PLEASE NOTE:

The following is from my phlog of the same date. I am placing it 
in the soviet_docs as a placeholder for the eventual treatise 
which take a while to finish. I am publishing this now for two 
reasons. 

Firstly, I'm still exploring the vagaries of git on Soviet with a 
view to producing a users' guide, perhaps even an info file. I've 
already discovered some interesting things to be aware of for 
those of us who are novices. Feel free, of course, to modify the 
document as you wish as per our tradition.

Secondly, I draw your attention to the orchestral arrangement by 
John Richard Campanelli. It's worth a listen. As a tone poem, it 
seems to fit our circumstances. But, that might just be me.


20210103 MARE CRISIUM, SEA OF CRISES 1
======================================

This will be the first of a series of short posts relating to the 
lunar crater, Crisium. There is a great deal of interesting 
information scattered across a number of sources. My goal is to 
pull this information together and eventually create a larger 
document accounting for the historical and cultural, as well as 
physical science dimensions of our namesake. In this way, I hope 
to contribute to the cultural riches of The Soviet.

As can be seen from the title, Mare Crisium is Latin for Sea of 
Crises. The crater is in the north east quadrant of the moon as 
viewed from earth. The mare is only one of 22 whose name has been 
official accepted. One of its easily visible characteristics is 
its separation from the plethora of other mares. Crisium stands 
alone.

It is also known as Caspian after the Caspian Sea on earth as they 
seemingly share a similar location if considered from a European 
orientation of the globe. However, Mare Crisium is the accepted 
"modern" nomenclature. It is also distinguished from many other 
mares by not having been named after a Renaissance astronomer.

One characteristic of the crater which was not detectable until 
more recent times was its mass concentration. Perhaps due to the 
composition of the astroid that created the crater a few billion 
years ago, gravitation forces associated with this mare are 
formidable. In fact, unware space probes are at risk of crashing 
in its vicinity. This actually occurred to an unmanned Russian 
craft during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969.

It would be interesting for future historians to investigate 
whether this is what indeed influenced the naming of our colony. 
In the normal course of events, the loss of a probe might not seem 
consequential. However, its demise during a mission in which 
astronauts from the United States landed and walked on the moon no 
doubt further poured salt into old wounds. The crater was, indeed, 
the source of a tangible crisis.

The crater has also inspired at least one musical cultural 
expression. John Richard Campanelli submitted an orchestral 
arrangement as his doctoral thesis at the University of Michigan 
in 1983. The following statement is was provided as an abstract 
for the thesis' inclusion in the repository:

-->> MARE CRISIUM (Sea of Crises), written between September, 1982 
and March, 1983, is an extended one-movement work for orchestra. 
It is scored for winds in threes (with oboe 3 doubling English 
Horn, clarinet 3 doubling bass clarinet, and contra-bassoon), four 
horns, three trumpets, two trombones, tuba, percussion, two harps, 
celesta, and standard strings. The title of the work is intended 
to inform the listener in an abstract rather than a programmatic 
sense. Mare Crisium is one of the seas of the moon, the majority 
of which were rather fancifully named by Renaissance astronomers. 
The language of the piece utilizes extended tertian triads as 
building blocks, with the interval of the third being important 
both melodically and as a basis for root movement. From an 
orchestrational and gestural standpoint, the work is inspired by 
the orchestral music of Claude Debussy, the early impressionistic 
works of Igor Stravinsky, and the pre-serial music of Arnold 
Schoenberg. Reference to their music in MARE CRISIUM is in the 
nature of an hommage. The period from which these works issue, 
i.e., ca. 1905 to 1913, is the one that I consider the golden age 
of the orchestra, in which the music conceived for the instrument 
of the orchestra most admirably suited its capabilities. MARE 
CRISIUM is, from this stylistic point of view, something of a look 
backward; however, I believe that the language of the piece works 
for our own time. <<--

In order to benefit personally and to enhance their commitment to 
The Soviet, Sundogs can listen to an excellent rendition of the 
orchestration at the following YouTube address:

https://youtu.be/XANqcLOLlS0

Again, as Bruce Sterling's <<Schismatrix>> was first published in 
1985, literary scholars will need to explore whether or not 
Campanelli's work influenced the author of our Urtext.