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Saturday, November 12, 2022

EARTHLINGZ KOUYOU GATHERING 2022

 

May be an image of tree and text that says 'EARTHLINGZ KOUYOU GATHERING NOVEMBER 25-27'
 @ THE SILKHOUSE, CHICHIBU


2年間 EarthlingZ Gatheringは開催されませんでしたが今年の11 月 25~27日に2 年間 EarthlingZ Gatheringは開催されませんでしたが今年の11 月 25~27日に開催したいと思います。参加してお手伝いやパフォーマンスができる方は、参加可能の日程をお知らせください。 出席できない場合は、チェックボックスにその旨を記入してください。 すでに私と内密に確認している場合でも、Doodle への参加を入力してください。そうすることでほかの方もそれを確認することができます。ギャザリングの開催時間は25日午後から27日午後までですが、前 日までに準備を手伝っていただける方がいらっしゃいましたら、個人的にお知らせください。 皆様に会えるのを楽しみにしています。

https://doodle.com/meeting/participate/id/bYvk3rAd

After two years without any EarthlingZ Gatherings, we are finally able to plan the Koyo Gathering, to be held on 25-27 November. If you think you may be able to attend and help or perform, please indicate the dates that you think will be possible for you. Even if you have already confirmed to me privately, it would help to encourage others to have your entry in the Doodle. The main times of the Gathering will be from the afternoon of the 25th to the afternoon of the 27th, but if you can volunteer to help with preparations in the preceding days, please include those dates or inform me privately. Hope to see you there!


               KENJI SAKASEGAWA   TABLA
                 YUICHI SEKIGUCHI /  SAROD
              IZUMI KURIBAYASHI /  VIOLIN
               NOBOYUKI KATO   GUITAR
                       DRMU BASS GUITAR   
                  JOOST & MIRI /  VARIOUS
                            MASAKO KORA
                 ED DURBROW /  GUITAR, LUTE
                                MIKU  /  DJ
                          MIURA /  DRUMS (tbd)
                       KAYOKO /  DANCE
                   L EIYA DANSE /  DANSE



COSTS:

チ ケット&宿泊:
1000円 

食べ物&飲み物 は入場時に購入するアース リングスのお金を利用し買うことがで きます。晩ご飯と朝ご飯をカバーできるように最低限2500 円分のアース リングスのお金を購入することをおすすめします。


 Party and Accommodation 
1000 円 

Food and Drinks:.
このイベントをサポートするために食事と飲み物を販売していますので、食 べ物と飲み物の持ち込みをしないで下さい。その他、お酒や薬物の使用はグリーンハ ウスで禁止されていますので、ご注意下さい。
  
Please do not bring your own food and beverages, as it is  the sale of these that supports these events.
Please note also that alcohol and stimulant drugs are not allowed at The Greenhouse.





Saturday, April 18, 2020

VERSES OF THE DAY




"Many Happy Returns"

-W.H.AUDEN-

Johnny, since to-day is
February the twelfth when
neighbors and relations
think of you and wish,
though a staunch Aquarian,
graciously accept the
verbal celebrations
of a doubtful fish.

seven years ago you
warmed your mother's heart by
making a successful
debut on our stage;
naivete's an act that
you already know you
cannot get away with
even at your age.

so I wish you first a
sense of theatre; only
those who love illusion
and know it will go far:
otherwise we spend our
lives in a confusion
of what we say and do with
who we really are.

you will any day now
have this revelation:
"why, we're all like people
acting in a play."
and will suffer, Johnny,
man's unique temptation
precisely at the moment
you utter this cliche.
remember if you can then,
only the All-Father
can change the cast or give them
easier lines to say;
deliberate interference
with others for their own good
is not allowed the author
of the play within The Play.

just because our pride's an
evil there's no end to,
birthdays and the arts are
justified, for when
we consciously pretend to
own the earth or play at
being gods, thereby we
own that we are men.

as a human creature
you will all too often
forget your proper station,
Johnny, like us all;
therefore let your birthday
be a wild occasion like a Saturnalia
or a Servant's Ball.

what else shall I wish you?
following convention
shall i wish you Beauty,
Money, Happiness?
or anything you mention?
no, for I recall an
ancient proverb--nothing
fails like a success.

what limping devil sets our
head and heart at variance,
that each time the Younger
Generation sails,
the old and weather-beaten
deny their own experience
and pray the gods to send them
calm seas, auspicious gales?

