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Molly Block

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New York Philharmonic Halted by iPhone During Mahler’s Ninth Symphony – WSJ.com

The final movement of Mahler’s Ninth Symphony is a slow rumination on mortality, with quiet sections played by strings alone.
During the New York Phil…

New York Philharmonic Halted by iPhone During Mahler’s Ninth Symphony – WSJ.com

The final movement of Mahler’s Ninth Symphony is a slow rumination on mortality, with quiet sections played by strings alone.

During the New York Philharmonic’s performance Tuesday night, it was interrupted by an iPhone.

The jarring ringtone—the device’s “Marimba” sound, which simulates the mallet instrument—intruded in the middle of the movement, emanating from the first row at Avery Fisher Hall.

When the phone wasn’t immediately hushed, audience members shook their heads. It continued to chime, and music director Alan Gilbert turned his head sharply to the left, signaling his displeasure.

Minutes passed. Each time the orchestra reached a quiet section, the phone could be heard above the hushed, reverent notes.

Finally, Mr. Gilbert could take no more: He stopped the orchestra.

A Philharmonic spokeswoman said Wednesday the music director has never before halted a performance because of a cellphone or any other type of disruption.

As the offending noise continued in a loop, Mr. Gilbert turned in its direction and pointedly asked that the phone be turned off. The audience let out a collective gasp.

The ringtone—believed to be an alarm—played on.

The audience wasn’t pleased. A Wall Street Journal reporter seated in the 19th row heard jeers hurled from the balconies. One man screamed: “Enough!” Another yelled: “Throw him out!” The audience clapped and hollered in agreement—and still the tone continued to sound amid the din.

Read the rest: New York Philharmonic Halted by iPhone During Mahler’s Ninth Symphony – WSJ.com

Apparently none of Lincoln Center’s ushers heard anything unusual – the sound of the phone, the music stopping, or the in-hall commotion – to then kindly escort the patron out of the hall. Had I been an audience member sitting near a door during the phone-chiming episode, I think I would have left the hall to find an usher in the lobby and ask that he/she take action! 

January 12, 2012
Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405...
Tags classical music, arts, New York Philharmonic, iPhone, tech, news

December 9, 2011

Chorus puts tweets to music

In an effort to promote the city of Calgary, Tourism Calgary asked people on Twitter to suggest ways of staying warm this winter, then Calgary Philharmonic Chorus’s master set 20 of the tweeted replies to music.

The result? Tweets (including “gravy action on my cheese,” a.k.a. poutine) sung to the tune of Carl Orff’s dramatic “O Fortuna” from Carmina Burana.

(If you aren’t able to play the “Singing Tweets” embedded video, click here to view it.)

Source: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNkj9LQINI0...
Tags music, classical music, social media, audience development, symphony, Carmina Burana, Calgary Philharmonic, travel, amusing
Via unconsumption:

For a project known as Scrapheap Orchestra, some top instrument makers in the UK transformed junk, including pieces of broken furniture, into 44 instruments for members of the BBC Concert Orchestra to play.

The quest to build an…

Via unconsumption:

For a project known as Scrapheap Orchestra, some top instrument makers in the UK transformed junk, including pieces of broken furniture, into 44 instruments for members of the BBC Concert Orchestra to play.

The quest to build an orchestra of instruments out of rubbish is more than just a musical spectacle - in the construction of these instruments we delve into the history of instrument making and the science of music, why different instruments are made the way they are, why some designs haven’t changed for hundreds of years and why, when played together, the sound of an orchestra is unlike anything else on earth.  (via BBC Four)

Next week, BBC Four will broadcast a 90-minute documentary that follows the project, which features the orchestra performing Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture on the scrap instruments at the 2011 BBC Proms. (Click here for broadcast info.)

For project photos, see Gramophone’s gallery, source of the above photo of orchestra members with instruments and conductor Charles Hazlewood. (Photo credit: BBC/Chris Christodoulou)

On a similar (instruments-made-from-junk) note, check out the Unconsumption posts on San Francisco’s Junkestra and New York Philharmonic’s percussion-from-junk exploration.

December 8, 2011
Source: http://www.gramophone.co.uk/features/galle...
Tags music, classical music, musicians, junk, upcycled, upcycling, BBC Concert Orchestra, Scrapheap Orchestra, art, arts, performing arts, BBC, musical instruments
Hitting the right notes
The book “Rhythms of the Game: The Link Between Musical and Athletic Performance,” written by former Yankee Bernie Williams and musician friends Dave Gluck and Bob Thompson, is “a grab bag of inspiration, self-help, his…

Hitting the right notes

The book “Rhythms of the Game: The Link Between Musical and Athletic Performance,” written by former Yankee Bernie Williams and musician friends Dave Gluck and Bob Thompson, is “a grab bag of inspiration, self-help, history and anecdotes that focus on the kinship of baseball and music.”

(via Baseball Players Who Play Music, Too - NYTimes.com)

June 27, 2011
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/26/arts/mus...
Tags music, classical music, sports, baseball, book

May 13, 2011
“In a world of instant musical gratification, where tunes from any genre or artist are available at the click of a mouse, can classical music remain relevant to the digital generation?”
—

BBC News – Is classical music doomed?

A video of the debate (between participants Stephen Fry, BBC Radio 1 DJ Kissy Sell Out, Greg Sandow, et al.) will be available on the Cambridge Union Society’s Web site.

Tags music, classical music, arts, relevance, audience development
Via junkculture:

The Art of Un-Thinking
Artist Nancy Fouts creates intricate and original pieces of art from unlikely combinations of things…more here

Via junkculture:

The Art of Un-Thinking

Artist Nancy Fouts creates intricate and original pieces of art from unlikely combinations of things…more here

April 22, 2011
Tags art, musical instruments, classical music, music, today in things i love

April 18, 2011

Via poptech:

Here’s an entertaining collaboration for your viewing pleasure - cellist Yo-Yo Ma and dancer Lil Buck caught on tape by Spike Jonze. Jonze explains:

The other day, I was lucky enough to be at an event to bring the arts back into schools and got to see an amazing collaboration between Yo-Yo Ma and a young dancer in LA, Lil Buck. Someone who knows Yo-Yo Ma had seen Lil Buck on YouTube and put them together. The dancing is Lil Buck’s own creation and unlike anything I’ve seen. Hope you enjoy.

Fabulous interpretations – from both Mr. Ma and Lil Buck – of Saint-Saens’s The Swan. Love performances in intimate settings like this one.

Tags art, arts, music, classical music, dance, Spike Jonze, video
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View a favorite vintage sign photo series:

Texas Vintage Neon Signs
92 dpi screen Texas Neon Now Gone.jpg
92 dpi screen Texas Favorite Study 2.jpg
92 dpi screen Oak Forest Shoe Shop.jpg
92 dpi screen Cafe Neon Sign 4.jpg
Holiday Plaza Motel 148  n 92 dpi.JPG
Landmark Lodge 52 n 92 dpi.JPG
92 dpi screen Landmark in Fort Worth.jpg
Clock Coffee Shop in El Paso 92 dpi.JPG

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