03 August 2007

On J.S. Bach's French Suites (BWV 812-817), and Norwegian commandos

So as I'm slowly, slowly learning how to play Robert Schumann's behemoth of a piano concerto, I decided to tackle a few side projects that would not make me feel like a total failure. I was listening to Glenn Gould play J.S. Bach's French Suites when I suddenly realized that some of them actually aren't too difficult to play. Once again, imslp.org came to the rescue, and I found sheet music for every one of them. I started with Menuet I and II of Suite No. 1 since they're fairly slowly paced, and I can already play them fairly decently.

It wasn't until I started playing them myself that I realized just how mesmerizing these suites actually are. I think it's because Bach wrote nearly all of them in such a way that the melody of the song shifts quickly and seamlessly back and forth between the left and right hands. Maybe there's more to it than that, but that's the extent of my analytical ability.

Also, I was reading in Making of the Atomic Bomb a few days ago that the real reason the Nazis during World War II failed to develop an atomic bomb before the Allies was not because the Allies were quicker, but rather because of a handful of Norwegian commandos who twice sabotaged Nazi efforts to obtain deuterium with which to build their bomb.

The first time I think was in 1939, when the Nazis first commandeered a dam in Sweden that produced small amounts of deuterium as a by-product. They didn't think to guard it very well, and a single commando snuck in and destroyed the tanks containing several gallons of heavy water with some very small explosives (the few guards who were present didn't even hear it). That set the Nazis back several months.

The second instance was in 1943. The dam was reinforced with many more guards, precluding the possibility of a second such intrusion. Instead, another Norwegian commando waited for the Nazis to load the tanks of deuterium onto a boat to ship acrosss some body of water (can't remember which one). He snuck onto the boat, planted a few charges in the hull, snuck out and detonated them, which punched large holes in the bottom of the boat, sinking it. After that incident the Nazis permanently abandoned their efforts to develop an atomic bomb.

So the moral of the story is, the next time you see a Norwegian commando, thank him that you're not speaking German.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hell yes!