Thursday, November 30, 2017

Holiday "Elevator" Music... 2017

Classic Nancy Wilson Christmas

Nancy Wilson - White Christmas (MCG Jazz Records 2001)

[ChristmasTimeTV, Youtube; November 30, 2010]



 A Nancy Wilson Christmas 

(A-Train Entertainment, Youtube; July 24, 2017)
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHxNBKaVxNc&list=PLr5-p_DdO-Fy9M6jV7il8GBhhTEBSXxPQ


Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Reflections of "Yore"

The Tonette

  In the days of (my) “yore”, a Tonette was the popular Elementary school “pre-instrument”. It was odd-colored, and had finger and thumb holes; perfect for K-3 small hands. Mine looked to me like some sort of blue plastic sea mammal with a fin, that squeaked when played. For myself of course, it was a sure waste of time to pursue “perfection”...

  Although there may have been those who continued with the Tonette, the Recorder, with its Soprano, Alto, Tenor and Bass forms, provide an introduction to Music periods, as well as opportunities for Ensemble performances.


The Piano Cardboard Keyboard
 
  Having conquered John THOMPSON Piano Book 1, it was even more problematic to be handed a cardboard replica of a piano keyboard. The keys were colored, but not raised. In the music classroom, there was an actual Upright Piano with and angled mirror above it to demonstrate finger posture and such, as well as hear the sounds of actual piano tones while music scripts were read and played.

Ahh... I still see in my mind’s eye the always patient Music Class Piano teacher, who wisely knew not to ask me to use the cardboard keyboard.


“What a difference a day makes...” ♫ Today, Class piano comes equipped with earphones, electric keyboards which allows one to feel the action and depth of motion, as well as hear the sounds produced. The Music teacher roams the classroom with earphones wrapped around his or her neck to hear the students’ progress.


The Ukelele

  The Ukelele has been forwarded as an instrument for small hands, and can be used as a pre-introduction to Strings, as it creates dexterity in the left hand.


Conclusion

It is not expected that teaching these instruments will produce “Ankle-biters” that will develop into professional players. The truth is that Music in and of itself is UNIVERSAL in all languages, and has played a significant role in cultural development -- even when a piece of paper was placed over the tines of a comb to produce memorable musical family moments.

For this, my January 2018 "tierce de Picardie" Award will go out to the ever patient, tireless and sometimes thankless work of the Elementary School Music Educator. May your work continue that someone, somewhere out there will be reminded in the years to come that today is actually the “yore” of tomorrow.


Image:  Elevator on Mauretania from Wikimedia Commons
                                 

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia (Rome) is on Tour in The United States

 Carnegie Hall Concert Presentation

Sir Antonio Pappano Conducts Verdi, Prokofiev and Respighi -With Martha Argerich
Medici.tv - Live Soon: Friday October 20, 2017- 8pm (EDT) / 5pm (PDT)
(medici.tv)
https://www.medici.tv/en/concerts/sir-antonio-pappano-conducts-verdi-prokofiev-and-respighi-martha-argerich/


Antonio Pappano, a Conductor of the Old School, Makes His Carnegie Debut
(HARVEY SACHS, New York Times; October 6, 2017)
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/06/arts/music/antonio-pappano-conductor-carnegie.html


USA 2017 TOUR

20 October          New York, Carnegie Hall, 8:00 PM
22 October          Boston, Symphony Hall, 5:00 PM
23 October          Rochester, Kodak Hall, 8:00 PM
25 October          Washington, Kennedy Center, 8:00 PM


Monday, October 16, 2017

25th Anniversary of Morinkhuur Ensemble of Mongolia and More!

25th anniversary of Morinkhuur Ensemble this Saturday
(A. Odontuya, GoGo Mongolia; 2017-10-16)
http://mongolia.gogo.mn/r/160414

Oblivion - Mongolian State Morin Khuur Ensemble - YouTube
(Munkhbayasgalan Byambakhand, youtube; July 25, 2012)



Mongolia Art and Culture

Mongolian Music - Morin Khuur The Horse Tale
(Legend tour Mongolia, legendtour.ru)
https://legendtour.ru/eng/mongolia/informations/morin_huur.shtml


[Sukhee, Youtube; January 18, 2012]

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

Celebrate The Solar Event: 8/21/2017 UT


"FIRST CONTACT"...


...AFTER THE SOLAR ECLIPSE...

  "The Sun's Return"!

