Thursday, October 09, 2008

Goa & construction

Bridge to the sea
Beachside shack


Random pictures from Goa and more of our house under construction


Mendrem Beach
Scooter ride preparation
Cabo de Rama
Bay inlet Cabo de Rama
Ferry to Cavalesimo
16th century old church
Church at Old Goa
Colva Beach


Cannon at Cabo de Rama

Saturday, September 20, 2008

House construction updates

Lambani woman at the construction site!

Framed!


Laying the wooden flooring for a mezzanine room at the base of a dome


Off beat house or a Ghost House?

Sunday, September 07, 2008

House Building!






Things are zooming along now - will we move in by end October? A great architect, some great ideas - there's no question of an apartment....

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

something i read

"How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant of the weak. Because someday in life you will have been all of these".

~ George washington Carver

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Chamundi - Bylekuppe - Coorg






A lovely weekend trip to Chamundi/Mysore - Dubare - Bylekuppe and Madikeri(Coorg)

Great roads and the company of my son and niece.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Dream House underway

Slowly but surely, our little house is getting there. Here are some photos of a rather crazy house which we hope will shelter music, books, us, dogs and more - in no particular order.






Monday, August 11, 2008

Links to ITC SRA

To those who visit my blog for music

Many links point to the ITC SRA website, which I personally like it quite a bit. Do take the time to visit it here

I point to streaming media.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Some links

Effective Proposal Writing Vasudev Murthy Sage Publishers ISBN
Here's a review in The Hindu Business Line
And another in The Dawn, Pakistan



What the Raags Told Me Vasudev Murthy. Rupa and Co., ISBN 81-291-0317-6.
Book Cover and a few press reviews of my book

Review in the Indian Express Tribune India Chapter Extract Interview in the Deccan Herald Interview in The Hindu Review in Sruti Magazine Radio Gandharv review A reference to my book in The Hindu
My son Sarang wrote a nice book which I highly recommend :-) Its a publication from Katha (www.fictionindia.com www.katha.org)

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


Articles in the Deccan Herald



On Cruelty - East or West
On the Nagasaki Bombing
On William McGonagall, the World's Worst Poet
About the lawyer Jacques Verges
About Violins and the Supernatural
Music and Spirituality
The Music of New Orleans
A Solitary Lamp for Sardar Patel
Flat Earth and Globalization
Why we hit out at the Police
The Rosetta Stone and the Decay of Indian Culture
Find your Own Space





Articles in Vijay Times



Nov Article on Nuremberg Trials
Dec Poem: Give me a Bribe! Cried my MP
Dec Corruption our new National Religion

Other Articles


Story in Veena Magazine, London Arts Review
God in a Restaurant
Poems: Far Away, The Other Me, etc.
June 2005: My article in RAVE magazine
A book in which I am a contributing author: The European Vegetarian Union's utopia
My Travel Articles on Bootsnall.com

Monday, July 21, 2008

The Music of Mali - Segu Blue



I listened to the intense music of the Mali musician Bassekou Kouyate on a flight from London to Bangalore



Segu Blue is what I heard. Simply brilliant addictive stuff!!!! Listen to it online (click here)

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Nemo at the Dog Show







This is our little Nemo, the Pug with an attitude, photographed by many people at the Dog's Day out event in Bangalore.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

USA here I come!

A visit to my old haunt - Dallas, for a week!

Thats where I studied, worked, lived for almost seven and a half years!

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Thomas Hardy



I borrowed Selected Poems of Thomas Hardy from the British Library last night.

Nothing like elegant poetry to put you in the mood.

I Look Into My Glass

I look into my glass,
And view my wasting skin,
And say, "Would God it came to pass
My heart had shrunk as thin!"

For then I, undistrest
By hearts grown cold to me,
Could lonely wait my endless rest
With equanimity.

But Time, to make me grieve,
Part steals, lets part abide;
And shakes this fragile frame at eve
With throbbings of noontide.




Sunday, June 22, 2008

Old Friends


A reunion after 24 years! The more things change, the more they remain the same!

Samuel Butler



Reading the brilliant book The Way of all Flesh by Samuel Butler. For excellence in language and style, you can't beat this book.

Preview - Our offbeat House being constructed


Our little house being constructed. Notice the granite blocks and sculptures. More pcitures along the way!

