Blessings to you in the coming year.
Image taken during yesterday's snow in the upper Midwest. Photograph © 2007 James Jordan.
A vision is like a lighthouse which illuminates rather than limits
Until someone figures out the camera tricks we’ve employed and the fog and snow clear away, revealing the truth that was there all along.
The saddest victim is the person who successfully fools himself.
Photo: A perfect world. Composite photo taken in fog. Click on picture to enlarge. Photograph © 2007 James Jordan.
For a season that offers stunning reality checks, the idea of a dreamlike view of this season of ice and snow seems to go counter to the sharp lines and absolutes continually handed down by the season we call winter. Temperatures that are measured in negative numbers are not only inconvenient, they are deadly. We cower in heated cocoons only one power outage away from disaster. A layer of ice on the landscape (and roadscape) convinces us that our world, with all of its important meetings and critical pieces of business, can wait for a day or so. A blizzard brings life to a virtual standstill. We are seldom so often reminded that we are so not the boss of us as we are in winter.
For me, there's something about seeing the moon in a winter landscape that adds to the metaphorical chill of the setting.
If autumn is when God’s palette is worked to the limit, then winter is when the whole scene is painted over in white and begun again.
Performing a Google search on the word snow returns about 18 million Web page results. Trust me, it does. And a lot of them say basically the same thing about snow – it’s frozen water vapor (really!). Snow is a pretty common substance (except for you folks in warmer climes), and the forecast is calling for a bunch of that substance to fall here in the Midwest sometime today. But, with snowstorms, you never know how much you’ll get or when you’ll get it.Mr. Lettera recorded his work and recently released it on DharmaSound, an internet label based in
Mr Lettera contacted me a few weeks ago asking permission to use my photograph Into the Sun (above) as cover art for his CD. He discovered the photo while searching Flickr, where I cross post many of my pictures. Once I understood how he was distributing his work, I readily agreed.
The Wizard of Oz is a richly orchestrated, multi-textured work in six movements. The entire work can be downloaded along with artwork for a CD label and CD sleeve. Lettera’s two previous albums are also available at DharmaSound, along with works by a number of other artists.
Who knows? I may have just solved your holiday gift giving for everyone on your list.
Click on pictures to enlarge. Into the Sun © 2007 James Jordan.
A traveler through this life collects photographs of and shares words about the points of light discovered along the way.
My photo gallery on Flickr
Want to take better pictures? Read some of the secrets behind my photos at Ready, Aim,Click.