February 04, 2012

Revisiting "The Jig is Up" based on comments

I received a number of comments on this piece, most of them over email. After much discussion I've opted to put in both bar lines and time signatures.



Sincere gratitude goes out to Patrick from Ligeti Quartet for his detailed comments. He went way above board in providing the information I needed to make this a playable piece.



Here is both a recording and the sheet music.



The Jig is Up by Chip Michael







If you'd like to see the previous article and my original approach to this piece, click here.






reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 4, 2012 at 02:00 AM

Jamal eating cereals



A re-upload of the best video on the internet. Song: Pharcyde – Runnin I do not own the music in this video.


reBlogged from:
The Cereal List

on Feb 4, 2012 at 02:00 AM

February 03, 2012

Anything But Music As Usual At Family Concert by LA Chamber Orchestra

Performance Marks Conductor Jacomo Bairos' LACO Debut as well as PROJECT Trio’s Debut as LACO Family Concerts Artists-in-Residence



Sunday, February 26, 2012, at Alex Theatre

1 PM – “Instrument Petting Zoo”

2 PM – Performance



It will be anything but music as usual when the electrifying Brooklyn-based ensemble PROJECT Trio joins the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra (LACO) and guest conductor Jacomo Bairos for the first of LACO's 2012 Family Concerts series on Sunday, February 26, 2012, 2 pm, at the Alex Theatre in



Glendale. PROJECT Trio, with its wildly eclectic mix of jazz, hip-hop and rock sounds and appearances on Nickelodeon and MTV, performs a high-octane twist on Copland's Appalachian Spring and other original works in its debut as LACO's Family Concerts artists-in-residence for the next three seasons. Bairos, who enjoys an international career as a conductor and educator, makes his LACO debut with this performance. Youngster at LACO's "Instrument Petting Zoo"

Photo by: Robbie McGraw


LACO Family Concerts, recommended for ages 5 to 105, are designed for children with little or no previous musical experience and include a performance prefaced by creative activities to amuse, enrich and engage them including an “Instrument Petting Zoo,” where youngsters handle and play brass, woodwind and string instruments with the assistance of students from the Pasadena Conservatory of Music; crafts with Kidspace Children’s Museum; dance-circles with the YMCA Glendale; and "create your own box harp" with the Autry Museum of the American West. Two additional LACO Family Concerts this season take place on Sunday, April 1 ("Fool for Dance") and Sunday, May 6 ("Mozart & Me").



Subscriptions, including all three concerts, are available at $51 and $30. Tickets for individual concerts are priced at $12 and $20. Both may be purchased online at laco.org or by calling LACO at 213 622 7001. Tickets to individual concerts will also be available at the venue box office on the day of the concert, if tickets remain. Discounted tickets are available by phone for groups of 12 or more.













reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 3, 2012 at 10:00 PM

294 :: February 3 2012 :: OM17: Kennedy/Budd

 Charles Amirkhanian previews the Other Minds 17 festival (March 1-3 in San Francisco):


 John Kennedy  Ambient 2   Harold Budd


John Kennedy: BAGHDAD for string orchestra (2008)

unreleased live recording ; Spoleto USA orchestra, Kennedy conducting


Harold Budd/Brian EnoAmbient 2/The Plateaux of Mirror (1980)

Editions EG EEGCD 18



OM17


reBlogged from: Music From Other Minds

on Feb 3, 2012 at 10:00 PM

Around The Classical Internet: February 3, 2012












Gustavo en 'Sésamo' con Elmo.

courtesy of Sesame Workshop

Gustavo en 'Sésamo' con Elmo.






  • Set your DVRs: Hot off a Mahler cycle in LA, Gustavo Dudamel will be on the Sesame Street episode airing this coming Monday. (Different audiences, I suppose.)
  • Four stories about sopranos up next. First: Camilla Williams — the soprano believed to be the first African-American woman to perform with a major US opera company — died Sunday in her home in Bloomington, Ind. at age 92. She made her debut at New York City Opera May 15, 1946, almost nine years before Marian Anderson sang at the Met.
  • Second: Patricia Neway died Jan. 24 at 92. A longtime collaborator of Gian Carlo Menotti, she debuted the role of Magda Sorel in his opera The Consul — and won a Tony for her turn as the Mother Abbess in the original Broadway production of The Sound of Music.
  • Third: A profile of soprano Renee Fleming as she enters the next stage in her career. "She has decisions to make about how to spend her remaining years onstage. Opera singers continually assess and refine their own voices, which change over time. What roles are appropriate? When is it good to stretch yourself, and when is it reckless?"
  • Fourth: American singer Angela Meade has been given the Beverly Sills Artist Award. It's a $50,000 prize for singers who have already appeared in featured roles at the Met. Previous winners include Joyce DiDonato, Nathan Gunn and Matthew Polenzani.
  • We've had a lot of coverage of Philip Glass' 75th birthday this week, but here's more: The world premiere recording of his Ninth Symphony debuted at No. 15 on the iTunes Top 100 albums chart.
  • And Justin Davidson wrestles with his lack of affinity for Glass' work: "I felt that I could have walked away in the middle of an arpeggio, had a four-course dinner, and returned to find those soothing chords still burbling away. Glass may well have done the same when he was composing the stuff. Surely there's an app for that. But I also found long seductive stretches that buzzed with energy or settled into feline languor."
  • Now, several items on labor and financial issues. Out of the ashes of the Honolulu Symphony rises the Hawai'i Symphony Orchestra, led by JoAnn Falletta. Their first, eight-program season starts next month.
  • The Philadelphia Orchestra has extended its contract with CEO Allison Vulgamore — for four weeks. (Not a typo. One month.) This is the second such extension of her contract with the struggling ensemble.
  • Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Inquirer's Peter Dobrin continues his dedicated and careful analysis of the orchestra's situation. He says there's been "incremental but encouraging progress" in gifts and pledges, but notes that "several prominent titled players — clarinetist Ricardo Morales, trumpeter David Bilger, and cellist Efe Baltacigil — already have accepted positions elsewhere, and another wave of departures is on the way." (A late-breaking update: The principal trombonist just announced he's leaving for the LA Phil.)
  • The musicians of the Louisville Orchestra have withdrawn their charge of unfair labor practices against management and the board. Says the musicians' committee chair: "We hope this shows that the musicians want to work in a positive way with anyone willing to move forward respectfully."
  • The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra's president and CEO abruptly resigned yesterday saying he was simply "ready to move on."
  • The Tuscon Symphony Orchestra just debuted a concerto for ... mountain dulcimer, composed by Conni Ellisor and played by Stephen Seifert. Says a humble Seifert about his instrument: "It's the simplest instrument you can make. It's a box with strings on it."
  • A recording studio owner likens crowd-source funding for classical recording projects to the slow food movement: "Just as the slow-food movement encourages eaters to think more holistically about how food is grown, prepared and brought to the table, this co-producer model gives people much more access to the creative process of music."
  • Remember the grumbling a few months back surrounding the renovation of the Bolshoi Theatre? Apparently a gilded handle broke off in a reporter's hand during a dress rehearsal for opening night, two studio ceilings are so low that dancers bump their heads during lifts, and despite a new shock-absorbent stage surface, dancers are getting injured.
  • Due to the European financial crisis, Barcelona's famed Liceu opera house is closing for eight weeks. More than two dozen performances are being cancelled.
  • The Guardian has a bright idea: "Wouldn't it be exciting ... to have an artist talk to the audience about the music that is being performed?" (If that's a new thought, then we clearly don't go to the same concerts.)
  • Pianist Jonathan Biss, who released an ebook called Beethoven's Shadow in late 2011, writes about how hard it is to write about music. (Can I get an "Amen!" around here?) "This is so extraordinarily difficult because to write effectively you need to be direct, clear and specific, whereas the glory of music lies in its abstraction — its nearly infinite malleability according to the listener's psychological state — and if you don't embrace that, you are sure to miss its essence. If you err on one side, you end up with a blow-by-blow account that can read like the minutes of a meeting or, worse, a report card; on the other end of the spectrum you get platitudes about beauty and spirituality without approaching either."
  • There are quite a few half-baked generalizations and weird bromides packed into this little essay about Asians in classical music — Baroque music is "mechanical," and classical music, if it survives at all, "will have an Asian afterlife, much in the way washed-up American rock bands can still pack stadiums in Manila." But the points the author raises about racial diversity in orchestral management and on boards is worth reflection.
  • Drumma Boy — a producer big in Southern hip-hop — muses on the classical music that molded him: "My mother was a professional opera singer and my father was the First Chair clarinet for forty years in the Memphis Symphony Orchestra — the first African-American to hold that position ... When I tackle genres that many people with tunnel vision believe to be the antithesis of Hip-Hop, they don't realize that I'm not broadening my horizons or crashing into a classical members-only party — I'm merely coming back home to Memphis, Tennessee, and the orchestral roots that lie deep beneath my beats."




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"fullattribution">Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.



reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Feb 3, 2012 at 10:00 PM

"VOX BALAENAE" George Crumb by Ensemble intercontemporain & Tero Saarinen CY







"VOX BALAENAE" George Crumb by Ensemble intercontemporain & Tero Saarinen CY
Choreography and dance : Tero Saarinen
Music : George Crumb, "Vox Balaenae"
performed by Ensemble intercontemporain soloists:
Sophie Cherrier (flute) / Hideki Nagano (piano) / Pierre Strauch (cello)

Lighting and set design : Mikki Kunttu
Costume design : Erika Turunen
Sound design : Marco Melchior
Choreographer's Assistants :Satu Halttunen / Henrikki Heikkilä / Sini Länsivuori

Recorded November 6, 2011, Automne en Normandie, 

Le Rive Gauche, Saint-Étienne-du-Rouvray, France

Realisation and Editing : Anne Delrieu (Radiofonies Europe)
Cameraman : Fabien Leca (Radiofonies Europe)
Interviews : Benjamin Bibas (Radiofonies Europe)
Editing coordination : Véronique Brindeau
Stage photo : © Luc Hossepied

Executive Production : Ensemble intercontemporain/ Tero Saarinen Company

Thanks to the Rive Gauche team and to Festival Automne en Normandie


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on Feb 3, 2012 at 09:00 PM

BREAKING NEWS: Due to Winter Storm Colorado Symphony has cancelled the Friday Night "Sibelius Violin Concerto" Feb 3rd

The Colorado Symphony has cancelled tonight’s performance of “Sibelius Violin Concerto” scheduled for 7:30pm, due to the winter storm. Patrons holding tickets to tonight’s performance may exchange them for Saturday night’s 7:30pm performance or can exchange for another upcoming Colorado Symphony concert. Please call the box office at 303.623.7876 to make your exchange.






reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 3, 2012 at 09:00 PM

5 questions to Judd Greenstein (Composer)

As the 2012 edition of the Ecstatic Music Festival is about to start, we asked 5 questions to Judd Greenstein, composer, curator of the festival, and co-director of New Amsterdam Records/New Amsterdam Presents. Oh, there’s a bonus question too… Where did the need for another New Music festival in NY come from? Very few festivals, or ...

reBlogged from:
I care if you listen(.com)

on Feb 3, 2012 at 09:00 PM

"VOX BALAENAE" Georg Crumb by Ensemble intercontemporain & Tero Saarinen CY







"VOX BALAENAE" Georg Crumb by Ensemble intercontemporain & Tero Saarinen CY
Choreography and dance : Tero Saarinen
Music : George Crumb, "Vox Balaenae"
performed by Ensemble intercontemporain soloists:
Sophie Cherrier (flute) / Hideki Nagano (piano) / Pierre Strauch (cello)

Lighting and set design : Mikki Kunttu
Costume design : Erika Turunen
Sound design : Marco Melchior
Choreographer's Assistants :Satu Halttunen / Henrikki Heikkilä / Sini Länsivuori

Recorded November 6, 2011, Automne en Normandie, 

Le Rive Gauche, Saint-Étienne-du-Rouvray, France

Realisation and Editing : Anne Delrieu (Radiofonies Europe)
Cameraman : Fabien Leca (Radiofonies Europe)
Interviews : Benjamin Bibas (Radiofonies Europe)
Editing coordination : Véronique Brindeau
Stage photo : © Luc Hossepied

Executive Production : Ensemble intercontemporain/ Tero Saarinen Company

Thanks to the Rive Gauche team and to Festival Automne en Normandie


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reBlogged from:
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on Feb 3, 2012 at 08:00 PM

CD of the Week: Peter Hill's Bach

Fugue in D Major, from the Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II; Peter Hill (Delphian 34101).

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Feb 3, 2012 at 07:00 PM

Hell Can Wait



reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Feb 3, 2012 at 07:00 PM

American Cosmology at the Composers Now Festival

 


The Latin American Music Center at Indiana University is presenting American Cosmology, a program designed specially for the Composers Now  festival that is involving many members of New York’s new music scene in February.  Invited by Composers Now’s artistic director, composer Tania León, the program will be presented on February 4th a the Music Now Marathon in Symphony Space , and on February 6 at the Americas Society Concert Series.


American Cosmology was designed by the LAMC’s director Carmen-Helena Téllez to showcase complementary meditations on the sky and the cosmos represented in David Dzubay’s Astral  String Quartet and in Gabriela Ortiz’s Baalkah for String Quartet and Soprano. Astral, written for the Orion Quartet, was inspired by the ensemble’s name and by the constellations visible in the sky while the composer worked at the MacDowell Artsit Colony in  New Hampshire. Baalkah was composed for the Kronos Quartet and Dawn Upshaw, and sets texts from Mayan cosmology addressing patterns of existence and the place of humanity in the universe.


David Dzubay has received commissions from Meet the Composer, Chamber Music America, the National Endowment for the Arts, the US-Mexico Fund for Culture, and the Fromm and Barlow foundations, among others. Recent honors include Guggenheim, MacDowell, Yaddo, Copland House and Djerassi fellowships, a 2011 Arts and Letters Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the 2010 Heckscher Prize. His music has been performed by orchestras, ensembles and soloists in the U.S., Europe, Canada, Mexico, and Asia, and is published by Pro Nova Music and recorded on the Sony, Bridge, Centaur, Innova, Naxos, Crystal, Klavier, Gia, and First Edition labels.


David Dzubay writes: “Beginning work on a piece for the Orion String Quartet, and taking a cue either from the group’s name or perhaps from gazing upwards on evening strolls around the MacDowell Colony in rural New Hampshire, I decided to focus on the stars, composing an “Astral” quartet, movements of which would look at stars and space in various ways. Though the movements are somewhat independent, they do share musical elements and together are balanced on the curious middle movement. Like our galaxy, the quartet has a spiral structure, both in the shape of an eight-pitch ‘spiral motive’ and in the duration of the movements (roughly 5′-3′-2′-4′-3′). A recurring element, first heard in the opening bars, is a group of three evenly spaced attacks, a representation of Orion’s Belt, the tight grouping of three stars lined up in the Orion constellation.


Gabriela Ortiz is one of the foremost composers in Mexico today. Recent commissions and premieres include her new videopera Unicamente la Verdad with the Indiana University Contemporary Vocal Ensemble under Carmen-Helena Téllez; Altar de Piedra for three percussion players, timpani and orchestra for Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra with Esa- Pekka Salonen and Kroumata percussion ensemble; Zócalo-Bastilla, for violin, percussion and orchestra premiered by violinist Pierre Amoyal, and  Altar de Muertos, a string quartet commissioned by Kronos Quartet.


Baalkah, which means ‘world’ or ‘cosmos’ in Maya, was inspired by the cosmological beliefs of the Maya of the Yucatan Peninsula and of other Mexican and Central American native peoples. For over 5,000 thousand years, these Native American peoples have conceived the world as being divided into 4 cardinal directions: east, north, west and south. In each one of these directions stands a gigantic tree that supports the sky, and each one has its particular cosmological characteristics, such as its own ruling deity, its own color, a set of related plants and animals, and, more generally, its own mood or personality. The lyrics of the first four songs of Balkah are taken from a 17th century Maya book, the Chilam Balam of Chumayel, a priceless depository of centuries of historical and religious wisdom inherited by Maya priests and kept hidden from the prosecution of the Catholic church. Each member of the string quartet represents one the four cardinal directions, and the center is represented by the soprano.


The ensemble includes Madalyn and Cicely Parnas, both soloists and members of the Parnas duo that has received accolades of  “stunning” and “electrifying” in the New York Times. Madalyn will play a solo piece by Timothy Dunne earlier in the evening on of Saturday February 4th.  Cicely was the inaugural artist-in-residence of the radio program Performance Today last December.  Violinist Tim Kantor has been a featured artist with the Banff and Aspen festivals as well as with the Cleveland Pops; and violist Rose Wollman has performed all over the word with conductors such as Pierre Boulez, Fabio Luisi, Hugh Wolf, Joseph Silverstein, and Larry Ratcliff in orchestras all over the world. A fierce new music performer, soprano Sharon Harms will return later to New York for the performance of Charles Wuorinen’s It Happens Like This, which she premiered under the baton of the composer at Tanglewood last summer.


reBlogged from: Sequenza21/

on Feb 3, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Mahler Project: Symphony No. 1, Adagio from No. 10, No. 2 “Resurrection”

by Ebner Sobalvarro

Performance dates: January 20, 21, 22, 2012





The second weekend of the Mahler Project brought two of the more anticipated symphonies by the composer, including the Adagio of his uncompleted final symphony.



Gustavo Dudamel and Mahler’s Symphony No. 1 go way back, to the time when he was 16. It was the first big symphonic piece he ever conducted, and his connection to it has grown over time. He chose it in 2009 for the gala concert that inaugurated his first season as music director with the LA Philharmonic. He also toured the piece with them throughout the US in May of 2010. Mahler was in his late 20’s when he wrote it, yet it is an unusually mature work for a first symphony. Its theme is that of a romantic hero who must face the tribulations of a harsh world before emerging victorious.



Dudamel made it crystal clear from the outset, like he did in ‘09: this is his Mahler 1. Whatever reputation he has built for himself as a lover of slow tempi would not be dispelled here. Dudamel’s hero leisurely strolled through nature in the first movement, with no rush and infinite patience. The maturation of his conducting continues from what he displayed in October: more economic yet effective gestures, a fearless ability to control time in the music, and a more focused energy going into the overall sound. For its part, the orchestra did everything he wanted without trepidation. They transitioned fluidly from a careless stroll to hurried sprint (he may love going slow, but he sure likes going fast we well). The second movement is a dance, its first theme more village square than ballroom. But interestingly, it felt stately and proud, fit for a king. That continued with the more waltz-like second theme, regal and even a bit privileged in attitude.



The famous third movement features the children’s song “Frere Jacques” in a minor key funeral march, with a rare solo from the principal double bass. It was lovingly played, with a somber quality that permeated the rest of the movement, along with that stubbornly slower tempo. Even the Klezmer music that is a point of intrusive humor didn’t have the lighthearted quality that it’s often played with. With a shocking scream, the fourth movement started, and it was a rollercoaster. All caution was thrown into the wind as Dudamel hit the gas, the orchestra playing with unbelievable drive and propulsion, taking no prisoners. Only when they slowed for the lyrical section did we hear the heart of a weary warrior. The piece has gotten better with age.



The Adagio from the unfinished Symphony No. 10 was the most ‘completed’ part of the work, with sketches of the other movements in various stages of development by the time Mahler died in 1911. At this time he was dealing not only with his failing health but with the revelation that his wife was having an affair (the manuscript of this symphony is covered with words describing his agony). If it sounds a little creepy at times, it’s because he wrote it so well, showing all the character of a crushed soul. It also extends a conflict from his stirring Symphony No. 9 of making the difficult transition from late Romantic music to modern music. Dudamel’s take was unsentimental, despite the nature of the music. What emerged was very savvy playing from the orchestra that created a subtext of a mind in torment, a mind that was slowly losing its grip and becoming detached. It stood in stark contrast to the Mahler 1 that preceded it.



On Sunday night, it was time for the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra to make their first contribution to the Mahler Project, presenting the gargantuan Symphony No. 2 “Resurrection.” The small army, numbering about 160 musicians, would be responsible for performing the funeral rites for the hero from Mahler 1, reflecting on all of his life’s key moments, in the first movement. The second is a nostalgic flashback, followed by a cynical third movement full of mock happiness. But then, the finale is nothing short of a musical miracle, in which Mahler lifts everyone into the heavens. Mahler 2 isn’t performed very often, due to the need for such a large orchestra, choir, mezzo-soprano, soprano, an offstage band and an organ. When it is presented, it’s quite an event.



If you closed your eyes, you wouldn’t have know the orchestra has an average age of 24 (they are not officially being called a ‘youth’ orchestra anymore). Their musical chops are that good, and when combined with the kind of sincerity and enthusiasm that exists during this stage of life, you believe absolutely everything they have to say musically. Dudamel smiled proudly and often at his band (he has been its music director since 1999) as they carefully spelled out all of the passages of the funeral march, examined with a macro lens. When he unleashed the power of the group at several dramatic moments, their response was terrifying in volume and intensity. They never let up and they never go on auto-pilot.



The ländler of the second movement was a warm blanket that covered the listener, highlighted by an elegant ensemble pizzicato. Rhythmically, they found a fantastic lilt during the waltz scherzo of the third movement, after which mezzo-soprano Christianne Stotjin was a sensitive vocalist making a profound statement of faith during the “Urlicht”. With the final movement, Dudamel presented things a bit piecemeal, as he had during a few moments in the funeral march. He’s endlessly interested in studying moments to their fullest. Sometimes, it’s a fascinating insight, but other times it distends the whole work at the expense of total structure. Examples of the former were the so-called “March of the Dead,” proud and enlivened, and the “grosse Appell,” the summoning of souls to be judged. The Los Angeles Master Chorale was peerless when they entered with the “Resurrection” chorale, and with the added beauty of soprano Miah Persson, it was a stunning vocal force. It was just after 9PM when the skies opened up and everyone saw, for a moment, what Mahler imagined the next world would be like. It was good enough to make believers out of everyone in attendance.






reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 3, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Loving Schumann

Loving Schumann … is in a way to assume the philosophy of Nostalgia … to risk the most Schumannian word there is: Evening. Loving Schumann … inevitably leads the subject who does so and says so to posit himself … according to the injunctions of his desire and not those of his society.

Roland Barthes, Loving Schumann



reBlogged from: Theater of Found Sounds

on Feb 3, 2012 at 04:00 PM

Elizabeth Gilbert on Nuturing Creativity



"http://feeds.wordpress.com/1.0/gocomments/jamesprimosch.wordpress.com/2411/">


reBlogged from: Secret Geometry - James Primosch's blog

on Feb 3, 2012 at 03:00 PM

Nicola Benedetti Gives and Oscar Worthy Performance in Santa Ana

Nicola's passionate performance of Bruch's Violin Concerto No. 1 was dramatic and powerful

Too often we associate "Oscar" performances outside the film industry as overwrought, melodramatic or just plain cheesy. There was none of that with Nicola Benedetti's performance of Bruch's Violin Concerto No. 1 with the Pacific Symphony last night. From the opening low G spoken with an intense focus, it was obvious Nicola has something to say, and does so eloquently with the violin.



During the first big orchestral interlude, Nicola immersed herself in the music. She physically responded to the jibes and exclamations of the orchestra. This was not a performance about turning on the talent when it's her time to play; this was all about expressing herself through the music. When she takes up the violin, it is with complete commitment, playing her part as an extension of the orchestral cast. Every part of her is involved in the performance. As the phrases rise, it's as if she's trying to get the music to physically climb out of the violin, as if some how she could will it to take flight - and it does! Her long hair occasionally whips about driving the music on. Even her violin seems to just an extension of self, not a separate instrument at all. Regardless of the impending threats of the orchestra, Nicola is determined to overcome them. She is the heroine after all.



However, she isn't overly dramatic. There were no overt gestures to accentuate the music, just expression borne out of the music. Nicola gave a nuanced performance. During the Adagio I felt as if we were in a close up scene, where the camera zooms in to capture just the face. This is the important part of the story where we learn about her dreams, her ambitions and we wonder if she'll make it in the end. There isn't room to be overly expressive, or the story become trite. To capture the emotion of the scene, it's all in the subtle inflections of the voice, the tiny shifts in eyes or the smile. We believe what she's telling us; we're on her side! Nicola captured the emotion of the beautiful 2nd movement with her violin, expressing her zeal for the music and proving herself worthy as the heroine.



Come the third movement, Nicola is having such a good time every face in the house was smiling with her. It's as if she'd had the best day and was telling us all the details. Maybe this is a romantic comedy and she'd just met the man of her dreams, or a rags to riches story where she's just landed her dream job. Regardless of the narrative, we've reach the point where our heroine is finally getting her due. The more Nicola "spoke" the better her day seemed to get. This was a film with a happy ending!



Nicola has commented how important it is for each musician to find their own voice. Nicola has found her voice through the violin. We get to experience a wealth of amazing stories because of it. Thank you, Nicola, for a wonderful, passionate performance.



- There are 2 more performances at the Segerstrom Concert Hall in Santa Ana, CA this week.



Friday February 3

Saturday February 4




PACIFIC SYMPHONY



CHRISTOPH KOENIG - conductor

NICOLA BENEDETTI - violin



DEBUSSY: Petite Suite

BRUCH: Violin Concerto No. 1

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 4



Tickets available online or through the box office. There is also a live broadcast of Saturday's performance on Classical KUSC.





reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 3, 2012 at 10:00 AM

Owens spricht


In advance of a recital on Feb. 21, the splendid Eric Owens takes a few questions from fans on Carnegie Hall's video channel. His goal on any given night, he says here, is to "not phone it in." So far, he is most definitely succeeding. My question: will there be a Kurtis Blow encore?


reBlogged from: Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Feb 3, 2012 at 07:00 AM

The Tumblr Album (MP3)


There is a techno heart somewhere deep in Sol Rezza‘s “The Existence of the Light Part III.” It’s in the wisp of a beat that patters along beneath everything else, a pixel tick tock. There’s a current of a beat above that, too, a more thorough pulse, one that fades in early and out late, that again has some semblance of techno to it. But the music is, after a brief moment at the start that suggests a clear genre slot, adventurous and spacious and adventurous in its spaciousness.



There’s plenty use of techno’s flavors, notably gurgling synth and those bauble beats, that bring Underworld to mind, that ability to have one foot in the rave and another in the gallery, both in the same pair of shoes.


