Saturday, July 26, 2014

All Those Years Ago

It's easy to forget that The Beatles—the band and the pop culture phenomenon as we know them—were only active for ten years. So much happened in that decade, the ever-intriguing and dynamic Sixties, including the elevation of the Fab Four to unfathomable heights of stardom. Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, & Ringo Starr, especially with the passage of time, seem easier to perceive as icons rather than human beings. 

The Beatles: young & not-so-young.
They are, of course, mere mortals (despite what individuals such as myself may want to tell you). In fact, one of the more interesting trajectories seen in The Beatles' career—if you step away from the music itself—is the physical aging process of the four men who comprised arguably the greatest and most influential rock band ever.


All things considered, The Beatles were still boys when they began their meteoric ascent through the ranks of the music industry: George Harrison was just 19 when the group scored their first number-one hit in "Love Me Do." But as the years went by, as they were forced into sharing hotel rooms during the height of "Beatlemania" and into making difficult decisions such as retiring from touring to devote themselves fully to the artistic process of recording, they aged rather rapidly into mature adults. 



Ten years, for just about any other band, could have passed for twenty: 12 studio albums, 20 number-one singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, 5 feature films, and innumerable stylistic, artistic, and philosophical transformations. Going strictly by the numbers, The Beatles were remarkably busy during their active years as a band. And the hard work showed: in their unprecedented success & on their faces.


The Fab Four in the early days: pre-mop top in 1962.

When the group disbanded in 1970, its most senior members, Ringo Starr and John Lennon, were just 30 years old. Paul McCartney was 28 and George Harrison had reached the ripe old age of 27. However, in the photos from the band's final shoot at Lennon's Tittenhurst Park home in August 1969, they all appear much older: aged by the trappings of superstardom, by artistic & business disputes, and—yes—by facial hair. 

What a difference five years makes: 1964 vs. 1969.

Although none of us are free from the heavy hands of time, one must admit that John Lennon's transformation between 1965 and 1967 was jarring (and even more so between 1963 and 1969). 

Lennon ('65 vs. '67) & Harrison ('64 vs. '70)
And George Harrison, once a fresh-faced Liverpudlian lad living in the shadow of the vaunted Lennon-McCartney duo, more closely resembled an Orthodox priest when he embarked on his post-Beatles debut, All Things Must Pass.

Some would have it that their changes were merely the result of drug abuse: tobacco, marijuana, amphetamines, LSD, cocaine, even heroin—The Beatles were familiar with all of them on some level. But drugs were far from the only factor: just look at their touring schedule

They played nearly every day of the year in 1963 and released two studio LPs. Then, in 1964, they embarked on their first world tour, additional tours in the UK, USA, Canada, and Europe, and still managed to release A Hard Day's Night and Beatles For Sale. More of the same in 1965: international tour dates & two more albums, Help! and Rubber Soul



It's no wonder that the band decided to stop touring the next year. It happened to be around then that the "Paul is dead" urban legend came about — well, if that grueling schedule didn't kill him, it at least aged him a few extra years.

The Beatles, of course, stayed active in their last four years together, putting out seven of their most ground-breaking records yet: Revolver, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club BandMagical Mystery TourYellow SubmarineThe Beatles ("White Album"), Abbey Road, and Let It Be

By comparison, Eminem—the top selling artist of the 2000s—has managed to release eight records over the course of 18 years.

And so, The Beatles as they appeared in 1969 at Tittenhurst Park were probably burned out: from a decade of constant travel, performance, and exceptional creative output. 

Their career mirrored the era in which it existed: high-paced, full of inspiration & change, and exhausting for those who lived through it.

John Lennon, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, & Ringo Starr at Tittenhurst Park. August 22, 1969.

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Oh, The Places You'll Go

An up close & personal look at the Ionic order, courtesy of one of the six columns supporting the Erechtheion's Northern porch. (Athens, Greece)
Attempting to pose outside of the Panathenaic Stadium while security guards blew their whistles at us. The stadium, which was reconstructed from the remains of an ancient Greek stadium, played host to the first modern Olympic Games in 1896. (Athens, Greece)
The towering Temple of Olympian Zeus: an ill-fated structure that was constructed over a period of 638 years, only to be destroyed during a barbarian invasion 135 years after its completion.
(Athens, Greece)
The Passion façade of La Sagrada Família, which has been under construction since 1882. At the time of architect Antoni Gaudí's death in 1926, less than a quarter of the project was finished. It is currently scheduled for completion in 2026. (Barcelona, Spain)
Resting at the foot of La Catedral de Santiago de Compostela after completing the final 30 km of "El Camino de Santiago," a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James that dates back to the 9th Century. (Santiago de Compostela, Spain)
An unexpected encounter with a room full of 13th Century frescoes in La Città Alta: a truly breathtaking experience. (Bergamo, Italy)
The Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion, the southernmost point of Attica. As legend has it, King Aegeus leapt to his death at Sounion when he mistakenly thought that Theseus, his son, had been killed by the dreaded Minotaur. Thus, the Aegean Sea acquired its name. (Sounion, Greece)
The Odeon of Herodes Atticus, or simply "Herodeon," is a theater built into the southwestern slope of the Acropolis of Athens. Completed in 161 AD, it was turned to ruin in the same barbarian invasion that resulted in the destruction of the Temple of Olympian Zeus. We had the distinct pleasure of listening to Mozart's "Symphony No. 41," his final symphony, in the reconstructed venue. (Athens, Greece)
Situated on the southwestern face of Mount Parnassus, Delphi was once thought to be the center of the earth. The Delphic Oracle exerted extraordinary influence in the classical Greek world: she was consulted before all decisions of importance, perhaps as far back as 1400 BC. (Delphi, Greece)

Saturday, July 5, 2014

The Life of a Tree


Mother Nature has a manner of inspiring awe in the most understated ways. As someone whose imagination tends to be swept away by the gravity of places, structures, and objects much older than myself, the history behind the earth's natural offerings is rarely lost on me. Trees, more than anything else, seem to inform my perspective on my own youth, and also the relative youth of my ancestors, my country, and my culture.

This photograph depicts the cross-section of a tree that lived for 1341 years before being cut down; its growth rings serve as perhaps the most tangible kind of timeline—more enlightening than any that is included in the index of a history book. This Giant Sequoia, which now resides at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, stood tall—and lived—as generations passed, as religions were born, as empires rose & crumbled, as the world was repeatedly transformed.

It saw not only the fall of the Roman Empire, but also the discovery of America—twice—as well as the birth of the United States of America, for good measure. It bore witness to the reigns of the Kings Henry, I through VIII. Its life spanned the entirety of the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Age of Discovery. 

The life of a tree, upon close observation, is the manifestation of the extraordinary in the seemingly ordinary flesh of nature. This tree, which survived through such a large portion of observable and recorded history, could easily have been mistaken as a mere feature of the contemporary environment. Perhaps that is the only rational explanation as to why such an immense being could be cut down in an instant. 

Whatever the explanation, the resultant cross-section of the fallen tree illustrates a truth that is easily forgotten: change as the world mightand the people and the structures that exist withinnature is constant. Humankind exists in a medium of living history, and each tree that has sprung forth from the rich soil of the earth is a physical connection to those who treaded there long before us.