Friday, January 30, 2015

The Little Things, Pt. 1

Money

This morning I stopped at a local convenience store to get a cup of coffee and top off my tank.

As I walked inside the cashier said, "That will be $11.02, Sir."

I handed him $12.00 cash.

He looked me directly in the eye, smiled a wide, toothy grin, and handed me my change.  A crisp $1.00 bill.  Now that's courtesy.

The little things.  They really do make a difference.

The little things.

This week, commit yourself to the little things.  But also commit yourself to noticing the little things.  Makes the day (and the week and the month and the life) just a little bit better.

Friday, January 23, 2015

Free Range

Buffalo 2

We were the great free rangers...the free rangers of legend.

Or at least we felt that way.

We felt that way last weekend while walking the grasslands and mountains of the Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge in southern Oklahoma.

Ten students.  Three teachers.  59,000 acres.  Cold nights.  Warm days.  Camp fires.  S'mores.  Tall tales.  Fresh air.

The Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge is one of my favorite places.  It was established in 1905 by President Theodore Roosevelt and conservationist William Temple Hornaday in order to reintroduce buffalo to the plains and save them from extinction.

One of my favorite writers, N. Scott Momaday, was born in 1934 just a few miles north of the refuge on the banks of Rainy Mountain Creek.   Momaday was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for House Made of Dawn and received the National Medal for the Arts in 2007 for his work that celebrated and preserved Native American oral and art tradition.

Though we only spent three days in the Wichitas, we experienced American bison (Bison bison), Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus canadensis nelsoni), whitetail deer (Odocoileus virginianus), coyotes (Canis latrans), Blacktail Prairie Dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus, a Red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis), a Red-shouldered hawk (Buteo lineatus), Mississippi kites (Ictinia mississippiensis), Canada geese (Branta canadensis), a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (Polioptila caerulea), and a very agitated Lark Sparrow (Chondestes grammacus).

If you haven't been there, I recommend it.  I think it's the most exotic outdoor experience within three hours of Fort Worth.  Take Hwy 287 to Wichita Falls, head north on interstate 44, then head west on OK Hwy 49.

Three hours, door to door.

You too can range freely...

Wichitas map

Friday, January 16, 2015

Sweet Sounds

Gentry Music List

Several months ago I introduced you to one of my mentors, the late Colonel Thomas Blythe Gentry, VMI Class of 1944.  Not only did he teach several of my English classes, but he also served as adviser to the Timmins Music Society, a social and educational club that promotes the understanding and appreciation of classical music.  He advised the Society since its founding in 1951.

Just the other day I found a crumpled and stained piece of paper that I haven't seen in many years.  It is a playlist of classical music that Colonel Gentry typed for me in 1987 and gave to me as a "starter kit."  He thought it would help me appreciate the music.

I treasure this list but have never shared it with anyone.

However, I think it's time.  Colonel Gentry would want you to enjoy the music.  I haven't changed a word.  Perhaps you could work through it at your own pace.

THE GENTRY LIST

Bach

Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 - Suite No. 3 in D Major - Magnificat (chorus and orchestra) - Organ music: Fugue in G Minor (Little), Toccata and Fugue in D Minor

Barber

Adagio for Strings

Beethoven

Overtures: "Coriolan," "Leonore No. 3," "Egmont" - Sonatas (piano): No. 14 in C Minor ("Moonlight"), No. 23 in F Minor ("Appassionata") - Concerto No. 5 in E Flat - Symphonies: No. 5 in C Minor, No. 6 in F

Berlioz

Harold in Italy (viola and orchestra) - Overtures: "Roman Carnival," "Benvenuto Cellini" - Romeo and Juliet (excerpts) - Symphonie Fantastique

Bizet

L'Arlesienne, Suites 1 and 2 - Carmen (opera) selections

Borodin

Quartet No. 2 in D

Brahms

Academic Festival Overture - Hungarian Dances - Concerto (violin) in D - Variations on a theme by Haydn - Trio in E Flat for Horn, Violin, Piano

Britten

Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra

Chabrier

"Espana"

Chopin

Preludes (selections) - Polonaises (selections, particularly "Military")

Copland

Ballets: "Appalachian Spring," " Billy the Kid," "Rodeo," " El Salon Mexico"

Debussy

"Claire de lune" (either piano or orchestra) - Iberia (orchestra) - Nocturnes (particularly "Fetes") - Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un faune ("The Afternoon of a Faun")

Delius

Brigg Fair - Walk to the Paradise Garden

Donizetti

Lucia di Lammermoor (Opera) excerpts, particularly the sextet

Dvorak

Quartet No. 6 in F ("American") - Slavonic Dances - Symphony No. 5 in E Minor ("New World")

Enesco

Roumanian Rhapsodies No. 1 and No. 2

de Falla

"El Amor Brujo" - "La Vida Breve" (dance)