This single track is, as its title suggests, part of a large-scale “album,” more a collection of images, still and moving, and text fragments as well as voluminous sounds that makes extremely creative use of the Tumblr publishing system’s inherent promise as a cabinet of curiosities. This screenshot below is just a narrow band of Rezza’s generous spectrum:



Track found via devinsarno.com. The large-scale project is housed at light.radio-arte.com, a subset of Rezza’s radio-arte.com webiste. She is based in Buenos Aires, Argentina.




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Feb 3, 2012 at 07:00 AM

Voyage

Dear Philip Glass, 


First of all, happy birthday week, and I wanted to say a couple of things to you. Thank you for making me a more patient person, one who can now go into that moment of purgatory between consciousness and the dreamworld when listening to music that is not only yours, but Reich's, Adams's, Andres's, and many others. Thank you for composing a piece that I can play at the piano when I'm feeling too busy or unfocused and automatically calm down. Thank you for giving the world a movie that I could watch with my dad when I was 10 and realize that movies didn't have to center on interactions between humans. Thanks for making "classical" music something that everyone loves, even if just a little. And thank you for making sound the simple thing that it is, in the most beautiful way possible. 


Sincerely, 
Elena 







(by me)


reBlogged from:
Neo Antennae

on Feb 3, 2012 at 04:00 AM

Pablo Who?

Hung Liu's Dirge

A recent
Wall Street Journal article (January 13, 2012) described how Chinese artists are now outselling artists like Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol at art auctions.

According to the article, three of the ten most expensive artworks sold at auction in 2011 were by Chinese artists. In fact, last year’s priciest art work, a delicate scroll by a Chinese artist, rocketed ahead of canvases by Pablo Picasso, Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol when it sold for $65 million at one auction!

The San Francisco Contemporary Music Players (SFCMP) is pleased to offer a unique limited edition of 45 prints from renowned artist Hung Liu, whose work is in major collections both nationally and internationally.  Stylistically, her work combines traces of Chinese history with a delicate modernist sensibility.

The print is available for only $1,800, and all sales of the print benefit SFCMP.  For the chance to view the work yourself, the organization will hold a special reception for the Hung Liu print at the Electric Works Gallery in San Francisco on Thursday, February 9, 2012.

There’ll be wine, hors d’oeuvres, and a performance by Chinese pipa virtuoso Shenshen Zhang.  Click here for more details, and RSVP at info@sfcmp.org or by calling (415) 278-9566.  Be in the vanguard!
- Dianne Ellsworth, long-time SFCMP subscriber


reBlogged from: San Francisco Contemporary Music Players

on Feb 3, 2012 at 03:00 AM

Tania León ~ A la Par







A la Par
Tania León
....For piano and percussion....

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reBlogged from:
Uploads by stanchinsky

on Feb 3, 2012 at 02:00 AM

York Höller ~ Diaphonie







Diaphonie
York Höller
(1965 rev.1974)
....For two pianos....

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reBlogged from:
Uploads by stanchinsky

on Feb 3, 2012 at 01:00 AM

The usual suspects

I swear, I was going to do hourly comics yesterday (like last year)—I was going to do them on the train back from New York, but the train was pretty shaky, and then the engine broke down and we were stuck in the dark for a couple hours, and by the time the lights came back on, my brain wasn't really working that well. So instead, I did what any sane person would do under the circumstances: I doodled sketches of mid-century American composers.









reBlogged from: Soho the Dog

on Feb 3, 2012 at 12:00 AM

February 02, 2012

Living in a digital world

I review a lot of Classical Music CD's - often before they are for sale to the general public. I get them via a special download link, listen to them (several times) and post reviews here on my blog



Over the last year, I've moved, which means I spent the last 9 months working from my laptop, rather than my desktop. Not a problem. When my desktop crashed, I didn't think twice about restoring it to factory defaults. All of my personal files were stored on an external drive (or so I thought).



Because I review so many CD's I generally don't have the time to go back and "enjoy" the previous CD's I've downloaded. - Well.... Nicola Benedetti is performing the Bruch Violin Concerto No. 1 tonight with the Pacific Symphony. I reviewed her recording of the same concerto last year. I thought the recording was on the external drive - but alas it's not!



Her recording as well as many of the other amazing CD's I have enjoyed over the past few years are gone --the little '+' and '-' are gone, all the little 1's and 0's and just 0's.... *sigh*






reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 2, 2012 at 07:00 PM

Stephen Hough performs Liszt Piano Concerto Nos. 1 & 2 with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Marin Alsop

Time and again, Hough's traversals of familiar works are played with such insight, probity and sage musical understanding that we feel almost as if we are hearing them for the first time … Stephen Hough's steady ascent to the summit of his profession exhibits equally supreme mastery of his instrument and the deep humanity from which it has flowered'

International Record Review on Grieg/Liszt Piano Concertos, 2011 Hyperion

Antonín Dvořák never really suited the musical rat race in which he inevitably became embroiled. At the height of his career, symphonies were commissioned for London and New York. But there was no such commission for the Eighth. This was a symphony Dvořák wrote to satisfy nobody but himself, ‘a work singing of the joy of green pastures, of summer evenings, of the melancholy of blue forests, of the defiant merrymaking of the Czech peasants’. An eye-widening sense of fun characterises Czech music of a later age from Bohuslav Martinů, heard before both of Liszt’s rapturously virtuosic Piano Concertos.



FREE Pre-concert event | 6.15pm-6.45pm | Royal Festival Hall

A discussion on the symphonies of Bohuslav Martinů with Marin Alsop.



Martinů Symphony No. 6 (Fantaisies symphoniques)

Liszt Piano Concerto No. 1

Liszt Piano Concerto No. 2

Dvořák Symphony No. 8



Marin Alsop conductor

Stephen Hough piano



TICKETS: £9 - £65 - book online at shop.lpo.org.uk



This concert will be broadcast live by BBC Radio 3.





reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 2, 2012 at 06:00 PM

The 'Fourth Orange': An Animated Short On Prokofiev's Life












The animated short 'Fourth Orange' by director Julia Titova.

YouTube

The animated short 'Fourth Orange' by director Julia Titova.









Earlier this week via a fellow music scribe's blog, I came across a very beautiful animated short about Prokofiev. Director Julia Titova's Fourth Orange is a wistfully brilliant little film now making the film festival rounds. It includes generous doses of Prokofiev's music and imaginative evocations of iconic pictures of the composer.

Utterly entranced by the visuals, I sought help from my Russian-speaking friends — and Inna Barmash, the excellent singer who fronts the band Romashka, generously volunteered to translate while I transcribed. Read on for the translation. The ellipses indicate pauses in the voiceover, not omissions — and any mistakes are entirely mine.


"creditwrap">YouTube





Title: TALES OF AN OLD PIANO

PROKOFIEV: I died the same day as Stalin. Only my relatives and friends attended my funeral.

Title: FOURTH ORANGE — SERGEY PROKOFIEV

I was born in the village of Sontsovka on April 23, 1891. Alexander III was the tsar. Lenin was 21, and Stalin was 11.

When my mother played the 'Moonlight' Sonata, I would ask her to leave the top range for me and I would hammer out little exercises. ...

In the spring, it would rain, and then it would pour, the river would overflow, and the bridge would crumble. ...

When I was five and a half, I figured out a tune and played it a few times, and I learned how to write it down – and the process of writing it down really made an impression on me. ...

When I was eight, my parents took me to Moscow to hear Faust ...

"Mama, I'd like to write my own opera." ...

My teacher, composer and pianist Reinhold Glière, came to the village when I was 11 and he was 28. In the evenings, I would play piano, Glière would play violin, and we would play together. And when I was 13, I was led to audition for the conservatory in St. Petersburg . ...

"Mr. Prokofiev, come in." ...

We see composers Anatoly Lyadov, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Glazunov looming overhead. Rimsky-Korsakov asks, "Are these all your compositions? Sit down and play them." ...

"Mr. Prokofiev, you're admitted." ...

Lyadov asks, "Why are you studying with me? You should go to Paris and study with Claude Debussy."

Rimsky-Korsakov asks, "Why are you listening to Sibelius?" ...

My mood that morning was murky. I was asking myself, 'Why am I here. How did I get here?' I was afraid of a bad outcome in the Anton Rubinstein piano competition." ...

Glazunov says, "The contest winner is Prokofiev."

"The prize is a Schroeder piano." ...

The news of the October Revolution is confusing. Everywhere, there's talk of the Bolshevik uprising. ...

I would like to get some kind of document so I can work and live anywhere I want.

He goes to the bureaucrat's office and says, "I'd like a breath of fresh air."

The bureaucrat replies "We have lots of fresh air here. You are a revolutionary in music, we are revolutionaries in other things. We should work together. But I'll give you the permission you want."...

In New York, I had huge success: six encores. I read about three oranges – pretty awesome. I could do something with that! ...

Nevertheless, I was drawn back to Russia. So I didn't even say goodbye to anyone in New York. I left; I was no longer interested in America. ...

I wasn't used to arriving in Paris from the west. ...

We see him with impresario Sergey Diaghilev, who says, "I'd like to commission a ballet from you."

"Why should I write on a theme that you propose? I don't want to write in a style that you approve."

Diaghilev responds, "Fine, so write in a style that you want."

I couldn't believe my ears. Diaghilev had commissioned me to write a ballet on a Soviet theme. ...

Prokofiev listens to a singing accordionist. "Why the hell am I here and not in Russia? In Russia, it's much more interesting for me." ...

I chose a particularly luxurious train so that no one would feel sorry for the one going back to a Bolshevik country. ...

I had thoughts of turning back. After all, this was an important life decision. As it turned out, in my absence I'd become quite famous. ...

Eisenstein's mastery inspired the creation of music that you could see. ...

One more page, and my symphony will be over.

I died on the same day as Stalin, and only my relatives and friends attended my funeral.



!-- END CLASS="STORY" -->
D CLASS="POSTCONTENT" -->


Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.


reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Feb 2, 2012 at 06:00 PM

Joke

Not sure where this originated; a neighbor posted it at an on-line community:
C, Eb, and G go into a bar. The bartender says, Sorry, but we don't serve minors. So Eb leaves, and C and G have an open fifth between them. After a few drinks, the fifth is diminished, and G is out flat.
It goes on from there, although I wonder if there are not (ahem) diminishing returns.


reBlogged from:
henningmusick

on Feb 2, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Harrison,Weber,Foss,Dahl-CHAMBER MUSIC BY (1976 New World Records)

Harrison, Weber, Foss, Dahl- CHAMBER MUSIC OF: New World Records 1976Today is the 9th anniversary of the passing away of Lou Harrison. He was 85 years,8 months old.Excerpted from the extensive gatefold notes (enclosed):Lou Harrison was born in Portland, Oregon, on May 14, 1917. He studied with Henry Cowell and with Schoenberg, and has earned his living by teaching (at Mills College 1937-40),

reBlogged from:
A Closet of Curiosities

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

James Blood Ulmer-ARE YOU GLAD TO BE IN AMERICA? 1980 Rough Trade Records

James Blood Ulmer- ARE YOU GLAD TO BE IN AMERICA? Rough Trade 1980Today is James Blood Ulmer's 70th birthday:He was born in St.Matthew's, South Carolina in 1942.This is another Ulmer l.p. from around the same period as my previous post.That is- from early in his recording career as a leader.This record features the same line-up as the Music Revelation Ensemble's first l.p,(1981) with the addition

reBlogged from:
A Closet of Curiosities

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

Audience data explodes entertainment fallacy

'The trouble is not that we want entertainment, but that we don't. If audiences truly insisted on nothing but entertainment, the world's theatres would: (a) be completely emptied, once and for all; (b) start delivering much more serious work.'
That observation from theatre and film director Peter Brook is relevant to the RAJAR audience data for UK classical radio stations released today. In the last quarter of 2011 BBC Radio 3's audience decreased by 5.4% against the previous year and continued the downward trend for the station. Everyone, with the exception of the BBC Trust, knows that Radio 3 is broken; so there is no point in going down that path yet again. But it is worth looking at the trend for the total audience for classical radio.

There is now virtually no difference between BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM - they both put entertainment before art, employ the same presenters and sound the same. If the audiences for the two stations are added together we find that the UK audience for classical radio declined year on year by almost half a million, a drop of 6.0%. Which means one of two things: either classical music is declining in popularity or the version of classical music served up by Radio 3/Classic FM is not what listeners want.

Views will differ as to which explanation is correct, but I opt for the latter for two reasons. First there is anecdotal evidence that audiences are flocking to 'difficult' contemporary classical music. Secondly there is factual evidence that audiences want more than entertainment: the same RAJAR data shows that news, speech and drama channel BBC Radio 4, the least dumbed-down UK station, added half a million listeners. Which means the Radio 4 audience grew by 4.8% in the same period that Radio 3/Classic FM's dropped by 6.0% - in fact Radio 4 gained almost exactly the same numbers of listeners as Radio 3/Classic FM lost.

Fortunately it appears that BBC director general Mark Thompson, on whose watch one of the biggest cultural genocides of recent years has taken place, is on the way out. Let's hope his successor reads Peter Brook's The Shifting Point from which my opening quote is taken. Header graphic is Salvador Dali's Queen Salome (1937) and Dali designed Brook's 1949 Covent Garden Salome. A little later Dalí created an opera titled Être Dieu with a score by the avant-garde French composer Igor Wakhévitch. Read about that forgotten opera here.

Also on Facebook and Twitter. Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk

reBlogged from: On An Overgrown Path

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

Prokofiev And The 'Fourth Orange'












The animated short 'Fourth Orange' by director Julia Titova.

YouTube

The animated short 'Fourth Orange' by director Julia Titova.









Earlier this week via a fellow music scribe's blog, I came across a very beautiful animated short about Prokofiev. Director Julia Titova's Fourth Orange is a wistfully brilliant little film now making the film festival rounds. It includes generous doses of Prokofiev's music and imaginative evocations of iconic pictures of the composer.

Utterly entranced by the visuals, I sought help from my Russian-speaking friends — and Inna Barmash, the excellent singer who fronts the band Romashka, generously volunteered to translate while I transcribed. Read on for the translation. The ellipses indicate pauses in the voiceover, not omissions — and any mistakes are entirely mine.


"creditwrap">YouTube





Title: TALES OF AN OLD PIANO

PROKOFIEV: I died the same day as Stalin. Only my relatives and friends attended my funeral.

Title: FOURTH ORANGE — SERGEY PROKOFIEV

I was born in the village of Sontsovka on April 23, 1891. Alexander III was the tsar. Lenin was 21, and Stalin was 11.

When my mother played the 'Moonlight' Sonata, I would ask her to leave the top range for me and I would hammer out little exercises. ...

In the spring, it would rain, and then it would pour, the river would overflow, and the bridge would crumble. ...

When I was five and a half, I figured out a tune and played it a few times, and I learned how to write it down – and the process of writing it down really made an impression on me. ...

When I was eight, my parents took me to Moscow to hear Faust ...

"Mama, I'd like to write my own opera." ...

My teacher, composer and pianist Reinhold Glière, came to the village when I was 11 and he was 28. In the evenings, I would play piano, Glière would play violin, and we would play together. And when I was 13, I was led to audition for the conservatory in St. Petersburg . ...

"Mr. Prokofiev, come in." ...

We see composers Anatoly Lyadov, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Glazunov looming overhead. Rimsky-Korsakov asks, "Are these all your compositions? Sit down and play them." ...

"Mr. Prokofiev, you're admitted." ...

Lyadov asks, "Why are you studying with me? You should go to Paris and study with Claude Debussy."

Rimsky-Korsakov asks, "Why are you listening to Sibelius?" ...

My mood that morning was murky. I was asking myself, 'Why am I here. How did I get here?' I was afraid of a bad outcome in the Anton Rubinstein piano competition." ...

Glazunov says, "The contest winner is Prokofiev."

"The prize is a Schroeder piano." ...

The news of the October Revolution is confusing. Everywhere, there's talk of the Bolshevik uprising. ...

I would like to get some kind of document so I can work and live anywhere I want.

He goes to the bureaucrat's office and says, "I'd like a breath of fresh air."

The bureaucrat replies "We have lots of fresh air here. You are a revolutionary in music, we are revolutionaries in other things. We should work together. But I'll give you the permission you want."...

In New York, I had huge success: six encores. I read about three oranges – pretty awesome. I could do something with that! ...

Nevertheless, I was drawn back to Russia. So I didn't even say goodbye to anyone in New York. I left; I was no longer interested in America. ...

I wasn't used to arriving in Paris from the west. ...

We see him with impresario Sergey Diaghilev, who says, "I'd like to commission a ballet from you."

"Why should I write on a theme that you propose? I don't want to write in a style that you approve."

Diaghilev responds, "Fine, so write in a style that you want."

I couldn't believe my ears. Diaghilev had commissioned me to write a ballet on a Soviet theme. ...

Prokofiev listens to a singing accordionist. "Why the hell am I here and not in Russia? In Russia, it's much more interesting for me." ...

I chose a particularly luxurious train so that no one would feel sorry for the one going back to a Bolshevik country. ...

I had thoughts of turning back. After all, this was an important life decision. As it turned out, in my absence I'd become quite famous. ...

Eisenstein's mastery inspired the creation of music that you could see. ...

One more page, and my symphony will be over.

I died on the same day as Stalin, and only my relatives and friends attended my funeral.



!-- END CLASS="STORY" -->
D CLASS="POSTCONTENT" -->


Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.


reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

Orphion Makes the iPad More Instrumental, Expressive; Watch it Meet Moogerfoogers


Design, and investigation in general, thrive on a challenge. So Bastus Trump, working with none other than Monolake co-founder and Ableton imagineer Robert Henke, took on the call to make the blank glass of an iPad behave more as an instrument might. The results, filling that screen with overlapping circles, are impressive, exploiting continuous touch movements to make pitch gestures that are more difficult on a piano-style keyboard. But it’s even nicer to see digital fuse with analog and timbral transformation as the app, Orphion, meets the more traditional Moog Moogerfooger effects.


Bastus writes CDM:


Orphion's interface was developed especially for a touch screen and allows very expressive — and also virtuosic — playing. You can choose between different layouts of tonally-tuned pads, which sound differently depending on the finger position when played, and can be modulated by further movements. The sound and the means of interaction is a mixture of string and percussion instruments and reaches from soft to plucked to a hard slap.


The concept of the Orphion results from my master thesis at UdK Berlin supervised by Robert Henke (aka monolake). The topic was to develop an interface for multi-touch screens that allows a maximum of expression.


So, you can see a quick demo of how it’s played. But just how would this fit into your studio? For the answer to that question, we turn to our friend Chris Stack and his excellent Experimental Synth series.



In this episode:


Playing the Orphion iPad app through a Moog MF-102 Ring Modulator and MF-104Z Analog Delay. Moogerfooger parameters are controlled with the Moog Voyager Touch Surface CV outputs.


experimentalsynth.com


Thanks for the great work, Bastus. We’ll be watching.


iPad only; download the app or provide your own review on our exclusive Apps section:

http://apps.createdigitalmusic.com/apps/orphion


Oh, yeah. About that. Announcement coming shortly. Consider yourself with the scoop by virtue of having read to the end of this article.




reBlogged from: Create Digital Music

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

A Monster Frankenstein Controller, with Fur Keys and Borg-Like Eyepiece, Built by Julie Covello


Photo by Nina Mouritzen; courtesy Julie Covello/Shakey.

In an explosion of color, buttons, keys, velcro, and fur, and coupled with a cyborg-chic eyepiece, the VoltAxe is controllerism gone Mad Max, a post-acocalyptic keytar bred from salvaged parts. And if you want to make a unique construction of your own, creator Julie Covello – aka New York’s DJ Shakey – is willing to tell all her secrets, as well as why this was important to her music.


In modeling (the basement hobby variety, not the skinny fashionista one), “kitbashing” is the act of combining bits of multiple kits to produce one finished whole. Some custom new controllers are following a similar route, taking the best bits of, say, a keyboard and a Novation Launchpad, and going a bit nuts. Julie’s work deserves special mention not only because it takes that technique to an extreme, but it couples it with a heads-up, hands-free video display to keep feedback from the computer visible without being a distraction.


Julie tells us all the details:


The VoltAxe controller was created as part of my artist-in-residency at the Clocktower Gallery in New York City, made possible with support from the Jerome Foundation. I named my residency “Dj Shakey’s Audio Control Adventure” and wrote a pseudo-blog on Facebook.


To me, exploring Controllerism means trying to make my performance easier, more creative, and more dynamic. I did quite a bit of general research during this project, but with the performance controller, I focused on making a system that allowed me to walk around, not look at the controller, not look at my laptop (remove the barrier between

me and the audience and / or my bandmates), and have maximum flexibility and spontaneity with the sounds I was manipulating.


I had about 5 weeks to work, and I wanted a finished product that I could perform with, so I followed up on simpler solutions and left the hardcore hacking and studying for another time. I was also planning a huge finale party with 23 music and projection artists performing in multiple rooms, so that was on my plate as well.


Here’s a description of the final controller system…

I use Ableton Live — the way I perform, I want to see the laptop screen so I can pick clips at random to suit my mood. I don’t want to memorize my set and I don’t want to stare at my laptop screen either, so the solution was creating an eyepiece that shows my laptop screen within it. To build this I got help from VJ DoctorMojo aka Mark Alan

Johnson of Mojo Video Tech, Inc.. We experimented with a number of hacks, repurposing components extracted from the viewfinders of old camcorders. These experiments yeilded a number of functional miniature low-voltage displays, however these units were all black-and-white and a color image was what I needed. Very long story short, the final solution was to buy a pair of Vuzix

personal video glasses
(US$250), flip them upside down and attach ONE screen to a regular pair of glasses so that only one of my eyes is looking at the screen and the other eye is looking out into the world. What I see with both eyes open is my laptop screen floating in the air on top of what I normally see. It’s amazing how easy this is to use!



Photo by Mojo; courtesy Julie Covello/Shakey.

There was more to do to make this work:

1. I had to run the output of my computer to a scan converter ($100) about the size of a cigarette pack and then run a wire to the little box that manages the glasses, adapters and cables were required.


2. I had to power the glasses, so that meant making the power cable about 10 feet longer so it could be plugged in while I walked around.


3. The image in the glasses was upside-down, since the unit was mounted upside-down (to avoid my nose!), so I rotated it 180 degrees via my Mac OS preferences.


4. The cursor size was too small, so I enlarged it with the Mac’s “Universal Access” preferences.


5. The image of my laptop screen was pretty low resolution, so low that I couldnt read any of the clip names, I referred to the Universal Access preferences to determine key commands for zoom in and zoom out and then programmed

my mouse keys to do the shortcut keys for these functions. Zoom out and I can see levels and stuff; zoom in and I can read type. I also fooled around with the screen resolution so it would be as clear as possible.


Speaking of the mouse, I did more research on the mouse than anything else! I wanted to attach it to my controller, which I was planning on hanging over my shoulders like a keytar. It had to have basic mouse functions AND I wanted buttons that could be programmed to do a series of keystrokes with one touch. There were some pretty cool mice on websites for the handicapped, but they were either absurdly expensive or they didn’t have all the functionality I wanted. I ended up using the one I had on my desk, the Kensington Expert Pro Turbo Trackball. I’ve had several over the years and I love them. They don’t make them any more, so they are hard to get and costly. (US$150 – 300) Also, the trackball is not secured in the socket. I basically just duct-taped this to my controller backing, and secured the trackball (with help from Mojo) with a piece of silver solder and a rubber band so it could move freely but securely. The mouse comes with programming software and I programmed the buttons to do — whatever I wanted!


The controller backing is 3/4 foam board ($5). I need this thing to be light! It is solid and doesn’t flex at all. I attached a number of controllers to this backing, a Novation Launchpad (triggering clips, punching clips in and out), Korg nanoPAD 2 (fx, samples), Korg nanoKONTROL 2 (mixing, fx), and two Vmeters (fx). I also messed around with a Keith McMillen Softstep foot controller which I like a lot and am still incorporating into the set-up. All of these run into a “Plugable” -brand 10-input powered USB hub on the back of the unit. I had to add a 12-foot usb extension to reach my laptop, as well as extending the power brick cable. All these long cables were bound into a single cable sleeve running to the laptop and power strip.

tp://createdigitalmusic.com/files/2012/02/covellorooftop.jpg">
A controllerist on the roof … sounds crazy, no? Trying to scratch out a pleasant, simple tune without breaking her neck looking at her laptop. It isn’t easy. You might ask, why do we stay up there? Are we checking our email? That I can answer in a single word: improvisation! Photo by Nina Mouritzen; courtesy Julie Covello/Shakey.

In an effort to use the controllers without looking at them, I added textures to many of the keys so I could find them by touch (velcro, rubber, fur). I covered up the keys that I had no plan to use so I wouldn’t hit them by accident. I divided the Launchpad up into 4×4 quandrants with miniature wire and ductape ridges. I’m still adapting to this set-up.


After the whole thing was put together, I hung it from a strap I grabbed off a gear case I had in the room. It took some trial and error to determine where to place the ends of the straps on the controller so that it would hang properly and my hands reached all the controls comfortably. I spent some time with the prototype attaching and re-attaching items until everything was in the right place before cutting out the foam board into the final shape. At this time, everything is attached with checkered duct tape from Home Depot; soon I will upgrade this to velcro (but keep the checkers as

decoration!).


The VoltAxe was ready to test play at midnight the day before the huge event where I was going to perform! Thanks to

Moldover and Mojo, who were with me doing ongoing troubleshooting, configuring went quickly and I was able to rehearse for a few hours and pull it together just in time! At the show, everything went as planned and I couldn’t have been happier – it was

so much fun! I can’t wait to evolve this set-up! My next move is to make it mobile and take it to the subway station to do some busking.


More information:

DJ Shakey : Clocktower Artist-In-Residency as written up by the video whiz behind the project, Mojo


Radio interview, talking DJing, “controllerism,” producing, and complete with remixes and original music from Shakey:

DJ Culture: DJ Shakey, The Illustrated Interview


If you like the project and want to see it developed more, you can also vote for it on Artists Wanted


track with the controller in action:

Minor schwing by FreebassBK


Thanks, Julie!




reBlogged from: Create Digital Music

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

A folk-inspired evening with Bridget Kibbey at Le Poisson Rouge

“Who’s ever been to a harp recital?” A couple of hands were shyly raised. “And who’s ever been to a harp recital in a club?” Bridget Kibbey had, in a few words, set the tone for the evening. Kibbey is one of the most talented harpists of her generation and her friendly, solar personality was ...

reBlogged from:
I care if you listen(.com)

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

From the Reading Journal, #12

“B. F Boeve and Y. E. Geda described another patient with frontotemporal dementia who developed a consuming passion for polka music.”


