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Today's Stories November 6-8, 2009 Mark Greuter November 5, 2009 Pam Martens Vijay Prashad Brian Gallagher Norman Solomon Nadia Hijab Joseph Shanksy Andy Thayer Tracy Rosenberg Website of the Day November 4, 2009 Stan Cox Andy Worthington From Gitmo to Palau: Who are the Uighurs? Robert Weissman Susan Galleymore Ralph Nader Michael Leonardi Bitta Mistofi Robert Bryce Martha Rosenberg Dave Lindorff Website of the Day November 3, 2009 Patrick Cockburn Mike Whitney Franklin C. Spinney Laura Carlsen Serge Halimi John Stanton Sophia Weeks Dave Lindorff November 2, 2009 Steven Higgs Ishmael Reed David Macaray Bouthaina Shaaban David Michael Green David Swanson Ellen Brown Adam Federman James McEnteer Stephen Fleischman Website of the Day October 30 - Nov. 1, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Jeffrey St. Clair / Carl Ginsburg Mike Whitney Joe Bageant Gareth Porter Saul Landau Anthony DiMaggio Dave Lindorff Rannie Amiri Niranjan Ramakrishnan Jayne Lyn Stahl Rev. William E. Alberts Alvaro Huerta Martha Rosenberg Binoy Kampmark Norm Kent Charles R. Larson Roth's "The Humbling:" Nothing Like a Novel From an Old Pro Ron Jacobs David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Kim Nicolini Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend October 29, 2009 Michael Neumann Mike Whitney Gary Leupp Conn Hallinan Marshall Auerback Laura Flanders Eamonn McCann David Macaray Mark Weisbrot Stephen Soldz Christopher Brauchli Website of the Day October 28, 2009 Moshe Adler Dave Lindorff Frank Joseph Smecker Alexandra Early M. Shahid Alam Vijay Prashad John Ross Franklin Lamb Gregory Travis Susan Galleymore Website of the Day October 27, 2009 Mike Whitney Patrick Cockburn Stewart J. Lawrence Alan Farago Ralph Nader Dave Lindorff Bouthaina Shaaban Brian M. Downing Elections in Afghanistan, the Second Time Around Iain Boal Carl Finamore Jayne Lyn Stahl Website of the Day October 26, 2009 Bill Quigley / Paul Craig Roberts Uri Avnery Mike Whitney Michael Snedeker Shamus Cooke David Michael Green Martha Rosenberg Patrick Bond Binoy Kampmark Website of the Day October 23-25, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Christopher Ketcham Jeff Gore Gareth Porter Jayne Lyn Stahl Saul Landau Mike Whitney Nikolas Kozloff Ron Jacobs Russell Mokhiber Missy Beattie Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Stephen Lendman David Ker Thomson Rannie Amiri Ronnie Cummins Norm Kent Charles R. Larson David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Ben Sonnenberg Kim Nicolini Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend October 22, 2009 Dan Pearson / Jonathan Cook Paul Craig Roberts The US as Failed State Mark Engler Johann Hari Brian M. Downing Eric Toussaint Tom Mountain Israel Shamir Charles Thomson Website of the Day October 21, 2009 Pam Martens Linn Washington, Jr. Liaquat Ali Khan D. K. Wilson Franklin Lamb Norman Solomon Stephen Fleischman Patrice Higonnet Binoy Kampmark Kevin Coval / Website of the Day October 20, 2009 Sharon Smith Tariq Ali Mark Brenner Bouthaina Shaaban Michael D. Yates Dean Baker Dave Lindorff John Ross Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Kevin Zeese Gilad Atzmon Website of the Day October 19, 2009 Mike Whitney Greg Moses John Ross Michael Donnelly Jayne Lyn Stahl Eric Walberg Russell Mokhiber Barbara Rose Johnston John V. Whitbeck Christopher Ketcham Website of the Day October 16-18, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Saul Landau Paul Craig Roberts Carl Ginsburg Ralph Nader Nikolas Kozloff Carlo Galli Dave Lindorff Catherine Rottenberg
/ Neve Gordon Marshall Auerback Nicola Nasser Windy Cooler James L. Secor Ron Jacobs Wes Jackson Jesse Lerner-Kinglake David Ker Thomson Against Leaders Missy Beattie Emily Ratner Stephen Martin Michael Snedeker Charles R. Larson David Yearsley Peter Stone Brown Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend October 15, 2009 Andrew Cockburn Brian M. Downing Ramzy Baroud Danny Weil M. Idrees Ahmad Margaret Kimberley Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Harvey Wasserman Nirmal Ghosh Charles R. Larson Website of the Day October 14, 2009 Michael Neumann M. Reza Pirbhai Gareth Porter Paul Craig Roberts John Strausbaugh Fortress Moon Ralph Nader Dean Baker Charles Modiano Nadia Hijab Walter Brasch Website of the Day October 13, 2009 Peter Linebaugh Shamus Cooke John Ross Brendan Cooney Frida Berrigan Yves Engler David Macaray Dave Lindorff Mark Weisbrot Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Binoy Kampmark Website of the Day October 12, 2009 Pam Martens Mike Whitney Martha Rosenberg Jessica Arents Eamonn McCann Bill Hatch Sen. Russell Feingold Niranjan Ramakrishnan Gideon Levy Iyad Burnat Alan Cabal Dan Bacher Website of the Day October 9-11, 2009 Alexander Cockburn James Bovard Kathleen and Bill Christison Andy Worthington Marc Levy Tariq Ali