I'm not such an idiot
as to claim the power
to peer into the vistas
of your future, still
I'm prepared to guess you
have not found your life as
easy as your sister's
and you never will.

if I'm right about this,
may you in your troubles,
neither (like so many
in the U.S.A.)
be ashamed of any
suffering as vulgar,
nor bear them like a hero
in the biggest way.

all the possibilities
it had to reject are
what give life and warmth to
an actual character;
the roots of wit and charm tap
secret springs of sorrow,
every brilliant doctor
hides a murderer.

then, since all self-knowledge
tempts man into envy,
may you, by acquiring
proficiency in what
Whitehead calls the art of
Negative Prehension,
love without desiring
all that you are not.

Tao is a tightrope,
so to keep your balance,
may you always, Johnny,
manage to combine
intellectual talents
with a sensual gusto,
the Socratic Doubt with
the Socratic Sign.

that is all I can
think of at this moment
and it's time I brought these
verses to a close:
Happy Birthday, Johnny,
live beyond your income,
travel for enjoyment,
follow your own nose. 

Sunday, April 05, 2020

EQUINOCTURNE


EQUINOCTURNE Had I not stopped attempting poetry 40 years ago, I might have done better with these musings, but please be tolerant. They are, at least, reasonably iambic. EQUINOCTURNE Coquettish Spring, elusive, virginal Brushes the chill of March with wisps of warmth, While brother Winter's valedictory Breaths, the harukaze, sternly greet Plum blossoms and incautious daffodils. The days grow longer, and with now in sight The Equinox of spring, the Light and Dark In perfect balance, even-handedly, The Yin and Yang co-equal, as we're told In all phenomena they tend to be, Blind to this equanimity though we are. Depending on the region you call home, It may not seem the earth is heating up; The melting glaciers paradoxically Provoke the startling blizzards unforeseen. Has nature's balance truly been upset-- "Koyannisqatsi" as the Hopis say-- Or do the new locales for droughts and floods Bespeak a larger kind of harmony Indifferent to our fleeting destiny? Whatever on the planetary scale May balance out, I can't avoid the thought That in the weather of the human heart A new ice age approaches, even where The temperatures are highest and, in thrall To atavistic ideologies, Men drive compassion from their freezing hearts And sink to medieval cruelty. The poet Robert Frost may be the one Who said it best: "Some say the world Will end in fire; some say in ice. From what I've tasted of desire I hold with those who favor fire. But if it had to perish twice, I think I know enough of hate To say that for destruction ice Is also great, and would suffice." We may not hold apocalyptic views, Nor eagerly or nervously await The end of days, but harder to deny Is something I am tempted to describe As Thanatotropism, or at least A fashion for acceptance of decline In standards of the bodies politic And spiritual alike -- for which I see No antidote but Auden's "affirming flame".

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Saturday, January 25, 2020

In my first few years in Japan, I spent most of the time apart from in the winters, travelling the length and breadth of the country by motorcycle, living in a tent in the forests, taking photographs and writing poetry.  My girlfriend at the time was Fukiko Hayamizu, who translated them for me  and did the Japanese calligraphy for the poems collected below.  Her translations were so good and idiomatic that many Japanese assumed they were the originals and that the English versions were translations of them, whereas the reverse was of course the case.





