-Oliver Sacks, “Musicophilia”





reBlogged from: Secret Geometry - James Primosch's blog

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 PM

The Monastery Service


Sound Clip: The Monastery Service/The Sound of the Wind by Margarita Zelenaia


In “The Monastery Service/The Sound of The Wind” actually the story of an eye-witness is the basis for this chant: “The liturgy in the summer cathedral astonished me with the unusual loftiness of the monastery service; the chants being sung were ancient, lingering, wind-like. At first, when you are trying to listening in, your hearing is almost insulted by the unusual rough monotony of the harmony, the strangeness of the rhythm. But then you are so absorbed by this truly monastic, passionless chanting that everything you hear is united into one harmonious whole, focusing your attention on the very spirit of the prayer.”


More on this artist


reBlogged from: Sound is Art

on Feb 2, 2012 at 02:00 PM

The Difference Between the Music Industry & The Recording Industry

(This was originally posted on Think Like a Label on January 16, 2012)


After publishing Why You Should Give Your Music Away for Free here on Music Think Tank, I have been inundated with articles, comments, and other assorted replies decrying that the new digital music business models are killing the music industry. It got me thinking about a crucial distinction that is being overlooked, and the consequences of doing so are preventing many from seeing the opportunities that are abound. It boils down to one main concept.


The Music Industry is different than the Recording Industry, and these terms should not be used interchangeably. 


Allow me to explain.


The Music Industry is a huge, overarching behemoth that includes all kinds of different smaller industries. For example:



  • Recording

  • Licensing

  • Touring & Live

  • Merchandise

  • Print & Web Design

  • Publishing

  • Marketing, Advertising & Public Relations

  • Video Production

  • Magazines & Newspapers

  • Instrument Design & Manufacturing

  • Music Hardware & Software


These are just the ones off the top of my head…I could go on if I kept thinking about it. The bottom line is that any business that is involved in music in any way can be considered part of the music industry. If you are a graphic designer who spends their time designing album art, or a bus driver who drives tour busses all over the country, then you are in the music industry.


The Record Industry is just one small subset of this larger “music industry.” Within the business world, it’s known as a vertical. The record industry is in the business of making money off the recordings of music. That is why the companies who participate are called “Record Labels.” They sell records, i.e. recordings. You may have heard of the RIAA, a political lobby whose mission it is to protect the major record labels. Notice that its called the RIAA – the Recording Industry Association of America. They are not called the Music Industry Association of America. That’s because they represent only a small subset of the industry as a whole.


It is critical to make the distinction between these two terms. Mind you, I am by no means the first person to bring this to light. But too many people are crying about the death of the music industry lately, and I wanted to remind everyone that the sky is not falling. The Music Industry as a whole is fine. There is a new wave of innovative business models that take into account the new economic realities of the industry. It is the Recording Industry that is in trouble, and without some serious innovation by the interested parties, it’s likely to get worse for them.


Jeremy Belcher is the Editor of Think Like a Label, a magazine for musicians & their people. Prior to that, he co-founded FoxyMelody Digital Distribution in 2005, one of the first companies that distributed independent music to the online music services (which we shut down this year). You can follow him on Twitter @thinklikealabel or visit Think Like a Label


reBlogged from: Music Think Tank (primary) RSS

on Feb 2, 2012 at 01:00 PM

What price a classical radio presenter?


New York Magazine's 'What Do You Get Just for Showing Up? An appearance-fee pecking order' can usefully be extended to classical music. A noticeable appearance-fee beneficiary is the BBC's self-styled 'Prom Queen' and 'Maestro' star Katie Derham whose recent Tweets include "Sofya Gulyuk tickling ivories v effectively right now on @bbcradio3 Rach 3. Beautiful". In addition to a reported salary of £250,000 Ms Derham will just show up for corporate and public sector clients for a fee of "£5k - £10k" per appearance. Katie Derham is positioned as the BBC's 'face of the Proms' and the BBC Proms are subsidised by the public via the TV license fee to the tune of around £75,000 for each concert. Others benefit from appearance-fees more clandestinely, but it's all part of classical music's celebrity economy.

Also on Facebook and Twitter. Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk



reBlogged from: On An Overgrown Path

on Feb 2, 2012 at 12:00 PM

DC’s Exploding Piano

As I alluded in an earlier post, Washington, D.C.’s new music scene has been exploding lately.  Part of that explosion comes courtesy of Kathleen Supove, who on Tuesday will be performing one of her “Exploding Piano” programs at the new music series at the Atlas Performing Arts Center (full disclosure: I’m that series’ curator).  In anticipation of this event, I’ve asked Kathy to write a few words about her program:



When Armando Bayolo asked me to perform on his New Music Series at the Atlas Theater in Washington D.C., I immediately thought: what am I going to play at the NATION’S CAPITAL? …the place that’s home to the Smithsonian, the Kennedy Center Honors, and the place from which we all imagine sending time capsules to other planets.


Something I’m proud of is having commissioned more than a few stellar pieces that  could take their places in the 21st Century piano repertory. Particularly, I would cite the multimedia works, with  sound tracks and, sometimes, video.  Not only are they great virtuosic vehicles with all those challenges and rewards, but they have soundtracks that are original, evocative, and infectious. Send them to the moon!!


Also, I saw this as a time to REPRESENT: it’s an America that is about quilting as well as about Steve Reich’s “Different Trains”, about Quaker revival meetings as well as the Metropolitan Opera. I wanted things that reflected the American musical language in some way, and I also wanted to reflect the American sense of humor.


Here’s the program:


“Isabelle Eberhardt Dreams of Pianos” by Missy Mazzoli


“The Same Sky” by Carolyn Yarnell


“On Track” by Anna Clyne


“What Remains of a Rembrandt” by Randall Woolf


“Digits” by Neil Rolnick


You can’t find a better example of the American vernacular crafted into art music than Missy’s piece; Carolyn’s piece is quite simply one of the best piano works of the last 20 years. Anna Clyne may have been born in London, but here she demonstrates a truly American sense of humor and appropriation of found sounds; Neil’s piece exhibits all of the above with an American aesthetic that perhaps finds it roots in Scott Joplin and other early ragtime artists.


These are not the only pieces that I love and am proud to program, but they certainly represent a kind of hit parade for me. But I also wanted something new. What fun is performing without that? Here’s where Randall Woolf’s piece came in. Full disclosure: he’s my husband. He hadn’t written a piece for me in a decade, but did so this fall. It was premiered two weeks ago in Florida (a commission by New Music New College), and I wanted to add it to the mix. The piece is part of a large project on which I’m embarking called Digital Debussy, in which composers create works that either subject Debussy fragments to modern electronic processes or, in some way, realize a 21st century Debussy. Randy is one of those maverick Americans, who is always pushing his and the world’s envelope a little. I knew he wouldn’t disappoint on this.


I can’t wait to see what the audience in Washington D.C. will be like. I’m pretty sure they won’t be bored. Now, to figure out what I’ll wear and what I’ll say…….


-KS



 


reBlogged from: Sequenza21/

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 AM

in search of comfort

We musicians accept that there’s a certain amount of discomfort involved in playing our instruments. Whether it’s blisters for cellists doing a lot of pizzicato, repetitive motion stress for pianists, wrist problems for flutists, shoulder and neck pain for violinists, the list goes on and on.


What we don’t quite accept is that this leads to a fair amount of injury. There’s a great deal of avoidance of the topic, as if it might be cancer or mental illness. In conservatory, getting injured is viewed as a consequence of improper technique. In the professional world, it is seen as a career-killer. This stigma on playing-related injuries is apparent in the strange and alternative ways we often deal with them. Where an injured athlete would seek a sports-medicine doctor or physical therapist, a musician will enlist the help of an acupuncturist or a Reiki practitioner.


My own journey on the violin and piano has involved a good bit of pain and injury. I ignored an injury to my right hand, practicing through the pain until I couldn’t use my hand for six months. In college my left shoulder became so inflamed that I couldn’t even touch it without searing pain. Two months after joining the opera orchestra in DC, I had to have cortisone shots in my neck and shoulder to keep playing.


I’ve had years of Alexander Technique, Feldenkrais, acupuncture, and yes, even Reiki. I’ve also endured electric shock therapy (just on my arm) and plenty of psychotherapy. For a long time I was convinced that I was doing something fundamentally wrong on the violin. I would compare myself to so-and-so, who has never been injured – what does he know that I don’t? No shoulder rest, a higher shoulder rest, wrist vibrato, arm vibrato, higher chinrest, flatter chinrest – I tried every combination possible and spent a lot of time and money in my search for the Holy Grail of injury-prevention.


my collection of chinrests and shoulder rests


The lesson I’ve learned through all this is that there are two truths that we must face.


Truth #1: it’s possible to do everything right and still get injured. Playing an instrument is athletic, and spending many hours a day doing it is tough on muscles, tendons, and ligaments.


Truth #2: what I do with my body when I’m not practicing is almost more important than what I do while practicing.


After all, I really only practice for a couple hours a day. I spend a lot more time slumped in front of the computer. Even so, I treat my body as an athlete would. The better shape my entire body is in, the better able I am to deal with the demands of playing the violin. This is working so far. Strength training keeps my shoulder girdle and back strong so things stay in the right place whether I’m playing violin or checking my email. And when something hurts, I treat it and stop using it if need be.


my pain treatment arsenal


Have I stopped searching for the Holy Grail? Of course not. Even though I’m not in pain now, I just started seeing a chiropractor three times a week. I’ve ditched my shoulder rest and am currently trying out an arsenal of chinrests loaned to me by the violin setup guru Andrew McCann, who uses a custom chinrest built for him.


Andrew's monolithic chinrest


I might get one built for myself. But I’m no longer under any illusions that a certain chinrest or shoulder rest is the key to never getting injured. While I can make playing the violin more comfortable to a point, I accept that it is inherently an awkward endeavor – the only magic fix is to quit.


reBlogged from: thirteen ways

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 AM

Grouper Takes Dead Moon’s “Demona” Literally


Grouper has covered an old punk-rock song. Grouper has channeled has an old punk-rock song into something akin to a deep drone. Grouper has accomplished this task not by undermining the original but, in fact, showing it deep respect — by, in essence, taking the song’s lyrics literally, especially the lines about how the title figure “comes in shallow light and disappears” and, later, the cryptic vision of a “silent chamber.” The song, “Demona” by Dead Moon, is in her rendering (Grouper is one person: Liz Harris) a deeply fuzzed out figment, less a song than the song equivalent of the illusion of water that results from hot tarmac being viewed at a distance on a sunny day. The melody and chord structure and overall shape are retained, but they’re produced in a way that makes the term “shoegaze” insufficient — this is “shoehaze” or “shoedrone” or “songdrone” or what-does-it-matter because trying to place the song in a tidy box is very much at odds with the ephemeral quality of the sound that it aspires to (MP3). It sounds like you’re hearing it through a thick wall. It isn’t wall-of-sound; it’s wall-as-filter.



Download audio file (Demona.mp3)

The track was made available for free download by Yeti, the magazine in whose latest issue it appears as part of an enclosed 7″ (along with three other songs, apparently not available for free promotional download).


Found via xlr8r.com and thefader.com. More on Grouper at her site. The original can be heard on youtube.com. It is redolent with a particular quality of guitar playing, one that is at once lackadaisical and jarring, and is distinct to a certain realm of non-hardcore punk




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Feb 2, 2012 at 04:00 AM

Miscellany: Mostly Carnegie

The major musical event of the winter/spring season, as I see it, is the San Francisco Symphony's American Mavericks Festival, variously at home, in Ann Arbor and Chicago, and at Carnegie Hall. In addition to four brilliantly programmed MTT/SFS programs...

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Feb 2, 2012 at 02:00 AM

Hilary and Jennifer

Hilary Hahn is at it again, working her way through chats with all of the composers commissioned for her “In 27 Pieces” collection of encores. This time up it’s a bright, young up-and-comer by the name of Jennifer Higdon (OK, maybe not quite so young, and maybe she’s pretty much arrived, but she’s still pretty darn bright!)


Click here to view the embedded video.


 


reBlogged from: Sequenza21/

on Feb 2, 2012 at 01:00 AM

Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival Announces Its 25th Anniversary Season, with New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia and Dallas Symphony Orchestras in Residence

From the heart of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, the Bravo! Vail Valley Music Festival announces its 25th anniversary season, which runs for seven weeks from June 25 to August 4. Celebrated pianist Anne-Marie McDermott returns for a second term as artistic director, and once again the Vail Music Festival boasts not one but three world-class resident orchestras: the New York Philharmonic, returning under music director Alan Gilbert for its tenth summer; The Philadelphia Orchestra, whose new music director designate Yannick Nézet-Séguin makes his Vail Music Festival debut; and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and its music director, Jaap van Zweden, Musical America’s Conductor of the Year 2012.



Programming highlights for this landmark season include numerous Festival premieres; multi-event immersions in the art of Brahms, Mendelssohn, and Gershwin; a series juxtaposing time-honored classics with trailblazing new music; plus chamber music, jazz, and pops galore. New York’s Gabriel Kahane returns for an encore performance of his 2011 Festival commission, while the Cantus Vocal Ensemble and Jasper String Quartet serve as 2012’s Young-Professionals-in-Residence. An impressive guest-star roster presents more than 30 soloists, including pianists Yefim Bronfman, Kirill Gerstein, and Benjamin Grosvenor; violinists Joshua Bell, James Ehnes, and Jennifer Koh; cellist Alisa Weilerstein; vocalists Susanna Phillips, Curtis Stigers, and Tracy Dahl; and electric guitarist/composer Steven Mackey. Ensembles include the Calder Quartet, Tiempo Libre, and Opus One, and guest conductors number Andrey Boreyko, Stéphane Denève, Bramwell Tovey, and Jeff Tyzik among them. As before, chamber concerts will be held in the intimate Vail Mountain School and Vilar Performing Arts Center in Beaver Creek, while large-scale concerts take place in Vail’s spectacular Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater, which accommodates 1,260 guests in covered seating and an additional 1,300 on the expansive grassy hillside, with its breathtaking view of the Rocky Mountains.






reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 2, 2012 at 01:00 AM

Make your Valentine's Dreams Come True with Two Colorado Symphony Concerts


Jim Brickman, America's platinum-selling piano sensation, brings pure romance to the Colorado Symphony stage; Scott O'Neil and the Colorado Symphony celebrate Valentine Classics


A Jim Brickman Valentine

Artists: Colorado Symphony Orchestra

Scott O'Neil, resident conductor

Jim Brickman, piano

Anne Cochran, vocalist

Benjamin Utecht, vocalist

Tracy Silverman, electric violinist



Performance Date: Friday, February 10 at 7:30 p.m.



Tickets: Remaining tickets currently start at $42.





Valentine Classics

Artists: Colorado Symphony Orchestra

Scott O'Neil, conductor

Yumi Hwang-Williams, violin



Program includes: TCHAIKOVSKY: Selections from Swan Lake

BIZET: Selections from Carmen

DEBUSSY: Clair de Lune



Performance Date: Saturday, February 11 at 7:30 p.m.



Tickets: Remaining tickets currently start at $19.





This Valentine's Day, love is in the air as the Colorado Symphony presents a Valentine's duet of unabashedly romantic concerts featuring American piano sensation Jim Brickman on Friday, February 10, and shining the spotlight on wistful yet passionate classics with the Colorado Symphony on Saturday, February 11. The perfect gift to enjoy with someone you love, tickets for both concerts are on sale now. This Valentine's, escape into the world of beautiful music!



Platinum-selling pianist Jim Brickman joins the Colorado Symphony on Friday, February 10, offering Denver concertgoers the ideal way to celebrate the most romantic of holidays. Brickman, whose signature style has brought him six Gold and Platinum albums, 30 charted adult radio hits, and two Grammy® nominations, is best-known for compositions such as his chart-toppers “Valentine,” “The Gift,” “Love of My Life,” “Simple Things” and “Peace.”



Since the release of his debut album No Words in 1994, Brickman’s romantic piano sound has made him the best-selling solo piano artist of our time. In November 2011, Brickman released Romanza, a collection of Italian-inspired original love songs that offer the perfect landscape for his Colorado Symphony concert.



On Saturday, February 11, resident conductor Scott O'Neil leads the Colorado Symphony in Valentine Classics: an evening of pure escapism highlighting the repertoire's most amorous music, with a dash of intensely passionate classics. Featured on the program are selections from one of the world's most popular ballets, Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake, as well as selections from Bizet's sizzling and exotic opera, Carmen. This optimistic program also features a beloved orchestral gem, Debussy's Clair de Lune, which recently established a place in the hearts of younger generations when it was performed by vampire Edward Cullen in the hit film Twilight.



Remarkably, neither Swan Lake nor Carmen were initial successes. Today, Swan Lake is recognized as one of Tchaikovsky's greatest achievements. Tragically, the composer died in 1893 believing the ballet score was a miserable failure. It took 15 years from its premiere to a re-staging in 1895 for the world to realize the genius and sweeping musical beauty of Swan Lake. For Bizet's Carmen, the initial critical reception was equally icy. Deplored by critics at its 1875 premiere, theatre managers were driven to giving away tickets in order to avoid humiliating empty houses. Bizet died several months later at the young age of 36, never knowing that Carmen would eventually become one of the world's most venerated operas.



More than 110 years later, audiences around the world continue their love affair with these great works, perhaps drawing a little skepticism to the theory of "love at first sight" as it applies to new orchestral works. This Valentine's, the Colorado Symphony's Valentine Classics concert on Saturday, February 11 offers concertgoers the chance to re-connect with these masterworks while re-igniting their own love affair with music.



Tickets: Tickets are on sale now at
www.coloradosymphony.org, the Colorado Symphony Box Office: (303) 623-7876 or (877) 292-7979 or in-person in the lobby of Boettcher Concert Hall in the Denver Performing Arts Complex. Hours are Monday to Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.





reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 2, 2012 at 01:00 AM

February 01, 2012

Gayby at SXSW

On a personal note, I'm ecstatically happy to say that Gayby, the feature-length directorial debut by my husband, Jonathan Lisecki, has been selected to play at the SXSW Film Festival. I have a tiny cameo in the movie, as does...

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Feb 1, 2012 at 11:00 PM

Talk Like An Opera Geek: Musical Signposts









(Talk Like An Opera Geek attempts to decode the intriguing and intimidating lexicon of the opera house.)


Know your rallentando from your accelerando? Opera singers must follow the composer's musical road signs.

iStock

Know your rallentando from your accelerando? Opera singers must follow the composer's musical road signs.






cs like speed limits to STOP, YIELD and KEEP RIGHT, traffic signs tell us how to navigate the road ahead. The same is true for opera singers. Their roadmap is the composer's score, and in it lie plenty of explicit directions (usually in Italian) on how to drive a voice or any other instrument through any given stretch of music.

This week, buckle up for a brief tour past a few of the dozens and dozens of musical road signs, with examples from some of opera's greatest chauffeurs.

Have a bit of operatic jargon that confuses or delights? Let us know in the comments section.



Hear The Musical Roadsigns



Mozart's Marriage of Figaro.

Staccato




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  • Artist: Nikolaus Harnoncourt

  • Album: Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro Highlights

  • Song: Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro), opera, K. 492 Act 1. Se vuol ballare




Think of staccato as a bumpy road, but with each bump clearly delineated. Staccato comes from the Italian "detached," meaning that notes should be articulated cleanly and completely separate from one another. In Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, the cavatina "Se vuol ballare" finds Figaro alone and feisty, talking trash about his boss. Figaro sings: "If, my dear Count, you feel like dancing, it is I who will call the tune." Notice how each note is shaped by baritone Thomas Hampson.





 


Bizet's Carmen.

Legato




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  • Artist: Giuseppe Sinopoli

  • Album: Bizet: Carmen Highlights

  • Song: Carmen, opera Act 1. Près des remparts de Séville




The opposite of staccato is legato — a very smooth road indeed. The word refers to being "bound" in Italian. The singer's job here is to connect each note seamlessly, phrasing the music in a flowing, apparently effortless style. Breath control is key, in that it should sound as if the singer never takes a breath. The sinuous opening notes of the "Seguidilla" from Bizet's Carmen need to pour forth easily, as mezzo-soprano Jennifer Larmore displays in this example.





 


Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov.

Accelerando




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  • Artist: Mstislav Rostropovich

  • Album: Moussorgski: Boris Godounov

  • Song: Boris Godunov, opera Act 2. Mon fils, mon cher enfant!




There are times when you need to step on the gas, as it were — that would be an accelerando. It comes from the Italian, "quickening." The direction here is to pick up the speed, often over several bars of music. In this example, baritone Ruggiero Raimondi, as the title character in Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov, sings about the "splendor of unlimited power" in one relaxed tempo, then makes an accelerando as he begins to fret about "secret underhanded plotting." The speed gradually quickens like a racing heartbeat.





 


Verdi's Otello.

Rallentando




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  • Artist: Mario del Monaco

  • Album: Giuseppe Verdi: Otello

  • Song: Otello, opera Act 4. Piangea cantando nell'erma landa




Rallentando is the opposite of accelerando. It means applying the breaks, with the word in Italian referring to gradually slowing down. Back in the 18th century they often used the term lentando, and even today there are a number of directions that mean roughly the same thing, the closest being ritardando, and also ritenuto, which generally implies a more sudden slowdown. Near the end of Verdi's Otello, Desdemona (soprano Renata Tebaldi in this excerpt) sings her haunting "Willow Song." Note the slight crescendo (see below) on the word "amarlo" in the opening phrase, and then a smooth slowdown on the words "e per morir" (and to die) — a portent of what awaits her in the opera's final scene.





 


Angela Gheorghiu's Puccini Arias.

Crescendo and Decrescendo




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  • Artist: Angela Gheorghiu

  • Album: Puccini includes Bonus Disc

  • Song: Manon Lescaut, opera Act 4. Sola, perduta, abbandonata




Crescendo comes from the Italian crescere (to grow), and in this case we're talking about growing louder. Decrescendo (or diminuendo) is the opposite. There are various ways to turn up the volume: crescendo il forte means simply get louder, while crescendo sin'al forte requires an increase to the dynamic level marked "forte." The precision and sculpting of the crescendo is also an important factor. At the end of Puccini's Manon Lescaut, the heroine, played here by soprano Angela Gheorghiu, is suffering and near death (of course, it's Puccini!). After she sings "Io la deserta donna (I'm a deserted woman), the crescendo comes on the phrase "Ah, non voglio morir" (I do not want to die), and the volume increases with each note up to a B-flat. Afterward, a decrescendo on the second "morir."





 



!-- END CLASS="CONTAINER PLAYLIST" ID="CON146203479" PREVIEWTITLE="PLAYLIST" -->





"fullattribution">Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.



reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Feb 1, 2012 at 09:00 PM

Investing in Creativity: The “Investing Less Time in Reading” Version

by Katherine Gressel


This is a shortened version of my Arts Policy Library article on Investing in Creativity.


Investing in Creativity: A Study of the Support Structures for U.S. Artists (2003), an Urban Institute publication authored by Maria-Rosario Jackson, Florence Kabwasa-Green, Daniel Swenson, Joaquin Herranz, Jr., Kadija Ferryman, Caron Atlas, Eric Wallner, and Carole Rosenstein, sheds light on the economic and employment situation of individual artists in the United States following the cessation of NEA funding to individual artists in 1995.  The report reflected several years of research, which included interviews with artists with arts leaders in nine cities, a national poll on attitudes towards artists, and expansion and analysis of a new NYFA Source database, in partnership with the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA).


Investing distinguishes itself by “providing a new and comprehensive framework for analysis and action, which views the support structure for artists in the United States as a system made up of six key dimensions of the environment in which an artist works:”



  1. Validation: The ascription of value to what artists do.

  2. Demand/markets: Society’s appetite for artists and what they do, and the markets that translate this appetite into financial compensation.

  3. Material supports: Access to the financial and physical resources artists need for their work: employment, insurance and similar benefits, awards, space, equipment, and materials.

  4. Training and professional development: Conventional and lifelong learning opportunities.

  5. Communities and networks: Inward connections to other artists and people in the cultural sector; outward connections to people not primarily in the cultural sector.

  6. Information: Data sources about artists and for artists.


This is a helpful framework for further research on artists’ conditions in any given region, and also marked a new understanding that it is not be enough to simply restore cuts to funding for artists.


Some especially salient findings and recommendations in the report are as follows:



  1. Individual artists are undervalued by society, in comparison to art itself. Artists’ societal contributions are not well understood, documented, or publicized—but if they were, it might be easier to make the case for allocating resources to individual artists.

  2. Individual artists feel overshadowed and neglected by large urban institutions, and are frequently left out of arts-based urban planning initiatives.

  3. There is a perceived inequality of opportunities for artists (such as exhibitions or awards programs) based on factors such as race/ethnicity, and art form.

  4. An artist’s career spans multiple markets and disciplines: this is especially important when assessing artists’ needs.

  5. Many artists face the economic uncertainties of irregular employment, lack of health insurance, and lack of affordable work or living space.

  6. Training in the practical side of working in the arts, and in specialized or hybrid fields like arts education/community work, is limited. Training should be expanded and diversified.

  7. Grants and awards need to be more accessible, equitable, and relevant for artists. An “information clearinghouse” with data on resources, and the capacity to support further research, would be helpful.

  8. Various arts organizations, arts councils, and artist networks are meeting some of these artists’ needs described above, but these organizations need strengthening.

  9. It is also important to cultivate stronger networks of people from both arts and non-arts fields advocating for artists’ needs.


Investing was commissioned by the Ford Foundation and supported by consortium of 37 other funders, some of whom were committed to acting upon the findings of the research. Therefore, the study is notable for having led directly to the development of several concrete initiatives to increase support for artists:



  1. A new NYFA Source online database allowing artists and other users to access customized, up-to-the-minute information on awards in all arts disciplines 24 hours a day

  2. The Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC) initiative, a ten-year national initiative to improve the conditions for artists working in all disciplines. LINC funds, researches, and aggregates information about three core areas identified as key artist needs in the report: Creative Communities, Artist Space, and Health Insurance for Artists.

  3. Investing is also cited in the development of the United States Artists (USA) grant making program, which gives unrestricted $50,000 grants to artists in all disciplines.   


