It’s kind of a shame that everything I could possibly say about language acquisition in a foreign country has already been said, more humorously and incisively, by David Sedaris in “Me Talk Pretty One Day.” On the other hand, that book is amazing. Read it.
I especially identify with the part where an entire French class explains Easter with only a basic grasp of vocabulary (see: me on Yom Kippur, trying to explain to my babushka that the reason I wasn’t eating had nothing to do with the quality of her food) and about how the fiercest critics of Americans in foreign countries are other Americans (the fanny packs! the map reading! the loud, obnoxious English speaking!)
There are some things that are specific to
I went to “Tuesdays,” the oh-so-strange indie music gathering that occurs every Tuesday night chez Yuri Kasyanik, a veteran experimental/avant-jazz musician for whom I’ve been doing some translation. I ended up in a trippy jam session, if you could call it that, with Kerry (from my ACTR group, plays bassoon), her host mother’s brother (piano) and Yuri himself (flute, when he wasn’t reading poetry.) In addition to having no idea what I was doing and the fewest years of musical experience of anyone there, I was also playing an ancient, five-stringed guitar with a third of a pick. Basically I just played whatever I thought went with what other people were playing, based on my (limited) atonal music and free jazz experience. The results were recorded on tape, much to Yuri’s delight and to Kerry’s and my dismay.
Only in
A couple of days later, however, Hilary and I made it to the local metal club (and that would be actual metal, not “heavy metal” that is really “tyazholiy techno.”) For the most part it was like any metal show in the
On Saturday, I went to the opera for the price of a latte back in the States. Sometimes I really love this city. Carmen was gorgeous. The singing in Russian was a little off-putting, but they managed OK, and it helped me get a little more of the plot than I would have otherwise. Those of us who were unsure of the details but knew it had to end in tragedy got confused when, at the end of the second act, the cast bowed and the audience started clapping in rhythm (the Russian equivalent of a standing ovation), especially since the act had ended with the entire cast singing “Freedom awaits!” all happy-like.
The problem with good-looking guys in
Some of the stranger techno remixes I have heard:
Nirvana, “Smells Like Teen Spirit”
Dire Straits, “Money for Nothing”
Phantom Planet, “
Don McLean, “American Pie”
Finally, a quote from the other night:
Me: I’m pretty sure my family shares a phone line with our neighbors.
Alison (from the ACTR group): You mean you have a party line?
Me: Yeah…a communist party line! Ohhh!
6 comments:
Sounds like you are having quite a cross-cultural experience. It is good that you are capturing it as it flows by you, because it is hard to reconstruct that sense of wonder later on.
Your description of the music club reminded me of a time I had in a jazz club in Berlin where the locals were dressed in Middle Eastern garb and were playing wild Coltrane-esque riffs at a feverish pitch, and then they would alternate with singing lyrics in English that I could not understand. At least they were having fun, and all of us in the audience enjoyed ourselves as well.
I just hope that you get some royalties when the tape they made of your musical debut gets turned into a gold record in Moscow!
WOW rachel, you are so cool...but not too cool i hope, wear a long jacket!
bad jokes aside, i miss you and hope you are having an amazing time.
muah
at least now we know that it wasn't the pictures that caused random abridgement (not that it helps)...
maybe it's an aftereffect of socialism, but the PDA is as common here as it sounds like it is there. we've tried asking our language teachers what the Hungarian equivalent of "get a room" is, but there is none; apparently, no matter how embarrassed or disgusted you act (and no matter how... uh... intimate people get on the trams or the metro), they don't stop.
After landing at BP on my return from sweden, I was very tired and a little hung over, so things were just sort of happening around me--it hadn't sunk in that I was back in Hungary until I sat down on the bus, two people sat down across from me, and immediately started making out. I was stuck in those seats that sit opposite each other, so I was facing them by default, but they didn't seem to care, so I spent half an hour trying to casually ignore them by staring out a window.
Your explication of Russian grammer was fascinating and put a deeper meaning into the Jewish mother thing (since Jewish mothers, at one time, came from the Russian shtetl).
I'll take your posts over David Sedaris anyday. I'm always excited to see a new post. And I can't wait to see what you'll think about Berlin, where you'll be amazed by the number of Russian Jews in some areas. Keep the faith...most guys in Berlin seem kind of grungy and most German girls are far from runway material (with the exception of Heidi Klum and Gisele Bundchen)!
I would like to exchange links with your site claremontlove.blogspot.com
Is this possible?
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