sovay: (I Claudius)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2012-04-30 04:38 am

We came together, then we took to the road

Well, I did not expect to wind up today walking home from Somerville after midnight, but it took me under two hours and there was a stunning haze-yellow half-moon following me all the way. It was actually pretty awesome.

Previous events had been more in the line of yardwork and going into Somerville to meet [livejournal.com profile] rushthatspeaks; we were planning to watch Pasolini's Edipo re (1967). Rather obviously, there were detours, starting when Rush found out that I had never seen Fantasia 2000. I was promptly sat down in front of the television (which still does not have a remote, but fortunately that's irrelevant to video cassettes) and shown "Rhapsody in Blue," "Carnival of the Animals," and the "Firebird Suite." The first of these was a lovely chaser to last week's trip, a clean-lined, looping, blue-toned day in Al Hirschfeld and George Gershwin's New York; it's funny and touching and follows the music at every turn. There are cameos by all the correct people. The second is just grin-making, a piece of classic cartooning with overtones of the Muppets—I have never heard James Earl Jones sound more like Sam the Eagle than when he finds himself reading the line ". . . that age-old question: what would happen if you gave a yo-yo to a flock of flamingos? Who wrote this?" The third, however, is pure Miyazaki; I was amazed. Disney is not traditionally known for its numinous. If I had been told it was about the rebirth of spring after winter and disaster, I would have assumed some sort of awful sentimental flower fairies at worst, at best something inoffensive and vaguely classical. It is not any of those things. [livejournal.com profile] nineweaving would recognize its iconography. And now I know where one of [livejournal.com profile] gaudior's best icons comes from.

And then one of the cats threw up on the floor and had to be attended to and we realized it was substantially more freezing in the house than it was outside, so we put on our jackets and went out to seek kitfo in Central Square. Some form of space-time folding evidently applies at the borders of Cambridge and Somerville, because we walked from Union to Inman just fine and then we were lost and suddenly found ourselves facing Mu Lan in Kendall, which is apparently a lot closer to Toscanini's than heretofore believed. (It suits my increasing feeling that the world is imploding in on Somerville and/or D.C. Last night I went to hear Rush and others of the Boston chapter of Sassafrass open for Heather Dale in a house concert and it turned out I knew the person whose house and concert it was. Today I find out someone I met months ago in a third-party context is actually two degrees out from my romantic life. I think it's the Singularity. Some say the world will end in fire, some in ice; I'm telling you it's going to be looking at other people's friendlists that does it.) Nonetheless, there was kitfo at Asmara, and lentils, and fruit juices, and a salad we could both eat around the onions in, and as we were walking home Rush was hit by a bolt of genius and suggested that we try to find Backbar.

It has a street address, but that really won't help you. You get there by trusting first that the alleyway that calls itself a private way is not merely the dumpsters-and-docking space between other restaurants' kitchens and then that you are meant to be on the other side of two fire doors and a hallway that looks like the tradesman's entrance or the fuse room. And then there is the kind of bar that looks like the liquor cabinets of everyone you know run together and rather stylishly arranged on several levels, also a pot of rosemary on the counter, also what really looked like an origami triceratops and we had no idea why the giant pair of forceps, but the horseshoe-sized π is strangely endearing. The ceilings are high and the walls primarily blackboard; the drinks of the week and day are drawn in the style of Aubrey Beardsley, the charcuterie looks like Mucha or Lalique, and I haven't a clue who the cheese list was derived from, but it's very pretty. The sound system was playing Benny Goodman when we walked in and the Psychedelic Furs when we left and the degrees by which this transition was achieved were seamless. It was not loud. We had two rounds of drinks, of which I think the second was the clear winner; I liked my Scofflaw well enough (Prohibition all the way, except for the pomegranate) and we discovered what the pot of rosemary was for when Rush's Back Word came with a little sprig stuck in a floating isle of lemon peel that actually contributed to the taste, but the seasonal milk punch is going to be a favorite whenever we return and I may have to negotiate some kind of open relationship with Saloon, because Backbar also made me a Bunny Hug. I think it's becoming my speakeasy litmus test. The one bartender looked it up in The Savoy Cocktail Book and made his partner taste it first. His partner turned out to be a self-described absinthe freak who came over to our table (in his Green Lantern belt) and offered to make us anything we felt like with absinthe in future, from classic preparations with spoon and sugar to setting the stuff on fire. Rush believes we should use him as an opportunity to test-drive Who Killed Hemingway; I have just realized my life is about to contain a lot of corpse-reviving. This place also makes the best caramel corn I can remember that wasn't from a fair or a midway: it's spicy. Chipotle, cumin, smoked paprika. The combination is sort of the platonic ideal of bar food.