Investing in Creativity did raise several critical questions for me: first of all, whether it is problematic to build a case for increased support for individual artists so heavily on the idea that artists benefit society, when there was little research to back up this claim.  I also believe that Investing pinpoints many challenges in the employment system for artists, yet never suggests that an entirely new system is needed. Instead, the implication is that conditions for artists can be improved through better information-gathering, networking, and training.


Whether or not the fundamental situation for artists has changed significantly since this report’s publication, Investing at least paves the way for more dramatic changes by suggesting ways in which the existing nonprofit sector can be better equipped to meet artists’ needs.


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reBlogged from: Createquity.

on Feb 1, 2012 at 08:00 PM

Across the Universe: Mind-Blowing AV Performance Makes Music a Spacey Trip


Turning music and sound into three-dimensional worlds often yields something that fields like a trip through space. But this feels like a real trip. Through pulsing, glowing starfields, “Versum”‘s audiovisual movements are brain-bendingly transformative. Artist Tarik Barri has created an integrated world of sound and image that makes the interface and the compositional realms seamless. It seems as though this really is a musical universe, through whose harmonies of the spheres you can fly like. Boldly going, indeed.


Ingredients: Max/MSP/Jitter, Processing, Java, SuperCollider, GLSL the 3D shading language , and … some serious skill and time, I imagine.


The work has been in development for some years (not surprisingly, given the results). But it surfaced again as we brought up the 3Dconnexion SpaceNavigator hardware as a practical controller for 3D. See Create Digital Motion:

Look at Me, I’m Flying: SpaceNavigator Hardware + Blender


Tarik’s work resurfaced after a presentation in the UK. Reader janklug writes:


I’m just back from the M4_u Max/MSP/Jitter conference in Leicester (was great, btw), where Tarik Barri presented his project ‘Versum’, both as an installation and as a performance.

The user (and in case of the performance, Tarik) navigates through this incredible 3D-space-sequencer-universum with the help of a SpaceNavigator; glowing objects floating in this space produce sound, and as you approach them, they even give this nice doppler effect…

It was totally amazing to be able to float between pulsing rhythm-planet-objects and shiny drone-beams; navigation was easy and natural. Tarik uses a combination of Processing and Max/MSP; don’t know which one the SpaceNavigator is connected to.

Having tried this, I immediately ordered one; I think it also could be a great interface for M4L…


More information:

http://tarikbarri.nl/projects/versum

PDF documentation 2009


Significantly, it’s really the act of flying that controls the music. That remains interactive, but it’s the movement through the three-dimensional space that determines what you hear. As the artist explains:


This virtual world is seen and heard from the viewpoint of a moving virtual camera with virtual microphones attached. This camera, controlled in realtime by means of a joystick (or any other kind of controller) moves through space, similar to how first person shooter games work. Within this space, I place objects that can be both seen and heard, and like in reality, the closer the camera is to them, the louder you hear them. So when the camera moves past several visual objects, you simultaneously hear several sounds fading in and out. Consequently, the way the camera travels past them actually causes melodies and compositional structures to be seen and heard.


The visual position of each object coincides with the panning of its sound: objects to the right of the camera will also be heard on the right, and those behind the camera will be heard from behind in case a surround speaker setup is used. This principle also applies to the Z-axis, meaning that sounds can be heard coming from above and below if the speaker setup supports it.


That’s the essential question, to me, when looking at 3D environments for music. What about the dimensionality will interact with the music? Is it something spatial, or will there be other sorts of interactions? (New Zealander-turned-Berliner Julian Oliver worked extensively with game engines, for instance. One solution for him was modifying the “gun” in those games to be an implement for doing things in the space, turning swords into plowshares after a fact by making the gun produce music rather than kill virtual entities.)


So, now you’ve seen some of the technical demonstration. But Tarik uses his work as an environment in which to make audiovisual performances. Here’s what some actual live playing looks like, in a beautiful, meditative piece called “Eleven”:


In fact, the biggest challenge to me of a piece this awesome is that you want an immersive environment, not just the small, rectangular screens that are often all festivals and venues can afford.


Holodeck, anyone?


More:




reBlogged from: Create Digital Music

on Feb 1, 2012 at 08:00 PM

Cygnus Ensemble at the Library of Congress

Washington, D.C. readers may have noticed that the new music scene in the District has been exploding lately.  This week brings another significant event when New York’s Cygnus Ensemble makes its Washington debut at the Library of Congress.  The concert, part of a mini-residence by Cygnus at the Library, is presented as a tribute to legendary violinist and composer Fritz Kreisler.  Rarely heard music by Kreisler from the Library’s Fritz Kreisler collection will be performed, featuring guest violinist Miranda Cuckson on Kreisler’s own Guarneri del Gesù violin.


Most notably for new music fans, the concert features the world premiere of Harold Meltzer’s Kreisleriana, for violin and piano, commissioned by the Library of Congress’ McKim fund.  The concert also features Meltzer’s Pulitzer-Prize finalist work Brion, commissioned by the Barlow Endowment for the Cygnus Ensemble.


The concert begins at 8:00 p.m. at the Library’s Coolidge Auditorium.  There will be a pre-concert discussion by Mr. Meltzer and Cygnus founder William Anderson at 6:15 p.m. at the Library’s Whitall Pavillion.  No tickets are required for the pre-concert talk.  Tickets to the main concert are free but require reservations and may be obtained by contacting Ticketmaster online or at 202.397.7328.


reBlogged from: Sequenza21/

on Feb 1, 2012 at 07:00 PM

Watching a Professional Rehearse: What I Learned





Last night I was afforded opportunity to watch a rehearsal of Nicola Benedetti and Christoph Koenig with the Pacific Symphony

I've see the Bruch Violin Concerto No. 1 performed lived a half dozen times. Nicola has performed it at least ten times that amount, recorded in and put in countless hours prior to that learning the piece. What all that time and effort has done is to internalize the music, to the point there is very little thought as to what's the next note. Watching Nicola go through the various passages, starting and stopping, repeating sections and moving on drove home how very familiar she is with the music.



Nicola had a music stand with the music, but this was only as a reference point so when Maestro Koenig asked for the orchestra to start 8 bars before rehearsal letter "A" she could find that point in the music. After a quick glance to determine what phrase she would start with, the rest of that portion of the rehearsal as introspective, Nicola connecting with her instrument and the music. It was obvious from watching her, she didn't need to focus on the printed music, so she was free to put more of herself into the "performance."



I liken Nicola's rehearsal with walking down a dirt path. Unless you two or three years of age, you don't really spend any time thinking about where you're placing your feet. Even if you're walking down a path you've never been before (rehearsing with an orchestra and possibly a conductor you've never played with before), you aren't think, place my foot here, move the next food forward, balance, step there! The process of walking is more internal than that. You are somewhat conscious of the vagaries in the path, so you don't just plod along willy-nilly. But the actual thinking of each and every step isn't something that occupies your brain. Your brain is free to take a look at the surroundings, enjoy the journey.



Nicola has achieved that same internal aspect with her performance of the Bruch. The importance of this kind of internalization is that it allows Nicola to focus on the orchestra --what are they doing, and the music she's playing --where should it go emotionally. This means every performance is slightly different, allowing the "path" of the music to wander where it will (even if you walk down the same path every day, your feet won't land in the same place every time). The technical aspects of the music are still virtuoso, and I don't want to say Nicola has become so complacent with the music, she's just going through the motions. It was obvious last night how very passionate she was even when starting with a phrase half way into it, or going over a section for the third or fourth time. Even in the rehearsal Nicola was putting more of herself into the music that just walking the path. She was truly enjoying the journey.



Maestro Christoph Koenig was in a much different position. I have no way of knowing how many times he has conducted this piece, or even if he's ever conducted with Nicola Benedetti. Still, his role as Maestro is to lead a rather large group down a path following Nicola's lead. He has to path attention to the path and all the little vagaries so to point them out during rehearsal to the various musicians. Second Violins, "that was the right intensity, now ten times softer." And when they went over that section again, the scenery of the music blossomed into a beautiful landscape. Like Nicola, Christoph needs to be familiar with the piece to the point he isn't having to worry about time changes and or tempo markings. He knows they're there; rather he is focused on the trouble spots in the path where he needs to guide the musicians through, adding emotional emphasis to the notes on the page.



These very different approaches to rehearsing the same piece of music helps me understand how important it is for a composer to detail each and every aspect into the music. The more detail we can provide allows the perform more information they can internalize. This way, during the performance they can add their own emotional response to the scenery I've provided allowing for a complete experience.



I am looking forward to Thursday and walking the path of the Bruch Violin Concerto with them!



PACIFIC SYMPHONY

Feb 2-4, 8pm


R&H Segerstrom Concert Hall



CHRISTOPH KOENIG - conductor

NICOLA BENEDETTI - violin



DEBUSSY: Petite Suite

BRUCH: Violin Concerto No. 1

BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 4





reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Feb 1, 2012 at 06:00 PM

Lukas Foss-TWO RECORD PREMIERES 1964 (?) Epic Monaural LC 3886

Lukas Foss-TWO RECORD PREMIERES commissioned by the Fromm Music Foundation.ECHOI (FOR FOUR SOLOISTS)TIME CYCLE (CHAMBER VERSION)Today is the third anniversary of the passing away of Lukas Foss at the age of 86.He was born on August 15th, 1922.Notes from the cover (enclosed):The title ECHOI (echo in plural) has several connotations: Echoi were ancient Arabian modes, but it is obvious that the

reBlogged from:
A Closet of Curiosities

on Feb 1, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Industrial/Drone/Chimes: The Top 10 Posts & Searches of January 2012

There were 38 posts on Disquiet.com in January 2012, and the most popular were as follows:


(1) a consideration of white noise in the work of Phil Julian (“A Variety of Noises, White and Otherwise”), (2) a “Sneak Peek at New Disquiet.com Project: Disquiet Junto,”, (3) the fuzzy beats of Would-Be Messiahs (“Hairshirt Industrial”), (4) a work for dual wind chimes by Josh Davison, aka Stringbot (“Chimes and More Chimes”), (5) Alarm Will Sound performing a syncopated work by Liza White (“When a Chamber Ensemble Sounds Like a Jazz Ensemble Sounds Like Breakbeat”), (6) a pair of tracks off Michal Jacaszek‘s Glimmer (Ghostly), (7) “Russian Post-Turntable Turntablism” by Mizontiq, and (8) “Sketch of a Drone / Drone as Sketch,” on a piece by Pacers that at times sounds like a church organ being tuned by an especially patient and exacting workman. Also: not (9) one but (10) two automated selections of what has happened in the previous week at twitter.com.disquiet.


The most popular searches (searches that didn’t yield null results) were: harold budd live, junto, autechre, best of 2010, In the Echo of No Towers, souns, mark harris, saito koji, Kahlen, weir, would-be messiahs, airport, brian eno, Carrie Underwood, compilations.




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Feb 1, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Arts Policy Library: Investing in Creativity


by Katherine Gressel


Investing in Creativity: A Study of the Support Structures for U.S. Artists (2003), an Urban Institute publication authored by Maria-Rosario Jackson, Florence Kabwasa-Green, Daniel Swenson, Joaquin Herranz, Jr., Kadija Ferryman, Caron Atlas, Eric Wallner, and Carole Rosenstein, sheds light on the economic and employment situation of individual artists in the United States following the cessation of NEA funding to individual artists in 1995.  While not the first study on individual artists, it distinguishes itself by “providing a new and comprehensive framework for analysis and action, which views the support structure for artists in the United States as a system made up of six key dimensions of the environment in which an artist works.” Commissioned by the Ford Foundation and supported by consortium of 37 other funders, the study is notable for having led to the development of several concrete initiatives to increase support for artists, among them a comprehensive NYFA Source database and the Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC) initiative.


SUMMARY


The report begins with the premise that artists bring value to society, but “the public often views the profession of ‘artist’ as not serious. The way artists earn a living may seem frivolous, and artists are often seen as indulging in their own passions and desires which bear no relation to the everyday experiences of most workers. This too contributes to a devaluing of the artist as a citizen with the same rights and responsibilities as everyone else.” Investing asserts that artists should receive the same consideration and benefits as any other professionals.


Background and Methodology


 Investing in Creativity reflects several years of research, including:



  • Case studies of artists in nine cities (the primary source of data), featuring interviews with more than 450 people. The cities–Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Houston, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington D.C–were selected based on their large populations of artists, as well as the interest shown in the study by funders in those cities.

  • A corresponding rural inquiry with two components: interviews with artists, arts administrators and funders operating in rural areas in California; and the convening of conferences of artists, arts administrators, funders and community leaders in rural areas in Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Maine, California, Kentucky, Missouri, and North Carolina.

  • Expansion and analysis of an of a comprehensive databaseNYFA Source – that provides national and local information on awards and services for artists, through a partnership with the New York Foundation of the Arts.

  • A national poll of attitudes toward artists in the United States as well as site-specific polls in case study cities. This poll addressed additional issues related to demand for what artists do and how they are valued (or not) in our society.

  • Advisory meetings with artists, leaders in diverse sectors of the arts, and researchers. The study authors attended various conferences and professional meetings for artists, vetted preliminary research findings at conferences, and continually investigated research in related areas.


Investing considers geographic location the primary framework in which to assess the supports available to artists –i.e., what is available in the artist’s local community.  Recognizing that the cultural sector “doesn’t operate in a vacuum,” parts of the study also examine the arts in non-“arts” settings. For the purposes of the study, “artists were defined as “adults who have received training in an artistic discipline/tradition, define themselves professionally as artists, and attempt to derive income from work in which they use their expert artistic vocational skills in visual, literary, performing, and media arts.”


Key Findings


One of the most important conclusions of Investing was that simply restoring cuts to government funding would not be enough to improve artists’ overall conditions. Instead, the research identified six core elements of an artist’s support structures:



  1. Validation: The ascription of value to what artists do.

  2. Demand/markets: Society’s appetite for artists and what they do, and the markets that translate this appetite into financial compensation.

  3. Material supports: Access to the financial and physical resources artists need for their work: employment, insurance and similar benefits, awards, space, equipment, and materials.

  4. Training and professional development: Conventional and lifelong learning opportunities.

  5. Communities and networks: Inward connections to other artists and people in the cultural sector; outward connections to people not primarily in the cultural sector.

  6. Information: Data sources about artists and for artists.


Investing in Creativity is broken into chapters on each of the six elements, each one describing in detail past research, current conditions, and future recommendations for each area. Rather than summarize each section individually, I will present what I see as the most salient themes in the overall findings:


Individual artists are undervalued by society, in comparison to art itself: while 96% of Americans value art in their communities and lives, only 27% value artists. This statistic is cited constantly in subsequent articles referencing this report.


Individual artists feel overshadowed and neglected by large urban institutions. Even institutions meant to serve local communities may not offer sufficient presenting or employment opportunities for local contemporary artists. Furthermore, “a general observation in all…cities was that on many fronts New York City sets the standards for critical review,” sometimes at the expense of developing a “local artistic heritage.”  The authors urge the cultivation of stronger regional support systems.


Individual artists are frequently left out of arts-based urban planning initiatives (which tend to emphasize “large institutions and the traditional artist-audience relationship”): “Our review of city and cultural plans revealed that they tend to focus on the physical infrastructure of presentation venues –often to the neglect of artists’ contributions and needs.”


Artists’ societal contributions are not well understood, documented, or publicized, partly because of the inability of busy arts administrators to engage in reflective practice around this topic.  Investing makes frequent mention of “the various ways in which artists contribute to society – as community leaders, organizers, activists, and catalysts for change, as well as creators of images, films, books, poems, songs, and dances” but acknowledges a lack of substantive data to back up these claims.   Investing implies that if artists’ social and economic contributions were better understood and documented, it would be easier to make the case for supporting individual artists in various areas—for example, why artists need affordable workspace space as much as other low-income or “at risk” populations.


There is a perceived inequality of opportunities for artists (such as exhibitions or awards programs) based on factors such as race/ethnicity, and art form. For example, “several artists of color felt that large organizations seek them out only during designated times – such as Black History Month or Cinco de Mayo,” and folk artists and artists working in new media/technologies felt that mainstream galleries do not have structures in place for exhibiting their work. The study comments that “demographic, artistic, and career-stage diversity are not well served through mainstream awards, arts criticism, and media coverage.”


An artist’s career spans multiple markets and disciplines: “Artists do their work – sometimes simultaneously, sometimes over the course of their careers – in and across various parts of the arts and other sectors.” The report compares artists’ experiences across the nonprofit, commercial, public, and informal arts sectors. For example, the nonprofit sector is more conducive to risk-taking than the public or commercial sector. The sectors also interact; for example, artists may pursue more lucrative commercial work to support their more experimental nonprofit work.  Furthermore, many artists contribute to non-arts fields like health and education, but this so-called “hybrid” work often goes unnoticed and lacks clear evaluation criteria.  


Networks are extremely important in artists’ career advancement and support. Networks are, in fact, key to obtaining almost every type of resource in the six categories. While peers and “intermediaries” such as agents were most often mentioned by interview participants, partners outside the arts community are also essential arts advocates (such as anthropologists who ascribe value to immigrant artists’ work, or local sheriffs supporting artist-in-prisons programs). Partnerships with professionals in fields like real estate development or city planning can be especially valuable to artists, since artists usually lack the knowledge and skills to advocate for themselves in those arenas.


Many artists face the economic uncertainties of irregular employment.  Some of the report’s findings on artists’ employment and material supports—that artists make little income from their creative work, juggle multiple part-time jobs to support themselves, and lack decent health insurance coverage in relation to the national average—are no surprise.  Access to affordable work and living space is one of the major struggles. Contrary to popular belief, however, there is “little evidence that artists get a ‘thrill’ from risk-taking, or that they underestimate the extremely long odds of winning the jackpot of commercial success.” Rather, “artists feel an inner drive or calling to become and remain working artists, whatever challenges they may face.”


Grants and awards need to be more accessible, equitable, and relevant for artists. The report’s section on funding aggregates data on the different types of competitive awards offered specifically to individual artists, through a partnership with the New York Foundation of the Arts’ Visual Artists Information Hotline (which was to become NYFA Source). This section contains the most comprehensive quantitative data, as summarized in the tables below:





As seen in the above charts, this analysis identified clear discrepancies in awards available to artists; for example, “the small number of awards available to artists making work that does not neatly fit into categories based primarily on Western European standards is a problem.” Awards are also unevenly distributed according to artistic discipline and geographic region.


Many artists choose not to participate in the awards process, citing the difficulty of applying, the unlikely chance of winning, or the feeling of exclusion.


Training in the practical side of working in the arts, and in specialized or hybrid fields like arts education/community work, is limited in traditional universities. Training for artists should not be limited to artistic skills alone, but should encompass business skills and specialized skills for the “hybrid” sector. Especially notable is the fact that “unlike programs in law, medicine, and business, arts training institutions often do little job-matching and placement of their graduates.”


Various arts organizations, arts councils, and artist networks are meeting some of these artists’ needs described above, but these organizations need strengthening. In each of the six categories, the report cites some examples, in different cities, of helpful organizations and resources. However, programs that serve individual artists’ needs are vulnerable to funding cuts. Furthermore, sometimes organizations offer professional development for artists outside the scope of their regular programming, in a way that is not sustainable.


Investing in Creativity concludes with several “priorities for action”:



  • Encourage better public understanding of who artists are, what they do, and how they contribute to society. This involves moving beyond an “art for art’s sake” argument for individual artist support.

  • Strengthen artist-focused organizations that are already addressing the critical functions and deficiencies the study has identified.

  • Establish broad-based networks of stakeholders at national, regional and local levels and convene those who are already working to improve artists’ support structures.

  • Create an information clearinghouse that brings together existing research and data and can capture new information. Partner with university departments and policy research organizations doing similar research in all the fields identified as important.

  • Strengthen the capacity of artists to advocate on their own behalf for the many crucial aspects of their support structure.

  • Cultivate existing and potential diverse markets for what artists do and make—especially hybrid markets.

  • Encourage changes in artists’ training and professional development to better address the realities of the markets in which they operate.

  • Strengthen the awards and grants system by making the application process less cumbersome and more responsive to different artists’ needs.


The report ends on a hopeful tone, suggesting that its findings will “help to illuminate the condition of artists as well as promote the creation of a more comprehensive and robust environment making possible their contributions to society.”


 


ANALYSIS


Investing in Creativity provides a comprehensive summary of previous research on artists, new findings, and current gaps in our knowledge. It also suggests new ways to approach researching individual artists. Investing is thorough because of its research not only on what artists think, but on how artists are perceived by others. Because it was a multi-city study, encompassing not just diverse urban communities but rural regions, Investing has the capacity to highlight similarities and distinctions between different regions, and identify nationwide trends.  As I will discuss shortly, Investing also led to the development of some concrete initiatives to help artists.


Despite these strengths, one of my main critiques of Investing is its failure to provide more detail on how the research was carried out. For example, while the report describes “fieldwork through more than 450 extended interviews with artists, arts administrators, arts funders, critics and media representatives, and selected persons outside the cultural sector, and in 17 focus group discussions around the country,” it does not provide any information on the selection of these groups. Similarly, the report lacks detail on how the national poll on attitudes about artists was distributed, and who actually filled it out (and whether the respondents can be considered a representative sample). At the least, appendices in the report showing the poll and focus group questions would have been helpful.  Instead, the figures and charts from NYFA Source data are the most comprehensive quantitative information provided.


The framework for understanding and meeting artists’ needs is arguably the most helpful result of this study, as well as its emphasis on the overlapping spheres in which artists function. For example, recognizing that artists may work in more than one arts (or non-arts) sector is the first step for training artists in more viable career paths, or for building the types of services and networks that are appropriate for artists’ varied careers. The framework itself can be used in any geographic region in the future, to assess ability to attract and retain artists, and to identify opportunities for improvement.


The suggested action steps for arts organizations in the report are rather general, though the authors claim that they are not aiming to make a comprehensive set of recommendations. As I will explore in the “Implications” section, most of these suggestions have to do with strengthening access to opportunities for artists through better networking, cross-sector partnerships, information-sharing, and training, rather than radically altering the system of artist funding and employment.


The report was designed for its findings to be disseminated and funneled into concrete actions through continued partnerships with the funders and arts leaders in the different geographic regions of study. In this respect, it was remarkably successful, perhaps one of the most successful arts research initiatives in history. Three outcomes in particular—the expansion of the NYFA Source artist opportunities database from the New York Foundation for the Arts; the creation of the ten-year grantmaking and research initiative Leveraging Investments in Creativity; and the birth of the United States Artists grantmaking program—show a study whose impacts are still being felt long after its original publication.


Expansion of NYFA Source


According to NYFA’s website, NYFA Source originated as a phone service, the Visual Artist Information Hotline, founded in 1990. When this hotline caught the attention of the Urban Institute in 2000 during its research for Investing, UI collaborated with Carnegie Mellon University’s Center for Arts Management and Technology to create the new NYFA Source online database. According to the NYFA Source website:


The new database was conceived with several new features in mind. First, it was expanded to include programs serving artists working in all disciplines. Second, it was built as an online database allowing artists and other users to access customized, up-to-the-minute information 24 hours a day. And finally, it was built to enable funders and researchers to acquire information about patterns and trends in artists’ support…Today, NYFA continues to research and update information in NYFA Source…Additionally, as part of NYFA Source’s ongoing development, UI will regularly produce analytical reports about the patterns of support represented in the database. These reports will enable the arts field to monitor trends over time.


NYFA.org, which includes NYFA Source, is an essential resource for artists and organizations today, with information about more than 8,000 opportunities and resources available to artists in all disciplines. NYFA.org, much more than just an online awards database, is now functioning as what the report’s authors might consider an “information clearinghouse” convening a “broad based network of stakeholders.” As its website suggests, NYFA Source is also used for research purposes, to allow the continued monitoring of opportunities available to artists. According to Investing’s  principal investigator Maria-Rosario Jackson, the Urban Institute did a follow-up assessment of NYFA Source in 2009, which verified its continued suitability for research.


Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC)


Investing led directly to the creation of Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC), a ten-year national initiative to improve the conditions for artists working in all disciplines. LINC funds, researches, and aggregates information about three core areas identified as key artist needs in the report: Creative Communities, Artist Space, and Health Insurance for Artists.  According to Jackson, many of Investing’s 30+ funders, in particular the Ford Foundation, were committed in advance to “doing something about the results of this study,” though they left this open, based on what the study would reveal.


Reports/findings published since Investing, available on LINC’s website, illuminate examples of Investing’s recommendations put into practice. Most notably, the 2010 publication “14 Stories” summarizes the impact of LINC’s Creative Communities program in fourteen different cities.  The programs, run by local arts nonprofits usually in partnership with non-arts agencies, are all providing a broad range of services for artists, strengthening training, networking, and material support opportunities.


One example is Cleveland’s CPAC – the Community Partnership for Arts and Culture. In a region striving to retain a vibrant artist community in the face of economic depression and unemployment, CPAC used its $190,000 LINC grant to found Artrepreneur, which sought to “treat artists like entrepreneurs.” In partnership with COSE, the Council of Small Enterprises, Artrepreneur morphed into the COSE Arts Network.  “Over the course of three years, nearly 500 artists have either joined COSE outright or been reclassified as artists within the existing membership.”  In exchange for annual dues, COSE helps artists access things like discounted health insurance, business and marketing workshops, and networking events.


LINC also conducts periodic research in target areas. One main area is health care; in 2009 LINC commissioned Helicon Collaborative to design and conduct an online survey of artists, administered through 40 different artist service organizations across the United States. Another study was conducted in 2010, forecasting the potential impact of Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (PPACA) on artists. Both studies also incorporated general data on artists’ employment. The findings in this report imply that artists’ overall insurance and work conditions have not changed substantially since Investing’s publication in 2003.  For example, “artists who earn from 21%-80% of their income from their artwork are those most likely to earn under $20,000 a year…and are likely to have inadequate health care.” The report goes on to describe changes that could occur under PPACA and the crucial role of arts service organizations in equipping artists with information and assistance.


Whether or not artists’ conditions have fundamentally changed as a result of LINC’s work, it is commendable that Investing resulted in a structure for continually updating research in core areas, especially as new federal policies have arisen. Unfortunately, LINC’s 10-year run is slated to end in 2013, so this banner will need to be taken up by someone else if it is to continue beyond next year.


