Visualizzazione post con etichetta Italia. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Italia. Mostra tutti i post

mercoledì 15 aprile 2015

A ghost at the seaside / Un fantasma al mare

(Segue testo in italiano)



One of the dichotomy in my person is being Italian and having a controversial relationship with seaside spots. I know it sounds a bit like a stereotype and a cliché, but if you are Italian or live in Italy, you perfectly know that, when summer holiday approaches, people ask you the usual question “where at the seaside are you going exactly?” instead of “where are you going to spend your vacation?”. Because in summer going to the seaside is a must, no other choice is taken in consideration. This attitude is so deep-rooted that when I answer “well, I am actually going to Berlin”, the possible reactions are usually the following:

“Oh, do they have sea too up there?”
Or
“Oh, ok, you have family there, haven’t you?”.

Once and for all: the answer to both questions is no.

I do not blame anybody for this behavior, it’s a sort of tradition and traditions are hard to be changed and maybe they shouldn’t at all. By the way, my friends do have this idea that I hate the sea. What I usually say is that it’s not me who hate it, but it is the sea itself which hates me. Being as white and pale as a ghost, I have considerable skin issues when it comes to laying in the sun and sea salt water plus wind make it worse. Like almost everybody else in this world, I do not like physical pain and even less I like people asking me what kind of disease I suffer from (aaaarrrghhh!!!).
Furthermore, in my early twenties I fell in love with Germany, where I feel at home and my fair skin is nobody’s business except mine. Sum up all this situations and you will easily understand why I do not spend my summer on the beach.



Last weekend my husband’s band (check them out! Klangstein, Rammstein's cover band) played in San Bartolomeo al Mare, a small town in Liguria, on the coast of the Tyrrhenian sea, and we took the chance of enjoying a weekend out, a little vacation.

The place was really lovely. Vegetation is luxuriant there, citrus trees, aloe plants and wisterias were everywhere, spreading sweet perfumes. We had a little balcony in our hotel room, from which we had a wide view both over the low hills and the sea. I spent several hours sitting there, just enjoying open air, the blue sky above, seagulls (not Steven… :D ) flying over my head and silence.



Then we headed to the beach. Wow. That was my actual idea of beach life! No one was around. It was still chilly, so we had our jackets on. The atmosphere was so peaceful and sun harmless. In April, at 18 C°, you are not really supposed to bathe, but I couldn’t care the least: I rolled up my trousers and entered in the water up to my knees. It wasn’t that cold after all!



Dear sea, we’d better keep our relationship for us only and meet privately, when other people are away and sun too weak to interfere. Winter-spring should suit, do you agree? Done!

Love
Mary






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Una delle dicotomie della mia persona sta nell’essere italiana e avere un rapporto conflittuale con il mare. Lo so che suona un po’ come uno stereotipo e un cliché ma, se siete italiani o vivete in Italia, sapete bene che, quando si avvicinano le vacanze estive, la domanda più frequente è “Dove andrai al mare?”, invece di “Dove andrai in vacanza?”. Perché d’estate s’ha da andare al mare, non c’è santo che tenga. Questa convinzione è talmente radicata che, quando rispondo “beh, in realtà andrò a Berlino”, le possibili reazioni sono sempre queste due:

“Ah, ma a Berlino c’è il mare?”
Oppure
“Ah ok, hai familiari là, vero?”

Una volta per tutte, la risposta ad entrambe le domande è: no.

Non biasimo nessuno per questo comportamento, è una sorta di italica tradizione e le tradizioni sono difficili da modificare, o forse non bisognerebbe proprio farlo. In ogni caso, tra i miei amici è diffusa l’idea che io non ami il mare. Quello che dico solitamente è che non sono io ad odiarlo, è lui che odia me. Essendo bianca e pallida come un fantasma, ho serie difficoltà con la pelle quando si tratta di esporsi al sole e il vento e la salsedine non fanno che peggiorare la situazione. Come la maggior parte delle persone a questo mondo, non mi piace la sofferenza fisica e ancora meno mi piace sentirmi chiedere di quale malattia soffra (grrrrrrrrr!)!
Inoltre intorno ai vent’anni mi sono innamorata della Germania, dove mi sento a casa e la mia pelle pallida è solo affar mio. Sommate tutte queste condizioni e comprenderete perché non trascorra l’estate in spiaggia.

Lo scorso weekend il gruppo di mio marito (i Klangstein: andateli a sentire!) ha suonato a San Bartolomeo al Mare, in Liguria e ne abbiamo approfittato per fare una mini-vacanzina.

