Ikh vel betn di klezmorimlekh, zey zoln zikh nit ayln
I am returned from the recording session of A Besere Velt with Polina Shepherd and Lorin Sklamberg. We had four songs on which we had been working all for lack of a better word semester: they will be part of an album coming out next year, along with songs from the London Yiddish Choir, the London Russian Choir, the Brighton & Hove Russian Choir, the Brighton & Hove Yiddish Choir Chutzpah, and Lorin and Polina themselves. It was tiring and fun and the last time I was part of a choral recording was twenty years ago; this time was remarkably like, including the part where I ate a sandwich halfway through. I got to tell Lorin afterward that his music had formed an important part of my writing. I got told to audition for a local theater company by someone connected with it, had a nice drive back from Acton with
skygiants and
genarti who described to me a gonzo item of eighteenth-century French science fiction, and came home to discover that
sara had sent me a CD of Brivele's A Little Letter (2018), rounding off the theme of the day. It made up significantly for spending my entire morning at urgent care, trying to get someone to pay attention to my sinuses. You can keep T. Witt making lebkuchen,
selkie.

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It was a good thing to do with the day.
(I got new antibiotics from urgent care. It is my hope that they work.)
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It did, and I could, and it works. Thank you!
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I will shout quite loudly about it when it exists, rest assured!
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Thank you!
What IS the gonzo item of eighteenth-century French science fiction?
I don't know its name! It is a journey through the center of the earth, from pole to pole, apparently predicated on a theory of the circulation of ocean currents that claimed they just poured in an unending cataract through the planet from north to south, which is how the narrator and his whole whaling crew who are just doing their thing around Greenland end up in not yet Antarctica where there are tons of islands and bears and strange birds and sea cows and man-eating flying fish. According to
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I will! I want to hear it myself!
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This seems presented as such a selling point that I am extra entertained it's just the occasional reproduction of a weird thing the protagonists failed to investigate.
Someday I may yet attempt a translation, if only a few other people can experience the gonzo-ness of it for themselves, but it would be a long and challenging process and is definitely a "maybe someday" thing for the moment.
I will bear this statement in mind and bug you about your own fiction instead.
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Right? Sometimes they're rather clunkily stylized depictions of weird bushes, but... I do wish it were more accessible to more of my friends so I could shove it at them, though.
(Also, apologies for that last paragraph being all one massive paragraph! It was originally three, but then I edited it on my phone to add in the publication year and DW immediately ate the paragraph breaks and refused to put them back in.)
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I feel like somebody would write Yuletide fic for it.
(Also, apologies for that last paragraph being all one massive paragraph! It was originally three, but then I edited it on my phone to add in the publication year and DW immediately ate the paragraph breaks and refused to put them back in.)
I regularly write paragraphs of that length like they're normal, so please, do not worry!
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Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must pass out.
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I am really glad the chorus did it and I am really glad I was part of it. Now I want to hear how it came out!
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Thank you!