United States Artists Grants


Investing in Creativity highlighted the importance of large, unrestricted grants: “Many respondents told of the life-changing impact of a large fellowship and, more generally, of the relief from constant fund raising that a large grant provides…As well as remarking on the value of large grants, many respondents made the related point that they value grants of long duration, because they provide some relief from the uncertainty of having to continually piece together a living. Specifically, respondents indicated that they want multi-year funding.” This particular element of Investing is cited in the development of the United States Artists (USA) grant making program, which gives unrestricted $50,000 grants to artists in all disciplines.


IMPLICATIONS


Despite the commendable efforts and increased awareness that resulted this study, the report itself raised a few important questions for me:


Is it problematic to build a case for increased research and support for individual artists so heavily on the idea that artists benefit society? 


Investing claims at its outset to be more focused on “artists’ contributions to society” than previous studies (and makes the broad recommendation that such contributions need to be better understood), but the report doesn’t offer many ideas for how to conduct such research—most of its statements about artists’ contributions seem to be assumptions or generalizations. The study is much stronger in its analysis of the working conditions, material supports and training available to artists.  Though the purpose of Investing was not to develop a methodology for studying artists’ societal impact, is it dangerous to put so much emphasis on investing resources in an area that may not be easily researchable? There is a sort of chicken or egg dilemma in this report: the researchers seem to be relying on the “value of artists to society” argument to justify putting time and money into researching how to serve artists better—including researching the very question of why artists should be valued.


As an example: the chapter about artist space states, “In response to the question of why artists should get special treatment around affordable space when others are dealing with similar issues, for example, the case often rests on the assertion that artists are somehow special and intrinsically valuable to a community. This entitlement argument does not resonate particularly well with city planners when there is no hard evidence to back it up.” The report goes on to say,


The social impact argument that artists contribute to various aspects of community improvement such as social capital and civic engagement, crime prevention, youth development, and education is potentially the most persuasive to people who are already stakeholders in a community or potential stakeholders.  But it cannot be made very strongly as yet because the contributions of artists are not well documented but rest largely on anecdotal evidence.


While the report does not offer any specific formulas for how to measure the contributions of artists, it suggests ways that the public can interact with and understand artists better, such as arts education and open studio programs.


I agree with the authors’ assessment that artists make important contributions to communities and deserve to be valued and treated as productive citizens. But I would also worry about this type of argument resulting in a bias toward supporting artists whose work has more obvious “functional” benefits, i.e. artists who teach youth, or create projects that generate a lot of tourism revenue in obvious ways.


To what extent does the report advocate for a radical overhaul of the current system?


Investing in Creativity pinpoints many challenges in the employment system for artists, yet never suggests that an entirely new system is needed. Instead, the implication is that conditions for artists can be improved through better information-gathering, networking, and training.  But should we still only be “training” artists on how to get by in an employment system that is fundamentally flawed?


Investing mentions, in passing, some past government programs that provided more stable artists’ employment. For example, many older artists interviewed for this study lamented the end of the federal Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA) of the 1970s. CETA opened up many new employment opportunities, even though “it was not an explicit arts-directed program.” I found myself wishing for more discussion of how CETA operated, and whether the United States government could institute something similar today, perhaps even a discussion of the WPA programs for artists of the Great Depression.  Investing does not seem to call for a major shift in federal policy toward artists; instead it is primarily focused on strengthening local communities.


Arguably, the advent of social media, crowdfunding, and other recent, market-driven technological developments have had more impact on the way artists do their work than the policy-driven interventions coming out of this study. The report could not have anticipated the widespread use of social media platforms among artists in the years following 2003, but at least it highlighted the importance of online information resources like NYFA Source.


Another recurring theme in the report is that while there are some good awards and service organizations available to artists (for example, Creative Capital in NYC, CellSpace in San Francisco), they are not distributed proportionately to the number of artists in need. Even if artists were better trained in accessing resources, would there be enough to go around?   For example, if the award application process were made even more accessible to artists across the board, would this just mean that more artists would apply and competition would be even steeper?


I was especially intrigued by the question, posed briefly by the report, of how artists can be better trained for sustainable employment, i.e. through university-level programs in more specialized fields like community arts—and how organizations can tailor mutually beneficial jobs towards artists. Some of the report’s most compelling personal accounts are from artists whose  “day jobs” (even those completely unrelated to the arts) are actually favorable to their creative development.  For example, teaching jobs where school administrations encourage integrating art into the classroom. Other artists find inspiration for their artwork’s content in mundane service industry jobs. This “day job” discussion has interesting implications for the field: for example, what if arts organizations designed more staff positions for artists that allow them to both work steadily in a teaching or administrative capacity, and receive things like health benefits and workspace in exchange? Should all artists be trained in more lucrative professions that can be done side by side with their artistic work? Beyond a limited number of unrestricted grantmaking initiatives, could there be other programs that pay artists to do creative studio work without a tangible end product?


Based on my own observations of artists, and current debates around artists as a creative labor force (for example, those raised by the Occupy Wall Street movement), it seems like the fundamental situation for artists has not changed significantly since this report’s publication—artists still face issues like underemployment, lack of affordable space, and the burden of grantwriting to support their non-commercial work. Nevertheless, Investing at least paves the way for more dramatic changes by suggesting ways in which the existing nonprofit sector can be better equipped to meet artists’ needs.


 


Further reading:



  1. LINC’s recommended research reports

  2. Maria-Rosario Jackson, Revisiting Selected Themes from the “Investing in Creativity” Study, The Urban Institute, 2009

  3. NEA Cultural Workforce forum, Friday, November 20, 2009 (which featured Jackson as a presenter)

  4. NYFA’s website contains up-to-date information about NYFA Source, as well as other listings helpful to artists, and recent articles about the business side of the arts that are helpful to all types of individual artists.

  5. Createquity, On the Arts and Sustainability


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reBlogged from: Createquity.

on Feb 1, 2012 at 04:00 PM

The Music of Poets Reading

I very much enjoyed the reading the other night at the 92nd Street Y in New York, given by my friend and collaborator Susan Stewart and by Mark Strand. Both are marvelous and wise poets, and they shared good, new, strong stuff.


I could tell you more about their work, but for this (mostly) music blog, let me comment that after the reading, I started mentally comparing the event with a new music concert. Neither type of gathering attracts a huge crowd, and there often seem to be a fair number of insiders in the audience. Compared with a concert, a reading is more informal in certain ways – poets (at least last night) don’t take bows. Could musicians learn something from the way the readings last night were made of numerous short pieces rather than a few lengthy ones? or from the way the evening was leavened with a good bit of humor?


The way a poet reads is a curious balance of artless and artful. Poets are not actors, they don’t use their voices’s full range of intonation and inflection. Yet poetry is generally not read in an everyday voice – there is that curious chant-like way poets have of intoning their texts. There were a few moments at last night’s reading when I lost my way in the meaning of the words (my fault, not theirs) and gave myself over to the sound of the poet’s voice, to the contour of the not quite pitched intonation, to the lengths of the phrases and sentences, to the rhythm, to accent, grouping, duration, to the tone and timbre at once intimate and public – to the music of poets reading.





reBlogged from: Secret Geometry - James Primosch's blog

on Feb 1, 2012 at 04:00 PM

One For All, or All For One? Solo Artistry Versus the Band in the Age of Social Media

Written by Paul Adler


The music industry today seems, to the casual observer, a veritable “Chicken Little” scenario, with all its members and participants, heads craned piously upward, scurrying about as if the sky were falling—the firmament of their reliable, decades-old business model crashing about them. From the haughtiest record company executive to the lowliest basement-dwelling ensemble, everyone in the music business is struggling to shore up their respective rungs on the industry ladder. However, as apocalyptic as the situation may seem, this can be an exciting time for newcomers to the music industry; we’ve all heard of the myriad merits of self-promotion and utilizing the internet, of the tales of insta-stardom, courtesy of YouTube. Many involved in music have conjectured this might be a viable business model for the nouveau-cottage industry of the music business as it stands in 2012—that the model of the self-promoted solo artist has become far more conducive to success than than of the traditional band.


When one considers the dichotomy of the solo artist versus the traditional band setup, the former might start to look slightly more appealing in light of the collapse of the music industry’s overall business model. Consider the ubiquity of online utilities available for self-promotion and contrast this notion with the stereotypically “traditional” path to success as an outfit or ensemble, paying special mind to the logistical and pragmatic difficulties of achieving tangible success as a band. The reality of the new music industry is, simply put, that being a solo artist might just be easier than putting oneself in a band setting. Over the past few years, we’ve witnessed the meteoric rise of solo artists spanning all genres of contemporary music. From EMA to The Weeknd to St. Vincent, Owl City, and yes, even Justin Bieber, we’ve seen solo artists emerge and set themselves apart from the milieu, garnering cults of personality by using social media and a variety of online tools to popularize themselves (before being picked up by record companies, that is).



On the subject of the so-called “cult of personality,” it seems dually fitting that we should see a shift in the collective attention of the music-consuming portion of society to more solo artists as social media shifts, simultaneously, toward more overtly egocentric platforms (see: Facebook, Twitter). Add to this the relative ease with which many DIY artists record, produce, disseminate, and promote their music and the appeal of being a solo artist becomes obvious.


In contrast to the facile nature of existing as a solo artist, being in a band can prove a somewhat trying ordeal. Think of a band as a relationship—the members are all significant others with their respective shares of issues, conflicts, and obligations. Forming a band is akin to dating, with potential members comparing interests and skill levels, seeing if their personalities mesh, and considering any logistical problems having to do with being in the band itself. Whereas solo artists have only themselves to consider and worry about, each member of a band needs to be concerned about the other members: will name here be able to make it to practice today? Does name here know all the music? We have a show, Friday! Is name here going to have his equipment ready and be able to get to the venue on time?, et cetera. Furthermore, should a band find themselves lucky enough to get picked up by a label or signed to a booking, management, or promotions company, these companies will then be privy to these “family matters,” so to speak, and no music industry professional likes dealing with a prima donna outfit of quarrelling members who can barely manage their own affairs, let alone ensure that the group as a whole has the capacity to move forward. 


Should the band itself fail, a breakup can be just as messy as the breakup of significant others, with parties taking sides, disputes over shared property, and other various pitfalls. This point can be especially valid in light of the fact that a solo artist never has to break up with his or herself. Being in a band with the goal of commercial success is a full-time job, with each member’s financial, logistical, and personal responsibilities to the group itself; conversely, solo artistry can run the gamut from being a hobby to being a career, and doesn’t involve the “relationship” aspect one can expect in a band setting. 


What happens when band relationships turn sour…



However, there are indeed two sides to the proverbial coin in both the band and solo setting. While problems similar to those one would encounter in a romantic relationship are liable to arise within a band, it would seem the old addage that “two heads are better than one” would be readily applicable as well. Should they utilize the strength of their numbers, the traditional band setup stands to provide advantages a solo artist would be hard-pressed to find, such as having additional manpower to cover tour, recording, and merchandise expenses, or to promote the band itself. A solo artist would also be at a significant disadvantage in terms of self-promotion, as one would assume creating awareness of one’s music would be more easily and efficiently done by five or six people, versus one person. The collective creative brainpower of a group of people versus a solo artist could be seen as another perceived advantage to the band setting, although it would seem that many solo artists have a specific “vision” for their craft, while bands tend to make their writing genre-specific because common tastes are usually a touchstone between members.


From an overarching standpoint it would appear that, especially with regard to the past decade, the model of the solo artist has become the norm and the traditional band setup has become the exception. We are no longer experiencing a mode of popular culture that hinges around rock music; successful music, even pop music, that used to rely on the tenets of rock has given way to popular music that relies on undertones of hip-hop and electronica. In the 80s and 90s, groups and solo artists that achieved success used rock as their medium (see: 80s hair metal bands, Madonna, Pat Benetar, Nirvana, Michael Jackson)—now, success comes through musical stylings other than rock (see: Skrillex, Britney Spears, Nicki Minaj, Kid Cudi). By and large, there has been a noted change in the tastes of our culture.


Think of the past year, in which we’ve seen many solo artists emerge, but few bands, and the bands that have achieved some tangible levels of success have either faced a years-long uphill struggle or have, in plain view, been assembled by record labels. These are groups like Mumford & Sons and Foster The People, who’ve worked for years to achieve some modicum of commercial success—these are also groups who (like Paramore, when two of their main members released statements regarding their respective departures) were exposed, via a mordant blog post, as an outfit built deliberately by a major label around the solo artistry of their frontwoman. These bands are the exceptions. More common have become tales of solo artists striking pay-dirt as a result of their own work ethic: Adam Young of Owl City self-produced and sold over 200,000 units from his parents’ basement before being approached by Universal Republic in 2008; The Weeknd has self-released three separate mixtapes over the past year, garnering international attention in addition to being short-listed for the Polaris Music Prize and collaborating with Drake on more than a couple songs.


Besides the obvious nature of dealing with finances—one artist clearly earns more, proportionally, than a group of four or five—it should be clear, at this point, that the more viable business model is that of the solo artist, especially when taken in light of the sociocultural and economic developments of the past decade. Social media and our collective cultural shift away from music in which a more traditional band setting is a requisite have helped to set the stage for the solidification of the solo artist as the recommended model for achieving commercial success. However, this notion is not meant to detract validity from the traditional band setup but should be viewed as an informed caveat to those who wish to pursue music as performers; it should further serve as a reminder that we, as conscientious members of the music industry and the music-consuming community, need to pay close attention to the direction in which cultural tastes are moving and learn to exploit these trends in favor of propelling the industry, as well as the craft itself, forward.



Paul Adler is a freelance writerbloggermusician, and former liquor store employee. Connect with him on Twitter or Tumblr.


Indie Ambassador TV is an educational series produced by Indie Ambassador. Through our video panelsindustry profiles and articles, artists and music professionals can educate themselves on general business topics, new technology and current industry trends.


reBlogged from: Music Think Tank (primary) RSS

on Feb 1, 2012 at 12:00 PM

Denk's New Yorker debut


When Jeremy Denk began blogging at Think Denk, it quickly became apparent that he was the liveliest writer-pianist since Glenn Gould. In this week's New Yorker, Denk makes his formal debut as an essayist, writing about his experiences recording the piano sonatas of Charles Ives. Here is a sample:


My Ives addiction started one summer at music camp, at Mount Holyoke College. I was twenty and learning his Piano Trio. There's an astounding moment in the Trio where the pianist goes off into a blur of sweet and sour notes around a B-flat-major chord. I knew the moment was important, but I wondered, was my sound too vague or too clear? (A recurring interpretative problem in Ives is discovering the ideal amount of muddle.) I was also puzzled about where this phrase was going. I'd been taught that phrases were supposed to go somewhere, yet this musical moment seemed serenely determined to wander nowhere.

One afternoon, the violinist of the group and I were driving off campus and happened to cross the Connecticut River. Looking out of the window, he said, "You should play it like that." From the bridge the river seemed impossibly wide, and instead of a single current there seemed to be a million intersecting currents — urgent and lazy rivers within the river, magical pockets of no motion at all. The late-afternoon light colored the water pink and orange and gold. It was the most beautiful, patient, meandering multiplicity.


Instantly, I knew how to play the passage. Even better, Ives's music made me see rivers differently; centuries of classical music had prettified them, ignoring their reality in order to turn them into musical objects. Schubert uses tuneful flowing brooks to murmur comfort to suicidal lovers; Wagner has maidens and fateful rings at the bottom of a heroically surging Rhine. Ives is different. He gives you crosscurrents, dirt, haze — the disorder of a zillion particles crawling downstream. His rivers aren't constrained by human desires and stories; they sing the beauty of their own randomness and drift.


out Ives in a conversation on the New Yorker podcast. On Feb. 13, he will appear at the Housing Works Bookstore Café, in a new series pairing musicians with writers; the writer in question will be the New Yorker literary critic James Wood, who is, as readers of Best Music Writing 2011 know, also a brilliant musical commentator. I may be obsolete.


reBlogged from: Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Feb 1, 2012 at 07:00 AM

BSO 21 Jan 2012

Chailly demurs, but the BSO rocks on:


link → review



reBlogged from: henningmusick

on Feb 1, 2012 at 05:00 AM

Just for the record

Progress on a Kyrie continues.

White Nights is not forgotten.

Despair is staved off for a season.

Wonderful, and wonderfully powerful, musical memories called forth by listening to some Tallis. And I really need to send the Passion off to Vegas.

At the close of the paragraph (not that any paragraph has here appeared), it’s all good.



reBlogged from:
henningmusick

on Feb 1, 2012 at 05:00 AM

Secret Geo on Now is the Time

My piece for piano and electronic sound, Secret Geometry, will be heard on Kile Smith’s contemporary music radio show Now is the Time, which can be heard on WRTI-HD2 on Sunday, February 5, at 10 pm. The show streams here; a complete playlist here. Read more about the piece here.


 





reBlogged from: Secret Geometry - James Primosch's blog

on Feb 1, 2012 at 04:00 AM

Jan. 25th, 2012

All selections by Boston Modern Orchestra Project

David Rakowski ~ Piano Concerto
Eric Moe ~ Superhero
Louis Andriessen ~ Passeggiata in tram in America e ritorno
Alan Hovhaness ~ Soprano Saxophone Concerto
Lisa Bielawa ~ Double Violin Concerto
Elliott Schwartz ~ Chamber Concerto III
Charles Fussell ~ High Bridge Prelude
Derek Bermel ~ Thracian Echoes



reBlogged from:
Music For Internets

on Feb 1, 2012 at 03:00 AM

Disquiet Junto Project 0001: “Ice Cubes in a Glass”



The first Disquiet Junto project was launched on the first Thursday of 2012, January 5. I had no idea if anyone would participate. In the end, 58 different musicians each uploaded, as directed, a single track in response to the assignment: “Please record the sound of an ice cube rattling in a glass, and make something of it.”


The significant majority of them made their tracks available for free download. They posted them in the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com, and used the tag “disquiet0001-ice” to distinguish their entry: including it in the file’s title and adding it as a tag. Soundcloud is a great service, but it doesn’t allow set creation within groups, so the only way to easily access the files associated with a given Junto project is by searching for a tag. I’m looking into ways to collect the files related to a specific Junto project, but in the meanwhile a search return is the best method.


The idea of using an ice cube in the glass had several points of inspiration. For one thing, given the long-running precedent of the Stones Throw Records Beat Battles, which meet once a week and use a shared sample as the starting point for competition, there was reason to distinguish the project; requesting that Junto members create their own sample, rather than employ the same exact source material, seemed like a good way to accomplish that. But, in a nod to the Beat Battles, I wanted a touch of hip-hop, and the sound of ice cubes heard in the Alkaholiks’ classic “Hip Hop Drunkies,” produced by E-Swift and Marley Marl, has long been a personal favorite (the song, which features a cameo by Ol’ Dirty Bastard, is from the 1997 album Likwidation; the instrumental is on youtube.com). In addition, the contact-mic experiments of musician Joe Colley came to mind. And, of course, there is Erik Satie’s furniture music, which is classical music’s strong precursor to what we now call ambient music: what could be a more casual everyday domestic sound than ice clinking in a glass?


The deadline was set for the following Monday, January 9, at midnight. In subsequent Junto projects the deadline would be moved back a minute, to 11:59pm, since some people weren’t sure if “midnight Monday” meant the midnight with which Monday began or with which it ended. Given that simple assignments are at the heart of the Junto, the fact that something as basic as “midnight Monday” was up for interpretation was an important lesson unto itself.


View a search return for all the entries: disquiet0001-ice.


Visit, listen to, and consider joining the group at soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto.


A full list of Junto projects is housed on Disquiet.com.


(Image of ice cubes in a glass comes from “Mystic Cubes,” the Junto entry by Mystified.)




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Feb 1, 2012 at 01:00 AM

January 31, 2012

The new ISSUE

A glimpse of the new ISSUE Project Room space at 110 Livingston Street in Brooklyn. Allan Kozinn has a review of the opening-week Gaudemaus festival in the Times; I'll have a brief item in The New Yorker next week.

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Jan 31, 2012 at 11:00 PM

Garrick Ohlsson: In Pursuit Of A Warhorse














Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approx. 7:00 p.m. ET





January 31, 2012



 



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Pianist Garrick Ohlsson has finally recorded the notorious

Wojciech Grzedzinski

Pianist Garrick Ohlsson has finally recorded the notorious "Rach 3," Sergei Rachmaninov's extremely tricky Piano Concerto No. 3.






a href="http://www.npr.org/artists/91234132/garrick-ohlsson" target="_blank">Garrick Ohlsson launched his career in 1970, when he became the first American to win the International Chopin Competition. Since then, he's performed and recorded an exceptionally wide range of piano literature — Chopin, Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert and much more. But there's one romantic warhorse he's avoided in the recording studio until now: Rachmaninov's flashy and notoriously finger-twisting Piano Concerto No. 3.

All my piano heroes share a common tradition — that showmanship can hinder the honest interpretation of a composer's intent. That dedication to pure music-making is what most characterizes Ohlsson.

At one time, it was fashionable to dismiss Rachmaninov as a second-rate composer who wore his heart on his sleeve, but this pianist shows that there's plenty of muscle in Rachmaninov's musical craft.



Garrick Ohlsson Plays Rachmaninov



Garrick Ohlssohn plays Rachmaninov.

Piano Concerto No. 3 — Finale (excerpt)



  • Artist: Garrick Ohlsson

  • Album: Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3; Symphonic Dances

  • Song: Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30 3. Finale - Alla breve





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Purchase Featured Music



  • "Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30 3. Finale - Alla breve "

  • Album: Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3; Symphonic Dances

  • Artist: Garrick Ohlsson

  • Label: ASO Media

  • Released: 2011










 



!-- END CLASS="CONTAINER PLAYLIST" ID="CON146148775" PREVIEWTITLE="PLAYLIST" -->

When Ohlsson walks on stage, at six-feet-four, he's an imposing figure. He looks like he could crush the piano with one big chord, and he does have a massive technique that makes short order of Rachmaninov's famously difficult passages. But Garrick Ohlsson can move from thunder to silk with extraordinary ease.

This is music composed on a grand canvas; its opulent textures and rhapsodic melodies require exquisite interactions among pianist, conductor and orchestra. And the Atlanta Symphony, with conductor Robert Spano, joins Ohlsson in this deeply inspired collaboration.

Ohlsson's recording of the "Rach 3" has given me new interest in this very familiar piece. I can't stop myself from repeating movements, even skipping around to sections just to get another taste of their emotional impact. Rachmaninov's third piano concerto is a heroic work, certainly, and Garrick Ohlsson is the piano hero who has brought us one of its finest performances.







llattribution">Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.



reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Jan 31, 2012 at 09:00 PM

Pictures at an Exhibition: Essential New Gear and Reflections from NAMM


Dewanatron’s Brian and Leon were on-hand with their unique inventions. Photos by Marsha Vdovin for CDM.

For the lover of musical instruments and technology, southern California’s NAMM show is a giant toy shop. It’s work for many of its attendees, of course, but we know many of our readers dream of the objects that will make their next creations. And sure, inspiring lust is not our aim; on the contrary, there is some love that goes into these things. In the ideal, that’s the relationship of creator and consumer. These are things not to be bought and discarded, but kept and really used.


So, we have a different look at the NAMM show, through the lens of CDM contributor Marsha Vdovin, who has been at this show more times than she might like to count. I’ve added some comments about what these devices are and why they’re important. And the next time we see them, these inventions pictured in silence here, we expect them to be working hard on music far from the din and flourescent glare of the trade show floor.


As always, click for larger images. Photos by Marsha Vdovin; words by Peter Kirn:



Roland’s V-Guitar marks a surprising collaboration, bringing the famed American guitar maker Fender together with the Japanese electronic maker to make an “electronic guitar,” merging the two company’s tech on a digitally-augmented Stratocaster. More on this soon – but the extended playing techniques won over many guitarists.



The Danish design aesthetes of AIAIAI have improved upon their TMA-1 headphones with a studio model. Same drivers, same basic design, but a “flatter” response to sound (rather than beefed-up, DJ-ready bass) and closed ear design. It’s impossible to hear anything at NAMM, but I can attest that the new design is far, far more comfy to wear. Actually, if I could have kept these on the whole show to drown out the sound, it would have been great.



An easy place to spot a talented celebrity was at the Dave Smith Instruments booth, at which artists clustered around Dave and Roger Linn. They were on-hand with plenty of tweaks to their stellar Tempest drum machine.




Teenage Engineering’s OP-1 grew up, with new features (drum sounds! MIDI sync – at last), and grew out, with a companion product for connecting sensors and USB host mode that could be a boutique item for music DIYers. We’ll go hands-on with each this year, and while readers were disappointed on a lack of some details (will the OpLab be open source?), we expect to get more details from the Teenagers when the product is ready in the coming months.



Readers of tech blogs (ahem) may miss out on the fact that the vast majority of NAMM is really for guitarists, drummers, and traditional instrumentalists. And yes, that includes glittery, pink products from Daisy Rock Guitars. We’ve concluded this model will be perfect for Sparkle Pony. (And really, if you’re not watching Portlandia to get that reference, get on it. Also, Jenny Conlee is crazy awesome.)



Thin, responsive, and expressive, the QuNeo from Keith McMillen – funded on Kickstarter – proves it’s really happening. With continuous pressure response on its touch controls and bi-directional control, it could be the most anyone will ever have gotten from a US$200 controller. Yes, we’ll be watching.



Pioneer wasn’t showing anything new at this show — they timed those launches over the fall with new controllers like the Ergo. But they did have a glossly all-white lacquer set of limited-edition devices that looked absurdly gorgeous. Now if I want to do my flat over in the style of a Stanley Kubrick set, I know what DJ gear I’ll be buying. (If you don’t know what I mean, watch the end of 2001 again – or the living room in Tron: Legacy, which is more or less a copy.) White is the new generic-dull-charcoal.






Akai’s MPC Renaissance is unlike any other mass-market controller we’ve seen. It’s actually substantial, something that feels like a vintage MPC even though it’s designed to work with software (pictured). The audio circuitry is straight out of the modern MPC, but there’s a switch for “vintage” modes – think 12-bit output when the MPC60 is enabled, for instance. Akai told CDM they built the software in-house, but we also learned at NAMM that they licensed time-stretch tech from iZotope, giving their upcoming MPC software generous audio-manipulation abilities.


The Renaissance will cost you, with a street expected well over a grand, but that makes it even more welcome that the same superb pads and response curves are also on the maker’s MAX49 keyboard and cheaper MPC Model.


Just expect to wait: these were prototypes, and there were still some bugs to work out.




