he’d teach me not to stay in one spot and play in one chord pattern. ‘Branch out, open up … play your instrument entirely.’ … John not only taught me how to explore, but to play thoroughly and completely.”

After his death, she devoted herself to raising their children. Musically, she continued to play within his creative vision, surrounding herself with such like-minded performers as saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and Joe Henderson.


The video is from a Finnish vacation,
but the music is "Journey is Satchidananda."


Early albums under her name, including “A Monastic Trio,” and “Ptah the El Daoud,” were greeted with critical praise for her compositions and playing. “Ptah the El Daoud” featured her sweeping harp flourishes, a sound not commonly heard in jazz recordings. Her last recording, “Translinear Light,” came in 2004. It was her first jazz album in 26 years.

Through the 1970s, she continued to explore Eastern religions, traveling to India to study with Swami Satchidananda, the founder of the Integral Yoga Institute.

Upon her return she started a store-front ashram in San Francisco but soon moved it to Woodland Hills in 1975. Located in the Santa Monica Mountains since the early 1980s, the ashram is a 48-acre compound where devotees concentrate on prayer and meditation.

Known within her religious community by her Sanskrit name, Turiyasangitananda, Coltrane focused for much of the last 25 years on composing and recording devotional music such as Hindu chants, hymns and melodies for meditation. She also wrote books, including “Monumental Ethernal,” a kind of spiritual biography, and “Endless Wisdom,” which she once told a Times reporter contained hundreds of scriptures divinely revealed to her.

In 2001, she helped found the John Coltrane Foundation to encourage jazz performances and award scholarships to young musicians.




20070114

Fire on the Mountain:
A light for us all


"'Fire on the Mountain: A Gathering of Shamans' is a documentary about the connection between consciouness and nature, as embodied in the spiritual traditions of Indigenous Peoples, whose ecological metaphors of the sacred are so relevant to the modern world.

"[The documentary was filmed] in 1997 at an historic 10-day gathering of shamans from five continents, who travelled to Karma Ling, a Tibetan Buddhist retreat centre in the Val Saint Hugon in Savoy, in the French Alps, to discuss their concerns with H.H. the Dalai Lama and high-level representatives of the world's religions."




20070113

Star charts, Korean cash
and cosmic serpents

While I was out to lunch with my Lady Friend, I noticed a copy of the Joongang Ilbo behind her on the floor. Two dark, circular images that looked for all the world like a planisphere were featured next to an image of the new 10,000 won bill on the front page.

"What's that about?" I wondered as I tried to get a better look.

When we finished eating, I picked up the paper and could see that it was indeed on old-style planisphere. The proprietor said it was from the 16th century. There's not much that I can glean from the article, except that this bill will go into circulation on January 22.

I can share that the bill features an astrolabe built during the reign of King Sejong. The actual device, honcheonui (혼천위) is displayed at King Sejong's tomb, which happens to be across town from where we live. [See "How cosmic time was kept in Korea"]

I also have to mention that the light blue band across both frames is the Milky Way... and the dark gap in both renderings is the same feature discussed in the previous post about the Mayans, Xibalba and December 2012. To that, allow me to add:

"The Milky Way Galaxy is the inspiration for the symbol of the Ouroboros. Myth refers to a serpent of light residing in the heavens. The Milky Way is this serpent, and viewed at the galactic central point near Sagittarius, this serpent eats its own tail."




Xibalba byeol

Yet another in an occasional series
of posts about the cosmic hotness
in the constellation Orion
.



This is a composite image of the Orion Cloud that was produced by Robert Gendler. There were four separate frames exposed for a total of 50 hours in order to produce the image.

I was recently able to view The Fountain, in which the same stellar region featured above -- this time called Xibalba, and cast in the yellow-orange light of a dying star -- prominently figures.

Even though Mayan legend and cosmology seems to regard Xibalba as a treacherous underworld realm, Darren Aronofsky portrayed it as a glowing fixture in the firmament. Aronofksy mentions in an interview that a pathway to Xibalba was to be found in the object that Occidental cultures know as the Orion Nebula.

More often, however, I've read that Xibalba's symbolic position in the sky is situated along the dark rift of the Milky Way... which is on the opposite end of the celestial sphere from Orion.

"There is a dark bifurcation or dark rift in the Milky Way caused by interstellar dust clouds. To observers on Earth, it appears as a dark road. The Maya today are quite aware of this feature. The Quiche Maya call it Xibalba. [Additionally, see "The Road to Xibalba" --Ed.]


