"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross."
-- Sinclair Lewis
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Sunday Classics: Still Mahler -- Warning: St. Anthony's preaching to the fishes has strong politico-religious importance
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From the Christmas Day 1967 Young People's Concert, with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic, we first hear Christa Ludwig singing Mahler's "Rheinlegendchen"; then at 3:29 Walter Berry sings the song we began listening to last night, " Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt" ("Anthony of Padua's Fish Sermon"); and finally at 7:18 Ludwig and Berry together sing "Verlorne Müh'."
"Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt" ("Anthony of Padua's Fish Sermon") [German text from Des Knaben Wunderhorn]
Antonius, arriving for his sermon, finds the church empty. He goes to the rivers and preaches to the fishes;
They slap their tails, glistening in the sunshine.
The carp with roe have all come here, have their mouths wide open, listening attentively.
No sermon ever pleased the carp so.
Sharp-mouthed pike that always fight have hurriedly swum here to hear the pious one;
No sermon ever pleased the pike so.
Also those fantastic creatures that are always fast, the stockfish, I mean, appear for the sermon;
No sermon ever pleased the stockfish so.
Good eels and sturgens that banquet so elegantly even they took the trouble to hear the sermon:
No sermon ever pleased the eels so.
Crabs too, and turtles, usually such slowpokes, rise quickly from the bottom, to hear this voice.
No sermon ever pleased the crabs so.
Big fish, little fish, noble fish, common fish, all lift their heads like sentient creatures:
At God's behest they listen to the sermon.
The sermon having ended, each turns himself around; the pikes remain thieves, the eels, great lovers.
The sermon has pleased them, but they remain the same as before.
The crabs still walk backwards, the stockfish stay rotund, the carps still stuff themselves, the sermon is forgotten!
The sermon pleased. They remain as always.
by Ken
In last week's Sunday Classics post, I cited baritone Iván Paley's interesting description of the common thread running through the Mahler songs based on poems from the folk-poetry anthology Des Knaben Wunderhorn (The Youth's Magic Horn): "how man is transformed through the experience of joy and pain." I did, however, add a qualification: "Or, sometimes, not transformed, but then, we can think of 'not transformed' as an extreme point on the continuum of transformation."
The qualification was entered with explicit reference to the song we began listening to last night, the delicious "Anthony of Padua's Fish Sermon." Because, of course, each of the river-dwelling contingents that takes in St. Anthony's sermon brings with it its set of character flaws and vices and then leaves feeling mightily pleased, even uplifted, by the good father's preaching -- and with all those character flaws and vices miraculously intact.
St. Anthony finding himself faced with the problem of an empty church -- hmm, this doesn't by chance ring any bells, does it? Of course, it didn't occur to our Anthony, good Christian that he was, to compromise his mission of faith. He simply went out into the world in search of would-be parishioners, and it appears no other men of faith were working the rivers. Okay, there is the small matter of the after-effect, the utter ineffectualness of his preaching, in terms of in any way changing the bad behavior of his new flock.
Essay Topic 1: On the other hand, look how happy and invigorated St. Anthony left all of his sermonizees. Could we reasonably ask for more from a preacher?
Essay Topic 2: How might all of this relate to the experience of late-20th- and early-21st-century American churches? (Hint: An essay that incorporates terms like moral bankruptcy and Crap Christianity seems apt to be on the right track.)
"The sermon has pleased them, but they remain the same as before.
The crabs still walk backwards, the stockfish stay rotund, the carps still stuff themselves, the sermon is forgotten! "
and don't think Zappa has anything to compare with this KenI
"We're waiting for Mistress Nightingale, Who lives in the green hedge, And if Cuckoo is done with, Then she'll begin to pulse."
Fantastic! thanks KenI, Now that I have seen the 4th I will keep my eyes out of for the 3rd. (I think it is obvious that your roomate's Zappa DID influence you KenI and that you have a thing for Christa Ludwig and/or George Moore, of course no judgment:)
I really ENJOY this as a welcome freaky musical break background to righting the overnight blogging wrongs of the world.
And as my partner just walked in and commented... "Groovy music man..."
HELP,,, Ok, so while living in Quebec and listening to Radio Canada but neither speaking or understanding french, they played a version of paduafish where the singer sounds like tom waits on helium, really scary, raspy, evil child like voice,,, I have never heard it since,,, if the forrester version sounded gravelier, that would be it but alas it isn't. going nuts for 15+years trying to find the elusive version
2 Comments:
Comodo Scherzando....
I DO grok the fishes,
"The sermon has pleased them,
but they remain the same as before.
The crabs still walk backwards,
the stockfish stay rotund,
the carps still stuff themselves,
the sermon is forgotten! "
and don't think Zappa has anything to compare with this KenI
"We're waiting for Mistress Nightingale,
Who lives in the green hedge,
And if Cuckoo is done with,
Then she'll begin to pulse."
Fantastic! thanks KenI, Now that I have seen the 4th I will keep my eyes out of for the 3rd.
(I think it is obvious that your roomate's Zappa DID influence you KenI and that you have a thing for Christa Ludwig and/or George Moore, of course no judgment:)
I really ENJOY this as a welcome freaky musical break background to righting the overnight blogging wrongs of the world.
And as my partner just walked in and commented...
"Groovy music man..."
HELP,,, Ok, so while living in Quebec and listening to Radio Canada but neither speaking or understanding french, they played a version of paduafish where the singer sounds like tom waits on helium, really scary, raspy, evil child like voice,,, I have never heard it since,,, if the forrester version sounded gravelier, that would be it but alas it isn't. going nuts for 15+years trying to find the elusive version
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