Saturday, 5 September 2020

Rhapsode

In classical Greek, a ῥαψῳδός (rhapsōidos) meant one who "sews songs together", from the verb rhaptei (to sew) and the noun oide (poem or song). A rhapsode or rhapsodist was a person who made an honest living by composing and/or reciting (or singing) works of Greek poetry in what was still largely an oral tradition. Metre and rhyme assisted memory, and the latter must have been phenomenal, though a skilled rhapsodist would have been able to improvise. Gradually, as was also the case with plays, the musical component of such recitations was dropped in favour of the spoken word.

When Adele and I visited Kefalonia five summers ago, we attended a concert of traditional Greek music at the Municipal Theatre in Argostoli - and what a magical night it was, consisting of traditional Greek instruments and kantades or 'folk' songs performed by some of the leading exponents and legends of the genre.

There are over twenty traditional Greek instruments (many being fore-runners of our modern percussion, string and wind instruments) with wonderful names like askaulos, barbitos, bouzouki, kanonaki, kithara, laouto, lyra, outi, phorminx, sambyka, tamboura and tympanon. A good many were called into action on that night in Argostoli and they provided a musical accompaniment to some truly wonderful singing; a rich cultural tradition dating back hundreds of years but still thriving.

serious rhapsody in progress
When we got back to England, I tracked down a 2CD set of forty-two digitally restored recordings of instrumental Greek music (some dating back to 1905, the most recent 1956) drawn from a variety of sources including old field recordings and 78rpm records. Appropriately enough, it is named after its title-track, 'Greek Rhapsody' (playing in the background as I type this blog); two and a half hours of fabulous ethnic music - best enjoyed with a good meze and chilled retsina.

In strictly mainstream terms, during the last two centuries in Western classical music, a rhapsody has come to mean something episodic yet integrated, free-flowing in structure, featuring a range of highly contrasted moods, colour and tonality, and giving a sense of spontaneous invention. Bartok, Debussy, Gershwin, Liszt, Rachmaninoff and Ravel have all written rhapsodies. And as well as colours (Blue, obviously, but also Red, White, Green) there are geographies in addition to Greek, most notably Bulgarian, Hungarian, Norfolk, Romanian, Spanish and Welsh Rhapsodies. (I believe there is even a Bohemian one!)

The challenge I've set myself for Greek week, and as trailed in another recent blog, was to 'reverse-engineer' the attributes of contemporary musical rhapsody into some Greek-themed poetry, and so here's one I sewed together earlier; (standard T&Cs apply: work subject to extension or revision as imagination deems fit).

sunrise at Olympia
By heck, it's a bit of an epic, but here goes.

Rhapsode
What? Do you lie drowsy still
in your perfumed bed of love,
even as the crested lark sports
sprightly above with bright Eos
goddess of the roseate dawn?

There is a far more fitting time
when evening grows to shade
for you to enjoy the charms
of that olive beauty folded softly
in your arms; so stir now poet,

leave her be and greet the day
with some alacrity. Take no bowl
of resin wine at breakfast, for
a clear head is required to sire
a new work worthy of the Fete.

Your duty, to compose an ode
to celebrate your island king
and all his allies on their return
from doing righteous battle
with an upstart neighbour. Think

how to honour brave Lykomenes
who brought home spoils to share,
cattle, women, honey, spears,
just deserts and peace of mind
thanks to the gracious gods who

favoured Samothrace over Icaria,
then charmed the mighty sea
so to allow safe passage home.
Name the deities by epithet in turn
along with all who fought to win

a famous victory on foreign soil.
Declaim also their lineage, along
with the deeds of their forebears
until you have a weighty song.
Practise to ensure word-perfection

for when libations have been poured
upon the sands and maidens
have performed their sensual
dithyrambic dance, then all eyes
turn to you, he who sews odes.

Take up your myrtle-staff, raise
high that voice and sing beguiling
tales of mortals and their gods,
blood of the house of Kronos
flowing proud in every king's breast

as they betake of the victory feast,
refill their bowls with sparkling wine
rejoicing in the telling of their glory.
Your efforts rhapsode will be
well rewarded in the coin of posterity.

Thanks for reading, S ;-)

47 comments:

  1. An ode to a rhapsodist, that's pretty cool poetry.💙

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  2. Thank you Steve,
    Interesting read. Enjoyed learning about the fascinating history.
    The line 'he who sews odes' ties the piece together.
    :)

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  3. I'm very impressed!

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  4. You seem to have caught the spirit of the thing there Steve. I enjoyed your poem. it has some fine lines and phrasing and as I said, it sounds the part. 👍👍👍

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  5. Excellent article. I suspect you took no bowl of resin wine at breakfast before writing it.

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  6. Marvellous Steve. I raise a glass to you for that. BTW did you read that Cat Stevens has re-recorded Tea For the Tillerman in honour of its 50th anniversary? Updating the songs for the times we live in, now the son has become the father etc. I suspect that for you as well as for me, Cat was a first introduction to Greek musical style (albeit in a small way).