Mike Whitney Paul Craig Roberts Alan Nasser Jack Z. Bratich Steve Breyman David Michael Green Dave Lindorff Paul Buchheit Jim Goodman Missy Beattie Michael Leonardi Nadia Hijab Mel Packer David Macaray James T. Phillips Charles R. Larson Michael Donnelly David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend October 8, 2009 Saul Landau Paul Fitzgerald / Linn Washington, Jr. Marshall Auerback Dave Lindorff David Rosen Chris Darimont / Misty MacDuffee John V. Walsh Stewart Lawrence Charles R. Larson Website of the Day October 7, 2009 Brendan Cooney Paul Craig Roberts Dean Baker Jonathan Cook John Stanton Joanne Mariner Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada Stephen Lendman Sen. Russell Feingold Mary Lynn Cramer Website of the Day October 6, 2009 Mike Whitney Gareth Porter Jonathan Cook Boris Kagarlitsky Iain Boal Ron Jacobs John Ross Michael Dickinson Stephen Fleischman Ira Glunts Missy Beattie Website of the Day October 5, 2009 Pam Martens Mike Whitney Paul Craig Roberts Harry Browne Sara Mann Omar Barghouti Shamus Cooke Brenda Norrell Fred Gardner Binoy Kampmark Copenhagen Blues: McChrystal and the Afghan Trap Website of the Day October 2-4, 2009 Alexander Cockburn Saul Landau Diana Johnstone Greg Moses William Blum Brian Cloughley Russell Mokhiber John Ross Ellen Brown David Ker Thomson David Macaray Gary Engler Robert Fantina Lisa Stolarski / Naomi Archer Anthony Papa Joe Allen Harry Browne Ron Jacobs Charles R. Larson David Yearsley Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend
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Weekend Edition The Musical PatriotAnna Magdalena, Music and the Art of DyingBy DAVID YEARSLEY News that the United States ranks 30th among nations in infant mortality rates, and is the second worst among developed countries makes me reflect on the role music has long played in preparing for and coping with such deaths. Among the most poignant confrontations with such circumstances before the advent of modern medicine is the notebook presented by J. S. Bach to his young wife Anna Magdalena in 1725. The notebook begins in the loftiest realms reached by 18th-century keyboard music, with early versions of Johann Sebastian Bach’s third and sixth partitas (BWV 827 and BWV 830), copied out by the composer himself. After the bracing chromatic counterpoint and taxing technical demands of the closing gigue of the sixth partita, Bach’s young wife, Anna Magdalena, makes her appearance as copyist, entering a naïve minuet by an unknown composer. This is the first of two dozen diminutive dance pieces—minuets, polonaises, marches, and kindred trifles by her stepson Carl Philipp Emanuel and others—that attest to Anna Magdalena’s taste for light music. Yet suddenly, in the midst of the Notebook’s run of often banal secular pieces, the sacred unexpectedly intrudes. After Anna Magdalena had copied out a fashionable polonaise, she turned to a meditation on death entitled Bist du bei mir, long attributed to J. S. Bach, but actually the work of a lesser known contemporary, G. H. Stölzel. The text runs:
Seemingly innocuous in terms of musical style, the melody is freighted with a profoundly religious concern—the contemplation of dying a blessed death. This abrupt shift of topic—from dances to death—has most often been attributed to the meandering musical predilections of Anna Magdalena, and, accordingly, is taken to represent her search for modest, expressive pieces that she might sing. True, the juxtaposition of secular and sacred is by no means rare in manuscript collections of keyboard music from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; one does not have to search long to find raucous dances and bawdy drinking songs disporting themselves unapologetically in the company of devout religious melodies. But Anna Magdalena Bach was not simply searching in a rather desultory way for pleasing melodies with which to fill out her personal notebook and with which to polish her bourgeois refinements. Thhis explanation does not sufficiently account for her apparently disquieting affection for texts that reflect on death and dying; these sacred songs represent more than moments of pious reflection amongst the earthly distractions and delights provided by the dances. Rather, they speak profoundly to the moral dimensions of music-making in the Bach home and the central position of the art of dying in their domestic musical life. Anna Magdalena’s apparent fascination with death should come as no surprise: the art of dying was one of the most important topics in the literature of moral uplift which circulated widely in Germany in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and which was collected avidly by J. S. Bach and his family. One of the authors best-represented in the Bachs’ large collection of religious books, the seventeenth-century theologian Heinrich Müller warned readers of his Liebes-Kuß (Kiss of Love) that “Above all things, know that you must die”’ Similarly, the anonymous aria Gedenke doch, mein Geist (Remember, My Spirit) of Anna Magdalena’s notebook concludes: “Inscribe these words in your heart and breast: you must die.” Writers such as Müller ceaselessly reminded their readership that death could come at any time: “Today healthy and strong; tomorrow dead and in your coffin.” Anna Magdalena was certainly not too young to harbor such concerns: these songs on death were entered into her notebook in the 1730s when she was herself in her thirties. Bach’s first wife, Maria Barbara, had died in 1720 at the age of thirty-five; Bach had returned from a trip to Carlsbad to find her dead and already buried. Given the uncertainty of life’s duration, Bach’s moral library urged constant preparation for death: damnation was the penalty for deferring maintenance on the soul. While no one could help but fear death at times, with proper preparation, faith in Jesus would lead the believer to salvation. The writers favored by the Bachs relished the opportunity to detail the terrors which surround the death beds of the damned and the unprepared: in these scenarios snapping lions, gnawing worms, ravenous rats await the doomed just beyond the threshhold of life. Müller urged his readers to entertain “thoughts on death” (Sterbens-Gedanken), every day if they hoped to avoid such a fate; these thoughts equipped the Christian with the spiritual armor to resist the mortal temptations of the devil through the last moments of earthly life. Müller and others offered concrete suggestions intended to prepare their readers for the grueling hours and minutes of dying; these recommendations ranged from the recitation of daily prayers beseeching God to ensure belief in the “last hour” (letztes Stündlein) to the memorization of scriptural dicta and glosses. Müller argued that the wisdom of such passages could be more firmly entrenched in the mind by coupling them with melodies; the chorale was the favored musical form of the Lutheran ars moriendi, but hardly less valuable were strophic sacred songs, a genre energetically cultivated by many of the same authors of moral literature represented so heftily in the Bachs’ library. Aided by the proven pneumonic power of music, articles of belief were to be inscribed deeply in the soul so that they would not be erased during the final assault of the devil: strengthened by vigilant rehearsal, the sedulous practitioner of the ars moriendi would face death with fearless Christian resolve. The sacred songs of the Anna Magdalena Bach book project a sense of domestic calm and compassion by drawing repeatedly on this death-as-sleep trope. The literature of moral uplift frequently praised the restorative power of sleep for true believers. Exploiting the metaphorical resonance of the warming embrace of sleep, the literature in Bach’s library compared the grave to a bed, the dirt to sheets; waking up after a good night’s sleep provided a foretaste of the resurrection of the body at the Last Day. By contrast, the godless were troubled at night, just as they would be tormented in eternity. The pious preparation for nightly sleep served as an intimate rehearsal for the real end of life. Heinrich Müller urged the believer to memorize comforting passages and recite them while going to sleep. Moral writers often drew on nurturing motherly imagery to convey a sense of the sweet rest of God that would be the eternal dividend of a pious death: thus the dying soul might be depicted as a sick child who, as Müller put it, surely finds his “best rest on the lap and at the breast of his mother.” The songs of the Anna Magdalena Bach book articulate this rest-as-death metaphor through a nurturing maternal idiom: the comforting affect of Bist du bei mi, and other pieces in the notebook, is that of a mother putting her child to sleep, the song’s regular phrase structures and frequent repeated notes in the bass referring to the musical style of the lullaby. The consultation of literature on dying and the singing of devotional songs on the same theme such as those in Anna Magdalena’s Notebook were an integral part of the family’s cultivation of the ars moriendi. The theological books were intended for both a male and female readership, and addressed themes relevant to the daily lives of both sexes; accordingly, these volumes were divided more or less equally between Bach’s heirs regardless of gender. To give but one example, Bach’s first child, Catharina Dorothea, received among other books from her father’s estate a volume entitled Nuptialia, a collection of wedding sermons by August Pfeiffer, whose works were outweighed only by thos of Martin Luther on the Bach’s bookshelves. Poignantly, this guide to domestic and married life became Dorothea’s property when she was 41 and single; like two of her three sisters who survived to adulthood, Catharina