• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
MENUMENU
MENUMENU
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • FlaglerLive Board of Directors
    • Comment Policy
    • Mission Statement
    • Our Values
    • Privacy Policy
  • Live Calendar
  • Submit Obituary
  • Submit an Event
  • Support FlaglerLive
  • Advertise on FlaglerLive (386) 503-3808
  • Search Results

FlaglerLive

No Bull, no Fluff, No Smudges

MENUMENU
  • Flagler
    • Flagler County Commission
    • Beverly Beach
    • Economic Development Council
    • Flagler History
    • Mondex/Daytona North
    • The Hammock
    • Tourist Development Council
  • Palm Coast
    • Palm Coast City Council
    • Palm Coast Crime
  • Bunnell
    • Bunnell City Commission
    • Bunnell Crime
  • Flagler Beach
    • Flagler Beach City Commission
    • Flagler Beach Crime
  • Cops/Courts
    • Circuit & County Court
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • Federal Courts
    • Flagler 911
    • Fire House
    • Flagler County Sheriff
    • Flagler Jail Bookings
    • Traffic Accidents
  • Rights & Liberties
    • Fourth Amendment
    • First Amendment
    • Privacy
    • Second Amendment
    • Seventh Amendment
    • Sixth Amendment
    • Sunshine Law
    • Third Amendment
    • Religion & Beliefs
    • Human Rights
    • Immigration
    • Labor Rights
    • 14th Amendment
    • Civil Rights
  • Schools
    • Adult Education
    • Belle Terre Elementary
    • Buddy Taylor Middle
    • Bunnell Elementary
    • Charter Schools
    • Daytona State College
    • Flagler County School Board
    • Flagler Palm Coast High School
    • Higher Education
    • Imagine School
    • Indian Trails Middle
    • Matanzas High School
    • Old Kings Elementary
    • Rymfire Elementary
    • Stetson University
    • Wadsworth Elementary
    • University of Florida/Florida State
  • Economy
    • Jobs & Unemployment
    • Business & Economy
    • Development & Sprawl
    • Leisure & Tourism
    • Local Business
    • Local Media
    • Real Estate & Development
    • Taxes
  • Commentary
    • The Conversation
    • Pierre Tristam
    • Diane Roberts
    • Guest Columns
    • Byblos
    • Editor's Blog
  • Culture
    • African American Cultural Society
    • Arts in Palm Coast & Flagler
    • Books
    • City Repertory Theatre
    • Flagler Auditorium
    • Flagler Playhouse
    • Flagler Youth Orchestra
    • Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra
    • Palm Coast Arts Foundation
    • Special Events
  • Elections 2024
    • Amendments and Referendums
    • Presidential Election
    • Campaign Finance
    • City Elections
    • Congressional
    • Constitutionals
    • Courts
    • Governor
    • Polls
    • Voting Rights
  • Florida
    • Federal Politics
    • Florida History
    • Florida Legislature
    • Florida Legislature
    • Ron DeSantis
  • Health & Society
    • Flagler County Health Department
    • Ask the Doctor Column
    • Health Care
    • Health Care Business
    • Covid-19
    • Children and Families
    • Medicaid and Medicare
    • Mental Health
    • Poverty
    • Violence
  • All Else
    • Daily Briefing
    • Americana
    • Obituaries
    • News Briefs
    • Weather and Climate
    • Wildlife

The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Sunday, March 20, 2021

March 20, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

Putin-Tin In Ukraine by Peter Kuper, PoliticalCartoons.com
Putin-Tin In Ukraine by Peter Kuper, PoliticalCartoons.com



Today at the Editor’s glance: Weather: Partly sunny with a chance of showers in the morning, then sunny in the afternoon. Cooler. Less humid with highs in the mid 70s. North winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent. Sunday Night: Clear. Lows in the lower 50s. Northeast winds around 5 mph.

“The Revolutionists,” by playwright Lauren Gunderson, a comedy about four women during the Terror in the French Revolution, is staged at Palm Coast’s City Repertory Theatre at 3 p.m. The Revolutionists propels France’s fight for equality and freedom to modern times with this bold, brave and blisteringly funny new work about feminism, legacy and standing up for one’s beliefs. At The CRT in City Marketplace, 160 Cypress Point Parkway, Suite B207, Palm Coast. Tickets: $20, or $15 for students. Book tickets here. See the preview, “Badass “Revolutionists” Guillotine France’s Reign of Terror in City Repertory Theatre Comedy.”