The Renaissance is for the MPC die-hard; the MPC Studio is the model that will directly take on Native Instruments and Maschine. It’s slim, sleek, and still has great-feeling controls. And while that makes it compelling competition for Maschine, I’m gratified to see this whole market expanding, new workflows for performance and production, and a push to better quality in the controllers. The days when computer gear meant “cheap and plastic-y” are mercifully at an end. Speaking of which –




Akai’s MAX49 keyboard could be a new model to beat. The keyboard action is satisfyingly springy, with a new keybed not seen in previous models. The pads are identical to those on the Renaissance, and feel more the way proper MPC pads should. Not everyone will love the light-up, touch-sensitive resistive faders, but I found with a bit of pressure, they worked well – and that means never having to worry about a fader catching up with the value in software. You also get serious features: Control Voltage, a full complement of MIDI ports, and aftertouch. Did I mention Control Voltage? It’s nice to see a controller keyboard with a slightly premium price, build, and features.



The last surprise from Akai was this MPC DJ. The company says it’s a prototype only, and had little more to say about it, but it’s fascinating to see the MPC and turntable controls converge.



Moog’s Minitaur was my favorite synth of the show. It just sounds consistently brilliant, no matter which way you turn it or play it – and I accordingly noticed it was the synth the most people were actually playing on the show floor.



This is what a 24-karet KORG MonoTribe looks like, alongside a silver-plated model. There’s little more one can say. It is, of course, one of a kind — and already spoken for.



The other thing of beauty at the KORG booth: a limited-edition reverse-key SV-1 keyboard.



iOS accessories were numerous, but a few were genuinely useful. IK Multimedia’s iRig Mic “Cast,” for instance, is coupled with handy software for podcasters, as a quick tool for interviewing or podcast recording.



It’s not a new product, but one of the reviews to which I’m most looking forward is this Eers product. It promises custom in-ears you make yourself, rather than the enormous cost of getting them custom-made. Stay tuned on this one – protecting your hearing and making on-stage gigs go well is perhaps as essential as gear can get.



The just-intonation Hymnatron from the Dewanatron crew was one of the most compositionally-compelling instruments at the show, with a unique sound, tuning, and key layout. And it looks mighty handsome in this one-off wooden case.



LiveWire’s modular was among the many dreamy modular rigs at Big City Music and Analog Haven, two Los Angeles hotspots for analog modulars. Did we mention space was more plentiful and inexpensive, and gigs more generous, in LA than in NYC, Chicago, or San Francisco? Funny coincidence, that.



Many modules graced this show, but the most intriguing was not analog, but digital – think digital algorithms in an analog, patch-cord-modular hardware workflow. Tom Erbe, maker of long-beloved SoundHack (the app, and then more recently the plug-ins) put some of his sonic wizardry into a module, collaborating with one of our favorite modular builders, MakeNoise. The result: the MakeNoise Echofon. As such, it’s a perfect emblem of our Create Digital Music, Create Analog Music philosophy. Dear Berlin friends: let’s plug this into your monster modulars, okay?



Big City Music is a wonderful place. The other candidate for best new module: brilliant creations by Metasonix, as previewed here. We’ll be watching for these to be patch-able, too.



Casio had its classic CZ-1000 synth on-hand at its booth. The Casio XW isn’t quite a successor to the CZ, though it does include some of those waveforms and phase distortion sounds. What it does appear to be is a very affordable, do-just-about-everything workstation at a fraction of the price of any of its rivals. For someone who wants a jack-of-all-trades gigging keyboard, this could very much be a contender.



Our friends at Beatport are evidently getting into the hardware business. The most interesting launch wasn’t a set of TMA headphones with Slimer-green cords (I’ll take the Studio model, thanks, or just a non-Danish set of studio cans). Instead, I was intrigued by the eminently-practical line of gigging cords Beatport is working on with Hosa. They include features live digital musicians and DJs badly need, like color-coded cords you can find easily at a show, and hinged USB cords you can cram into tight spaces. More on those soon.


Thanks, all. Lastly, I want to thank everyone I got to spend time with at the NAMM show, and particularly Marsha Vdovin, who is responsible for these photos and keeping our schedule together. NAMM is always too crowded and too short, but it can lay groundwork for a whole year. And I’m excited for this Year of the Dragon. Be seeing you.


For the rest of our NAMM coverage:

http://createdigitalmusic.com/tag/namm/


Photos by Marsha Vdovin / Words by Peter Kirn.




reBlogged from: Create Digital Music

on Jan 31, 2012 at 07:00 PM

Happy 75th Birthday Philip Glass!


Philip Glass is 75 today. The American Composers Orchestra gives the American premiere of his 9th Symphony at Carnegie Hall tonight.


My interview with Dennis Russell Davies, who is conducting the ACO concert, is up on Musical America’s website (subscribers only).


If you’re looking for a terrific way to celebrate PG’s birthday, Brooklyn Rider’s latest CD on Orange Mountain Music includes Glass’s first five string quartets. The earthiness with which they play the music may surprise you at first, but it provides a persuasive foil for some of the more motoric, “high buffed sheen” toned performances of minimalism that are out there.  In a 2011 video below, they give a performance of a more recent work, a suite of music from the film Bent.


Click here to view the embedded video.


 


reBlogged from: Sequenza21/

on Jan 31, 2012 at 06:00 PM

A stream of glorious music

'I think there is a great deal in The Kingdom that is more than a match for Gerontius, and I feel that it is a much more balanced work and throughout maintains a stream of glorious music whereas Gerontius has its ups and downs.'
That is from Sir Adrian Boult's introductory note to his 1969 recording of The Kingdom and after writing yesterday's post about mystical devotion I listened once again to Elgar's oratorio. Sir Adrian's high regard for The Kingdom is reflected in his interpretation - his recording is probably the finest achievement of the EMI dream team of Boult, Bishop and Parker, although their Pilgrim's Progress runs it a close second. Forget about Elgar the flag waving patriot, he was a Catholic and it was only twenty-eight years before he was born that Catholic emancipation became law in England. Instead follow these links to Elgar the mystic and Elgar the occultist.

Also on Facebook and Twitter. Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk

reBlogged from: On An Overgrown Path

on Jan 31, 2012 at 06:00 PM

Disquiet Junto Project 0003: “The Expanded Glass Harp”



Each assignment in the ongoing Disquiet Junto series of projects serves several purposes. The underlying purpose of these initial ones is to help define what, exactly, the Junto is all about.


Certainly it is about the use of constraints to stoke creativity. That is the Junto’s stated purpose. But one constraint was to be avoided from the start: the Junto is not a sample-of-the-week endeavor. And thus, at the risk of being met with mass disinclination, the third project was designed to test some boundaries. It required the participants to record a live performance. This meant no post-production, which is something of an anomaly in a realm of music-making that, oftentimes, takes place entirely in a creative zone that would be considered “post-production.” Despite some initial concerns on my part about potentially limiting turnout, almost three dozen musicians uploaded finished tracks.


These were the instructions:


This project is in honor of Benjamin Franklin, after whose Junto Society our little group was named.


In an effort to expand and refine the glass harp, Franklin developed his own lathe-like glass harmonica, which he called the “armonica.” Marie Antoinette took lessons on it and Beethoven composed for it, but Franklin’s invention proved expensive and fragile, and it had a limited lifetime. And it may have given its frequent users lead poisoning.


You are *not* being asked to build a Franklin armonica. But like Franklin, we are going to expand on the glass harp. In our case, we are going to do so digitally.


You’re being asked to use the more common instrument, the glass harp. That involves the familiar “rubbing the top of a wine glass that has water in it” approach:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_harp


The Junto assignment is to record a live performance on the glass harp, and to employ live processing in the performance. There should be no post-production. And there is no length limit for the piece, though I would suggest that anything over 15 minutes may limit the size of your potential audience.


We could just as easily — more easily, really — used samples of glass harps and harmonicas as pre-made building sonic blocks for the piece. But the goal was to be true to Franklin, whose Junto lent its name to our collective endeavor. Franklin was as famous for his inventions and scientific inquiries as he was for his role in the development of the United States government. (An inveterate constructor of organizations — not just of his Junto, but of fire departments, militia, schools, and lending libraries — it’s quite possible to see the U.S.A. as the largest club he helped invent. Our ambitions are not so large.) And since the armonica was developed by him as an instrument for live performance, it seemed only right to use the glass harp in a live setting. (Just as a side note: the title of the piece was inspired by the concept of “expanded cinema.”)


Here, for further background, is an excerpt on the armonica from the Benjamin Franklin biography written by Walter Isaacson:



The assignment was made late in the day on Thursday, January 19, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, January 23, as the deadline.


View a search return for all the entries: disquiet0003-glass. As of this writing, there are 35 tracks associated with the tag.


Visit, listen to, and consider joining the group at soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto.


A full list of Junto projects is housed on Disquiet.com.


(The images up top are from the tracks contributed, going clockwise from upper left, by: Matthew Barlow, Mark Rushton, Brian Biggs, and Ted Laderas)




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Jan 31, 2012 at 06:00 PM

Playing Schumann

Playing Schumann with Evan Kory, piano.



reBlogged from:
Theater of Found Sounds

on Jan 31, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Soprano Angela Meade Receives Seventh Annual Beverly Sills Artist Award

“In the world of talented young singers, there may be none with greater promise.”— Mike Silverman, Associated Press

American soprano Angela Meade is having a momentous season. In October she caused a sensation in the title role of the Metropolitan Opera’s premiere production of Anna Bolena, delivering what the New Yorker’s Alex Ross called “as pure a display of vocal power as I’ve heard at the Met in the past few years.” A month later she was honored with the prestigious 2011 Richard Tucker Award, and now – still less than four years since her professional debut – the soprano has been named recipient of the seventh annual Beverly Sills Artist Award for young singers at the Metropolitan Opera. Muffy Greenough, Beverly Sills’s daughter, presented the award to Meade at a ceremony at the Met this afternoon.



The award, for young singers who have appeared in featured solo roles at the Met, has been given annually since 2006, and with prize money of $50,000 it is the largest of its kind in the States. Previous winners include baritone Nathan Gunn and mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato.



“I am so deeply honored to be the recipient of the Beverly Sills Award,” Meade said, continuing:



“I would have loved to have met Ms. Sills. We share much of the same repertoire and her interpretations of Norma, Anna Bolena, Elisabetta in Roberto Devereux, Cleopatra, and Violetta have been an inspiration to me. I am greatly humbled and realize what an immense responsibility it will be to carry on the legacy Ms. Sills achieved. Her artistry has been something that young singers aspire to attain. I offer heartfelt thanks to the Metropolitan Opera and the Agnes Varis Trust, in memory of Agnes Varis and Karl Leichtman.”


The rising young soprano returns to the Met as Elvira in Verdi’s Ernani on February 2, in the role with which she made her unscheduled “star is born” professional debut – at the Met – in 2008, when she substituted for an ailing colleague. Opera lovers worldwide can hear Meade in the role when Ernani is beamed to cinemas around the world on February 25 as part of the Met’s ever-popular Live in HD series. Her co-stars include Marcello Giordani, Dmitri Hvorostovsky, and Ferruccio Furlanetto, with Marco Armiliato leading the Met Opera Orchestra. It was Armiliato who conducted Meade at the Grand Finals Concert of the 2007 Met Opera National Council Auditions, as chronicled in the documentary film The Audition.





reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Jan 31, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Robin Ticciati Conducts the London Symphony Orchestra in Brahms, Strauss and Mahler w Baritone Christopher Maltman

Robin Ticciati conducts the LSO in Brahms’ 2nd Symphony and Strauss’ Tod und Verklärung on Thursday 15 March in the Barbican Hall. They are joined by baritone Christopher Maltman in a performance of Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder, completing the programme.



Robin Ticciati was a member of the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain when he turned to conducting, aged 15, under the guidance of Sir Colin Davis, LSO President, and Sir Simon Rattle. He is Principal Conductor of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Principal Guest Conductor of the Bamberger Symphoniker and from January 2014, Music Director of Glyndebourne.



Ahead of the performance, at 6pm, Guildhall School pianist Ben Schoeman will perform Brahms’ Sonata No 3 in F minor Op 5 and Variations on a theme of Paganini (Book 1), part of the Guildhall Artists at the Barbican series.



Thursday 15 March, 7.30pm, Barbican



STRAUSS Tod und Verklärung

MAHLER Kindertotenlieder

BRAHMS Symphony No 2



Robin Ticciati conductor

Christopher Maltman baritone

London Symphony Orchestra



Tickets: £10-£35






reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Jan 31, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Houston Grand Opera Announces Its 2012-13 Season

Including Four New Productions: La bohème, The Italian Girl in Algiers, Show Boat, and Tristan und Isolde

Houston Grand Opera, with Music Director Patrick Summers and Managing Director Perryn Leech, announces its 2012-13 season, headlined by four new productions. The first of these is Puccini’s La bohème, which launches the new season with a new staging by award-winning British director John Caird. To honor 2013’s joint bicentennials of Wagner and Verdi, the coming season juxtaposes Tristan und Isolde – starring Ben Heppner and Nina Stemme in a new contemporary staging by Christof Loy – with a revival of Steven Lawless’s unforgettable take on Il trovatore. British conductor Trevor Pinnock leads a strong international cast in Mozart’s ensemble masterpiece Don Giovanni, while Francesca Zambello’s new production of Kern and Hammerstein’s Show Boat brings together stars of Broadway and the opera house in a celebration of America’s own contribution to the art. For a more intimate experience, Daniela Barcellona and Lawrence Brownlee star in Rossini’s dramma giocoso, The Italian Girl in Algiers.



John Caird’s brand new production of a perennial favorite, Puccini’s La bohème, opens the season on October 19. An Honorary Associate Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company and Principal Guest Director of Stockholm’s Royal Dramatic Theatre, Caird’s numerous honors include two Tony Awards, two Laurence Olivier Awards, and three Outer Critics Circle Awards. American soprano Katie Van Kooten stars as Mimì, the role in which she made her Covent Garden debut, impressing the Telegraph as “a major operatic talent” with “a winning stage personality.” Opposite her as Rodolfo is New York native Dimitri Pittas – “a huge talent, with a ringing, easy tenor voice…like a young Plácido Domingo” (Opera News). With designs by Olivier Award-winner David Farley, the new production will be conducted by young American Evan Rogister, former Kapellmeister of the Deutsche Oper Berlin.



As HGO Artistic and Music Director Patrick Summers reveals, “Planning a season is like planning a great six-course meal, and the company has a lot of main courses but the one dessert – and it’s a great one, a real soufflé.” This “soufflé” is Rossini’s comic masterpiece The Italian Girl in Algiers, which opens on October 26. Making her HGO debut in the title role is Italian soprano Daniela Barcellona, a bel canto specialist whom Opera News found “perfect” in the title role of Rossini’s Tancredi. She’ll be singing opposite tenor Lawrence Brownlee, winner of both the Marian Anderson and the Richard Tucker Awards, who returns to Houston after wowing audiences in The Barber of Seville. The production comes courtesy of Spanish director-designer team Joan Font and Joan Guillén – who were last seen in Houston with witty stagings of Rossini’s La Cenerentola and The Barber of Seville – and features Italian conductor Carlo Rizzi on the podium. Winner of the first Toscanini Conductors competition, Rizzi made his HGO debut in 2007 with Aida.





reBlogged from: Interchanging Idioms

on Jan 31, 2012 at 05:00 PM

I've got a secret

And another...

Reviewing Anonymous 4.
Boston Globe, January 31, 2012.



reBlogged from: Soho the Dog

on Jan 31, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Dennis Russell Davies in rehearsal (Philip Glass, Symphony No. 9 – US Premiere)

Watch this video on YouTube.   Today, on his 75th birthday, the American Composer Orchestra (ACO) will be performing the US premiere of Philip Glass’s Symphony No. 9. We were at the rehearsal and talked briefly with Dennis Russell Davies. Happy birthday Philip Glass! Thank you to the ACO for letting me shoot part of ...

reBlogged from:
I care if you listen(.com)

on Jan 31, 2012 at 04:00 PM

Glass = 75

On the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday, Philip Glass occupies the front page of iTunes: a recording of his Ninth Symphony — which had its world première on New Year's Day, in Linz, and which the American Composers Orchestra will...

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Jan 31, 2012 at 03:00 PM

Raising A Glass To America's Most Famous Contemporary Composer












Philip Glass' 75th birthday cake — featuring some of his scores rendered in fondant.

Anastasia Tsioulcas/NPR

Philip Glass' 75th birthday cake — featuring some of his scores rendered in fondant.






http://www.npr.org/artists/15680178/philip-glass" target="_self">Philip Glass has earned just about all the accolades a living composer could reasonably dream of collecting. He'll be spending tonight — the evening of his 75th birthday — at the U.S. premiere of one of his recent pieces. The setting? No less august a venue than Carnegie Hall. The piece? It's his Ninth Symphony, played by the American Composers Orchestra and conductor Dennis Russell Davies. And to top off all the festivities, this piece is also being released today in its world-premiere recording by the Bruckner Orchester Linz and Russell Davies. You can hear the first movement right here.



Raising A Glass To America's Most Famous Contemporary Composer




Glass, Symphony No. 9



  • Artist: Philip Glass

  • Album: Symphony No. 9

  • Song: Movement I



Performed by the Bruckner Orchester Linz, conducted by Dennis Russell Davies.






 



!-- END CLASS="CONTAINER PLAYLIST" ID="CON145995146" PREVIEWTITLE="PLAYLIST" -->

All that uptown establishment glamor still seems — even after all these years of sparkling accomplishments — a slightly uncomfortable fit for one of downtown's high priests, whose churning, dreamy music mesmerized the New York loft scene of the 1960s and 1970s. The birthday party thrown Sunday night by the composer's friends and his record label, Orange Mountain Music, at the Greenwich Village nightclub (Le) Poisson Rouge, felt cozy, comfortable and friendly even while it glowed with serious star wattage. (Over here, Paul Simon; over there, Laurie Anderson and Lou Reed, and the latter was even spied smiling.)

As one might expect in Glass' company and in such a setting, most of the celebration revolved around music. Some but not all was by the man himself. Pianist and Glass consigliere Michael Riesman played a piano quintet based on Glass' score to the film The Hours with members of the Signal Ensemble. Violinist Tim Fain and pianist Bruce Brubaker played a 2010 piece, Pendulum, in which Fain's brilliant performance posited Glass as an 21st-century Paganini-style showpiece composer. The Kronos Quartet played both Glass' moody arrangement of Bob Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright" and the "China" movement of Orion, the culture-hopping piece Glass wrote for the 2004 Olympics in Athens. For "China," the quartet was joined by Wu Man, the stunning Chinese pipa player, whose confidently bent and twisted notes give Glass' score a pronounced piquancy.

As Glass himself remarked later on in the evening, "All music is ethnic music," and there were plenty of other examples of how wide a variety of friends and collaborators Glass has cultivated. There were warm and delicate melodies from Gambian kora player Foday Musa Suso (another Orion collaborator), whose web address was painted in blazingly large letters on the audience-facing side of his custom-made instrument. Fiercely talented Cape Breton fiddler Ashley MacIsaac stomped out a string of Celtic tunes (the most recent of which, MacIsaac explained, was written in 1937, the year of Glass' birth). Meanwhile, bringing "ethnic" music to a more familiar American terrain were The Raybeats, the arty neo-surf band founded in the early 1980s, whose Glassfest set culminated in their cover of the 1961 Link Wray tune "Jack the Ripper."

The warmth radiating from the club on this frigid January night came from Glass' own extended family as well. The composer's cousin (and our public radio sibling) Ira Glass served was the evening's genial emcee, while Glass' adult son Zack sang and played a wistful slide guitar.

The evening's formal portion ended with Glass' very young two sons, Cameron and Marlowe, presenting their dad with a small cake sweetly topped off with two candles marking out "75." But there was another, much more unusual fondant-festooned cake. Emblazoned with Glass' own signature in the middle, it was draped with his scores rendered in frosting and studded with edible pencils. Glass peered at it in front of this gathering of friends and fans and said, "Wow. That's actually some of my music. Someone worked very hard at this." Then he plunged back into the crowd, where the wine and conversation continued to flow.





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"fullattribution">Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.



reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Jan 31, 2012 at 03:00 PM

Glass 75

On the occasion of his seventy-fifth birthday, Philip Glass occupies the front page of iTunes: a recording of his Ninth Symphony — which had its world première on New Year's Day, in Linz, and which the American Composers Orchestra will...

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Jan 31, 2012 at 02:00 PM

Listen: LA’s Brainfeeder Label Shares Free Sampler; More Gilles Peterson Winners in London


Brainfeeder at work. Photo (CC-BY-NC-SA) Theo Jemison Photography.

Writing about music may indeed be like dancing about architecture, so why not give music a listen?


If you’re not already familiar with the terrific Los Angeles label Brainfeeder, founded by Flying Lotus, now’s the time to discover its artists. If you are familiar with them, you barely need read this blurb before skipping ahead to a lovely compilation.


Onboard: Thundercat, Martyn, Samiyam, Tokimonsta, The Gaslamp Killer, Jeremiah Jae, Taylor McFerrin, Teebs, Austin Peralta, Matthewdavid, Mono/Poly (the artist, not the synth, but we can love both), plus (exclusive) Lapalux.


BRAINFEEDER SAMPLER Download, info

Brainfeeder Label Site


And the timing is fitting: Brainfeeder has won well-deserved recognition in the Gilles Peterson Worldwide Awards 2012. (Other fine labels in the runners-up — Numbers, Hotep, R&S, Young Turks.) These awards dig through our world’s plentiful quality music to find things that are really special; you can check out some of their picks in the award setting in London in the short film below. It was also gratifying to see Machinedrum (Travis Stewart, also of Sepalcure) take home the “John Peel Play More Jazz Award,” as one of our favorite musicians of 2011.


More:

Worldwide Awards 2012 – The Winners Gilles Peterson Worldwide blog




Brainfeeder is brainchild of this man, Flying Lotus, seen here laboring on the label. Photo (CC-BY-NC-SA) Theo Jemison Photography.



reBlogged from: Create Digital Music

on Jan 31, 2012 at 01:00 PM

New NAMM Music Gear in a Nutshell (English + Deutsch) with De:Bug



De:Bug is one of my favorite reads in music technology. And while I can fake my way through French and Spanish, De:Bug is also the one non-English publication I read daily. So I’m gratified to get to write a byline for the publication, which someone was nice enough to translate into German. For our German-speaking readers, you actually don’t have to read this one in English (though there’s an English version, to)


In this story, I pick out the major themes in new music tech at the NAMM show this month in Anaheim, California:


Winter NAMM 2012 Roundup

Peter Kirn von CDM ist für uns über die NAMM gelaufen


It’s also a pleasure to get to meet the folks from De:Bug. Believe me, I’ll be practicing by reading your work, though I’d best leave the translation to the pros for now.




reBlogged from: Create Digital Music

on Jan 31, 2012 at 01:00 PM

Into the new year... Pete Morton/Gren Bartley gig...

It's been a while... but I have been buried away working on a new project in between the usual annoying illness/fatigue.  I have not been to any gigs recently either - but that changes on Friday incoming - 3d February - when I'll be down at the Swan in the Rushes, in God's Little Acre, for a gig headlined by one of my favourite musicians/writers etc.  Pete Morton.  Who will be supported by Gren Bartley, in what should prove to be a fascinating mix of acoustic styles.  Couple of vids on the TappedButSettling site to give a flavour of both...



reBlogged from: wordsandmusic

on Jan 31, 2012 at 12:00 PM

Disquiet Junto Project 0002: “Duet for Fog Horn & Train Whistle”



The first Disquiet Junto Project could very well have been its last. Who knew if anyone, let alone almost five dozen musicians, would respond to an assignment like “Please record the sound of an ice cube rattling in a glass, and make something of it”?


When just that happened, when 58 different musicians participated, the question was what came next. First came an email announcement list, so that rather than having to check the Info tab on the Junto’s Soundcloud.com page, members of the Junto could have each assignment delivered to their inbox (if you’re interested in being added to the list, send a request to marc@disquiet.com). Then came an FAQ, which is housed on the Info tab. And then, with some consideration, came the second assignment.


The first assignment had asked the participating musicians to produce their own samples, in this case of the sound of ice in a glass. For the second assignment, the more traditional approach of using a shared sample was employed. But instead of one sample, there were two. These are the instructions to the second assignment:


Create an original piece of music under five minutes in length utilizing just these two samples:


Fog Horn: http://www.freesound.org/people/schaarsen/sounds/69663/


Train Whistle: http://www.freesound.org/people/ecodios/sounds/119963/


You can only use those two samples, and you can do whatever you want with them.


Deadline for finished tracks is midnight (wherever you are) on Monday, January 16.


When posting your finished track on Soundcloud, be sure the include the following two sentences, in order to abide by the Creative Commons license:


Fog horn sample by Schaarsen: http://www.freesound.org/people/schaarsen/sounds/69663/


Train whistle sample by Ecodios: http://www.freesound.org/people/ecodios/sounds/119963/


The suggestion of a fog horn sample was not a surprise to anyone who had spent more than a day or two observing my twitter.com/disquiet feed. I live in the Richmond District of San Francisco, where we are serenaded, when the climate is right, by deep fog horns that sound like Zeus left his phone on vibrate (and dozens of other haze-induced similes). Fans of contemporary classical music will associate that sound with the field recordings that form the basis for the Fog Tropes of composer Ingram Marshall, and Marshall’s masterwork was indeed very much an inspiration for this project. As for the train, it had no particular consequence sonically, except that the sample I located seemed aesthetically compatible with the fog horn sample. Instead, the train was intended as a cultural contrast, the implied rhythm suggesting rock’n'roll against the classical element of the fog horn. None of this was described in the assignment. It merely informed the dimensions of the project as it was being developed in advance of its announcement. No, the real crux of the assignment is this portion of the instruction: “You can only use those two samples.” If all the participants were to share the same source material, then the real challenge was to see how they would make that source material their own, and how better — in the spirit of constraint — than to limit their palette to that source material?


The assignment was made late in the day on Thursday, January 12, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, January 16, as the deadline.


View a search return for all the entries: disquiet0002-duet. As of this writing, there are 50 tracks associated with the tag.


Visit, listen to, and consider joining the group at soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto.


A full list of Junto projects is housed on Disquiet.com.


(Oddly apt photo from http://www.flickr.com/photos/j33pman/5245441632. It was attached to the Junto entry “Bumpy Ride” by Doug Laustsen, aka douglownote.)