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Grace Bumbry Soprano in Concert

Italienische Opern Gala mit Grace Bumbry (8 July 2017)

(Oper imBerg Festival, opernimbergfestival.com)
http://www.operimbergfestival.com/festival-2017/italienische-operngala/index.php

Grace Melzia Bumbry - From Playgirl to Soprano

(GEORGE MOVSHON, New York Times Archives; JAN 2, 1977)
http://www.nytimes.com/1977/01/02/archives/grace-melzia-bumbryfrom-playgirl-to-soprano-grace-bumbry.html

Among many honors:  Ms. Grace Bumbry - Honorary Member of SIGMA ALPHA IOTA International Music Fraternity - Alpha Omicron 1965


Shirley Verrett & Grace Bumbry - Duet From Aida

(Operazine, Youtube: June 16, 2007)

Sunday, June 4, 2017

The Left Hand and Arm: A Conductor's Indicators of Direction

     The left hand or arm has always been used as an indicator of a Conductor's intent or instruction.  Perusing the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) Driver's Manual, notice how the provided hand signal illustrations  use the left hand and arm to assist in indicating a Driver's intent of which direction he or she desires to take while in the midst of traffic. In the United States, even the vehicle's turn signals are located on the left side of the steering wheel.

     Then a random thought occurred to me.  Why not conveniently devise a left hand gadget to control intended musical direction for a Symphony Conductor?  The gadget could be placed in a specially designed pocket allowing for an appropriate button to be pressed to indicate musical instruction at the appropriate time while an orchestral piece is being performed.  It seems like some "whiz kid" should have already started work on such a project...

The Symphony Conductor's left hand and arm signals and demonstrates the strong element of intended direction and, dare I say it, "love".  Love for the Composer's music, love for the Musicians who perform as a singular, yet multifaceted "vehicle"; and love for the audience as the directed harmonious strains of coordinated notes reach their ears, and stimulate their senses.  When a "tutti"  is needed, the grand gesture exudes with and from the left hand and arm of the Conductor.  When a "sotto voce" , or any other interpretive concept is musically instructed, it is once again the work of the left hand and arm.  These movements can be described, in my view, as an "Embrace of Love".  This love can not be manufactured.  It can not be imitated, and only duplicated as the Conductor heeds the intended directional signals written by the original Composer.

     Therefore, fear not ye Symphony Conductors!  Your invaluable place in musical society is firmly planted. Because the element of love comes from within the designated "Driver", it can not be arbitrarily invented, placed in a computer generated scheme, or haphazardly repeated no matter how often a composition is rehearsed or performed.

     Remember, it is this "Embrace of Love" the drives each individual Symphony Conductor to faithfully follow a Composer's intended musical direction.


                                   Kudos, then, to the "Embrace of Love"!




Image Attribution:  By Unknown (signed as "Poyet")[Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.



Friday, April 7, 2017

Herbert von Karajan: "The Composers' Conductor"

Karajan Documentary English - Karajan Beauty as I see it
 (Excellent Interpretation, youtube; December 12, 2015)
 



Masterclass with Herbert von Karajan 
(Victornasty, dailymotion; August 3, 2015)

Masterclass with Herbert von Karajan by victornasty


Sunday, March 5, 2017

"Spring" into Vivaldi at his 339th!

Vivaldi - 10 Facts About Antonio Vivaldi | Classical Music History
(HalidonMusic)

Vivaldi - 10 Facts About Antonio Vivaldi... by HalidonMusic


Vivaldi The Four Seasons - Recomposed by Max Richter, with Daniel Hope
(Medici.tv)

Vivaldi The Four Seasons - Recomposed by Max... by medicitv

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Harry Bellafonte Career Retrospective

Harry Bellafonte 90th birthday career retrospective collection due Feb. 24
(Randy Lewis, L. A. Times; Februaury 22, 2017)
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/la-et-ms-harry-belafonte-90-when-colors-come-together-20170221-story.html


Harry Bellafonte  - Turn the World Around (Audio)
(Harry Bellafonte, Vevo; February 8, 2017)

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

The "'Use By' Date"...



The “’Use By’ Date”...

  In the beginning, was the “Woomb-a”: the initial stage of hearing or feeling the voice, and active movements of the
 “carrier” - Ah... Next, the “Ankle-biter” stage: the stage in which it is realized that an appropriate teacher is required to cultivate one’s “success” (e. g., Recitals, scholarships, competitions). It is after these aforementioned stages that the reality of what might be called the “’Use by’ Date” begins to set in. The course of events brings self-doubt to the fore-front, which is often unknowingly brought about by well-meaning friends and family who insist “You won’t survive... It’s a ‘cut-throat’ business”. Then, a former Instructor’s ill-placed words begin to resonate in your mind: “It might be a good idea for you to just ‘partner-up’, and do the ‘woomb-a’ thing rather than pursue this particular career...” And finally, there are those who will just flat out splinter your soul with the all too familiar phrase, “Why don’t you just give up, and go get a ‘REAL’ job”?