Byblos: In 1717 Francois Couperin wrote “Les barricades mysterieuses,” literally translated as “The Mysterious Barricades.” The title seems to be as evocative as the piece, even if no one has managed to explain the title. Couperin didn’t. Explanation is not that important. Think of those titles that accompany art works in museums. We rush to them as if to the holy grail, missing the point, which is in the work (if even there: let’s not even be so reductive as to look for a point), not the title. Sometimes the artist winks back, as if to tell you not to put much stock in titles, if not in the work itself, like Magritte’s “La trahison des images,” or “The Treachery of Images,” with its famous Ceci n’est past une pipe (“This is not a Pipe”), a wink as rich in double entendres as the piece itself (une pipe, in French, is a blow job). Or think of the way titles are imposed on musical works postpartum—Beethoven’s “Moonlight” sonata, a marketing trick he had nothing to do with that cheapens rather than informs the piece. I’m getting far afield. Evocation is enough. The great (late) harpsichordist Scott Ross likened the Couperin piece, anachronistically (an interpreter of his genius must have poetic license), to something like a train. Had it been used as a wedding processional, a funeral processional, a baptismal processional, even a graduation processional, and stuck to that use over the centuries, it would have probably worked as well as Vaughan Williams’s march or Bach’s Sheep May Safely Graze. We associate occasions with certain pieces of music not because that’s what the music was written for, but because, like moonlight as a romantic trope, that’s what someone at some point decided to associate it with, and it stuck. Of course associating a heavy metal piece with a Wordsworth poem might seem anachronistic. But you never know. If Picasso could turn a bicycles handlebar and seat into that beautiful bull’s head—the beauty is in the idea as much as in the execution—then why not heavy metal Wordsworth? Art without frontiers is redundant. It’s a tautology, like saying all sonatas are sonatas. Art is by definition without frontiers, a salve to imaginations that may not have the artist’s talent, but that nevertheless are able no less to appreciate its  reach and beauty—beauty for its own sake, not because it makes us better human beings, not because it teaches us something (god forbid), not because it makes us “more cultured,” god forbid to the power twelve: art is not transactional. It is not the chamber of commerce’s means to better sales. It is (like human beings, we so often forget) its own end. So to get back to Couperin’s barricades, which at this point may mean the very opposite of the title—or could mean barricades to interpretation—fitting the title into some use, imagining it as anything particular, isn’t the point. What it is in itself is all there has to be. And if you insist on some context, Couperin had a few years before become one of Louis XIV’s court composers, in the setting days of the Sun King’s endless reign. He died in 1715. Maybe the piece calls out to those echoes of echoes in Versailles’ empty chambers, France having never known either a reign or an end so gigantic. Louis XV would be no match. Or this (I see I am contradicting everything I said above): Could Couperin have been daring to pun on the Fronde, the attempted aristocratic and burgeoning bourgeois revolution that Louis XIV so ruthlessly put down, delaying the French Revolution that should have been? (The Fronde could have been to France what the Glorious Revolution would a few decades be to England). Wistful, daring, unbearably elegant Couperin: that’s his barricades. I have listened to this piece over and over, every time hearing it anew. It would work just as well at a memorial for the victims of Ukraine. Or for their dimming but inextinguishable hopes. Here are two versions, the first for harpsichord, the second for piano:





The Live Calendar is a compendium of local and regional political, civic and cultural events. You can input your own calendar events directly onto the site as you wish them to appear (pending approval of course). To include your event in the Live Calendar, please fill out this form.

May 2025
Sunday, May 11
9:30 am - 10:25 am

ESL Bible Studies for Intermediate and Advanced Students

Grace Presbyterian Church
grace community food pantry
Sunday, May 11
12:00 pm - 3:00 pm

Grace Community Food Pantry on Education Way

Flagler School District Bus Depot
Sunday, May 11
12:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Palm Coast Farmers’ Market at European Village

European Village
gamble jam
Sunday, May 11
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Gamble Jam at Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area

Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreation Area at Flagler Beach
al-anon family groups logo
Sunday, May 11
3:00 pm

Al-Anon Family Groups

Silver Dollar II Club
Beau Wade, left, and Ethan Fink get jiggy in “Midsummer Vaudeville,” a scene in City Repertory Theatre’s “RockabillieWillie.” The quirky take on Shakespeare runs May 2-11. (Mike Kitaif )
Sunday, May 11
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm

RockabillieWillie At City Repertory Theatre

City Repertory Theatre at City Marketplace
flagler county commission government logo
Monday, May 12
4:30 pm - 6:00 pm

Flagler County Library Board of Trustees

Flagler County Public Library
nar-anon family groups palm coast
Monday, May 12
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Nar-Anon Family Group

St. Mark by the Sea Lutheran Church
Monday, May 12
7:00 pm - 9:30 pm

Bunnell City Commission Meeting

Bunnell City Hall
No event found!

