Thursday, August 31, 2023

the romance of the Rhine

When Heinrich the old cellist was still a young poet, he and his fiancée Maria liked to spend their spare time together reading the same book cheek to cheek, as we know from a poem written by Maria. She didn’t reveal what book they were reading, but fortunately I discovered a book which they both signed after reading it.

It first attracted my attention because in Heinrich’s first inscription (presumably when he bought the book) he identifies as a musician, which is the earliest evidence we have for his musicianship. He had just turned 18 three weeks earlier. His inscription is:

Heinrich Groß Musiker
1. Oktober 1900
Bielefeld

He read it within two months, as he reveals with a different pen:

Gelesen 30. November 1900
Bad Warmbrunn
Im Rosenheim

(Bad Warmbrunn, Riesengebirge, is today in Poland, and I have no idea what he was doing there, nor for Bielefeld either)

Maria then signed after reading it nearly three years later:

Gelesen Ende Oktober 1903
M. Pfersching

which incidentally is the earliest evidence that links her to Heinrich. She only arrived in Strasbourg the same year, so Heinrich must have thrown that book at her pretty swiftly after first setting eyes on her. Three weeks later, 18.11.1903, Heinrich is crazy in love with her, as documented in his poems. On 18.4.1904, Maria's 23rd birthday, they get engaged.

Anyhow, moving on to the book itself, it is a collection of six stories, volume 3 out of 3 of the “selected stories” of W. O. von Horn (1798-1867), published by J.D. Sauerländer in 1892. Incidentally, the author, real name Wilhelm Oertel, hailing from Horn near Simmern, comes from a location and background that makes it highly likely he has shared ancestry with my grandmother, the future daughter-in-law of Heinrich and Maria. I am slightly spooked by this coincidence, but will look at his family history in a separate blog entry and stick with Heinrich and Maria and their shared book for now.

W. O von Horn was a highly successful writer of novels, stories and non-fiction for young readers and “the people”. Hailing from the Simmern area, notorious for the stories of the robber Schinderhannes (who gets a mention in the book, too), he spent much of his life in the upper Middle Rhine region, where all those romantic ruins of medieval castles are lined up. Accordingly, most of his stories are set in this area, and some are just dripping with its romantic spirit, and also spiced up with the kind of robber stories that Schinderhannes personified.

Reading the stories I also note that those set on the Middle Rhine give me a strong sense of place, with detailed descriptions of the landscape seen from this castle or from that rock. The non-Rhineland stories by contrast, don't have anything similar. In one case, the story of a man who loses his home and love after being forced to join Napoleon's army, the absence of geography may be a clever device used to illustrate his loss of Heimat.

The first story, in particular, a love story set against the backdrop of Sooneck Castle, shown below, and its demise in the 13th century, brings the medieval fortresses back to life and indulges in the charm of the ruins that the author appears to have known first hand in the 19th century (quite a few, including Sooneck, were repaired or rebuilt during the 19th century in the spirit of reviving German glory rather than historic authenticity). The castle being flattened for its role in armed highway (and river) robbery is the backdrop for a very romantic love story, so in view of Heinrich’s romantic poetry, we can see how that story fitted the young poet’s frame of mind.

Steel engraving from "Views of the Rhine" by William Tombleson (around 1840): Ruins of Sooneck Castle
source: Wikipedia

I’m more intrigued by the geographic factor though. Heinrich was the son of a railway man from Breslau (Silesia), born in Thuringia, and schooled in Stendal/Tangermünde where his father’s career found its final stop. From there to the ruined castles of the Middle Rhine it’s quite a long distance, whereas for Maria, from Bruchsal, it was just down the river.

So I’m wondering whether it was perhaps the romantic ideas of the Rhine, first acquired from literature like this book and possibly others, that helped to attract him to Strasbourg and/or to Upper Rhine native Maria. Rhine romanticism was all the rage in the 19th century, so he would have been trailing the zeitgeist a bit, as he did with his romantic poems. Note that in later life, Heinrich and Maria settled at Elberfeld, which then became Wuppertal, and isn’t too far from the river Rhine, whereas Heinrich’s sister Gertrud and her descendants stayed in the watershed of the river Elbe.

The last of the stories, which I haven't quite finished yet as this entry goes live, is the only one with an explicit musical connection. Pegged on the premise that many of the inhabitants of 19th century Elz (Hesse) became travelling musicians (a historical fact, according to the German Wikipedia entry), it tells the story of the first musician in this tradition and his daughter. Elzer Musikanten are still very active today. The first page of this story is the only one in the book that has come loose, suggesting that this particular story was opened more often than the others. Yet another clue that this old book gives us about Heinrich and Maria.

