The last CHQ 2024 post

furled

Here is the last CHQ 2024 post. I did not realize I would write quite as much about the place, but it wasn’t easy to encapsulate it.

Often, I would wake up at about 3:30 in the morning and wander into the Presbyterian House library. I would check my e-mail, complete my Wordle, etc.  It’s a small but interesting room, which has an array of significant photos on the walls, such as one of Thurgood Marshall at a podium in 1957, a few years after he was the primary lawyer to litigate  Brown v. Board of Education before the Supreme Court, and a decade before he was named to SCOTUS.

Many presidents and future presidents appeared on the walls, and at least some photos were taken in Chautauqua. The picture above of Bill and Hillary Clinton, and Al and Tipper Gore was taken before the 1992 election.

FDR was there in 1917, 1919, 1929, and 1936; the picture was of him standing before a crowd, which suggests earlier in the list. His cousin Teddy was there in 1890, 1894, 1895, 1905, and 1914, before, during, and after his presidency. William McKinley was there in 1895 before he took office.

For some pictures, it was more challenging to ascertain if they were taken there. Ulysses S. Grant visited Chautauqua as President in 1875. Rutherford B. Hayes visited in 1889, well after his term in office. Garfield’s stop in 1880 was a year before his Presidency and death. Gerald R. Ford’s picture was a government issue; his appearance in 1964 was a decade before he became Commander-in-Chief.

Furled flag

When I wasn’t attending an event during the day, I often sat on the back porch of the 2nd floor of the Presbyterian house. It’s a lovely space with a small table. To my left, I could see Chautauqua Lake, which was lovely. Often, I could hear music from the amphitheater; sometimes, it was from a worship service, while other times, it would be the rehearsal for a show that would take place that night. Once, a program for kids took place, with young adults performing short plays the kids had written.

I would talk to the staff, mostly young people, who would clean the windows, sweep the floor, and unfurl the flag. This particular American flag on this porch got wrapped daily. Once, when my wife came out and unfurled it after it had been wrapped twice, a couple of hours later, it had furled five times. Meanwhile, the Presbyterian flag, made of a much heavier material, only furled once that week.

I have never seen so many American flags in a small community as in Chautauqua. CHQ considers itself part of a great American experiment, so one expects to listen to points of view that are divergent from one’s own.

This is not to say that everyone is on board. The Daily Chautauquan, which comes out six days a week and covers (previews then reviews) most of the significant events, carried a letter to the editor blasting CHQ for inviting former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy to be in conversation with Julian Castro, HUD secretary under Obama, the day before my wife and I arrived.

There were many discussions about politics at mealtimes, largely because Joe Biden announced on Sunday that he wouldn’t run for re-election. A guy named Bill and I mused over Kamala Harris’ VP pick.

The penultimate day

My favorite time at Chautauqua was on Friday afternoon in the main quad. My wife told me there would be a Pete Seeger tribute on the green, which reminded me of a college main quad. It turned out that the performance was the day before. A couple, a guy on guitar and a woman on fiddle sang folk songs, and I sang a little harmony with them.

Then my wife and I returned to Presby House, where they served wine – before supper! – and a couple of young adults, the male clearly the son of a woman staying there, sang some songs. Eventually, they performed Country Roads, Take Me Home, and I sang harmony in the chorus, which made them happy. Then, someone else sang a Fleetwood Mac song. It was a fun time on our last afternoon at Chautauqua.

CHQ: Boyz II Men

Motownphilly

Our daughter didn’t go with us to Chautauqua Institution, but if she had, she would have attended the Boyz II Men concert. She’s really into 1990s soul, and the group broke into the charts early in that decade.

CHQ has had other popular music acts this season, such as Martina McBride and the Beach Boys. Still, I wondered if Chautauquans knew of these singers. While some were familiar, others were not so much. “But they were huge!” I noted.

