Log24

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Review

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 5:16 pm

A review of posts tagged Design Theory yields . . .

"… at the core of reality lies a deep and eternal demonium."

— Alicia in the Cormac McCarthy novel  Stella Maris.

Vide  "CORE" as a starting point for mathematics from
Royal Holloway

Friday, January 24, 2025

Dutch Treat

Filed under: General — Tags: , , , — m759 @ 9:01 am

A midrash for Kantor

The time  of this post, 9:01, suggests a look at the prime factors of 901:

Related entertainment: the new thriller "Prime Target."

Friday, January 13, 2023

Dürer, Music, and Doktor Faustus

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 1:49 am

The previous post and Mann's Doktor Faustus in this journal
suggest a look at . . .

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Nunc Stans

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 9:00 pm

On conductor Kurt Masur, who reportedly died at 88
in Greenwich, Connecticut, today, Saturday, Dec.19, 2015 —

"Rehearsal conductor at Halle State Theater,
Saxony, East Germany, conductor at Erfurt City Theater
and Leipzig Opera, and guest conductor with Leipzig
and Dresden Radio orchestras, 1951-53…."

Motifs from yesterday's 9 PM post

Design from 1697

— and from a novel by Thomas Mann:

Design from 1514

Related text —

Thursday, May 14, 2015

The Faustian Merry-Go-Round

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 9:00 pm

Continued from April 25, 2015 .

See also Soul, a post of May 6, 2015.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Princeton Music continues…

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 2:22 am

A post yesterday linked to a discussion
of the Faustian music of Milton Babbitt,
a serial composer who reportedly died
in Princeton on Saturday, Jan. 29, 2011.

Related material from this journal in
January 2005:

See also "me into you, you into me"
("Taking Lucifer Seriously," Jan. 24, 2004)
and the Saturday night "cold open" in this
journal on the date of Babbitt's death.

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Serial Box

Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , , — m759 @ 1:20 pm

Enotes.com on Herman Wouk's 1985 novel Inside, Outside 

"The 'outside' of the title is the goyish world
into which David’s profession has drawn him;
the 'inside' is the warm life of his Russian-
Jewish family on which he, as narrator, reflects
in the course of the novel."

For a different sort of 'inside' life, see this morning's post
Gesamtkunstwerk , and Nathan Shields's Feb. 8, 2011,
tribute to a serial composer "In Memoriam, Milton Babbitt."
Some other context for Shields's musical remarks —

Doctor Faustus and Dürer Square.

For a more interesting contrast of inside with outside
that has nothing to do with ethnicity, see the Feb. 10,
2014, post Mystery Box III: Inside, Outside, about
the following box:

 .

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Magic Square

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 10:18 pm

This post was suggested by the December 4th death
of modernist composer Jonathan Harvey, 73,
and by Harvey's reflections on his 2007 opera
Wagner Dream .

For related reflections, see the Oct. 10 post on
the Dürer magic square in Mann's Doctor Faustus .

See also a December 2nd post on the Nov. 18 death of
chess grandmaster Elena Akhmilovskaya Donaldson.

IMAGE- Chess grandmaster and Dürer's angel with magic square
 

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Types of Ambiguity —

Filed under: General,Geometry — Tags: , — m759 @ 9:48 pm

Galois Meets Doctor Faustus

Galois's theory of mathematical  ambiguity (see June 14) —

  My principal meditations for some time have been directed towards
  the application of the theory of ambiguity to transcendental
  analysis.  It was a question of seeing a priori in a relation
  between quantities or transcendent functions, what exchanges one
  could make, which quantities one could substitute for the given
  quantities without the original relation ceasing to hold.  That
  immediately made clear the impossibility of finding many expressions
  that one could look for.  But I do not have time and my ideas are
  not yet well developed on this ground which is immense.

 — Evariste Galois, testamentary letter, translated by James Dolan

Thomas Mann on musical  ambiguity in his novel Doctor Faustus

http://www.log24.com/log/pix10B/101214-FaustusAmbiguity.gif

Related material — Some context for the above and some remarks on the German original.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Sunday November 18, 2007

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 2:02 am
For Martin Scorsese
on his birthday, from
the New York Lottery:

 

Words and Music

Words:
In the Details

"It was only in retrospect
 that the silliness became profound.
The players were becoming possessors
of 'a truth with implicit powers
of good and evil,' Gino Segrè writes
in Faust in Copenhagen

And 'the devil… was in the details.'"

— George Johnson of
The New York Times,
quoted in Log24 on 6/23.

Music:
A Black Berry

"Her wall is filled with pictures,
she gets 'em one by one…."

Chuck Berry, quoted
in Log24 on 2/13.

NY Lottery Nov. 17, 2007: Midday 623, Evening 213

Related material:
Yesterday's Log24 entry

 

BlackBerry with pictures from Log24

Tuesday, October 14, 2003

Tuesday October 14, 2003

Filed under: General — Tags: — m759 @ 4:07 pm

Saint Leonard's Day

From a review of Leonard Bernstein's 1973 Norton lectures at Harvard:

The truly emblematic twentieth-century composer is Mahler, whose attempts to relinquish tonality are reluctant and incomplete, and whose nostalgia for past practice is overt and tragic. Mahler's Ninth Symphony, his "last will and testament," shows "that ours is the century of death, and Mahler is its musical prophet." That is the "real reason" Mahler's music suffered posthumous neglect–it was, Bernstein says, "telling something too dreadful to hear." The Ninth Symphony embodies three kinds of death–Mahler's own, which he knew was imminent; the death of tonality, "which for him meant the death of music itself"; and "the death of society, of our Faustian culture." And yet this music, like all great art, paradoxically reanimates us.

Joseph Horowitz, New York Review of Books, June 10, 1993

Wednesday, January 8, 2003

Wednesday January 8, 2003

Filed under: General — Tags: , , — m759 @ 12:00 am

Into the Woods

From the Words on Film site:

"The proximal literary antecedents for Under the Volcano are Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy, especially The Inferno, on the one hand, and on the other, the Faust legend as embodied in the dramatic poem Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and the play Doctor Faustus by Christopher Marlowe."

"In the opening page of the novel, we find the words "The Hotel Casino de la Selva stands on a slightly higher hill …" (Lowry, Volcano p. 3). "Selva" is one of the Spanish words for "woods." One of the cantinas in the novel is named El Bosque, and bosque is another Spanish word for "woods." The theme of being in a darkling woods is reiterated throughout the novel."

Literary Florence

Tonight's site music is "Children Will Listen,"
by Stephen Sondheim, from "Into the Woods."

Stephen Hawking is 61 today. 
An appropriate gift might be a cassette version of
The Screwtape Letters, by C. S. Lewis,
narrated by John Cleese. 

See also this review of Lewis's That Hideous Strength
and my entries of Dec. 31, 2002, and Jan. 4, 2003.   

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