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Jan 31, 2012 at 09:00 AM

Disquiet Junto Project 0001: Ice Cubes in a Glass



The first Disquiet Junto project was launched on the first Thursday of 2012, January 5. I had no idea if anyone would participate. In the end, 58 different musicians each uploaded, as directed, a single track in response to the assignment: “Please record the sound of an ice cube rattling in a glass, and make something of it.”


The significant majority of them made their tracks available for free download. They posted them in the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com, and used the tag “disquiet0001-ice” to distinguish their entry: including it in the file’s title and adding it as a tag. Soundcloud is a great service, but it doesn’t allow set creation within groups, so the only way to easily access the files associated with a given Junto project is by searching for a tag. I’m looking into ways to collect the files related to a specific Junto project, but in the meanwhile a search return is the best method.


The idea of using an ice cube in the glass had several points of inspiration. For one thing, given the long-running precedent of the Stones Throw Records Beat Battles, which meet once a week and use a shared sample as the starting point for competition, there was reason to distinguish the project; requesting that Junto members create their own sample, rather than employ the same exact source material, seemed like a good way to accomplish that. But, in a nod to the Beat Battles, I wanted a touch of hip-hop, and the sound of ice cubes heard in the Alkaholiks’ classic “Hip Hop Drunkies,” produced by E-Swift and Marley Marl, has long been a personal favorite (the song, which features a cameo by Ol’ Dirty Bastard, is from the 1997 album Likwidation; the instrumental is on youtube.com). In addition, the contact-mic experiments of musician Joe Colley came to mind. And, of course, there is Erik Satie’s furniture music, which is classical music’s strong precursor to what we now call ambient music: what could be a more casual everyday domestic sound than ice clinking in a glass?


The deadline was set for the following Monday, January 9, at midnight. In subsequent Junto projects the deadline would be moved back a minute, to 11:59pm, since some people weren’t sure if “midnight Monday” meant the midnight with which Monday began or with which it ended. Given that simple assignments are at the heart of the Junto, the fact that something as basic as “midnight Monday” was up for interpretation was an important lesson unto itself.


View a search return for all the entries: disquiet0001-ice.


Visit, listen to, and consider joining the group at soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto.


A full list of Junto projects is housed on Disquiet.com.


(Image of ice cubes in a glass comes from “Mystic Cubes,” the Junto entry by Mystified.)




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Jan 31, 2012 at 08:00 AM

Around the horn: Anyone but Mitt edition

ART AND THE GOVERNMENT – DOMESTIC



ART AND THE GOVERNMENT – INTERNATIONAL



ALL ABOUT PHILANTHROPY



  • GiveWell details how charity regulations in various countries make donating to top-rated international charities more difficult than it should be.

  • The Craigslist Foundation is shutting down.

  • Most foundation leaders have trouble converting evaluation results into “meaningful insights.”


IN THE FIELD



  • More on Opera Boston’s sudden demise late last year.

  • Bye bye Detroit Children’s Museum.

  • Yikes! longtime conductor, author, and inspirational TED talker Benjamin Zander was let go by the New England Conservatory this month over a cover-up involving a videographer who was a convicted sex offender, as NEC clearly wanted no part of any Joe Paterno/Jerry Sandusky redux.

  • LA Opera joins those trying out the dynamic pricing route.

  • Interesting new curator time share model being pioneered by the Detroit Institute of Art and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

  • When the IRS dumped hundreds of thousands of organizations from the nonprofit rolls last year, people hardly batted an eye – mostly because they assumed those organizations (who had failed to file required forms for three years in a row) were either no longer active or not accomplishing any good if they were. Yet my cultural asset mapping work has suggested that at least some of those organizations who had their tax-exempt status stripped were real and continuing to provide public programs. Thomas A. Kelley provides one such example in this account of an African American community center that is fighting to get its nonprofit status back.

  • Jerome Weeks notes the difficulty that Dallas-area arts organizations are having with recruiting top leadership talent, and correctly follows the breadcrumbs to the lack of attractive opportunities for earlier-stage arts professionals:

    Jose Bowen says one reason the pickings remain thin is that the starting jobs for arts management graduates generally don’t pay well. And the punishing costs of college don’t help, either. Bowen is dean of SMU’s Meadows School of the Arts. It’s one of the few that offers a double master’s degree in arts management – in the arts and business administration.


    Bowen: “Our students graduate and are immediately faced with a choice. Come work for Goldman and make more money or go work for a nonprofit and make less money. And when you have loans, right out of school? That’s a hard choice to make.”


    It’s really very simple, people. If senior leaders with demonstrated records of accomplishment don’t want the job, it’s time to consider either senior leaders without demonstrated records of accomplishment, or junior leaders who haven’t had a chance to demonstrate accomplishment yet. If arts professionals below the leadership ranks are never given an opportunity to take initiative, manage people, or own projects in their roles, they’re never going to be in a position to fill those positions effectively, after the person who did so for so long is gone. And that’s assuming they stick around on low salaries waiting for their big break. Something to think about.


ng>BIG IDEAS

  • I’ve been wondering for a while about the effect on the bottom line that election season must have for struggling traditional media companies – especially in the wake of the Citizens United decision. Well, Dave Copeland takes that thought further and notes how well-positioned online audience gatekeepers – such as Google – are to benefit from campaign ads.

  • ArtsJournal hosted one of its blog debates last week called Lead or Follow, featuring Diane Ragsdale, Michael Kaiser, and others.  Doug McLennan continues to experiment with the form of these fora, and though I don’t think he’s quite nailed the perfect formula yet, the process is fascinating to watch. As background to this conversation, the Wallace Foundation published 54 stories of audience engagement arising from its Wallace Excellence Awards grant program from the previous decade, as well as four more in-depth case studies on its own site.

  • Is your brain constantly bloated because it’s trying to take in too much information? Maybe you should go on an information diet! Beth Kanter reviews what looks to be an important book for folks like me who are constantly trying to drink from the fire hose.


RESEARCH CORNER



  • Add a feather to Randy Cohen’s cap: the Americans for the Arts researcher’s National Arts Index project has inspired an imitator across the pond, the UK Arts Index. (h/t Mark Robinson)

  • Kickstarter is out with its annual project stats. Kickstarter projects attracted nearly $100 million in pledges in 2011! Also of note, the number of high-volume donors (people who contribute to hundreds of projects a year and presumably seek them out as a kind of hobby) is growing.

  • Nonprofit Finance Fund is conducting its fourth annual survey of nonprofits, analyzing how they are responding to and recovering from the financial crisis. The survey is anonymous and takes 10-15 minutes to fill out, and they’re looking for as many respondents as possible. They are taking responses through February 15 and you can participate here.

  • Look out, American Red Cross! GiveWell is on the warpath to get you to release your evaluation of your own organization’s relief efforts in Haiti.


ETC.



  • We haven’t had any silly links in Around the Horn for a while. Well, that’s about to change


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reBlogged from: Createquity.

on Jan 31, 2012 at 07:00 AM

Seasons Don't Fear the Silence

                First of all, I would like to address the personally-saddening fact that I haven’t been blogging recently. This is going to change starting NOW!  I’ve been writing applications for four different writing camps this summer, and that’s taken up a lot of my typing energy, as has mock trial and my new internship at UNM’s newspaper. Thanks for reading; this blog isn’t looking to die anytime soon.      




As I sit here and type this, I’m watching and listening to Julliard’s live broadcast of their Focus! Festival that celebrates John Cage’s 100th birthday year. After the intermission, in an impromptu move, they played an audio recording of John Cage speaking, called “John Cage speaks.” In his delicate, tenor voice, he said:
“I have nothing to say, and I am saying it, and that is poetry as I needed it. This space of time is organized. We need not fear these silences. We may love them.”
The first sentence of that quote is one of the most famous Cage quotes, but the sentences that follow are just as important. They create a rule to live by that not only applies to the listening of Cage’s music, but the rest of our lives.




                At the Focus! Festival, Cage’s Third Construction, for percussion quartet, was played. This was the second time I had heard this piece in the past week. The first time was truly live, with the conch’s actual sound waves running through my ears at Sunday Chatter’s Cage/Reich percussion day. It was easily one of the most breathtaking performances I’ve ever seen—and I am talking about all performances. However, before this piece, three people got up and left. They had heard Living Room Music by Cage and Marimba (Piano) Phase by Reich. Living Room Music has indeterminate instrumentation, employing any object from one’s home. This particular performance included a lamp, a map, voice, and other objects.


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                Cage, as well as other composers of the like, is famous for being someone who induces walk-outs like these. Wolff, Feldman, Tudor, Brown, and countless others lived by the paradox of achieving so much with of music that so many hated (and still do, as demonstrated by the three I saw). This music is well-known, and there is no need to explain its philosophy, but the reactions and realizations it brings are infinitely telling. It’s puzzling, but at the same time, this family of pariah sounds shows us more about our cultures than most forms of music labeled as “beautiful.”
                When Cage says “We need not fear silences,” he is, to some degree, talking about sound. Sound is a blanket of comfort. We turn on the TV or radio when we are home alone, some use white noise machines to sleep, “awkward silences” between people are hurriedly filled with small talk.  
                An aural example of the fear of the “silences” of music occurred at the world premiere of Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Fresco in 1969, when the Bonn musicians rebelled against the music. The piece was meant to last four-and-a-half hours, using the orchestra in four different places in the foyer of the performance hall. The musicians were said to stand by their beloved classics and, with “glissandos no faster than one octave per minute,” were puzzled and captured in the silence of unfamiliarity and fear. The musicians were furious with Stockhausen, despite the fact that he described to them his vision (“music internally animated through the concentration of the musicians”). On the day of the performance, the musicians left a hand-painted sign on the warm-up room, reading: “We are playing, otherwise we would be fired!” During the performance, the musicians were taunted by audience members, and many left only an hour in. The concert was stopped about 20 minutes short.  
                Scandals like this show how the fear of the unfamiliar can bring out the bitterest side of humans. Even the notes of an acclaimed composer can be rejected because they aren’t arranged in comfortable ways. Contemporary music is being accepted more as time goes on, but there are still the ones who walk out of theaters or question the need for it.
                However, Cage is also talking about life in his quote, we can assume. Silence is a synonym for worry and unfamiliarity. Humans hate being in different situations in which their personal boundaries are pushed. The poetry that Cage talks about comes through his acceptance of these moments of silence and fear. Because time is balanced, he says, silence is just as important as sound. This is musically known, but in life, uncomfortable, idle, or hard times are thought of as unnatural and evil. Perhaps we need this silence, however, to understand and appreciate the sound. Often, when we push ourselves outside of our comfort zone and come out successful, the results are more rewarding than any familiar deed. Ideas, literature, art, opinions, and thousands of other concepts are improved when people initiate. Initiation cannot be done without the acceptance of the silences of life.
                After the intermission of the concert where the three people left, Cage’s Child of Tree and, of course, Third Construction itself were played. Not only did these patrons miss out on a particularly musical cactus and a life-changing performance, they missed out on the opportunity to accept the silences in life. Does this mean their lives are unbalanced, as Cage said? No. Their silences just took the form of the absence of the performance. 






yle="text-align: center;">Do not fear the cactus 

reBlogged from: Neo Antennae

on Jan 31, 2012 at 07:00 AM

Xenakis: "Kraanerg" (complete)







Iannis Xenakis: "Kraanerg" (1968-69) for 23 instruments and 4-channel tape. ST-X Ensemble, Charles Zachery Bornstein, conductor.

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on Jan 31, 2012 at 06:00 AM

La Alquimia de los Sueños / The Alchemy of Dreams


The Spanish-born painter Remedios Varo (1908-1963) depicted surreal visions in which the mythological and the quotidian intertwined in enchanting ways. She created fascinating documentation of her explorations of the terrestrial and the otherworldly, a place where sight and sound, scent and taste, sense and fantasy collaborated and contrasted toward a tantalizingly ephemeral end.


This month I had the pleasure of concluding work on a project with Julio César Morales and Max La Rivière-Hedrick that celebrated various facets of Varos’ work and life. Titled La Alquimia de los Sueños (which translates as The Alchemy of Dreams), it was commissioned by the gallery Frey Norris in San Francisco to coincide with an extraordinary Varo exhibit running there through February 25. The project took the form of a dinner, a kind of meal-as-art, held at Engine 43 in San Francisco’s Excelsior neighborhood. There were six courses, each associated with a different magical spell and drawing on the surrealist recipes that Varo had created with her close friend, Leonora Carrington. There’s a January 29 story about the event at nytimes.com (“Break Brick, Break Bread, Break the Mold”).


I. The Sound of Dreams


As for my role, among other things I had the pleasure of interviewing Mexico-born sound artist and musician Guillermo Galindo, who lives in San Francisco, about his participation in the project. As seen up top, in a pair of photos by Andria Lo, he performed at the dinner — not only his own mix of sounds, but also deep shuddering bass lines that drew from Varo’s interest in resonance and vibration. What follows is an excerpt of the full interview, “The Sound of Dreams,” which can be read at engine43.org:


Weidenbaum: Regarding the relationship between Tarot and the collective unconscious, can you talk a bit about specifically the role of sound in dreams?


I have found that for most people it is difficult to remember the sound, or sounds, of their dreams. Most people, including me, have an easier time remembering music: music that accompanies the dream, music that is played by someone or, in my case, composition ideas that appear by themselves or performed by myself or someone else. As in real life, dream components have sounds: an explosion, someone walking in high heels, the sound of the rain etc. Having said this, I do think that sounds have their own significance in dreams — a significance not necessarily attached to the visual or narrative elements of a specific dream. In other words, I believe that sounds in dreams do have their own specific symbology.


Weidenbaum: Are there parallels between food and sound you’d like to discuss?


Galindo: I had a Chinese music student who, in order to reconnect to her homeland memories, recorded the sound of herself cooking of Chinese dishes, which she would cook one day each month. Then she would present random photographs of the dishes with the audio of the cooking sounds. Different foods have different textures of sound when one cooks them. This provides information about their physical nature and about the chemical reaction that they have when mixed over the fire with other elements. I think that the purest and most enjoyable “food” sound is the sound of water. I think that the sound of the water falling into a glass is a vital element when enjoying a good drink of water, not to mention the “clink” of the wine glasses, the sound of silverware, or the sound of clay, wooden, or ceramic plates and bowls.


And this is a screenshot that Galindo provided to me of the software setup he utilized when playing live, in addition to a pair of Kaoss Pads and at least four iPods. (It is of higher quality than the casual camera shot I posted on Twitter the night of the event.)



Here, from a post-event summary, is a list of the sounds he developed for each of the courses:


0. XECATL (simulated gigantic ice flutes) independent white noise frequency bands oscillating randomly in chaos.


1. Introduction of 50 Hz.low frequency modulated by 260 Hz. and 2.5 Hz. LFO simultaneously resulting in sudden architectural shaking.


2. Harmonic content evolving from Erik Satie’s Gnossienne #1 as if reproduced by echoing crystal feathers.


3. Multiplication of Vivaldi’s Stabat Mater as if sang by a bleeding heart.


4. Intermittent triple drone in Eb and recurring patchy electric glitches emanating from pure electricity controlled by light boxes. Agustin Lara’s Veracruz emerges from the minuscule speaker of a transistor radio.


5. Modulated low frequency enters the 20 Hz realm as if entering subsonic levels. Low frequency joins polyrhythmic mass reaching a climax buildup made of electronic glitches and samples of heavy metal distorted guitars doubled with baritone sax reaching 120 bpm plus tempos. The sonic storm breaks into total silence.


II. A Brief Fiction


In addition, I served as managing editor on the project, working with the various participants on their written contributions. And I wrote a short story, “Sitting for a Dream,” that is an imaginary scenario inspired by the fact that Mexico City cardiologist Dr. Ignacio Chávez commissioned what yielded the 1957 Varo portrait “Retrato del doctor Ignacio Chávez.” This is an excerpt from the story:


She took his hand in hers and silently led him through several chambers, each its own little world. One was dark and painted like a jungle. Another was covered, walls and ceiling, in billowing cotton tarps that filtered the daylight. He entered the final chamber by himself. Varo stood on the far side, directly opposite the doorway through which he had just walked. She, too, wore a lab coat, her hair pulled back. The room was almost empty. In the center there was a medium-size wooden frame suspended from the ceiling by pulleys. On either side facing the frame was a single chair. He walked toward the frame, and as he approached, so did Varo. He realized she was mimicking him, but not in a rude way. If anything, it was flattering to be the subject of such attention. He walked toward the closer of the two chairs. She approached the other, copying his gait, adjusting her posture to match his.


y reached their chairs, they both sat down, looking at each other through the frame, as if at a painting. She gave him a little smile, which he acknowledged by removing his hat. In turn, she pulled from her coat pocket a deck of cards. She selected one card, seemingly at random, and turned it toward him. It showed an old sage with a stick, and below it, in English, was written “The Hermit.” She then pulled another card, this one in Spanish. It read “El Corazon.” It was his turn to smile. He recognized it from the lotería. The next card was “La Pera,” and he recalled the tree from the ill-fated mural she had proposed. She saw the recognition in his face, and her shoulders relaxed. Then his shoulders relaxed. Somehow, he found himself now imitating her, unintentionally but naturally. Varo reached under her chair and lifted a small goblet. Taking the hint, Dr. Chavez did the same. Again, he found himself mimicking her — how simply she had cast her spell.


This is the painting that inspired the story, which is readable in full at engine43.org:



III. Notes on Scent


One especially fascinating element of the event was smell. Each course was accompanied by a scent developed by Mirjana Blankenship (of captainblankenship.com), and these scents built one upon the previous as the evening proceeded. The terms for these elements of a collective sent, I learned from Blankenship, are musical: they are “notes.” The deepest is the “base” note, and then there are “heart” and “top” notes above, and they all “decay” over time, much as a struck chord might. The explanation reminded me of an essay by Brian Eno from the magazine Details back in 1992 (“Scents and Sensibility”), in which he described the parallels and intersections between his experiments in smell and sound. Blankenship’s scents (presented in the elegant bottles shown below) were not to be experienced in their own olfactory anechoic chamber. Quite the contrary, they were selected and constructed to mix with the scents inherent in the meal, including the rich smoke that emanated from the hearth in which meat was roasted, and the burnt sugar that resulted from pistachio pralines made on site just moments before they were served (see the very bottom of this post). By intending to mingle rather than command attention, Blankenship’s scents were like the famed “furniture music” of Erik Satie that is understood as a strong precursor of ambient music — sounds that Galindo included in his performance.



More on the exhibit and the gallery at freynorris.com. There’s a wide range of coverage of the La Alquimia de los Sueños event at engine43.org.


I previously participated in A Sors, a project the duo developed, with Norma Listman, for the Warhol Initiative.



(Photos by Andria Lo of andrialo.com.)




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Jan 31, 2012 at 03:00 AM

January 30, 2012

Radio Rambler – first update for 2012

Hey everyone, DJ Rambler here. It’s been a few months, I know, but I have finally got around to updating the Radio Rambler playlist. Thanks to those of you who wrote to me and asked when I was going to … Continue reading

reBlogged from: The Rambler

on Jan 30, 2012 at 11:00 PM

Been around the world

Not really. But I have been mostly elsewhere than this space. Catching up:

Fuzzy Math. Many words on the history and appeal of the hot toddy, with recipes both true and speculative. A guest post for Molly Sheridan's Wonderland Kitchen, January 30, 2012.

Reviewing Helios Early Opera.
Boston Globe, January 30, 2012.

Reviewing Lise de la Salle.
Boston Globe, January 30, 2012.

Reviewing the Boston Symphony Orchestra Chamber Players.
Boston Globe, January 24, 2012.

New England's Prospect: The Haunted Mansion. The BSO plays Harbison's Sixth and Turnage's From the Wreckage.
NewMusicBox, January 20, 2012.



reBlogged from: Soho the Dog

on Jan 30, 2012 at 09:00 PM

The Difficulty of Seeing Music

Sort of looks like an old faded-then-digitized photograph of the Alps, doesn’t it? I should make you guess the piece, but given my current obsession it’s too easy. This is the MIDI info, player-piano-roll style, for the first six systems of the Concord Sonata. After the initial wedge motive Ives descends down to the lowest ...

reBlogged from:
PostClassic

on Jan 30, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Joy In Repetition: Philip Glass Turns 75














At age 75, composer Philip Glass is as busy as ever.

Stewart Cohen

At age 75, composer Philip Glass is as busy as ever.






http://www.npr.org/artists/15680178/philip-glass" target="_blank">Philip Glass turns 75 tomorrow. Impossible, you say? Given his two dozen operas, reams of orchestral music, virtually uncountable film scores and scads of projects in every discipline, isn't he like 90 or 100 or 110? Or, judging by his kaleidoscopic connections and collaborators, isn't he somewhere between 20 and 50, hunkered down among hipsters and plotting his next move toward musical world domination?

Glass is celebrating his birthday with the premiere of his Ninth Symphony by the American Composers Orchestra at Carnegie Hall. It's the same ensemble that introduced his first mature orchestra piece, the sweetly lyrical Violin Concerto No. 1, 25 years ago. After Tuesday's festivities, life goes on as usual — an opera production in Norfolk, Va., that violin concerto in Bologna, Italy, orchestral music in Warwick, England. And that only takes us up to Saturday. He's touring throughout the year with Einstein on the Beach, the groundbreaking minimalist opera on a maximal scale he created with director Robert Wilson. (Here's a moving 2009 performance of the finale featuring the Los Angeles Children's Chorus.)

It's safe to say that no contemporary musician with classical ties has had Glass' reach or success. What other composer has been both commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera and appeared as a musical guest on Saturday Night Live? But there are goals yet unreached, as in this exchange from The Simpsons:

Carl Carlsson to David Byrne (who has just walked into Moe's Tavern): David Byrne?

Bartender Moe Szyslak: Singer, artist, composer, director, Talking Head?

Byrne: And I used to wrestle under the name El Diablo.

Lenny Leonard: I thought that was Philip Glass.

Byrne: Yeah, he wishes.

No living composer has married music to a wider range of images and movement than Glass has. If you can judge a person by the company he keeps, consider that a very short sample of Glass' artistic partners includes Byrne, Paul Simon, Ravi Shankar, Allen Ginsberg, Martin Scorsese, Nobel literature laureate Doris Lessing, choreographer Twyla Tharp, playwright David Henry Hwang and filmmaker Errol Morris.

To get an idea of what makes Glass Glass, let's examine just one project, his score for the mesmerizing Paul Schrader film Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters. It's from 1985, when the former Baltimore child prodigy (University of Chicago at age 14) had completed his training (Juilliard and then Paris, with Copland's teacher Nadia Boulanger) and stints as a New York cabbie and plumber (he installed art critic Robert Hughes' dishwasher).

Mishima, like Einstein and the Gandhi opera Satyagraha, is built around a larger-than-life historical figure, a Japanese author whose ritual suicide is foreshadowed in the sweeping theme. The haunting score for string orchestra and percussion also has passages for the Kronos Quartet, which eventually became Glass' String Quartet No. 3. (Not only does his music resemble Vivaldi's in sound and quantity, but he also repurposes like his Baroque predecessors.)

In one memorable section of Mishima, the composer employs the sound of a surf-rock band that captures the anxious energy of postwar Japanese youth. In the slow section that follows, there's a passage that reappears time and time again as background music in This American Life, the radio show hosted and produced by Glass' cousin and fellow Baltimore native Ira Glass.

Mishima is but one moment from an international career that shows no signs of slowing down. Hear Mishima below, as well as a few other high points from Glass' catalog. What are your favorites? Have you seen him perform? Let us know in the comments section or Tweet @nprclassical.







"fullattribution">Copyright 2012 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.



reBlogged from: NPR Blogs: Deceptive Cadence

on Jan 30, 2012 at 05:00 PM

I thought I saw a Sufi cat

'As an Anchoress Julian was allowed to keep a cat for pest control, particularly to keep down the mice. Julian is often portrayed with her cat nearby, no doubt it was a great source of comfort to her.'
That notice is displayed in the Anchoress' cell in St Julian's Church in Norwich and I photographed the Marseille street cat seen below when I was on the road with a Sufi saint recently. On my iPod in Marseille was Aïcha Redouane singing her own settings of the Sufi poems of Rabi`a Al-`Adawiyya. Those two remarkable women, Julian of Norwich and Rabi`a Al-`Adawiyya, are linked by their fervour for mystical devotion. Julian and her cat are portrayed by Brother Robert Lentz OFM, a gay American Franciscan friar who controversially incorporates contemporary social themes into his icons. The link between Christian and Islamic mysticism fascinated another American monk Thomas Merton, who venerated both Julian of Norwich and the Algerian Sufi saint Shaykh Ahmad ibn 'Ajiba. The importance of mystical devotion was also recognised by the Catholic philosopher Teilhard de Chardin who said "humankind is being brought to a moment where it will have to decide between suicide and adoration". Suicide has powerful advocates but those fighting the corner of adoration include Edmund Rubbra with a homage to Teilhard de Chardin in the form of his revelatory Eighth Symphony together with the feline linked Jonathan Harvey whose How could the soul not take flight sets the verse of Sufi poet Jalal Al-Din Rumi. Also on the side of adoration is Hildegard authority June Boyce-Tillman who captures Julian's mystical devotions in Enfolded in Love, a musical pageant for young musicians. With maritime tragedies in the news June Boyce-Tilman has a topical performance in Southampton on Feb 4: her new work for choir and orchestra The Myth of the Titanic retells the story of the sinking of the Titanic as a myth about human hubris and arrogance - classical music cannot be more relevant than that. The Myth of the Titanic, which in an echo of Tippett's A Child of Our Time uses a song from the black community in the US to protest against colonialism and racial subjugation, is confirmation that engagement is alive and well if you look beyond the Mahler symphonies. Isabelle Eberhardt, who campaigned against colonialism and was a frequent maritime traveller, had drawn me to Marseille and Missy Mazzoli's refreshingly engaged opera Song from the Uproar: the Lives and Deaths of Isabelle Eberhardt premieres at The Kitchen, NYC on Feb 24. Funds are being raised for a recording of the opera on Kickstarter, which was how Ochion Jewell funded the CD of his First Suite for Jazz Quartet - is a new anti-business model emerging for music recording? Alas no recording of June Boyce-Tillman's mystical musical celebration of Julian of Norwich, but read about it in Meetings with remarkable women.