Dorothea never married. This grim volume never tires of informing Pfeiffer’s listeners and readers that death hovers over every couple, whether freshly united or near the end of decades of married life. What a contrast these wedding homilies make with the pep-talks of the current age. In the nuptial sermon that opens the book, Pfeiffer draws a vivid picture of Abraham mourning over the body of his dead wife, Sarah. For Pfeiffer, the death of spouses and children is the central fact of earthly existence and one that should not be shied away from, even at a wedding celebration. “Can a woman forget her baby?” he asks, especially having endured childbirth, the pain of which is the legacy of Eve’s sins. The answer is that she cannot forget, and at the wedding Pfeiffer goes on to dramatize the anguished sighs of devout, devoted parents grieving over lost children: “Oh, my heavenly father, here are your children, that you have given me. Oh, I hereby give them over to you.” Pfeiffer and other evangelical wedding preachers claimed the premature death of children as a blessing, since the sin and torment of a long earthly life would be spared them; these young souls went unblemished directly to heaven. For Pfeiffer, it is the death of babies that sends the clearest message to the parents that they must die as well. Such crosses were to be borne with belief and through careful preparation for one’s own big sleep. Anna Magdalena would certainly have imagined that her husband, sixteen years her senior, was likely to die before she did. But Pfeiffer’s stern vision of domestic life aside, she could have been excused for hoping to be spared the loss of so many children. Of the thirteen children Anna Magdalena gave birth to, only six outlived her; of her first eight children only two survived beyond the age of four. Her first child, Christiana Sophia Henrietta (1723-1726), died soon after turning three; her second, Gottfried Heinrich (1724-1763) was musically gifted and lived a longer life, but was mentally handicapped; the third, Christian Gottlieb (1725-1728), died at two-and-a-half. The little girl and boy who died were, presumably, walking and speaking, and capable of a full array of emotions from anger to love to sadness. In 1733 Anna Magdalena’s daughter Regina Johanna died at the age of four-and-a half, that is, during the period that many of these death lullabies were likely copied into her notebook. Thus by the time the last of these songs was entered, Anna Magdalena had had much brutal experience of her own infants’ sleep as death. As Anna Magdalena’s notebook filled with music the number of her dead children inexorably increased. Given the mortality all around her, it seems certain that Anna Magdalena used the songs of the 1725 notebook as lullabies, that is, whether they were used by this busy mother-musician, for the practical purpose of putting her children to sleep and for comforting them while ill, even fatally so. When she sang songs filled with sleep-as-death metaphors she knew that her children might not wake up. In this scenario the songs present their messages with even greater power, re-enacting the prayer of the mother at the cribside, following the Lutheran tradition in which family and friends often made music around the deathbed to usher the dying out of this world and into the next. The inclusion of “Bist du bei mir” on a number of CDs marketed for children is done in happy ignorance of the context for this song and others in the Anna Magdalena’s notebook. The instrumental version for clarinet and piano to be heard on the Everland Kids’ Sleep Tight cleanses the music of its text; but even in purely instrumental form this hypnotically beautiful lullaby cannot shake the spirit of death that hovers over it, unbeknownst to the slumbering bee pictured on the CD cover. Given America’s recently exposed health record for newborns these timeless death songs of the Bach family have regained a mortal relevance. David Yearsley teaches at Cornell University. He is author of Bach and the Meanings of Counterpoint His latest CD, “All Your Cares Beguile: Songs and Sonatas from Baroque London”, has just been released by Musica Omnia. He can be reached at dgy2@cornell.edu
Inside the New Print Edition of Our Subscriber-Only Newsletter! Obama and Black America Ten months into Obama-time, the plight of black Americans is terrible. Yet overwhelmingly they rally behind the president. In a powerful report from the Deep South Kevin Alexander Gray asks the question: what should the black political agenda be? Mark Rudd counterposes “organizing” with “activism” and describes what it will take to build a movement. H. Bruce Franklin gives a chronology of the march into Afghanistan. Get your new edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents.Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year !
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