Here's a recent photo of the book:

The odd stripes at the corners show where the brown-speckled paper cover has been glued on such as to overlap the grey linnen corners. Wondering whether the paper is original.

Contents of the book:

Soneck. Historisch-romantische Erzählung aus dem dreizehnten Jahrhundert
Aus dem Leben eines Vogelsbergers in Krieg und Frieden
Das Original. Ein Stücklein
Das Mühlchen in der Morgenbach. Eine Begebenheit aus dem Jahre 1716
Der Apostelhof. Eine Geschichte aus der Vorzeit Bacharachs. (12 Teile)
Die Elzer. Eine Geschichte aus dem Nassauer Land

Intriguingly, the very same stories are available from Google Books as the scan of a volume marked as vol 3 of the Complete Works in 12 volumes, whereas my edition is vol 3 of the Selected Works in 3 volumes. Same publisher, but published postumously. Maybe they just selected to re-publish the first three volumes of their 12-vol opus? Also, my vol 3 doesn't tell that it's meant to be a set of three (but antiquarians sell it as such). Maybe the publishers were just republishing as "selected" volume by volume to see how it sells and gave up when it ran out of steam? Anyhow, enjoy!

Monday, August 21, 2023

our planet is in hot water

We have just experienced the warmest month since records began and reports of new weather extremes have become a regular feature of the news. Most of the extra heat we are inflicting on our planet doesn't end up in our cities and landscapes however. Most is absorbed by the oceans. There it will not only disrupt marine ecosystems, it also feeds more deadly storms and accelerates the loss of the ice caps and thus sea level rise. Even if we can still be grateful that the oceans save us from even worse heating, all of these changes will eventually come back to bite us.

Pegged to the ongoing marine heatwaves in the North Atlantic and Southern Ocean, my feature looks at what we can learn from previous heatwaves and how the warmer oceans are going to affect life on Earth, both marine and terrestrial. The feature is out now:

Oceans feel the heat

Current Biology Volume 33, Issue 16, 21. August 2023, Pages R829-R831

Restricted access to full text and PDF download
(will become open access one year after publication)

Magic link for free access
(first seven weeks only)

See also my Mastodon thread where I will highlight all this year's CB features.

Kelp forests off the Californian coast and their residents, such as this kelp bass (Paralabrax clathratus), were affected by the extended marine heatwave nicknamed the North Pacific Blob in the years 2014 to 2016. (Photo: © Chris Honeyman.)

Sunday, August 20, 2023

a crazy life

some thoughts on

Uschi Obermaier, Olaf Kraemer

High Times – Mein wildes Leben

Heyne 2008

This is one of the many books I discovered at Düsseldorf’s street libraries and enjoyed even though it would never have occurred to me to look for them or buy them. Our heroine was a household name in the 1970s as I was growing up. She was present with glamorous photos in Stern magazine and everywhere else especially after her participation in the famous Kommune I, the flagship commune of the 1968 movement.

The memoir written down by coauthor Olaf Kraemer based on interviews adds more material I wasn’t aware of including on-off relationships with two Rolling Stones and adventures around the world in a hippie van with a shady guy from Hamburg’s red light district. This van related part of the story was less interesting to me and maybe less relevant to world history, but all in all, one could say, never a dull moment. And her perspective on 1968 and the music scene is an interesting addition to the more official historical record.

Thursday, August 17, 2023

a colourful collection

In the 1950s and 60s, my grandparents bought and read loads of paperbacks including the iconic rororo ones with the cloth strip round the spine - easy to spot on any shelf. Their collection of several hundred volumes of this series still resides in the house where they lived in the 1960s through to the 1980s, but in the last few years I was worried it might go awol and therefore started building a collection of my own with the rororo paperbacks I found at street libraries in Düsseldorf and further afield. I just love the cover designs.

My grandparents left a typescript list of their collection (up to number 5,000 which must have been in the 70s and a while after they stopped using the cloth backs), and my collection is now reaching the point where I have to produce a list too, such as not to lose the overview. I'll note the date when it was first published, and also if my copy is a first edition. Where my collection overlaps with that of my grandparents, I put the number in bold (there's not that much overlap).