Also on Facebook and Twitter. Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk

reBlogged from: On An Overgrown Path

on Jan 30, 2012 at 03:00 PM

Valley of old-media references

That would be Billy Joel’s Glass Houses album. (No, I’m not throwing stones.) Before “Sometimes a Fantasy,” you hear a phone being dialed: you hear ten tones. So, those carefree days when, not only did you hit only ten buttons (even dialed is a throw-back term, yes?) in order to dial a number — but hitting ten buttons implied that you were dialling long distance.

And before “All Night Long,” that late-night-TV invocation of “The Star-Spangled Banner” — those days before 24-hour, 400-channel cable TV . . . .



reBlogged from:
henningmusick

on Jan 30, 2012 at 01:00 PM

A Response to SOPA: Free Pays(More)


So as we know, if a song reaches a certain level of popularity these days, there’s pretty much a guarantee that someone, somewhere is going to pirate it. This is now a fact. Should it happen? Some say yes, and some say no, and there will probably never be a consensus. Regardless of the answer to that question, the unrelenting truth of the matter is that it DOES happen. The smartest response in this case then is to stop arguing about the should’s or the why’s, and simply accept the fact that this is happening. The ground is shifting below our feet, and we need to act or we will all get sucked under.


To me it seems pointless to even bring up the prospect of a subscription service, or even a pay-as-you-go model as a viable solution for a future sustainable industry model. This is because the internet, now the basis of content consumption, is like a huge river of information. A paywall is like a little pebble being thrown into it. The water in the river has no trouble getting around the pebble. Paywalls will never solve the piracy problem, and damming up the whole river, as we’ve seen with SOPA, will not be easy, and most likely will never happen.


Really though, I don’t think that the actual problem that the rights holders have with piracy is the copying, but rather it is the loss of revenue brought about by the copying that motivates the rights holders into action. They want to be rightly compensated for their work. Who wouldn’t? The problem is that the business model - the mechanism that they’ve chosen to help them receive compensation, is not only a little dated, but it has been proven ineffective in this new environment that is very different from the one we saw even 15 years ago.


The rights holders need a new mechanism for compensation. It’s that simple. Why they’re trying to preserve the one they have, I really don’t know. But the sooner they accept the fact that it is broken and it’s time to get a new one, the happier they will be.


So pay walls aren’t the answer. They won’t work in this environment. But if fans don’t pay, how then can the artists make money? This, it turns out, can be solved with a concept that has been around for about 4o years, with a little twist. It all starts with the long established Basic Cable ad revenue model. I can’t speak about before then, but in the early 90’s, you had something like 13 basic cable channels that any TV with an antenna could pick up, with no other wires or services required. The viewers would watch for free, but they were also being exposed to ads, and so the content providers on these 13 channels were still justly payed through ad revenue models.


This model worked okay, but it often times lead to media networks selling out to the point where they were willingly subjecting their viewers to incredibly interruptive messaging and breaks in programming, often at the most crucial times. This was not as serious of an issue for the rights holders however, because there was simply no alternative for their consumers to run to. Obviously, no longer is this the case.


So this is where the twist comes in. There needs to be a shift in advertising and marketing as it is practiced today. As Seth Godin so enthusiastically preaches, interruptive marketing is NOT the solution. The new cardinal rule of marketing should be: NEVER INTERRUPT THE CONENT THE AUDIENCE IS THERE TO EXPERIENCE. Think about it logically. The incentive for viewers or listeners to tune in is the content. When there are breaks in content, the incentives for viewers and listeners to stay are weakened, which creates the perfect opportunity for those offering uninterrupted alternative experiences that are also free, an opportunity that the internet community has never failed to capitalize on. The efficiency of the internet to provide alternatives makes any weakness in audience loyalty or incentives, a very dangerous thing for a rights holder.


But this does not have to be the end of advertising or ad-supported models, just perhaps the end of advertising as we know it today. There is in fact a new choice - a new way of marketing which will benefit all parties involved, and then some. Take a look at the Beat-Play ad model. 



So just like with basic cable, artists can give away their songs (preferably trackable streams) for free, in one place - say Facebook - and fans would no longer have to bother risking viruses on torrent websites because they could go right to the artist instead, in a more convenient and safe location. Then the artists, with the right tools, could (for the first time) track not only all of their fans, but all of their actual plays.


These analytics can then be used as leverage to negotiate the price of an artist’s ad space on Facebook. The more popular the music, meaning the more it’s being shared, the more money an artist could actually make.


The real difference maker here lies in the ads themselves though. No longer can the ads be obtrusive to the user’s experience. No longer can irrelevant messages be blared in your face seemingly at random. This, again, breaks down consumer incentives, and as Freakonomics has taught us, incentives are everything.


Instead of the advertisers taking something from the viewer or listener (their time), brands need to be willing to give something of value to their prospective customers. A great way to start is to sponsor the music or content that their demographics love and care about. This is an amazing PR move for brands. The fans would be getting their music for free, and they would (even if subconsciously) know who has provided it to them so easily.


As for integrating the brand into the user’s experience with the content, this is where the interactive media comes in, or what I like to call Smart Media. This is the Skrillex Mothership Invaders Game, or the Kelly Clarkson Fashion Showdown app. It could really be almost anything, as long as it fits into 1 of the following 4 categories: Interactive, Fun, Useful or Beautiful. If an ad does not fit one of these categories, and if it is not relevant to the artist or content, it threatens to weaken the chances for retaining an audience, and it could hurt the rights holders, the brands and even the fans.


The end goal of these ads is to actually add to the user’s experience. These ads should be designed so people will actually want to click on them and interact. This encourages authentic engagement with the brand. Mix that engagement with the already established cred from giving away the music for free, and you’ve finally got a reciprotive advertising model.


The end result – The artists release their music to the world, the fans consume and share it all they want for free, the advertisers tap into those fans and utilize the artist’s momentum for effective marketing. The rights holders get paid justly with full control over negotiations with brands, the brands gain significant cred amongst their demographics, which in theory, should boost sales, the fans gain a more relevant, more useful ad experience with no needed interruption, and they get all of the content that they could want in one simple and easily accessible location. Everybody wins, and the rights holders have the potential to make even more money with this free model than with their current one, because of the viral nature of content sharing and the ability to now directly correlate it to revenue potential.


All of a sudden this argument over piracy, or file sharing, seems incredibly useless and irrelevant. There is a solution laying here untouched that makes the sharing of the content a way more profitable prospect than the selling of it. It means a shift from monetizing song purchases to monetizing song plays! What an amazingly huge opportunity just lying in wait for rights holders, most of whom are too busy complaining about why their current business model is failing for them to notice.


So this is my message to rights holders - LET THE CONTENT BE FREE! In every sense of the phrase.


Now this does not mean that every artist should go out and start giving their music away for free right away, nor does it mean that they shouldn’t. Of course some artists may never want to give their music away at all, and that is okay. What it does mean is that we need more established platforms to track online content usage, make communications with advertisers easier, make access and management of content better for the consumers, and we need to establish standards that set important precedents for everyone, in order to optimize results with emerging solutions and models like the one proposed here. There needs to be better tools to organize and manage these solutions, which will be required to make a new system function. We, as a world community of content creators, need to unify, and get started in supporting one common platform that provides solutions for these needs, and something that most importantly syncs well with existing networks like Facebook and the various Mobile platforms where the biggest support already lies.


This is what I have spent the last 4 years of my life working on. As an independent artist who dropped out of college at 18 with no plan, and decided to pursue a career in music, I have been actively attempting to develop and design solutions that would make this new model of promotion and monetization for artists everywhere possible, especially for independent artists like myself. I am happy to say that we are closer than ever to realizing the very first steps towards this new, open and profitable environment, but we cannot do it without the support of the whole community. We cannot even attempt it if we are alone. We need contributions from everyone. Contributions of faith, action and unity.


We need to spread the word of a solution to the world, and then, maybe, people will forget all about this whole SOPA business. The bill may have been abandoned for now, but there is no doubt it will be back in some form in the future. The time is now for the community to forge solutions that make the prospect for these kinds of bills irrelevant, for everyone, as the ultimate protection.



Beat-Play is still undergoing many changes. Our platform is available now at Beatplay.com. We are releasing our newly redesigned interface (shown above) next month, and have plans for a mobile app in the next few months, along with increasing options for cultivating artist-to-brand relationships, and a lot more. Currently we support 100% unlimited and free music and video uploads. We also support the Youtube and Soundcloud API’s, which create some amazing opportunities for creating playlists between the two platforms that were not possible before. This is just the beginning.


We are focused on creating sustainable solutions for all pieces of the music industry business model - Promotion, Distribution, Monetization, Organization and Playback. There is of course no one solution that is right for everyone. There must be multiple options available for every aspect of the industry just mentioned. That is why we need to enlist the help of you, the music community, to provide the proper cultivation of these new solutions, and proper stewardship necessary to transform these amazing opportunities into full-blown sustainable solutions for the entertainment industry moving forward. Help us build a thriving and sustainable world music community. Please join our efforts. The solutions are in right our grasp, we just need to act.


Contact us anytime, we would love to talk, and we will be at MIDEM this week!


Beat-Play on Facebook


MusicWithoutLabels Blog


Written by: Dante Cullari Founder & CEO Beat-Play, LLC


reBlogged from: Music Think Tank (primary) RSS

on Jan 30, 2012 at 12:00 PM

Posing Questions: Wolfgang Rihm at 60

2012 sees the 60th birthday of the prolific composer Wolfgang Rihm and the London Sinfonietta curated a concert that included three UK premieres of Rihm works in addition to two works by composers who at some point in their training were taught by Rihm: Rebecca Saunders and Jörg Widmann. Ricercare – music in memorium Luigi Nono ...

reBlogged from:
I care if you listen(.com)

on Jan 30, 2012 at 11:00 AM

Mahler at the Neue Pinakothek



reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Jan 30, 2012 at 02:00 AM

January 29, 2012

Collecting Sounds


Sound Clip: Memorabilia Collecting Sounds With by Mark Gergis


Memorabilia Collecting Sounds With is a new Ràdio Web MACBA radio series (http://rwm.macba.cat/) which seeks to break through to unearth and reveal private collections of music and sound memorabilia. It is a historiography of sound collecting that reveals the unseen and passionate work of the amateur collector while reconstructing multiple parallel histories such as the evolution of recording formats, archiving issues, the collecting market and the evolution of musical styles beyond the marketplace. Each episode in the series is accompanied by an additional programme featuring an exclusive music selection by each of the collectors.


The first episodes feature an insight of the collections of Mark Gergis (Sublime Frequencies collaborator), William Bennett (aka Whitehouse and Cut Hands) and dutch Broken Music collector Ed Veenstra.


More Info


reBlogged from: Sound is Art

on Jan 29, 2012 at 10:00 PM

Voices from the Heartland

George Crumb says he has now finished his American Songbook project, with the final installment premiered last night in Philadelphia by Orchestra 2001 with James Freeman conducting. This has been a huge undertaking: seven big cycles of folk song settings, all for solo voice or two singers, accompanied by percussion quartet plus amplified piano. This last set, called Voices from the Heartland, includes settings of “Softly and Tenderly” “Lord, Let Me Fly!”, and “Beulah Land”, among others, as well as a couple of American Indian chants. There is a delightfully Ivesian treatment of “Come All Ye Fair and Tender Maidens” combined with “On Top Of Old Smokey” – the two songs are sung simultaneously in different keys. In a sense, the pieces break no new ground for Crumb – he has his language  – but within that language they are unfailingly imaginative, varied, and beautiful. The performance was very fine, with George’s daughter Ann and baritone Patrick Mason as soloists. These singers, along with the instrumentalists of Orchestra 2001, are so experienced in performing Crumb’s music that the special demands he places on them – whispered vocal effects, or myriad non-Western percussion instruments – pose no problems. It is uncommon to hear players, for example, consistently command the extremely soft dynamics that George often requests.


I do wish the voices had been amplified more subtly – not just more softly, but not as closely miked. I feel there must be a way to use the amplification to support the voices and help them compete with the loudest percussion passages while still making it feel like the voices and the percussion are in the same acoustical space. In contrast, the amplification of the piano made some of its more delicate effects audible while keeping the instrument integrated with the non-amplified percussion. You were constantly aware of the voices being amplified – it shouldn’t draw attention to itself in this way.


The amplification was also a bit too loud for the Boulez Anthèmes 2 on the first half of the concert, in a virtuosic performance by Gloria Justen, with Peter Price assisting at the laptop.  As for the piece itself, it is a pleasant 8 minute demonstration of how a computer can process live violin sound. Unfortunately, the piece went on for 3 times that length. While the sounds were attractive, Boulez just presents them, never shaping them into a narrative. Not that every piece has to have a linear narrative; a succession (rather than a progression) of contrasting gestures can work, but if you are going to have a piece that long, you would need less repetition of gestures, or at least some genuinely extended phrases, rather than short phrases going on at length. A comparison with the Crumb is instructive: both pieces rely on an unusual sound palette, but the carefully shaped forms and the sensitive attention to timing in George’s music makes for a vastly more successful piece.


The concert began with a short piece by Louis Andriessen, a setting of a letter he received from mezzo Cathy Berberian, the spouse of composer Luciano Berio. In the letter she speaks of how Stravinsky re-shaped what became his Elegy for J. F. K. for her. The piece is straightforward, light in manner, with a hint of elegiaic tone, for it memorializes an artist who died too young. Ann Crumb served the piece well with her charismatic theatrical flair.


Here I am with George after the performance:



 


More about George and the Songbooks, here, here, and here.





reBlogged from: Secret Geometry - James Primosch's blog

on Jan 29, 2012 at 10:00 PM

Vaults

“I’m the strange Dr Weird, and you’ve just entered the Vaults of Mindless Fellowship . . . .”

Finished watching, last night, the extended version of The Fellowship of the Ring. So that I have now seen the entirety of the Peter Jackson trilogy.

Overall, my observations have remained consistent: I should not mind ways in which they modified the narrative for cinematic considerations, but the freedom which the screenwriters took to themselves, in playing fast and loose with the character of Tolkien’s dramatis personae, (a) resulted in gratuitous changes which were hardly ‘necessary’ for the movie(s), (b) made for weaker characters, and therefore for reduced power of the story and its arc, and (c) betrayed either a failure to have read and understood what Tolkien wrote, or a self-important disregard for what Tolkien, or both.

I suppose I do not necessarily lament the fact that the house at Crickhollow, and the episode of the Old Forest/Tom Bombadil/the barrow wight, were dropped. But one important aspect of the interlude at Crickhollow was, that Merry and Pippin joined in the quest knowingly and with assent. That got lost with Jackson’s decision to have the brace of young hobbits just stumble onto Frodo and Sam in the cornfield. In Tolkien’s narrative, Merry and Pippin were part comic foil, yes, but also informed participants, who mature along with (though at slower pace than) Frodo and Sam; and it means something when they are permitted by Elrond to complete the tale of nine for the Fellowship which sets out from Rivendell. Jackson reduces them to munchkins.

I’ve not yet made up my mind, yea or nay, about Jackson’s decision to show the narrative of Gandalf’s delay in (real-ish time) parallel with the hobbits’ journey to Rivendell. So put me down as considering the possibility that it’s all right. But, I wasn’t crazy about the written-in “duelling wizards” episode in Orthanc, for much the same reason that I wasn’t crazy about the “exorcism” fantasy imposed upon Théoden later on.

Similarly, not mad about the “evil-faced Bilbo” bit in Rivendell when the older hobbit glimpses the Ring on the chain around Frodo’s neck. Even less seemly (if that be possible) was Bilbo’s blubbering afterwards. It’s clear that the screenwriters have no sense of how they are dramatically altering the tone of Tolkien’s characters, because they have no better than a comic book concept of drama. They’re like kids who only work with stick figures, who have decided they are the ones to do a copy of a Titian.

One understands the arguments for making a fuller character in the movies of Arwen (who is off-stage for most of Tolkien’s narrative). But I think they ought to have been able to do that, without so radically rupturing Tolkien’s story of Aragorn and his path to the restoration of the unified Kingdom. Part of the collateral damage there (as I’ve observed before) is the diminution of Elrond . . . who just becomes a supporting actor in a Danielle-Steele-type love story where the two lovers are on pointedly different pages.

An equal but opposite horror, is how Saruman is made a much bigger cheese, practically a hand-in-glove lieutenant to the Dark Tower (where Tolkien’s story is much more nuanced, much more interesting). That the near-catastrophe on Caradhras is now attributed directly to Saruman is another instance of the screenwriters taking a rich narrative, and reducing it to two dimensions.



reBlogged from:
henningmusick

on Jan 29, 2012 at 09:00 PM

Tacet, non tacet.

Tacet, a new bilingual (French/English) review of experimental music has just put out its first, John Cage-centered issue. See more, here.



reBlogged from: Renewable Music

on Jan 29, 2012 at 03:00 PM

FX Firefly Panel: Favorite Cereal?



Adam Baldwin, Ron Glass & Christina Hendricks answer a question about what their favorite breakfast cereals are.

Video Rating: 4 / 5


reBlogged from:
The Cereal List

on Jan 29, 2012 at 03:00 AM

January 28, 2012

When Todd Met Peter and Gabriel

With so much of the new music buzz being (deservedly) sucked up by the Ecstatic Music Festival right now, I wanted to make sure that the S21 faithful know about what looks to be a great evening coming up on February 10 at 9 pm at Joe’s Pub, featuring three of “hottest” musician/composers around.


Todd Reynolds, dubbed by ur…me, “the Eric Clapton of the electronically souped up violin,” will perform a few works from his album Outerborough, which was named Amazon’s Best Classical release of 2011, and also perform with the British cellist Peter Gregson,  who has collaborated with Tod Machover and Max Richter, among many other luminaries. He will be marking the first US performance of Nonclassical’s latest release, Cello Multitracks (written by Gabriel Prokofiev), which he premiered in London in 2011.  Prokofiev, who is also in the US for the world premiere of his latest orchestral work, has gained a unique status as an innovative, far-reaching figure within British contemporary music. His work as a composer has brought instruments such as turntables, electric guitars, and oil drums, to high profile concerts including the BBC Proms, earning him critical acclaim in the process. Meanwhile, as a DJ Prokofiev has carved a singular reputation, playing to audiences at the New York Met and around the world, combining his background in urban music production with a passion for 20th and 21st century classical music.


Book it, Dano…


reBlogged from: Sequenza21/

on Jan 28, 2012 at 06:00 PM

Best Music Writing update

The fundraising campaign for the new, independently published edition of Best Music Writing is in its final days. As I wrote last month, it's imperative that this series continue, not least because it allows writers from so many different genres...

reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Jan 28, 2012 at 05:00 PM

Are we even having a conversation?

I just listened to a 1957 radio discussion with Pierre Boulez and four Bay Area composers, Robert Erickson, Arnold Elston, Andrew Imbrie, and Jack Holloway from John Whiting's My KPFA website. The themes of the discussion run precisely into issues of continuity and coherence which were controversial then and continue to make music (and thinking about music) lively. Once again, Robert Erickson's down-to-earth but very smart way of talking about music was most impressive, the former Webern student Elston appeared most sympathetic to Boulez while Imbrie just wasn't buying it. Given the early date, the fact that a room full of musicians was straying into philosophical territories somewhat outside their professional comfort zones, some insecure moments (i.e. when Boulez couldn't recall Heidegger's name) and a presumed orientation towards a general listening public, I'm struck by the thought that a conversation like this, which once took place on an American free-to-air broadcast, probably couldn't happen today. At KPFA or another Pacifica station, certainly, where some social/political achievements of the new left — the (in itself, necessary) opening to a diversity of minority interests — led, in the zero sum game of sharing airtime available in a radio programming day, to shutting out a great deal of the programming, particularly any musics weighed down by any degree of connection to the classical tradition, even the most institutionally fragile of these musics, the new and experimental.* (Baby thrown out with the bathtub, you know?) In principle, the resources of the Internet ought to have restored some balance to this and, to a certain extent they have. I am, for instance, able to listen to this old broadcast anytime I want, and the offerings in online recordings, interviews, podcasts, articles, composers' or performers' or critics' webpages etc. are rich in real content. But are we really having serious public conversations (and productive disagreements) anymore about complex or subtle matters, connecting to the larger cultural and intellectual life, or are we, vulnerable to some extent due to our marginality, focused rather more on the pursuit of accessibility?

_____

* The Pacifica stations were VERY important for the reception of other "classical" musics neglected by the commercial classical stations, being pioneers, for example, in broadcasting early music or in composers once considered outside the canon. William Malloch, for example, of KPFA (and whose weekly analytical broadcasts were a more vital lesson in 19th and early 20th century music history than any I actually received in University), had a very important role in the Mahler renaissance. And then there are some real commissioning activities of the stations: from Cage's WBAI to Lou Harrison's Homage to Pacifica. What radio station in the US today is commissioning new pieces?




reBlogged from: Renewable Music

on Jan 28, 2012 at 04:00 PM

Passing of a great Sibelian

Ladies & gentlemen, Paavo Berglund has passed away at 82.



reBlogged from: henningmusick

on Jan 28, 2012 at 03:00 PM

George Eliot on new music


Those who are familiar with the history of music during the last forty or fifty years, should be aware that the reception of new music by the majority of musical critics, is not at all a criterion of its ultimate success. A man of high standing, both as a composer and executant, told a friend of mine, that when a symphony of Beethoven's was first played at the Philharmonic, there was a general titter among the musicians in the orchestra, of whom he was one, at the idea of sitting seriously to execute such music! And as a proof that professed musicians are sometimes equally unfortunate in their predictions about music which begins by winning the ear of the public, he candidly avowed that when Rossini's music was first fascinating the world of opera-goers, he had joined in pronouncing it a mere passing fashion, that tickled only by its novelty. Not indeed that the contempt of musicians and the lash of critics is a pledge of future triumph: St. Paul five times received forty stripes save one, but so did many a malefactor; and unsuccessful composers before they take consolation from the poohpoohing or 'damnation' of good music, must remember how much bad music has had the same fate, from the time when Jean Jacques' oratorio set the teeth of all hearers on edge."

                               — "Liszt, Wagner, and Weimar," 1855


reBlogged from:
Alex Ross: The Rest Is Noise

on Jan 28, 2012 at 02:00 PM

The sacred mystery of the concert hall

Liturgy comes from a word meaning "public work"; by its performance more is expressed than can be conveyed in verbal formulae. Like music, liturgy holds more than can be explained in a commentary. The meaning is implicit and conveyed by performance. It is not a theatrical performance but more like the performance of a string quartet, not in its aesthetics, but in the thing behind the music.
Classical music's anti-silly conventions lobby has been getting quite a bit of airtime here recently, so I offer the thoughts above to add some balance. They come from Christopher Howse's book Sacred Mysteries and help explain why concert hall conventions have survived and also clarify the intentions, if not the actions, of traditionalist Catholics.

Illustration shows Julien's Orchestra at a Promenade Concert in Covent Garden. Louis Antoine Jullien (1812-1860) was born in Sisteron in France and after leaving France to escape his creditors established promenade concerts in London; which means that great British tradition the last night of the Proms is in fact of pure French descent. Jullien's first concerts were popular mixed programmes but later introduced symphonies, a trend which which contemporary Promenade Concerts have reversed. There is a topical link to audience interruptions at Promenade Concerts here, and more on music as ritual here.

Also on Facebook and Twitter. Any copyrighted material on these pages is included as "fair use", for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis only, and will be removed at the request of copyright owner(s). Report broken links, missing images and errors to - overgrownpath at hotmail dot co dot uk

reBlogged from: On An Overgrown Path

on Jan 28, 2012 at 02:00 PM

The Disquiet Junto

The Disquiet Junto is a group I founded on Soundcloud.com. The purpose of the group is to use constraints to stoke creativity. Each Thursday evening I post a clearly defined compositional assignment, and members of the Junto are to complete the assignment by 11:59pm the following Monday. The initial Junto assignment was made on January 5, 2012, the first Thursday of the new year.


The inspirations for the group’s existence are numerous. There are the weekly Beat Battles sponsored by Stonesthrow, and also hosted at Soundcloud.com, in which dozens if not hundreds of participants craft instrumental hip-hop beats from a shared sample. There is the tradition of Oulipo, whose embrace of creative constraints is personified by one of its co-founders, the author Raymond Queneau. Several comics artists with whom I have worked, including Matt Madden, have bonded under the banner of Oubapo, and there is, in fact, a related musical tradition, which goes by Oumupo.


The word “junto” comes from the name of a society that Benjamin Franklin formed in Philadelphia during the early 1700s as “a structured forum of mutual improvement.” In Franklin’s honor, the third Disquiet Junto project explored the glass harp, an instrument he experimented with in the development of what he christened the armonica.


The idea for the Junto arose after the completion of a Disquiet project at the end of December 2011. That project, Instagr/am/bient, was more loosely curated than other such projects I had commissioned, beginning in 2006 with Our Lives in the Bush of Diquiet. Instagr/am/bient proved quite popular, with over 20,000 listens and almost 4,000 downloads in its first month, and this success suggested to me that I experiment with an even looser format — the irony being that this “looser” format is, in fact, dedicated to constraint. Much to my surprise, the very first Junto project resulted, in four days, in 56 original pieces of music by as many musicians. The assignment was to record the sound of ice cubes in a glass and to make something musical of that recording.


If for the musicians involved, the Disquiet Junto is an experiment in creative constraints, for me it is as much an experiment in what I would describe as “community organizing as a form of curation.”


Visit the group — and, better yet, sign up and participate — at soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto. There’s also an email announcement list for the group. If you would like to be added to it, send me an email at marc@disquiet.com with “Disquiet Junto List” as the subject line.


This page serves as an index of the assignments. They are listed here in reverse chronological order. The tag for each assignment links to either a post on Disquiet.com about the project, or to a search return on Soundcloud that yields the tracks in that project:


Disquiet0004-mfischer

Remix the Marcus Fischer piece “Nearly There.”

Start: 2012.01.26 … End: 2012.01.30


Disquiet0003-glass

Record a live performance for “expanded glass harp.”

Start: 2012.01.19 … End: 2012.01.23


Disquiet0002-duet

Duet for fog horn and train whistle — using only those two provided samples.

Start: 2012.01.12 … End: 2012.01.16


Disquiet0001-ice

Record the sound of ice in a glass and make something of it.

Start: 2012.01.05 … End: 2012.01.09


And this is the initial post I made on Disquiet.com, announcing the project on January 7, 2012: “Sneek Peek.”




reBlogged from: Disquiet

on Jan 28, 2012 at 09:00 AM