Friday, June 13, 2008

Travel

A quick trip to the mid-east beckons....there's been too much travel lately. On the other hand, its to be my first trip out of Bangalore since the new airport was opened. But other than that, I can;t say I'm looking forward to it. Ticket, Forex, visa - all here, but ....

Thursday, June 05, 2008

Soul Food - a short story

Soul Food
VASUDEV MURTHY

If you like being frightened by things like blood and gore, then you should not read further. That is because this tale does not have these tedious elements in them and you will not find what you are looking for.

The material world remains fundamentally the same, offering little in terms of excitement to one who seeks to swim in the occult, where grim menace emerges unexpectedly, where horror is subtle and not stretched in time, or grotesquely sprinkled with the intent to unsettle and disturb. In the occult world that I visit, horror is permanent and accepted and has no connotation of evil. It is merely � and correctly � another aspect of the universe and does not come with childish and na�ve labels like �good� or �evil�. The very word �horror� is inadequate and is an application of a tedious, contrived value system which refers to some kind of dissonance or an excitement of our nerves in a certain way. With horror comes the feeling of being extinguished in a manner not of one�s choosing. And that then is how it actually is.

After death, you see, our souls are herded together, like so many cattle and we are yoked and taken to Shambala, where we are cleansed and examined for any defects and sorted. We, as those previously alive, but still with a glimmering of understanding of a sense of self, are put through a sieve of sorts and certified.

For what, you ask, perhaps anxiously. Well, my dear Sir or Lady, we are truly soul food, intended for consumption by a more powerful entity, a genuinely permanent reality that needs to eat and stay alive for purposes beyond explanation. Preposterous, you say? It does not matter. Your experiences while you lived actually do season your soul and give it an extra spice, which makes for gourmet consumption. And so, in Shambala, your soul is sorted and accumulated in one of many little bottles depending on the hue your life took. Later, your last sense of self is extinguished as you are consumed, yes indeed. You protest and say that you lived a good life? I applaud you, but regret to say it merely means you shall be used as an ingredient, no less, no more. Were you shockingly evil and did you deliberately cause pain and suffering? No matter. You too shall be used for food. Perhaps this causes bitter disappointment, setting your value systems on their head. Perhaps you are frightened, not of death any longer, but the lingering endless waiting of your soul in a container as you wait your turn to be picked up and eaten. THAT extinguishing, THAT event � now THAT will truly be death.

I see that the innocent, the good, the evil, the macabre, the cruel, the soft and compassionate are all equal and are merely crops of different varieties. Each is allowed to grow till it is ready for harvesting. Then arrives the state we call physical death, where the soul is extracted and taken to Shambala, as described.

This journey requires telling. The first step, immediately after physical death, involves setting free the soul. It is extracted from the top of the head and immediately chained and constrained. You will be bewildered and confused. How different this is from just a few moments ago, you will wonder. Your dignity is stripped and you are tied to other similarly newly-dead with ropes of ether. Not knowing what else you could possibly do in this bodyless state, you will be in a state of stupor, completely terrified, uncomprehending, wondering what next.

And soon there will be a tug and you will hopelessly drift in the direction of Shambala, which you may not even have known existed, except in distorted ways in books here and there. By now you would have realized that you are being manipulated against your will, what little there still is of it. But you cannot protest, for you know not how to express this feeling and you know not who could listen and what they could possibly do. But FRIGHT overwhelms you, as you sense a complete and final loss of control. You are truly paralyzed.

And now in Shambala, you sense many such agglomerations of similarly baffled souls who seek pointless freedom of a sort. The sense of darkness is overwhelming. You are roughly handled and dipped through a soup of what seems purple fire, but which is in fact a kind of cleansing pool. You will emerge, washed but yet completely helpless. You will be separated and herded based on some criteria which you cannot understand and then placed with millions of similar entities. Now your sense of time will leave you. You have nothing to look forward to and have no idea how to mark the passage of time and what to do about it. So you wait, awake for eternities, completely subjugated, completely removed of dignity and respect, for these mean nothing any longer. Were you once compassionate to a sick puppy? Did you once kill an old helpless lady? Neither means anything here � they merely added a kind of spice to your soul and made it additionally attractive for consumption.