From Wikipedia: “The group first saw commercial success in 1991 with the release of their singles ‘Motownphilly’ and “It’s So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesterday,” both of which peaked within the top five of the Billboard Hot 100. Their 1992 single, ‘End of the Road’ peaked atop the chart and set a then-record for spending 13 weeks at the position. Boyz II Men later broke this record twice more with the singles ‘I’ll Make Love to You’ and ‘One Sweet Day’ (with Mariah Carey), which, at 14 and 16 weeks, respectively, set records for most weeks at number one. When ‘On Bended Knee’ took the number one spot away from ‘I’ll Make Love to You,’ Boyz II Men became the third musical act, after the Beatles and Elvis Presley, to replace themselves atop the Billboard Hot 100.”

Formed in 1985, they were a quartet: baritone Nathan Morris, tenors Wanyá Morris (no relation) and Shawn Stockman, and bass singer Michael McCary. McCary left the group in 2003 for what turned out to be multiple sclerosis. Since then, the group has persevered as a trio.
Songs
Here are some of the songs they performed:
Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough (Michael Jackson song)
Water Runs Dry
One More Try
On Bended Knee
More Than You’ll Ever Know
Cooley High Harmony
Uhh ahh
4 Seasons of Loneliness
A Change Is Gonna Come (Sam Cooke song)

At this point, nothing shocked me. But then they got much louder than I would have expected and did it well, including Are You Going My Way (Lenny Kravitz song), American Woman (Lenny Kravitz version of a Guess Who song), and Come Together (Beatles song).

Say Goodbye To Yesterday
One Sweet Day – the audience was asked to provide the Mariah Carey part
I’ll Make Love To You
End Of The Road
Motownphilly—of course, Motownphilly. How else could one end the show but with the song that namechecks them? Here are some more videos.

There was no encore. I suspect that was a CHQ requirement since the workers had to refigure the stage for the next morning’s activities. The one song I wanted to hear they didn’t perform, Thank You, blasted from the speakers as the audience departed.
CHQ pricing
I should explain the pricing at the Chautauqua institution. There is a parking fee. Room and board varied depending on the location and how early one books. An access pass allowed you to see most of the shows for free.

People not staying at Chautauqua did, in fact, see some of the programs and got preferential seating. But they paid $69-$129. The CSO concerts of Phil Collins’ music, Dvorak 8, and the Chautauqua Opera Co.’s “Hansel and Gretel” all started at $49 each.

CHQ: Our Greatest Challenges

local news

chqThe Chautauqua Institution has a series of lectures based on a theme. For instance, The Evolution of the Modern Presidency was the theme in week 1, June 22–29.

For week 5, when my wife and I were there, the topic was Our Greatest Challenges (That We Can Actually Do Something About). All of the events were at the amphitheater.

Monday: “Scholar, cultural critic, and staff writer at The Atlantic Thomas Chatterton Williams surveys the current American conversation on race, shares how he has evolved in his conception of race and societal division, and provides his perspective on creating a space for productive conversation and bridge-building. “

He was an organizer of what many called the Harper’s Letter, “A Letter on Justice and Open Debate” in 2020. It had several prominent signees, including Noam Chomsky, Margaret Atwood, Salman Rushdie, Garry Kasparov, and J.K. Rowling. It attempted to address what is loosely called “cancel culture.” (The Atlantic called it A Deeply Provincial View of Free Speech.) Openness, Chatterton Williams notes, is “a necessity in a free society.”

He also spoke on racial identity. His 23 and Me genetic test notes he is 59.6 European. His father had always been defined as black, but his daughters are so fair that they could pass in Stockholm as Swedish. As long as society imposes racial and other categorizations, he believes we are limited in terms of how we can truly communicate with each other. (I don’t know what that looks like, but that’s for another time.)

A free press

Tuesday: “Margaret Sullivan, the Egan Visiting Professor at Duke University, award-winning media critic and groundbreaking journalist will… evaluate the state of local journalism; offer models for re-establishing this critical community institution; and share ways that individual and community action can create solutions.”

Like many of a certain age, she was inspired by the reporting of the Watergate scandal. She started as an intern at the Buffalo News and eventually became its first female editor-in-chief.

At the time, newspapers were wildly profitable because advertisers had few ways to target their potential customers. But competition, first from Craigslist, hurt the bottom. Eventually, Facebook, Google, and others circulated the expensive-to-create news content for free and this gutted newsrooms.

This is most unfortunate. Sullivan cited the two Buffalo News reporters who broke the story about the root causes of the 2009 plane crash near Buffalo after the national press came, reported the incident, and then moved on to the next story. That type of investigative digging costs money and time.