So here's the family portrait (in numerical order):

(compare and contrast with the photos of my grandparents' collection below)

... and here's the list:
__4 Kurt Tucholsky: Schloss Gripsholm (first published May 1950)
_11 Graham Greene: Orientexpress (9/1950)
_25 Betty McDonald: Das Ei und ich (first ed. 3/1951)
_29 Honore de Balzac: Die Frau von dreissig Jahren (first ed. 5/1951)
_39/40 AJ Cronin: Die Zitadelle (first ed. 11/1951)
_41 Pearl S. Buck: Ostwind-Westwind (9/1951
_50 rororoTucholsky (3/1952) - a selection of Tucholsky's writings obviously in celebration of the 50th volume, in just two years.
_65 Allen Roy Evans: Der Zug der Renntiere (10/1952
_70 Bruno Frank: Cervantes (12/1952)
_89 Gabor von Vaszary: Wenn man Freunde hat, Pariser Geschichten (8/1953)
_92 Nancy Mitford: Liebe eisgekühlt (first ed. 9/1953)
127 AJ Cronin: Der spanische Gärtner (10/1954)
133 Tania Blixen: Afrika, dunkel lockende Welt (12/1954)
145 Richard Mason: Denn der Wind kann nicht lesen (4/1955)
151 Jean Duché: Drei unter einem Dach (6/1955)
170 Wolfgang Borchert: Draußen vor der Tür (1/1956)
176 Richard Gordon: Aber Herr Doktor! (3/1956)
192 Alain Fournier: Der große Kamerad (first ed. 8/1956) - Le grand Meaulnes
197 Damon Runyon: Schwere Jungen, leichte Mädchen (first ed. 9/1956)
201 Friedrich Sieburg: Blick durchs Fenster (11/1956)
212 Jean Hougron: Das Mädchen von Saigon (first ed. 2/1957)
225 Heinrich Spoerl: wenn wir alle Engel wären (6/1957)
233 Richard Gordon: Hilfe! Der Doktor kommt (9/1957)
248 Peter Fleming: Brasilianisches Abenteuer (first ed. 1/1958)
251 Allen Roy Evans: Wind über weißen Wegen (first ed. 2/1958)
285/286 Jules Romain: Der Gott des Fleisches (first ed. 11/1958
290 Allen Roy Evans: Ein glückliches Paar (first ed. 12/1958)
295 Richard Gordon: Käpt'n Ebbs, Seebär und Salonlöwe (first ed. 1/1959)
305 Pierre Boulle: Die Kehrseite der Medaille (first ed. 4/1959)
330 Leo Slezak: Der Wortbruch (first ed. 10/1959)
337 Richard Mason: Schatten über den Blauen Bergen (12/1959)
339 Marcel Ayme: Der Mann, der durch die Wand gehen konnte (first ed. 12/1959)
376 AJ Cronin: Das Licht (first ed. 9/1960) includes ad for cigarettes at the front!
448 Friedrich Dürrenmatt: Der Verdacht (first ed. 10/1961)


UPDATE 24.9. Added three titles found on my latest visit, numbers 39/40, 50 and 197. The first two also present in my grandparents' collection I never liked the way they designed the double volume to look like two books.

UPDATE 25.2.2024 Added four titles: 41, 65, 285/286, 339

Here are some from my grandparents' collection:

Thursday, August 10, 2023

23 street libraries

Arriving in Dusseldorf this month, I visited the nearest three street libraries (offener Bücherschrank, I used to be unsure of the translation but now I think I'll go for street libraries!) and wondered whether there were any others that I wasn't aware of, beyond the six I had visited so far. The official website told me that they just opened the 23rd within the city boundaries. Looks like I have some work to do. Here is the list, and I'll mark in bold the ones I've visited. While I was writing up this entry, I managed to increased the count to 13, with a tram excursions to Wersten and Benrath, Pempelfort and Derendorf,

    City Centre:

  • Mannesmannufer, next to KIT (Kunst im Tunnel)
  • Kö-Bogen

    Angermund (way out north, behind the airport!):

  • Kreuzung Angermunder Straße, In den Blamüsen und Kirchweg

    Benrath:

  • Marktplatz

    Bilk:

  • Friedensplätzchen (photo below) - this one is my local and the one that got me hooked. Both the range of offerings and the turnover rate are amazing. Without exaggeration, it's worth visiting every day.

