Tuesday Tones

The weekly music feature returns! As does the theme we were exploring before December took over: music inspired by water, or written with a watery “theme”. And today we have two works, by two titans of classical music, neither one of which I had ever heard of before last week when I listened to them for the first time. I feature these two works because they share identical inspiration: a pair of poems by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The poems are called “Calm Sea” and “Prosperous Journey”, hence the two works Calm Sea and Prosperous Journey. The first is a cantata by Ludwig van Beethoven; the second is a concert overture by Felix Mendelssohn. The works date, respectively, to 1815 and 1828.

First, the poems:

“Calm Sea”

Deep stillness rules the water
Without motion lies the sea,
And worried the sailor observes
Smooth surfaces all around.
No air from any side!
Deathly, terrible stillness!
In the immense distances
not a single wave stirs.

“Prosperous Voyage”

The fog is torn,
The sky is bright,
And Aeolus releases
The fearful bindings.
The winds whisper,
The sailor begins to move.
Swiftly! Swiftly!
The waves divide,
The distance nears;
Already I see land!

Reading the first poem, one might wonder why the speaker seems so vexed by calm seas. Wouldn’t you want a calm sea? Well…no, you wouldn’t, because this was in the days of sailing vessels, and a calm sea means no wind…and therefore, no voyage. Calm seas were viewed with dread by sailors. Read The Rime of the Ancient Mariner again for a good illustration of this: a calm sea means a ship floating along powerlessly. No, for a sailor, the wind is the key to a prosperous voyage.

Here are Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage, first by Beethoven (op. 112) and then by Mendelssohn (op. 27).

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Announcing! (and a quiz)

First things first: I have decided to dust off the newsletter that I’ve been maintaining (sort-of) on Substack! But, for various reasons I’ve also decided to migrate my newsletter to the Ghost.io platform. If you previously subscribed to me on Substack, you should have already been migrated and received the new one; but if not, and if you want to subscribe–and why wouldn’t you!–you can go right here to check things out. Yes, this is part of my new focus on content creation in 2026.

And now, let’s take a look at the Sunday Stealing questions for this week!

1. What would you rather be doing right now?

Right this moment, I’m fine! It’s Sunday night, we’ve just finished dinner. We’ll be walking doggos soon. Now, I’d rather not be going back to work tomorrow to start my 2026 work year in earnest, but there it is.

2. What is always on your grocery list?

Half-and-half for coffee. Lactose-free milk. I’m more often than not buying some kind of cheese and chocolate.

3. Have you ever used a fire extinguisher for its intended purpose?

Yes! One time at work one of the ovens had a bit of pooled-up grease that caught fire. I dealt with that right quick!

4. How many times did you text yesterday?

Just twice! Yay, me! I don’t actually text a whole lot.

5. Would you prefer a slow-paced, relaxing vacation or one filled with new sights and experiences?

Some mixture of each. A proper vacation is nice and long with space for both of those things.

Moving on!

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Frohes Neues Jahr!

It’s January 1, 2026. Wow. We made it. We got through 2025. And if I’m being honest, I’m not entirely sure that 2025 doesn’t slide in right above 2020 if we’re ranking recent years by how much of a shitshow they’ve been. 2025 was a shitshow, and there’s no mistaking it.

Normally right about now I’m tucking into a lengthy year-end quiz-thing, but this time…I’m not going to do that. At least, not right now. I’m already working on it, but it probably won’t be appearing until Saturday, 10 January. Why so? Because 2025 was a year that needs some thinking about. Lots of dust to settle, and much of it won’t settle for years anyway. I just want to take my time with this, is basically where I land here. So stick around. Regular posting will resume now…though also with a few changes there to come, which I’ll be announcing soon. (Nothing bad, by the way, but I’m going to try adopting a more structured approach to my content creation, in hopes of spinning it into something possibly lucrative.)

Longtime readers will know that my annual tradition is to, at some point in the first few days of the New Year, watch the New Years From Vienna concert, featuring the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. This year is no different. If you’ve never seen it, I strongly recommend it! PBS always has it on Great Performances, but they do an abbreviated version of the program, which is why I recommend, if you can find it, the BBC’s full version. Still, it is always a wonderful way to bring in the new year and send out the old. And if you just can’t manage that at all, well, here’s the work that is always heard second-to-last in the program. A musical cliche, yes…but cliches become cliches for a reason, and not always bad.

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