Saturday, July 06, 2019

Remembering Jeffrey Tate




In my first year at Cambridge there was a small group of friends, all fellow members of Christ's College, who met together most evenings and many afternoons for endless conversation. What we all had in common was a great appreciation of classical music, theatre and of wit. Jeffrey was a powerhouse of all these. His physical affliction ruled out most roles in drama, but his direction/production of Measure For Measure for the ADC (or Mummers? or Marlowe Society?) left an indelible impression on me.
In those days, despite never having had any piano lessons, I was trying to teach myself to play Bach.The second piece I learned was Var.13 of the Goldberg Variations. It took me two years. I used to practice it in a little back room at Christ's One day Jeffrey popped in to see what I was doing.
"Do you play?" I asked.
"A little," said he.
"Please show me how this should go"
Whereupon he sat down and played it so well that I asked him to start from the beginning, and marveled as he sightread the entire Goldberg Variations, his performance being as good as any I had heard. I knew he loved music and was in the college choir, but he was studying medicine, so it was quite a surprise. But in fact, after doing his medical internship, he got a position as a repetiteur for Georg Solti at Covent Garden, and went on to become principal conductor at Covent Garden, the English Chamber Orchestra, the Rotterdam Philharmonic.and others.
I lost touch with him when I left England for India and, eventually, Japan, but he got in touch when he came to Tokyo for some concerts with the pianist Mitsuko Uchida, and my wife and daughter and I attended the concert and spent the rest of the day with the two of them; he was as fun to talk with as ever,and we were able to catch up a bit on what had become of all the members of our little clique.
Although people with his condition normally have a short life expectancy, this didn't seem to apply to Jeffrey. You may have noticed that conductors generally live to a very advanced age, often doing their best work in their final decades. I don't for a moment doubt that allowing music to flow continually through your mind and body is the closest thing to the Elixir Of Youth available And also, as Jeffrey said,
""There is in the last resort no limit to my physical energy if I know what I'm doing and want to do it."

Saturday, June 15, 2019

An introduction to EarthlingZ, the creative community that has grown up around the site in the mountains where my wife Futaba and I settled a few decades ago:


GreetingZ, EarthlingZ!
Most of you know about and many of you have visited The
Greenhouse and Silkhouse , which constitute the physical
basecamp of EarthlingZ in the mountains of Chichibu. It
is a couple of old farmhouses which we have turned into a
place catering to the creative and nature-oriented people
we have come to know through our own activities,
especially those working in the fields of music, dance,
graphics, the healing arts, and the spiritual sciences.
Of course there are countless such people, especially in
and around Tokyo, but our location and the values we
encourage has meant that only those who have discovered
the importance to their creativity of connecting with the
infinite energies of organic Nature will make the effort
to return again and again.
There is very little in urban life today that brings to
our attention our place in the cosmos, or even reminds us
that we are on an actual planet. From the moment we leave
our rooms in the morning we are moving through a creation
of human engineering, a giant warehouse and database
which we navigate in as straight lines as we can towards
destinations determined largely by our material agendas.
We rarely look up, knowing that there will be no stars
visible, and that what's happening in the sky makes
little difference to our work and movements. Even as we
sleep we are bathed in the discordant electromagnetic and
psychic vibrations of the physical and mental activities
of millions, but hardly understand the tensions and
levels of egotism this creates.
If we step out of this and into the real life of the
planet, we find our oppressive sense of separate selfhood
dissolve as we walk through the cool cathedrals of the
cedars, watch the wind ripple over the ricefields, or
hear the voices of birds and animals punctuate the
stillness of the glittering night.
In such an atmosphere, we need no guidance, no teachers
or gurus, to bring us to considering our condition as
humans on the earth. We move without effort towards
wider perspectives, consider our pasts and futures with
at least temporary detachment, and recharge our spiritual
batteries through grounding to the earth while attending
to the heights.
This often leads us to make music, to dance, to centre in
the Here and Now, to show each other the wonders we
discover in so doing, and to rediscover what marvellous
creatures human beings are when they are really Present
and open to each other and their environment.
It was once said by Terence McKenna that "Nature is the
great teacher of metaphysics". People who like to learn
this way we call EarthlingZ, and all the facilities we
have developed here are meant to make this easier.