"The Mayans believe when a planet, the Sun, or the Moon crossed the exact center of the rift, entrance to the underworld road was possible. It so happens that the Mayans, 2300 years ago, calculated that our Sun will be in the exact center of the rift on December 21st, 2012."
december 21, 2012, at 8:11 a.m. in Korea

Oh, by the way, byeol is the Korean word for 'star.'




Bright-blue baby byeol

Byeol (별) being the Korean word for "star," of course.

"This new image taken with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope depicts bright, blue, newly formed stars that are blowing a cavity in the center of a star-forming region in the Small Magellanic Cloud.


"At the heart of the star-forming region, lies star cluster NGC 602. The high-energy radiation blazing out from the hot young stars is sculpting the inner edge of the outer portions of the nebula, slowly eroding it away and eating into the material beyond. The diffuse outer reaches of the nebula prevent the energetic outflows from streaming away from the cluster.

"The Small Magellanic Cloud, in the constellation Tucana, is roughly 200,000 light-years from the Earth. Its proximity to us makes it an exceptional laboratory to perform in-depth studies of star formation processes and their evolution in an environment slightly different from our own Milky Way."




20070108

Mapping dark matter

"An international team of astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has created a three-dimensional map that provides the first direct look at the large-scale distribution of dark matter in the universe.

"This new map provides the best evidence to date that normal matter, largely in the form of galaxies, accumulates along the densest concentrations of dark matter. The map reveals a loose network of filaments that grew over time and intersect in massive structures at the locations of clusters of galaxies.

"The map stretches halfway back to the beginning of the universe and shows how dark matter has grown increasingly 'clumpy' as it collapses under gravity.

"Mapping dark matter's distribution in space and time is fundamental to understanding how galaxies grew and clustered over billions of years. Tracing the growth of clustering in dark matter may eventually also shed light on dark energy, a repulsive form of gravity that would have influenced how dark matter clumps.

"The research results appeared online today in the journal Nature and were presented at the 209th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Seattle by Richard Massey and Nick Scoville. Both researchers are from the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California."




20070106

Titan, the methane moon


"Titan has long intrigued space scientists, as it is the only moon in the Solar System to have a dense atmosphere -- and its atmosphere, like Earth's, mainly comprises nitrogen. Titan's atmosphere is also rich in methane, although the source for this vast store of hydrocarbons is unclear.

"Methane, on the geological scale, has a relatively limited life. A molecule of the compound lasts several tens of millions of years before it is broken up by sunlight. Given that Titan is billions of years old, the question is how this atmospheric methane gets to be renewed. Without replenishment, it should have disappeared long ago.

"When the US-European spacecraft Cassini sent down a European lander, Huygens, to Titan in 2005, the images sent back were of a rugged landscape veiled in an orange haze. There were indeed signs of methane flows and methane precipitation, but nothing at all that pointed to any sea of the stuff.

"But a flyby by Cassini on July 22 last year has revealed, thanks to a radar scan, 75 large, smooth, dark patches between three and 70 kilometers (two and 42 miles) across that appear to be lakes of liquid methane, scientists reported on Thursday.

"They believe the lakes prove that Titan has a "methane cycle" -- a system that is like the water cycle on Earth, in which the liquid evaporates, cools and condenses and then falls as rain, replenishing the surface liquid."




20070105

The Thousand Hands
of Limitless Compassion
appeared in the new year.

As it has been noted before...


"Deaf artists from the China Disabled People's Performing Arts Troupe dance during a dress rehearsal for their show 'My Dream' in Madrid on January 3, 2007."

This just in: video footage!




20070104

Not quite temple tourism
[but I'll still call this part five.]

This was part four.


[1111px version with a Monkey for scale]


We were in the middle of a week off, so My Lady Friend and I spent a day and a half in Seoul. We visited the National Museum of Korea, which currently features Buddhist mural paintings on loan from the Seattle Art Museum; blue-green landscape paintings from the Joseon Dynasty; longquan celadon ceramics, and an archaeological exhibit focused on decorative wear that was crafted with jewel beetles.

The gigantic gwaebul painting above was the last piece that we came across after viewing many, many landscape and iconographic works. The mural was created in 1767 for use in outdoor ceremonies at Tongdosa Monastery. I haven't been able to find dimensions, but you can look at this photo of my Lady Friend standing in front of the painting and get an idea.


[1111px version, cracks and all]




Did you know that East Asian people gaze at the Full Moon and see a rabbit making rice cakes? Well, now you know...







20070102

The Artwork of Chris Duncan