And when we got home, we finally watched Pasolini's Edipo re and it was worth it. It's two years earlier than his astonishing Medea (1969) and it is not as historically careful, but it shares the same sense of raw myth raked straight from a past so distant, it is at once instantly recognizable and utterly alien in every detail—Jocasta in her turreted crown, Oedipus setting out from Corinth to Delphi like a vase painting in his broad-brimmed traveler's petasos, but there is also the impossible feel of casually documenting the ancient world, the dust and goats, knotted wreaths of flowers, the clay-faced walls of cities, even when the viewer knows for a fact that Delphi was never a single dry-branching tree in desert hills beneath which sits the Sibyl in her double-faced mask with blind cowrie eyes, laughing at Oedipus, slattern-voiced, pitiless, as she tells him which parent he'll kill and which he'll fuck, now go away. It begins a few decades before its present day, ends in the year of its making. In between is the Archaic period, because that is the time of oracles and fates and the harshness in all these stories that Pasolini does not polish off into something graceful; we change over when Laios—not yet in fear of prophecy, but in beautifully reversed jealousy of his wife's affections—decides to kill his child. The Messenger is nameless in the myth-time, but in contemporary Italy his name is Angelo. Things are edging into Oedipus at Colonus by the end. It's a very strange Sphinx, but I think it works.

The last bus did not hold up its end of the social contract. I still consider the day won.
selidor: (Default)

[personal profile] selidor 2012-04-30 09:20 am (UTC)(link)
There's nothing quite like walking home under a waxing moon to distil the day.
I have a soft spot for the various Fantasias; now I shall have to add Edipo re to the Quickflix list.
In addition to the Platonic solids of bar food: oven-roasted sweet potato curl-crisps. I wonder what the other three may be?

[identity profile] moon-custafer.livejournal.com 2012-04-30 02:13 pm (UTC)(link)
the Sibyl in her double-faced mask with blind cowrie eyes

Ooh...

[identity profile] ladymondegreen.livejournal.com 2012-04-30 06:32 pm (UTC)(link)
I have probably never told you that I was once almost kidnapped by someone who though I hadn't seen the Firebird sequence in Fantasia 2000 and was determined that he must show it to me so that I would understand that he knew my innermost heart and would thus leave my boyfriend and go out with him.

And yes, this was well after college. I was mildly appalled. More than mildly, really.

He's happily married now.

Also, I saw Heather Dale yesterday, and it seems awfully likely that I know the person who hosted the house concert you attended in Boston. Sometimes my life is tiny.
gwynnega: (tea poisoninjest)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2012-04-30 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Whenever you write about restaurants & bars, I wish I had a TARDIS so I could fly in and check 'em out.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2012-05-01 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
I'm delighted that the day was won by you, despite the failure of the bus to hold up the social contract. May the ghost of John Locke torment the guilty bus driver's dreams!

Today I find out someone I met months ago in a third-party context is actually two degrees out from my romantic life. I think it's the Singularity. Some say the world will end in fire, some in ice; I'm telling you it's going to be looking at other people's friendlists that does it.

It's very strange how that sort of thing happens.

I recently saw a comment on a Facebook friend's status from somebody who absolutely must be a classmate from University of Chicago and my first attempt at grad school--he has the very same, less than commonplace, full name, with the very same, and uncommon (even in the South, most families stop at three) number after it. I was floored--said FB friend is somebody I'm acquainted with through Irish language and music,* and said classmate** has nothing to do with either one, beyond having gone out on one date with one of my best friends*** who'd been a neighbour of mine in Ireland and who was also living in Chicago at the time.

*Leftist singer songwriter from the North.
**Another classmate and I ended up taking him to the ER once with suspected alcohol poisoning after he got kicked out of a party we also happened to be at. He was an obnoxious drunk, with a hint of death wish.
***Who neither plays trad nor speaks Irish beyond the cúpla focal.
Edited 2012-05-01 00:10 (UTC)
genarti: ([b!] the hat makes the man)

[personal profile] genarti 2012-05-01 07:59 pm (UTC)(link)
I had never even heard of Backbar before this post. I think I must make time to find it, if I can. It sounds rather as if one needs to not only know the road but choose the correct phase of the moon and have the correct talisman in one's pocket to find it. (I suspect that, if so, success will only make the drinks more delicious.)

[identity profile] schreibergasse.livejournal.com 2012-05-05 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
You get there by trusting first that the alleyway that calls itself a private way is not merely the dumpsters-and-docking space between other restaurants' kitchens

Ah, yes. Sounds like The Turf in Oxford.