Saturday, September 08, 2018

Memories of Nigel and Jenny

A writer named Ingrid Maclean is writing a book about the psychedelic revolution in London in the 1960s, of which a large part will be the story of the adventures of my good friend Nigel Lesmoir-Gordon, and I was asked to contribute some reminiscences,. I procrastinated until the deadline was upon me, and quickly penned this the other evening. 
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By the time I went to Cambridge to study philosophy, I had been devoted to literature for years, and even intended to be a writer, having been producing poetry since I was 13. It was in literature, of all the creative arts, that I sought to learn about human nature and existence. I had thought that the study of philosophy would amount to considering such matters at an even higher level than poetry, but I had the misfortune to be at university in a period when British philosophy was dominated by logical positivism, which rejected all metaphysical notions as well as existentialism ("continental claptrap", opined my director of studies.)
Disillusioned with the courses and lecturers, I found myself devoting much more time and attention to drama, which at least seemed to be concerned with The Meaning Of Life. But I soon came to find the theatre world at Cambridge to be much more petty and cliquey than suited me. I had previously in London been involved with the Hampstead bohemian set, and came to know similar people in Cambridge, some of whom lived in a house in Clarendon St. owned by a recent graduate, Bill Barlow.
It was in a conversation with Bill that he made what seemed to me the radical assertion that my goal of being a creative person was not necessarily the most admirable path. Rather, he insisted, the elevation of consciousness was the greater priority. After all, the quality of one's creative work is bound to be a direct result of one's consciousness, and the most important criterion of its value was surely its effect on the consciousness of others as well.
Nigel Lesmoir-Gordon at that time was living at Clarendon St., and I soon realised that he was already of that persuasion, and it was from him that I learned about such authors as Ouspensky, whose Meetings With Remarkable Men and Tertium Organum were fundamental texts for the expanded consciousness movement, as well as Gurdjieff and R.D. Laing, who was making waves with his novel ideas about altered mental states. Nigel was quite familiar with the beatniks, and introduced me to many of their writings. I soon was spending more time at Clarendon St. than with my fellow students, delighting in conversation with Nigel and his lovely girlfriend,later wife, Jenny.
At about the same time that I left the university in 1965, Nigel and Jenny moved to an apartment in London, also owned by Bill Barlow, at 101 Cromwell Road. Once again I was drawn to their company time and again, and after living for a few months in Marylebone, I moved in to the room next door to theirs. Thus began the most intensely transformative period of my life to date. It's hard to believe that it really only spanned about three years, so full of experience and realisations was it. The history of 101 is well-known; the myriad of underground writers, artists, musicians and psychonauts who frequented the place has become legendary. Nigel was the most congenial of hosts, and Jenny brought a cleverly mischievous charm to all occasions, and there was hardly an evening when there were not several or many visitors, quite often enjoying the LSD that arrived there via Michael Hollingshead and John Esam before it was known at all in London.
Many histories of the 60s present the 101 scene as if it revolved around Syd Barrett of the Pink Floyd, who lived there at various periods, and perpetuate the perspective typical of journalists and fans, namely that the most famous person in a group is the centre of it, implying that the people sharing space with him at 101 Cromwell Road and later at Egerton Court were "camp-followers" or "hangers-on." Nothing could be farther from the truth. Just about everybody there had his own thing; most were there before he came, and some of them were his childhood friends. The creative atmosphere owed less to him than to such residents as Nigel, poet John Esam (who co-organised the Albert Hall Poetry Festival), photographer Dave Larcher, graphic artists Storm Thorgerson and and the others who formed Hipgnosis, visual artist David Gale (Lumiere & Son), poet-author of The Book of Grass George Andrews, budding alchemist