Let the music begin
 
 
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19 June 2013 Wednesday
 
 
 
 
 
 
Columnists 30 July 2012, Monday 0 0 0 0
PAT YALE
p.yale@todayszaman.com

Let the music begin

For as long as I’ve been living in Cappadocia it’s been standing in the middle of Mustafapaşa, its heavy double doors firmly bolted against outsiders.

Then some time last year they were tentatively unlocked and a man was positioned across the street to collect a ticket toll from potential visitors. Since there was absolutely nothing to look at inside the building, most made do with hovering in the doorway, snatching a picture of its elaborate facade and then hurrying away before he could corner them.

I’m talking, of course, about the Church of Sts. Constantine and Helena, now renamed the Eleni Church. This magnificent edifice with a stone grapevine running in picturesque style around the doorway was originally built in 1729 when Sultan Ahmed III’s grand vizier, Nevşehirli Damat İbrahim Paşa, encouraged the repair and construction of many churches in Cappadocia. As it stands today, however, it’s mainly a rebuild carried out in 1840 after the new equality ushered in by the Gülhane Decree (1839) sparked a rash of new church building. Once upon a time, its interior would have been as thickly painted with frescoes as the region’s much older rock-cut churches. Today, only some stenciled decorations and vague, dusty outlines survive.

How do I know that if I managed to dodge the ticket collector? Well, because last week the church served as the venue for the opening concert in this year’s Klasik Keyifler Cappadocian music festival. It took place on a day when the heat lay heavy over the valleys and most of us had spent the afternoon either spread-eagled on our couches or hopping from patch of shade to patch of shade as we made our way about the village. In Mustafapaşa it was, if anything, even hotter than in Göreme and after a few minutes on the verandah of a fine house given over to the welcoming festivities most of us were forced outside in a desperate search for air.

All that was forgotten, though, the minute the music began. The program started with a Debussy composition that sounded as if it had been designed to be performed just here. But that was as nothing to the glory of the Fauré. Here was a French composer about whom I confess to having known nothing at the start of the evening and now here was his superb piano quartet soaring and swooping and carrying me back with it to a very different past when this, perhaps, would have been the music of choice for many of the locals. Closing my eyes, I could feel the ghosts of lost Sinasos gathered around me, the Greeks who before 1924 had lived here and used the proceeds of the Constantinopolitan trade in salt fish to embellish their town. I could hear the rustle of their long skirts settling on chairs more elegant than the plastic ones provided by Mustafapaşa Belediyesi, the swish of their fans as they too struggled to beat the heat, the polite clearing of throats in the intervals. It was an illusion, of course, but an illusion as vivid as if they had been sitting beside me.

Returning to Göreme, the heat, the litter, the night-time noise, all was forgiven and forgotten in the sheer joy inspired by the magic mingling of perfect music with a perfect venue.

Pat Yale lives in a restored cave-house in Göreme in Cappadocia.

Columnists Previous articles of the columnist
17 June 2013
As the Romans said
12 June 2013
The play's the thing
10 June 2013
Wrong place, wrong time
5 June 2013
Walking to Göreme
3 June 2013
White village calling
27 May 2013
Remembering the expat harem
22 May 2013
The other ‘Cappadocia'
20 May 2013
The other “Cappadocia”
15 May 2013
The word trap
13 May 2013
Remembrance of pears past
8 May 2013
In praise of Mount Erciyes
6 May 2013
From Bayındır with love
1 May 2013
Taking the waters a la Turka
29 April 2013
Situation normal
24 April 2013
A hard rain's a-gonna fall
22 April 2013
Sisters in grime
18 April 2013
Good, better, best
17 April 2013
Spying out the land
16 April 2013
How authentic is too authentic?
15 April 2013
The Crimea comes to Nevşehir
12 April 2013
Not waving but drowning
11 April 2013
Changing places
10 April 2013
Testing out the testi kebab
9 April 2013
On the trail of St. Hieron
3 April 2013
Back to basics
1 April 2013
Easter without the bunny
27 March 2013
The harshest memories
25 March 2013
Nevruz in Nevşehir
19 March 2013
Follow that bus!
18 March 2013
Behind the scenes at the winery
13 March 2013
Window on the world
11 March 2013
The flapping of butterfly wings
6 March 2013
The Ürgüp goose chase
4 March 2013
Nevşehir church: the prison years
27 February 2013
On the trail of a tower
25 February 2013
Pomegranate village (3)
20 February 2013
Pomegranate village: II
18 February 2013
Pomegranate village (1)
13 February 2013
A time-traveling tale
11 February 2013
Too much too young
6 February 2013
The Şok of the Dia
4 February 2013
The mahalle revisited
30 January 2013
Remembering the mahalle
28 January 2013
The donkey library (2)
23 January 2013
The donkey library (1)
21 January 2013
The comings and goings of Prokopi
16 January 2013
Unknown unknowns
13 January 2013
It's beautiful, but…
9 January 2013
When the lights go out
7 January 2013
Make mine a Laz Bombası
2 January 2013
Ring out the old, ring in the new
31 December 2012
Cultural close shaves
26 December 2012
The rising road toll
24 December 2012
The return of Darius
19 December 2012
Way too much of a good thing
17 December 2012
The road to Gaziemir
12 December 2012
A-wassailing we will go
10 December 2012
Last days of a village
5 December 2012
The sinking ship
3 December 2012
The new Cappadocian
28 November 2012
Roadmapping Cappadocia’s future
26 November 2012
The big fog
21 November 2012
The ballooning premium
19 November 2012
Enough is enough?
14 November 2012
Autumn serenade
12 November 2012
A tagging tale
7 November 2012
Death of a mahalle
5 November 2012
The times they are a-changin’
31 October 2012
Pictures that tell a thousand stories
29 October 2012
Three famous men (and one woman)
24 October 2012
Problem-solving the low-tech way
22 October 2012
The baffling business of Sufism
17 October 2012
The fairy chimney story
15 October 2012
Cappadocia’s forgotten museums
10 October 2012
That loving feeling
8 October 2012
The shrine by the bus stop
3 October 2012
Small is beautiful
1 October 2012
The world’s prettiest villages
26 September 2012
Heaven, Hell and assorted other caverns
25 September 2012
It’s a camel’s life
19 September 2012
The end of an era
17 September 2012
The Kayseri way with food
12 September 2012
A tourist frame of mind
10 September 2012
Behind the scenes at the museum
5 September 2012
The other kind of cave
3 September 2012
The day trip that wasn’t
29 August 2012
Cappadocia’s forgotten Russian saint
27 August 2012
The gift of water
22 August 2012
House of memories
15 August 2012
A girls night out
13 August 2012
Three cheers for Göreme
8 August 2012
A forgotten anniversary
6 August 2012
Our man in İstanbul (again)
1 August 2012
Drum rage
30 July 2012
Let the music begin
25 July 2012
Reviving a lost neighborhood
23 July 2012
The tale of Darius and Atossa
18 July 2012
Down by the riverside
15 July 2012
Bitter sweetness
11 July 2012
From Göreme to Kabul
...
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