  It is often safe to say that there are few who have escaped any of the formerly mentioned scenarios at one time or another. Not to worry, though! Places have already been prepared to accept and promote those who, for whatever reason, have chosen to move on to other professional areas or genres rather than their original pursuit... Their “first love”...


  “How you start is important, very important, but in the end it is how you finish that counts... The victor in the race is not the one who dashed off swiftest but the one who leads at the finish. In the race for success, speed is less important than stamina. The sticker outlasts the sprinter in life’s race...”

                                                                                                                ~ B. C. FORBES



Conclusion:

  We are not obligated to become victims of a “Cast away” society, where one is inevitably relegated to the proverbial “garbage heap”.  GET UP!  Get involved within your chosen "métier" and show them YOU - Who you are, and what a “sticker” is truly made of!









Illustration:  Jacob GROSSMANN, Bucket Elevator, In: The Elements of Chemical Engineering, 1906.  Public Domain via Wikipedia Commons.  

Enjoy the Blue Danube Waltz at 150!

The Blue Danube keeps waltzing at 150
(isi/at[afp]|Deutsche Welle; 14.02.2017)
http://www.dw.com/en/the-blue-danube-keeps-waltzing-at-150/a-37544786?maca=en-rss-en-cul-2090-rdf


"Danube so blue" - 150th anniversary of the "Blue Danube" Waltz by Johann STRAUSS 
(Cornelia Jarosch, vienna-insight.at; 15. February 2017)
http://vienna-insight.at/blog/2017/02/15/danube-blue-150th-anniversary-blue-danube-waltz-johann-strauss/






Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Polar Prize 2017

Sting, Wayne Shorter win 2017 Polar Music Prize
(Daniel DICKSON, Reuters; February 7, 2017)
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-music-polarprize-idUSKBN15M0MN

Sting och Wayne Shorter får Polarpriset 2017
(Joachim SUNDELL and Jacob Runevad KJELLMER, svt NYHETER; 6 februari 2017)
http://www.svt.se/kultur/musik/sting-och-wayne-shorter-mottar-polarpriset-2017

Website:

ABOUT:  The Story behind the Polar Music Prize
http://www.polarmusicprize.org/about/

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Coloration & the Unfair Status of Being a Bass


Coloration

The Oxford Concise Dictionary of Music reads, “It is impossible for music to convey colors, but it is customary to speak of ‘colouring’ or ‘tone colour’ where variations of timbre or tone are produced by different intensities of overtone sounds.”

     Seated at the console of a Pipe Organ, surrounded by various stops and stop combinations producing sound ranging from piccolo heights to 32’ bass, one has the sense of an Artist’s paint palette with its primary and secondary colours, followed by complementary, analogous or triadic combinations of overtone intensities...

     Eighteenth century composition employed the colourful use of the “tierce de Picardie”, with its final major cadence chord jolting the previous minor to its conclusion.  An example of this is seen in J. S. BACH Organ Toccata in D minor (BWV 565).  Measure 3 closes with a quiet "tierce de Picardie” in the raising of one note after the flourish.  This is preceded by the growling of the 32’ bass, as if its is an announcement of the spectacular expectation in the upcoming rhythmical hand and footwork of the Organist.  It is the powerful root bass note that clearly makes the wee Church mouse flee in terror, as the deep vibrations of sound cause the edifice foundation to be shaken to its very core.  


Unfair Status of Being a Bass

     The value and placement of the root base note is evident in the Figured bass featured in 17th and 18th Century compositions; where the bass is doubled by two instruments to provide a strong foundation, and give rise to the importance of the Bass voice.

     Too often, however, the role of the bass in the Winds and Brass sections, as well as the percussive Bass drum of a Symphony Orchestra, are generally relegated to the status of either being “heard but not seen”, or “seen but not heard”.  Case in point:  The Double Bass.

      Recently, the Double bass has clearly evolved into “holding its own” in Solo repertoire, with its deeply rich and earthy overtones being heard when the bow is used on the instrument.  It is no longer defined by mere plucking action (i. e.pizzicato), or being the “Oom” in the proverbial “Oom pah pah” arena; although it must be said that the Double bass is an invaluable asset in those traditional genres.


Conclusion

     Therefore, in my first attempt to bring notice to the question of musical coloration and the unfair status of being a Bass, my January 2017 “tierce de Picardie” award goes to those who are often seen as minor.  Yet, once the final chord is struck during the cadence of the piece, these entities are transformed into major players, performers, and/or instruments in our Musical society today; who bring a myriad of colours, intensities, and overtones of our musical palette to the forefront.





Illustration:  Jacob GROSSMANN, Bucket Elevator, In: The Elements of Chemical Engineering, 1906.  Public Domain via Wikipedia Commons.