Il paese é davvero carino. La vegetazione è rigogliosa, ci sono alberi di agrumi, piante di aloe e di glicine ovunque, emanano nell’aria un profumo fantastico. La nostra stanza in hotel aveva un terrazzino, con vista sia sulle collinette circostanti, sia sul mare. Ho passato diverse ore seduta la fuori, godendomi l’aria aperta, il cielo azzurro, i gabbiani che volavano sopra la mia testa e il silenzio.

E poi siamo andati in spiaggia. Wow. Quella era la vita da spiaggia che intendo io! Non c’era nessuno. Faceva ancora fresco, quindi avevamo ancora i giubbotti. L’atmosfera era molto tranquilla e il sole innocuo.
In Aprile, a 18 gradi, non è realmente previsto fare il bagno, ma poco mi interessava: mi sono arrotolata i pantaloni e sono entrata in acqua fino al ginocchio. Dopotutto non era poi così fredda!

Caro mare, io penso che dovremmo tenere la nostra relazione per noi, incontrarci in privato, lontano da sguardi indiscreti, quando il sole è ancora debole. Inverno-primavera dovrebbe andare bene, d’accordo? Andata!

Ciao
Mary

mercoledì 3 dicembre 2014

Blutengel fly to Italy for their new video: Asche zu Asche



Today I would like to talk to you about one of my favourite bands, Blutengel, focussing on their last single “Asche zu Asche”. 

For Italian speakers: you can find my article for the magazine “Berlino Cacio e Pepe” at the following link


I strongly believe that most of the readers of this blog know the band quite well but, anyway, I think that a short introduction is due.

Blutengel are one of the most famous German dark-gothic bands. They were founded in 1999 by the frontman, Chris Pohl, who had already been member of Terminal Choice and Seelekrank. After the turnover of several female singers, at the moment the only woman sharing the microphone with Chris is Ulrike Goldmann, who has been part of the band since 2005.

Chris and Ulrike are not alone on the stage during concerts: dancers and performers (at the moment: Viki Scarlet, Nicola Heinrich and Nadine Schneiderat) create a catching show, which recalls the topic of each song played.

 Photo by Marco Tridente

Blutengel have many fans here in Italy too: they follow the band in tour and at festivals in Germany, because unfortunately they have not been playing in our country for a long time. However, last month, we have had a clear sign that Blutengel are quite attentive to what happens in Italy too: Chris Pohl announced (via Facebook) that Ulrike and he would have flown to Rome to shoot the videos of two songs which will be part of their new album Omen (expected for February 2015).

In Germany there are several agencies for video production, but this time Chris Pohl was looking for something new compared to what they had shown until then with their videoclips (though they being very good). He had the chance to see the works of the director Carlo Roberti and he was quite impressed by the cinematographic style that Roberti creates, thus Chris decided to collaborate with the director’s agency: Solobuio Visual Factory. This last is not new to the dark-gothic scene, as they had already worked with bands like Kirlian Camera, Spiritual Front and L’Âme Immortelle.

The two Blutengel’s videos were shot between Rome and Tivoli in less than a week. The first result shown to the public is “Asche zu Asche”, uploaded on line on 13th November by Out of Line, the band’s label. The German-Italian collaboration was immediately appreciated in the web, scoring more than 55.000 views in the first three days.

The effect that both Chris Pohl and Solobuio wanted was fully achieved: “Asche zu Asche” looks like a thriller movie synthesized in the 5 minutes length of the song. The sexy killer, played by the Italian actress Claudia Salvatori, is hired by Ulrike Goldmann, acting the part of an icy dark lady, in order to kill some men. The turn of events is reached when the killer changes her mind: to put an end to her violent destiny, she shoots Ulrike, instead of murdering the chosen victim. In the last scenes we see Claudia Salvatori appearing, weapon in the hand, behind Chris Pohl, who had been watching everything from the top of a high building until that moment. The immediately following image shows the woman in her flat, trying to wash away blood from her hands. The viewer feels the suspense and asks himself if Chris could have been the real instigator and if he ended up by being killed too.

It is surely peculiar, especially for those who usually follow the German band, to hear one song of theirs and seeing it played by Italian actors under such an Italian style direction. It is a “fusion” which has satisfied both Solobuio and Blutengel. Furthermore it is nice to see fans’ comments in the several social networks: Italian ones are happy to see their idols appreciating the work of their compatriots at the point that they did not hesitate to come over to Italy to start a collaboration, the German ones, on the other hand, like the news introduced by the video in terms of idea and directions.


Deutsch-Italienische Freundschaft perfectly succeeded!