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On duende

 . . . . I come not to steal from George Frazier, but to praise him. To render tribute by picking up where he left off, to grope around in the dark for "duende," to find it and to bring it back into the sun. As a concept for a column, duende is irresistible, even if the late great Frazier, and not I, discovered it. Frazier, who wrote for the Boston Globe and Esquire until his death in 1974, first began trying to define duende in 1963. It turned out to be such a good vehicle for his stylish views of the world that Frazier kept on writing of duende, trying to give it a modern context and to help Americans understand it. . . ..

The orthodox Spanish definition of duende is "hobgoblin" or "ghost." But it has much larger meaning. . . .  In the Andalusian dialect, it means "black sounds." Federico Garcia Lorca called duende the "energetic instinct" that no flamenco singer or bullfighter could be without. It means "to have what it takes," and not all of us do, which gets to the fun. Frazier and his readers had a wonderful time dealing with duende, and so will we. . . .  Frazier's idea was that duende was "that certain something that sets persons apart." It might be "soul," but it might also be "star quality." It is a power that transmits a profound feeling from the heart of the artist to his audience "with the minimum of fuss and the maximum of restraint." . . .

Frazier remembered sensing duende when he first saw Joe DiMaggio grace, and therefore illuminate, an outfield. It wasn't merely greatness that he saw, nor majesty, nor merely aura. It was duende, and he had to learn more about it. . . . A definition of duende can only evolve through prose and argument -- and, more importantly, example. . . ..  "Clark Gable," Frazier wrote in his first lecture on duende, "had that certain something but others, like Rock Hudson, do not." In Frazier's view, Ingrid Bergman had duende. So did Billie Holliday. Fred Astaire had it, but not Gene Kelly. . . . Shirley MacLaine never had duende the way Judy Garland did. ( "It was what Ted Williams had even when striking out, but Stan Musial lacked when hitting a home run.")  . . . .  "To say that duende is merely charisma or panache or flair is rather to demean it," Frazier wrote, "for while it is certainly all those things, it is the nth power of them. It is chemistry." . . . .  So I like to continue what George Frazier started, for there is nothing more important, in this day of pop culture and ephemeral celebrity, for discerning audiences.

Posted by Dan Rodricks at 8:52 AM | | Comments (1)
        

Comments

Too few appreciate the excellence of George Frazier, if they have even heard of him at all.

You, sir, a literate man writing a newspaper column, are another rarity in this age.

Most of today's scribblers' compositions read like tortured translations from German, or a schoolboy's translation from a Latin text without a guide.

Keep up the good work.

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About Dan Rodricks
Jan. 8, 2009, marked 30 years for Dan Rodricks' column in The Baltimore Sun. Over three decades, Dan has won numerous regional and several national awards for his reporting and commentary -- in print and on the air. "I've had opportunity to write a column and work in both radio and television, never having to leave my adopted hometown of Baltimore to have those experiences," he says. "I consider myself very fortunate." In addition to writing a twice-weekly column for The Baltimore Sun and his Random Rodricks blog, Dan is currently the host of Midday, on WYPR-FM, National Public Radio in Baltimore. An artful story-teller and social critic, he has observed local, state and national political and cultural trends for three decades, and has a lot to say about almost everything.
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