For the full calendar, go here.

FlaglerLive

“I am an American, but I do not believe that any of us loves a blustering nationality–a nationality with a chip on its shoulder, a nationality with its elbows out and its swagger on. We love that quiet, self-respecting, unconquerable spirit which doesn’t strike until it is necessary to strike, and then strikes to conquer.”

–From a 1916 campaign speech by Woodrow Wilson.

Previously:

Maupassant's illusions | Music of the woods | Better lie than doubt | John Cheever's premature eulogy of John Updike | Updike's daily death of selves | Old age and habit according to Wharton | Marmontel's Belisaire's truth | The typical ancient Roman | Salman Rushdie realizes some people will never like him | Uncle Willy's Republicans and Democrats | Cicero on not knowing | A tyrant's culture | American regression | Bernard Rustin's Spokesmen of the Confederacy | Aged relic | Barthelme's alternative to intelligent conversation | On drunkenness | Bastards and sons of bitches | Junot Diaz's trauma |  Loyalty to a dream country | Sorrow for the Levant | Nixon resigns | Cross Creek | To die laughing | America's Hiroshima experiment | Aged beyond repair | Virtue without self-glorification | Adrift | James Baldwin dares everything | GOP menace to society | Human misery | Inflexibility as death | | Kant's Enlightenment | Belhumeur's ethics | Israel's bigoted nation-state law | More tolerant empires | American weather | Red Smith on dismal Olympics | Louis Brandeis on clear and present freedom of speech | Ishmael Reed | Don't tread on me | Wicker on LBJ's presidency | Marxist reality check | | Nelson Mandela invokes MLK | Fishermen's honor | Nuclear dawn in Almogorodo | Eric Hobsbawm's Enlightenment | | Ritchie Robertson's Enlightenment | When you don't know what you don't know | Leaving Lebanon | Rheumatic fever's side-effect | | Risk of becoming imbeciles | The blubbering of America | Why Vidal hates good citizenship history | An Elsa Morante bit | Woke aesthetics | Let America Be America Again | American artist | Custer's enduring myths | Orwellian politics | History as a weapon | Political correctness improved America

Archives: 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021


 

The Cartoon and Live Briefing Archive.

Support FlaglerLive's End of Year Fundraiser
Thank you readers for getting us to--and past--our year-end fund-raising goal yet again. It’s a bracing way to mark our 15th year at FlaglerLive. Our donors are just a fraction of the 25,000 readers who seek us out for the best-reported, most timely, trustworthy, and independent local news site anywhere, without paywall. FlaglerLive is free. Fighting misinformation and keeping democracy in the sunshine 365/7/24 isn’t free. Take a brief moment, become a champion of fearless, enlightening journalism. Any amount helps. We’re a 501(c)(3) non-profit news organization. Donations are tax deductible.  
You may donate openly or anonymously.
We like Zeffy (no fees), but if you prefer to use PayPal, click here.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  • Conner Bosch law attorneys lawyers offices palm coast flagler county
  • grand living realty
  • politis matovina attorneys for justice personal injury law auto truck accidents

Primary Sidebar

  • grand living realty
  • politis matovina attorneys for justice personal injury law auto truck accidents

Recent Comments

  • Using Common Sense on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Billy B on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Marlee on NOAA Cuts Are Putting Our Coastal Communities At Risk
  • James on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • D. on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Enough on Florida Republicans Devour Their Own
  • Alice on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Big Mike on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Justbob on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Ed P on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Friday, May 9, 2025
  • Ed P on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025
  • Lance Carroll on Without a Single Question, Bunnell Board Approves Rezoning of Nearly 1,900 Acres to Industrial, Outraging Residents
  • Lance Carroll on Without a Single Question, Bunnell Board Approves Rezoning of Nearly 1,900 Acres to Industrial, Outraging Residents
  • Ray W, on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025
  • CJ on Palm Coast Mayor Mike Norris Thinks the FBI or CIA Is Bugging His Phone
  • Ray W, on The Daily Cartoon and Live Briefing: Saturday, May 10, 2025

Log in