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  7. Very good! I didn't know all of the backstory to rhapsody so thanks for that. As for the poem, excellent. If that's what not-going-to-Greece does for you, may I suggest you also consider not-going-to-Iceland at some point? :)

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  8. Fabulous. I love Greece!

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  9. Kudos to you for that composition! Excellent.

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  10. I don't know anything much about epic poetry but if someone told me that was a translation of a poem from ancient Greece I'd believe them. I think you've done a nice job there. Stay well my friend.

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  11. I enjoyed your article and poem today, interesting and informative. Cheers.

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  12. I love your Greek poem, some fabulous imagery.

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  13. Charlotte Mullins9 September 2020 at 14:59

    A fascinating piece, so many instruments with lovely names. If the poet can't go to Greece, then Greece must come to the poet - and you seem to have made that happen. I love it Steve.

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  14. Well that made me feel nostalgic. My father and his brother both played the bouzouki. I'm going to try and get hold of the CDs you mentioned. I thought your rhapsody poem was very clever, well done Steve. 👍

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  15. Yes very good. There's a big Greek population here in Oz. In fact Melbourne is twinned with Thessaloniki. I'll share your blog with some of my Greek friends, see what they think.

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  16. Interesting historical resume and a neat exercise in rhapsodic verse.

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  17. I love the rhapsodic poem :)

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  18. Interesting blog Steve. I like what you've donw with the poem esp. the hectoring narrator :)

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  19. So well written Steve, a pleasure to read.👍👍👍

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  20. I'm gratified that my piece about Greek Rhapsody seems to be going over quite well. I love the music, love epic Greek poetry (albeit in translation) and it was fun to have a go at writing something in the classical style. By the way Mac, my first introduction to Greek music actually predates Cat Stevens: in Cambridge in the late '60s there were a couple of Greek restaurants - Eros and the Varsity - that I used to frequent as a 6th-former with girlfriends and best mates. They were cheap (catering to student budgets), the food was great and the music though recorded was excellent; the start of a lifelong love of all things Greek.

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  21. Rhapsode - really good that. 👍

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  22. I greatly enjoyed this Steve. It's in marked contrast to your more political blogs (though I hasten to add I enjoy them too). The first time I heard a bouzouki was on Kaleidoscope's 'Side Trips' album. Maybe you know it?

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  23. Such lovely poetry Steve. Thank you for sharing it.

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  24. Brilliant poetry, exercise or not! An antidote to all the crazy stuff in the new everyday. I loved it.

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  25. If you or your readers like Greek bouzouki or rebetika music they might enjoy this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVAzB8Uj0KM

    I enjoyed your clever poem Steve. Sorry you felt you could not visit Greece this year in these strange times.

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  26. You write beautiful poetry. I love Rhapsode. ❤️

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  27. Ravishing, Steve 🌿

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  28. That was a most interesting post on the origins of rhapsody and greek music. As a previous comment stated, you could easily believe the poem was written two thousand years ago, it sounds so authentic to the casual reader of today.

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  29. I loved the poem.

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  30. A shame it's virtually impossible to make an honest living from writing or reciting poetry these days!

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  31. Fabulous flowing poetry Steve. I hope all is well with you in the jewel as I hear Lancashire is heading for Lockdown 2.

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  32. If you like 'laiko', my friends in Anagennisi are best Greek band in Melbourne since 15 years, anagennisi.com.au

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  33. Rhapsode is such a clever and beautifully worded poem. The first stanza is to die for! Lovely imagery thereafter too. Very well done :)

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  34. Utterly brilliant that, epic in fact! 👍👍👍👍👍

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  35. Excellent, Rhapsode :)

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  36. Do they still play Greek music in Greek restaurants? Or Indian music in Indian ones come to that? It's so long ago I went to one! I really enjoyed your poem. It's beautifully written. Is it a re-telling or a complete invention?

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  37. A really interesting blog and a great poem. Thanks for sharing.

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  38. Brilliant, that! Lovely poetry Steve. 👍

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  39. Loved that Steve, the history, the rhapsodic poem, the illustrations. Those bouzouki players look a hell of a lot sexier and more serious than the Ullswater Ukelele ensemble! (LOL)

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  40. I loved reading this. I didn't know the origins of rhapsody, absolutely fascinating. Your poem is lovely and the photo of sunrise at Olympia quite stunning.

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  41. Fascinating. I assume the oral tradition predates writing? How long ago was all that (genuine question)? I loved the poetry.

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  42. Is 'fabulous' too strong a word? I don't think so.

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  43. That's brilliant Steve! I really enjoyed both the instructive blog and the beautifully spun poem.

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  44. Nicole Barkhuizen2 March 2021 at 16:19

    Yes, fabulous! 💙

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