Every now and then you hear phrases that really help set a mental image or concept...as a former music teacher and lifelong music student I try to "collect" these phrases as they apply to music so that I might better explain a concept or image...this morning I added one to my mental collection.
This morning on NPR's Morning Edition...was a tribute to Indian Sarod player Ali Akbar Khan, wonderfully put together by Sandip Roy, editor with New America Media and host of New America Now on KALW in San Francisco.
Roy, included in his piece a quote from Ali Akbar Khan to students..."don't sing like a typewriter...sing like handwriting"...at that very moment I could picture the beautiful loops and turns of eastern handwriting as a contrast to the harsh tapping sounds of a typewriter.
I also thought that the phrase if used on younger students might need a little updating, I know my children have seen a typewriter but I don't think they've ever used one...my updated version might replace the typewriter with "noisy keyboard"...not quite the same ring but it might get the point across.
For the complete story on Ali Akbar Khan and his roll in bringing Indian Classical music to the US go to http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=105798864
Do you have a phrase that helped you with a musical concept? Please share
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Subscribing to the Music
If you've been following trends in downloading music over the last decade, then you know that Napster -- once the haven for free peer-to-peer sharing -- now is a subsidiary of Best Buy, and has developed a business model initially dependent on users' paying 15 dollars a month to listen to as much music as they'd like (with a la carte mp3 purchases available as well). In the last month, Napster has slashed its price to five dollars per month, with five free mp3s thrown in the bargain ... another sign of trouble in the long-suffering world of online music-by-subscription.
Is anyone offering music via that method and doing well? Yes, says this article in Tuesday's Los Angeles Times: it's Naxos, the independent classical label. The Naxos Music Library, available at about $20 per month, is targeting America's colleges, universities, and public-school systems, and has been tapped by hundreds of thousands of music students, educators, and musicians.
It seems to be a glimmer of hope not just for the preservation of the online-music-subscription business model, but also for the longevity of classical music in the American consciousness. What do you think?
Is anyone offering music via that method and doing well? Yes, says this article in Tuesday's Los Angeles Times: it's Naxos, the independent classical label. The Naxos Music Library, available at about $20 per month, is targeting America's colleges, universities, and public-school systems, and has been tapped by hundreds of thousands of music students, educators, and musicians.
It seems to be a glimmer of hope not just for the preservation of the online-music-subscription business model, but also for the longevity of classical music in the American consciousness. What do you think?
Friday, June 12, 2009
More on the Cliburn
NPR Music has posted audio links to performances by the pianists who shared the gold-medal prize at the 2009 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition in Fort Worth: Haochen Zhang, 19, from China, and a young man from Japan, Nobuyuki Tsujii, 20, who was blind at birth.
To hear Zhang performing Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20, and Tsujii performing the Chopin Piano Concerto No. 1, from the final round, with James Conlon and the Dallas Symphony -- and to hear 13 other semifinal- and final-round performances, click here.
And you can visit the Cliburn site for video of the performances.
To hear Zhang performing Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20, and Tsujii performing the Chopin Piano Concerto No. 1, from the final round, with James Conlon and the Dallas Symphony -- and to hear 13 other semifinal- and final-round performances, click here.
And you can visit the Cliburn site for video of the performances.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Lost in America?
Interesting story published this week in the Star-Telegram of Fort Worth, Texas, home turf of Van Cliburn and the annual Cliburn Piano Competition.
Only two Americans have won the Cliburn, possibly the most prestigious piano competition in the world, in the last 20 years. And for the third year running, no Americans have made the semifinals. Evidence of the decline of classical music in the American cultural and educational landscape? Some people think so.
Check out this article -- http://www.star-telegram.com/news/story/1408170.html -- and let us know what you think.
Only two Americans have won the Cliburn, possibly the most prestigious piano competition in the world, in the last 20 years. And for the third year running, no Americans have made the semifinals. Evidence of the decline of classical music in the American cultural and educational landscape? Some people think so.
Check out this article -- http://www.star-telegram.com/news/story/1408170.html -- and let us know what you think.
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