The decline in regional news coverage means local officials are often not held accountable, and corruption is more likely. Also, when local cultural criticism is gone, replaced by wire services, what’s lost is the fabric that ties a community together.

Good news

The good news is that some entities, such as the Daily Mississippian, which often shares stories with dailies and weeklies in the Magnolia State; ProPublica, Investigative Journalism in the Public Interest; and others, are attempting to fill the breach. 

Still, Sullivan, who has also held significant roles at the New York Times and Washington Post, suggests that the audience follow and pay for local news and contribute to “free” investigative sites such as the Guardian, et al. Read about Rebuild Local News.

Most importantly, she called people to be “engaged citizens at the local level. You can make sure you vote… If everyone who still believes in a reality-based press were to pitch in, I think  we can restore the foundations of local journalism.”

CHQ, Day 2: church and music

backgammon

CHQ is a designation of the Chautauqua Institution. My wife and I received little magnets with those letters at a meal early on at the Presbyterian House. One was a rainbow heart, the other like a bumper stick you might find on a car.

Incidentally, Presby House is the only religion-affiliated house serving three meals daily. There are several other places to get food on the ground, from food trucks to fancy restaurants, but we did not utilize any of them. 

In some ways, CHQ is like a college campus with narrow streets. It has a center square where one can play games, go to the bookstore, mail items, get directions, and much more. 

The key to being at Chautauqua is the realization that you simply can’t go to everything. Since it was our first time, we overdid it at least once. Each week, there’s a two-sided, roughly 22″ by 11″ (56cm by 28 cm) sheet with columns in six-font type. On Sundays, there are many different worship services at 9:30. After breakfast, the Presby House pastor for the week led a service in the chapel downstairs.

Then, there was a 10:45 service at the Amphitheater, also broadcast on the CHQ Assembly on the YouTube channel, led by the Rev. Kate Braestrup, a best-selling author and the chaplain for the Maine Warden Service, which is probably not what you might think it is.

I should admit that my wife went to far more religious services and lessons than I did. Part of it was that she was more theologically enamored with Rev. Braestrup than I was. Also, I had to finish the book I was reporting on the following week.

88 keys

After lunch, we attended a 2:30 “scintillating program of works for one and two pianos, with repertoire drawn from virtuoso works of the great classical composers and arrangements of popular and familiar tunes” by the Chautauqua School of Music.

I’m listing the pianists to say I saw them when one or more of them broke through nationally or internationally. The music links are not theirs.

(I’ll Build a) Stairway To Paradise, 1922 and Strike Up The Band, 1927 -George Gershwin (1898-1937) (arr Logan Skelton).  Sean Yang and Eric Yu. I thought the first piece was by Scott Joplin because Gershwin borrowed from him. 

2 Pieces for 6 Hands: Romance and Valse, 1890 -Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943). Even Cao, Ellen Li, and Letizia Palmieri

Brasileira from Scaramouche, 1937 -Darius Milhaud (1892-1974). Sebastian Castillo and Runyang Wong

From Jeux d’enfants, Op. 22 – Georges Bizet (1838-1875): Trompette et tambour  (Trumpet and drum), La toupie  (The spinning top), Petit mari, petite femme (Little husband, little wife), Le bal  (The ball). Karina Tseng and Vivian Yang

Ondine from Gaspard de la nuit, M. 55, 1908 – -Maurice Ravel (1875-1937). Seohee Yang. Based on this and a later performance, my wife and I felt she was the breakthrough artist.

Tarantella from Suite No. 2, Op.17 -Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943). Dongwon Shin and HaEun Yang

A classical steal

España, 1883 -Emmanuel Chabrier (1841-1894). Yujin Han, Cheonmi Park, Sean Yang, and Eric Yu. I thought I didn’t know the composer; wrong. From Wikipedia: “Hot Diggity (Dog Ziggity Boom)” is an American popular song written by Al Hoffman and Dick Manning. The song is almost identical in melody and triple-time rhythm to a portion of Emmanuel Chabrier‘s 1883 composition, España. It was published in 1956. The song was recorded by Perry Como,” and went to #1 on the Billboard pop chart.