    Derendorf and Pempelfort (north of the city centre) - these five are lined up very neatly:

  • Frankenplatz
  • Roßstraße, intersection with Klever Straße/Jülicher Straße
  • Maria-und-Josef-Otten-Platz (Marschallstraße/Blücherstraße)
  • Rochusmarkt
  • Berty-Albrecht-Park (near the centre of this lovely park which stretches a long way, more than 1 km)

    Flingern:

  • Hermannsplatz near S-Bahn Flingern

    Friedrichstadt:

  • Fürstenplatz

    Gerresheim:

  • Apostelplatz
  • Gerricusplatz (historic centre of the town, worth visiting)
  • „Roter Platz“ on the corner Hatzfeld- and Heyestraße, near S-Bahn station

    Grafenberg:

  • Staufenplatz near eponymous tram station

    Kaiserswerth:

  • Markt

    Knittkuhl (way out east, not served by the otherwise perfect tram system!):

  • In der Flieth

    Oberkassel:

  • Werner-Pfingst-Platz

    Volmerswerth:

  • Volmerswerther Straße (next to the loop where the tram turns around)

    Wersten:

  • Liebfrauenstraße
  • Ickerswarder Straße Ecke Kölner Landstraße

    Zooviertel:

  • Brehmplatz

Here is a historic photo I took of the one in Bilk back in 2014:

Might add a few fresh ones when I get home and process all my photos.

Note also that this is an actual gas light behind the book shelf. Obviously problematic in this day and age, but also very quaint and historic. On my quest for more libraries, I am discovering some lovely parks and squares, and also a lot more gas lights. Around the market square of Benrath I saw more than 20 of them.

PS Here's a book I took home from one of them during the August exploration (not sure which one, actually) and very much enjoyed reading. Typical for the random stuff I discover there in that I would never have thought to look for let alone pay for it but am very glad I found it.

UPDATE 24.9.2023 took the tram to Gerresheim today (and S-Bahn back) to explore another five libraries. They have 3 in Gerresheim, an adorable little town that became part of the city in 1909, but preserved its character, and anothr two were on my path there and back. So that should bring up my total to 18 (after correcting the previous total to 13). Five to go.

UPDATE 24.2.2024 Made the expedition to Angermund on the S1, and took in the library at Brehmplatz on the way there, three to go. Also starting a list with links to other cities below:

Street libraries elsewhere:

Monday, August 07, 2023

musical minds

Obsessing about all things musical is normally very much an amateur and hobby kind of thing for me, but every once in a while I find an excuse to feed it into a feature (eg the one on how whales learn their tunes). This time I came across a special issue on music and development of the journal Developmental Science, which underlines the importance of music for studies of the mind. From the abundance of material provided in the issue, I picked out the papers on music and language and had a closer look at those. The resulting feature is out now:

Music on our minds

Music is widely believed to be beneficial for children’s development, but the systematic study of cross-domain effects, for instance between music and language learning, is still an emerging field with many questions left to investigate.

Current Biology Volume 33, Issue 15, 7. August 2023, Pages R781-R783

Restricted access to full text and PDF download
(will become open access one year after publication)

Magic link for free access
(first seven weeks only)

See also my Mastodon thread where I will highlight all this year's CB features.

Exposure to music in early childhood is thought to be beneficial for other domains including language learning, but much more research into the details of its effects is still needed. (Photo: Getty Images.)

PS returning to the playful side of things, one of the editors of the special issue runs citizen science projects to study music perception and psychology through interactive games and quizzes. You can take part here.

Tuesday, August 01, 2023

when Heinrich met Jenny

This month, Heinrich the cello will move out to reunite with the young cellist in their new home. In my effort to keep Heinrich entertained over the last few years, I have taken the habit to play cello every day (even though still not as well as a senior cello like Heinrich deserves to be played), so I went looking for a new old cello to keep up the musical exercise.

It's been a very interesting experience trying out half a dozen cellos displaying very different temperaments, even though they're basically all the same shape and size. I settled on a relatively modern one which I bought from Jenny, who couldn't take it with her on her return to her home country. As our string instruments need names, Heinrich's younger sister will now be known as Jenny after her previous owner.

As you can see in the pictures, Jenny has a very nice dark varnish and a pattern of stripes strikingly similar to Heinrich's. She also has a very warm resonant tone. I'm still learning her ways (it's amazing how many things I can forget when distracted by an unfamiliar instrument!) but am looking forward to introducing her to my orchestral and chamber music adventures in September. Some preliminary pictures of the pair (I'm sure there will be more once we see the sun again):

The only structural difference I've spotted so far is that the new cello's fingerboard rises more steeply above the body, which becomes obvious because the bridge is looking much higher (to be precise, the bridge was 12 mm higher for all four strings). A small part of that bridge height was unnecessary, however, as the strings were a bit too high above the fingerboard, so I took them down by a couple of millimetres. In the process I learned that the makers had been too hasty in putting on the bridge - part of the varnish underneath it was attached to its feet rather than the belly of the cello.

Another surprising discovery: the tailpiece is made of metal. Why? And is this a good idea?

PS Having studied the market of private cello sales in Oxford quite thoroughly, I am now also aware of several other cellos that are also really lovely and could make recommendations if anybody else is looking for one.