And then the Event will unfold. You will be pulled out, helpless, paralyzed, uncomprehending. And you shall feel that sense of being consumed. That will be the final darkness.

That will truly be death.

Sunday, June 01, 2008

P D James

I've just discovered P D James and am thoroughly in awe.

From Innocent Blood

"He held her left hand, wondering what dreams, if any, peopled the uplands of the valley of her shadow."

Striking, fantastic stuff.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

A short story - will it scare you?

Flight NA100 to Mumbai
----------------------

I knew I would never see him again, but I did not speak out. As Pilot of NightAir 100, my duties do not include needless chatter with passengers.

My taxi dropped me at the airport at about 1 am and I walked past security, who ignored me completely, as though I did not exist. The place was quiet and deserted. I walked through the final doors and then on the tarmac towards my plane, a Boeing 737 waiting motionlessly in a dark area of the airport, very far away from the terminal. It stood silently, blacker than night, glowing with tales and mystery. Not a soul was around. I got into the cockpit and started up the engines and went through the manifest and papers. I went through the checks and let the engine idle and waited for my passengers. I turned on the lights in the cockpit. Then I looked into the blackness and waited. And waited. I had all the time in the world.

And soon I saw him, my lone passenger, running across the large concrete expanse, breathless, with two small bags in his hands. I waved at him from the cockpit window and saw the relief on his face from a distance. He clambered on, huffing and puffing, a short fat businessman.

He peeped into the cockpit. “NA 100 to Mumbai?” he asked, gasping, trying to catch his breath. I nodded, not turning around.

He went to find his seat, and then returned a moment later.

“No airhostess? No other passengers?”, he asked, a moment later, a bit nervously.

“Nope. Its just us. One Pilot. One passenger. Red-eye flight, you know.”

“Ah.”

“We’re ready to go. Please sit down and fasten your seat belt.”

“Of course, of course”, he said hurriedly. In the mirror, I saw him turn and walk back quickly to his assigned seat. A fat businessman on a mission to make more and more money. I shut the door to the cockpit, made the routine announcements on the intercom and dimmed the lights. It was pitch dark now, inside and outside.

I taxied the plane to the head of the taxiway and announced an imminent takeoff. The lights were off on the runway too, but I knew the way, having taken off so often. I revved the engines and gathered speed. Faster, faster, faster. The Plane shook and trembled and rattled as it trundled down the runway, against the wind, about to lift off, about to take off into the black moonless night, about to take my passenger to his destination.

And soon it took off. A sleek black arrow with one pilot and one passenger. I angled the plane up and away, seeking to gain height as much as possible.

And then I saw it, once again, another 737 right in my flight path. Where had it emerged from? Why hadn’t I been warned?

And my plane crashed straight into the other plane and we went up in flames together, lighting up the night.

I had failed in my task to take my passenger to Mumbai. Perhaps another hundred passengers in the other plane had also died.

Tonight I am scheduled to fly NA100 once again to Mumbai. At the same time. From the same place.

I wonder who my passenger today will be.

On Dogs

My little fellow Nemo has become quite something - driving away dogs ten times his size, steadily growing and becoming strong and generally coming into his own.

A friend sent me some nice thoughts about dogs. Here they are:

The reason a dog has so many friends is that he wags his tail instead of his tongue.
-Anonymous



The average dog is a nicer person than the average person.
-Andy Rooney

If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous, he will not bite you; that is the principal difference between a dog and a man.
-Mark Twain

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Vegas Boston London

A whirlwind trip through Las Vegas, Boston and London. London is becoming quite my favourite city. I like the place, the feeling and the people. Las Vegas was glitzy, loud and noisy, quite the stereotype I had in mind. Boston was quite nice too, with friends kindly showing me the historical district.

I'm exhausted and plan to sleep for a week after I get back to Bangalore soon!

Friday, May 02, 2008

Battersea Dogs Home

Dropped by at the Battersea Dogs Home during some free time I had last Sunday.


I was quite impressed by the enormous care they seem to lavish on their residents. Large clean well lit areas, toys and so on. I observed the adoption process too where people seem to be interviewed and evaluated thoroughly for whether there's a fit between a potential adoptee and adopter.

A couple of photos



"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be measured by the way in which its animals are treated."