Danse Macabre, Op. 40 -Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921). Karmen Grubisic and Seohee Yang

Prelude in D-flat major, Op. 32 No. 13 – Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943). Alexei Aceto

A Scott Joplin Rag Rhapsody, 1997 – Kevin Olson (b. 1970). Yujin Han, April Lee, Yali Levy Schwartz, and Kyuree Kim. Ah, familiar Joplin themes.

Where ARE we?

Then, we attended a 4:00 orientation for new Chautauquans. By the time we finished dinner, I didn’t want to go anywhere.

Fortunately, at breakfast, the Presby House pastor had indicated an interest in playing backgammon. I hadn’t played a human in years, only on my phone. We were well-matched, as she beat me two games to one, even as we (mostly I) engaged in a running commentary to benefit a young man watching us who had read the game’s rules but had not played.

Then I played him a few games, even as we listened to the 8 pm Sacred Song Service in the nearby Amphitheater. This brought me joy.

One of the quirks, at least at Presby House, is that you don’t lock your doors when you go out. When my wife was in the room, even though she had opened and closed the door, she inadvertently locked me out. It took only a day or so to get used to it. 

Security

By happenstance, the day we returned from Chautauqua, CBS reran the segment from 60 Minutes detailing when Salman Rushdie was stabbed on the Amphitheater stage. I had seen the piece before, but it was somehow more disturbing, having been in that place. In 2022, access to the stage appeared less secure. 

I don’t know exactly what measures they had then—there are people I should ask—but there are now several folks responsible for security. The ones in the blue shirts appeared to be armed. While undoubtedly necessary, this made me a little sad.

Sunday Stealing: plans for August

Sing Sing

Another Sunday Stealing quiz.

1. What are your plans for August?

My family is going on another trip. I’ll tell you about it after the fact. I will note that my wife and I returned yesterday from the Chautauqua Institution. We were away for a week during its 150th anniversary. I’ll write about it in dribs and drabs in the coming weeks. Also, some major housecleaning is required due to an unexpected development.

2. Your mid-year resolutions or goals

 Do more genealogy. My sister Leslie was in our hometown of Binghamton, NY, for a reunion this month, and she got a lot of info from a third cousin (I think) on my mother’s side and my father’s first cousin. Oh, and I plan to do LESS of some other things.

3. Are you good at taking care of plants?

Absolutely not. I have no plants; I’ve never been good with them. My wife has a few, but we must keep them out of reach of our cat Stormy, who will otherwise chew on them and then throw up.

4. What makes you feel nourished?

Interesting question. It depends on what one means by “nourished.” It could be oatmeal or music.

5. Which animals do you see most in your area?

Cats. Lots of cats are in our backyard, so many that our neighbors mistakenly think they are ours.

6. Books on your summer reading list

When folks come to the Friends of the Albany Public Library and present an author talk, I usually buy one of their books. Currently, I have more than a dozen unread. I’ll pick one AFTER the projects are done, which is to say, probably in the autumn.

Hanging like the sword of Damocles

7. Projects you want to tackle this summer

I am editing someone’s book, which I MUST return to; I haven’t touched it all month. Getting our back porch replaced.

8. Do you have weddings, graduations, summer celebrations

We went to the Olin family reunion in July. It’s my MIL’s people.

9. Which summer snacks are you excited to enjoy again?

I can’t think of a thing I eat only in summer.

10. How much time do you like to take for vacations

A minimum of a week. Three-day jaunts can be okay, but it’s not vacating enough.

11. Where are your favorite picnic locations?

Random roadside stops. There’s a nice one on I-86 about a half hour west of Binghamton.

12. Something that would be out of character for you

Not singing.

13. Which summer movies are you excited to see?

I went to the Rolling Stone list of The 44 Most-Anticipated New Movies of Summer 2024. So far, I’ve seen Ghostlight, Inside Out 2, Janet Planet, Thelma, and Daddio, all of which I have reviewed in the links; I liked them all except Janet Planet. Sing Sing is the only movie on the list I know enough about that I would like to see.

14. Your favorite free/cost-effective ways to have fun

Lots of free concerts in Albany

15. Who do you trust most to house & pet sit?

My daughter’s friend Kay

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