Stash Klossowski de Rola, etc., etc. Other visitors to 101 included Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Kenneth Anger, Donovan, Marianne Faithfull, Alex Trocchi, and various Stones and Beatles. A much longer list could be made, but the point is that Syd was there because it was a matrix from which sprang the 60s London psychedelia. Of course, in addition to the psychonauts there were people who came merely because it was a Scene, people stuck at the level of personalities. Interestingly enough, many of these are the ones most eager to be interviewed about the carryings-on there, and their accounts often miss the essence as much as they themselves missed the point then through their exclusive focus on personalities.
At that time I was working as assistant to Robert Fraser (Groovy Bob) at his gallery in Duke St., which became one of the principal nodes of Swinging London. Through Fraser I met and became good friends with Christopher Gibbs, the two of them being central figures in a bohemian aristocrat set to which several Rolling Stones and Beatles were also attracted. I introduced Nigel to these people, and he and Jenny were immediately accepted with great enthusiasm. After all, few couples merited the term "The Beautiful People" as much as they did, and many of these privileged people and celebrities were becoming turned on to acid and welcomed the transcendental perspective that we sought to share, which interpreted the psychedelic experience as cognate to the experiences of mystics and occultists.
At that time there were basically two schools of thought about how LSD was best taken, which one might call the Leary school and the Kesey school. The latter, with its extroverted antics and missionary zeal, is well described in Tom Wolfe's Electric Koolaid Acid Test. The Leary/Alpert approach was based on eastern spirituality, though no less proselytising. Nigel, like most of us, was of that leaning, and our explorations of Buddhism, Taoism, Jung's writings and many other esoteric works gradually led many of us to a search for the ideal method of attaining what we were still bold enough to call Enlightenment.
It was in the company of Nigel and Jenny that my transition to vegetarianism began. While full-on tripping,we went to a restaurant and ordered a meal. When it came, I stared at my veal escalope in horror, muttering "Baby calf flesh", while Jenny gazed in dismay at her omelette. "Baby chickens,", I believe she whimpered. I can't remember what Nigel had ordered, but that experience pretty much converted me to a vegetarian diet. It was at another restaurant meal, incidentally, that I placed in a moment of verbal ineptitude an order for "a glass of two milks", a phrase that will live in infamy, now that Nigel has used it as the title of one of his recent novels.
It was from Nigel that I first learned about a Master in India who seemed to have all the qualities of a true master, as distinct from the many questionable gurus who appear in profusion, levitating, collecting Rolls Royces and materialising watches, etc. Several friends had been to his ashram, or Dera as it was called, and came back with glowing testimony to his being The Real Thing. It was not long, therefore, before Nigel and Jenny, myself and Adrian Haggard obtained permission to attend the Radha Soami Satsang in Beas, Punjab. Adrian and I set out to hitchhike to the Punjab, which was an adventure in itself, and we met up with Nigel and Jenny there. Over the next few weeks we experienced the amazing aura and wisdom of the master, Charan Singh, and as our stay there ended, we all received initiation into the practice of Shabad Yoga, the yoga of internal sound. Without doubt this has proven the most significant turning point in all our lives.
Nigel and Jenny returned to England, and I headed east, hitchhiking and working my way on ships until I reached Japan, where I have been pretty much ever since. We've got together several times over the years, in England and in India, and they remain among the most loved people in my life, true spiritual colleagues. Many of my best memories are of things said or written or otherwise learned from or together with them. If any one thing epitomises the shared vision we had from the start of what we might become, it is probably a Chinese poem Nigel had written out and pinned to his wall, which seemed to sum up the ultimate goal as not at all the gravitas of Enlightenment, but the shared delight of heightened awareness.
"When two masters meet
They laugh and laugh--
The trees, the many fallen leaves."