Taz is lovely. He is probably about 25 and works in PC Garage by Ladbroke Grove Tube. He always amuses me. I like to watch him interacting with people : unfailingly polite and patient he deals with everyone in the same friendly and helpful way. He is not a flirt really, but people flirt with him endlessly, hoping for something a little more perhaps but he just responds kindly to everyone. I have had reasons to go in there over the last few weeks because I need IT stuff. I am normally a really impatient shopper. But at PC Garage I don’t mind. I just settle in happily, watching Taz dealing with the other customers, calming them and reassuring them with his soothing manner and his slight Indian accent before turning his attention to me.
The other day there was a
woman in her fifties with long bleached blonde hair, short skirt, a
large pot belly and an enormous amount of badly applied make
up talking to Taz about her cheap mobile phone which had stopped working
and couldn’t be mended. Since it didn’t work anymore she needed some on line information
about her up- coming trip to Rumania. She had Taz checking up the time schedule
for the tube to Heathrow on the day of her trip, then she wanted some
other information, totally outside of
the services PC Garage offer. And I was waiting patiently, enjoying myself while
Taz continued supplying the information she needed. And finally she said
« thank you so much ! I must take you out for a drink when I get
back » and winked at him. And dear Taz said ‘ Yes that would be
nice !’ Meanwhile a pretty woman
walked past outside the shop window and caught his eye. She blew Taz a kiss. He
smiled back and waved. Then a large Somali woman and her grown daughter, both
in Hijab, arrived and both started flirting away quite shamelessly while
discussing a broken mobile phone screen and trying to bargain. Taz is open to
bargaining and that makes Taz-watching even more fun. Quite a gruesome looking
type arrived (one couldn’t help thinking he was probably a drug dealer) and
tried to buy a £25 mobile phone for £20 but was not successful. However, Taz’s polite
refusal was a marvel of diplomacy.
Taz has successfully downloaded Chess Titans on my Windows
10 new computer- quite a feat, since many others have tried and failed. I am
not sure that Taz knows the game of chess, but he thinks I like games in
general : in this respect I have had to take a firm lead : No, Taz, I don’t want Candy Crush Soda Saga. And
definitely not Bubble Witch 3 thanks. Just Chess Titans. And then I walk away,
happy with my little visit to PC Garage, a smile on my face like countless
other Taz fans in the neighbourhood.
So I am now quickly becoming enmeshed in the technology of Europe :
I am gathering an impenetrable forest of pass words and codes in order to
access all my new appliances and software. I have been Spotified and Netflixed,
I am having a 40¨ flat screen TV arriving tomorrow morning.
But not only new technology : tonight dear David took me to the Wigmore Hall
for a song recital. (Dire picture below, of the rather beautiful early 20th c. décor.)
He calls it the Wigmire, and thinks it is a frightfully dull
place, although we have seen and heard the most marvellous performances here
together, like tonight when the lovely German soprano Anne Schwanewilms sang
Lieder from Shubert, Liszt and others.
This is perfect bliss to me and belongs
to Old Europe. There is always something wistful about a good Lieder performance: old fairy tales spring to life with echos from childhood and half forgotten poetry, like a delicate piece of Bruges lace. But there is much passion and strength too in a good Lieder performer: and there was plenty in the lovely Ms Schwanewilms: I would love to see her perform Brecht and Weill's Surabaya Johnny... David's review:http://www.theartsdesk.com/classical-music/anne-schwanewilms-charles-spencer-wigmore-hall-review-going-deep-schubert
I am keeping up the Sunday lunch habit, and yesterday came Kathy and Dan, my dear sculptor friends with their children who are quite grown up now, and we ate nice Roast Pork with apple sauce and played fun games.
And meanwhile, back in Timbuktu, the little team is finally
receiving the last touches of their digitization teaching from Suleyman, the
teacher from SAVAMA in Bamako who braved the insecurity on the road up to Timbuktu. The project is on route again, after a long delay caused by the jihadist attack in August.
Standing up to the right is Oumar Bily, fluent in Arabic and French, who will work on the meta data. He is the one who has spent three years in a Mauritanian refugee camp. This is his first real job!
You'll get me into trouble! I think some of the Wigmire audiences can be rather frightful, especlaly the well-off core of 'inner circle' supporters. But it can be very lively on nights when they get younger folk in on cheaper tickets (ie those concerts that aren't sold), and the programme is comprehensive. This is still where you come to hear the world's best singers and instrumentalists in chamber music. Anyway, heavenly Anne did not disappoint, and let the world know that Sophie was spot on about the colour she brings to a single note.
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