Wednesday 25 August 2010

16th Century Goosebumps

Amazing how many nice photos can be shot in 3 days. We spent this weekend in Zeeland, a coastal province of the Netherlands, mostly staying in or near Middelburg, Domburg, and Veere. At this time of the year, this part of the Netherlands is full of German tourists because of the school vacation. We went there even though it was somewhat crowded because it was probably our last chance for this year to go there, and the weather was not bad.

And we managed to meet all of our targets during this weekend: 1) lie on the beach, 2) take walks on the beach, 3) swim in the North Sea, 4) have coffee and apple pie in one of the cafes on the beach, 5) eat Dutch pancakes, 6) buy Dutch food (especially various kinds of chocolate and licorice) and Indonesian Kretek cigarettes which are hard to find in Germany.

On Sunday, we went to Veere for the second time because the Grote Kerk was open to the public - this church amazed me because it was so huge and looked so unusual (a fire destroyed most of it in the 17th century - it never was really completed). The church isn't used for religious purposes anymore but mostly as a culture space (usually for modern art exhibitions and classical/jazz music). While we were there, we had the privilege to watch a rehearsal of Graindelavoix, a Belgian choir which sang 16th century music (Missa de Sancta Maria Magdalena, by Nicolas Champion).



I found that this music moved me deeply. It gave me a kind of continuous stream of goosebumps at times, something which I hardly get from music these days. Buying a CD of this stuff was the first thing that I did when I got back home.


We also climbed the tower of the church and got this nice view.


A last walk on the beach under dark clouds, a last coffee. When the first rain drops began to fall, we decided to return home. With a large box full of trophies.

1 comment:

  1. Wow. Lovely images, Michael.

    As for that beautiful music, yes, there is something about the harmonies and melodic lines that reflect the same kind of soaring architecture where the music was likely first heard 500 years ago. Gives me goosebumps, too...

    In the back of my mind, when I'm performing, there's always a part of me that is yearning to create something that will have even a small fraction of that purity of expression and amazingly simple, straight-forward beauty about it.

    Thank you for sharing it!

    Beste,

    ~~D.

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