Frank

Sonata in A for Violin and Piano

Gershwin

"American in Paris" - Porgy and Bess (opera) selections

Glinka

Overture "Russlan and Ludmilla"

Grieg

Concerto in A Minor (piano and orchestra) - Peer Gynt (excerpts)

Handel

Messiah (oratorio) excerpts - Water Music Suite

Haydn

Concerto in E Flat for Trumpet - Quartet in C,  Op. 33,  No. 3 ("Bird") - Symphonies: No. 94 in G ("Surprise"), No. 100 in G ("Military")

Kodaly

"Harry Janos" Suite

Liszt

Hungarian Rhapsodies - Les Preludes (orchestra)

Mahler

Youth's Magic Horn (songs in German)

Mendelssohn

Concerto in E Minor (violin) - Midsummer Night's Dream - Symphony No. 4 in A ("Italian")

Mozart

Requiem - Concerto No. 4, K. 495 for Horn - Concerto No. 27 in B Flat, K. 595 (piano) - Overtures: "Marriage of Figaro," " Cosi fan tutti" - Serenade No. 10 in B Flat for 13 Wind Instruments - Serenade in G, K. 525 "Eine Kleine Nachtmusil" - Symphony No. 29 in A, K. 201 - Piano Concerto No. 9

Offenbach

Gaite Parisienne

Poulenc

Concerto in G Minor for Organ, Strings, and Tympani

Prokofiev

Alexander Nevsky - Lieutenant Kije Suite - Love for Three Oranges Suite

Puccini

Madame Butterfly (opera)

 Rachmaninoff

Concerto No. 2 in C Minor - Rhapsody of a theme of Paganini

Ravel

Bolero - Daphnis and Chloe Suite No. 2 - Pavane pour une infante defunte (Pavane for a Dead Princess) - La Valse

Resphighi

Fountains of Rome

Rimsky-Korsakov

Capriccio Espagnol - Russian Easter Overture - Scheherazade

Rossini

Overtures: "William Tell," "Barber of Seville," "Semiramide"

Saint-Saens

Danse Macabre - Introduction to Rondo Capriccioso - Samson and Delila (opera) selection

Sarasate

Zigeunerweisen (violin)

Schubert

Quintet in A ("Trout") - Rosamunde: Incidental Music - Symphony No. 8 in B Minor ("Unfinished")

Sibelius

Finlandia - Swan of Tuonela - Valse Triste

Smetana

Bartered Bride Dances - The Moldau (orchestra)

Strauss, Johann

Die Fledermaus selections

Strauss, Richard

Don Juan (orchestra) - Rosendavalier suite - Til Eulenspeigel (orchestra)

Stravinsky

Le Baiser de la Fee (The Fairy Firebird Suite) - L'histoire du Soldat Suite (The Soldier's Tale) - Petrouchka Suite

Suppe

Overtures: "Poet and Peasant," "Light Cavalry"

Tchaikovsky

Capriccio Italien (orchestra) - Concerto in D Flat Minor (piano) - Concerto in D (piano) - Nutcracker Suite - Overture 1812 - Romeo and Juliet Overture - Swan Lake (excerpts) - Symphony No. 6 in B Minor ("Pathetique")

Vaughan Williams

Fantasia on a theme of Tallis

Verdi

Operas: Aida (excerpts), Rigoletto (excerpts), La Traviata (excerpts), La Trovatore (excerpts)

Wagner

Lohengrin Preludes to Acts I & III - Die Meistersinger Prelude - Tannhauser Overture and Venusberg Music - Die Walkure Ride of the Valkyries and Magic Fire Music

Weber

Invitation to the Dance - Overtures: Die Freischutz, Eurvanthe

Violins

















Friday, January 9, 2015

Along the Banks of Alamo Creek

 

Luna's Jacal

The old timers claim that Alamo Creek was once a Comanche war trail.

I don't know if it was.  I suspect so.

What I do know is that along its dry banks lived Gilberto Luna, one of the legendary personalities of the Big Bend country.

Luna lived in a hut - called a jacal - which he built by applying mud plaster to latticework walls of cane grass and ocotillo.  You can see it for yourself north of Santa Elena Canyon on a caliche thoroughfare now known as the Old Maverick Road.  I saw it last week for the fifteenth time while backpacking in Big Bend National Park with my son Robert.

Luna built the jacal sometime around 1890.  He farmed on Alamo Creek, which produced enough seasonal water to grow vegetables.  He made a living selling produce and goats to the workers of the nearby Terlingua cinnabar mine.

Some say Luna lived to the ripe old age of 108.

He died in 1947 in Fort Stockton.

According to an early park superintendent, he outlived eleven wives and fathered thirty children.

That's right.  108.  Eleven wives.  Thirty children.  In his jacal.

Along the banks of Alamo Creek.

luna

Gilberto Luna