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my choral compositions.

Monday, February 26, 2007

Dream Cast

I ordered this recording of Der Fliegende Hollander because I haven't owned a copy of Wagner's best opera since the vinyl era, and particularly because of the performers listed.  Follow the link and scroll down a bit:  is that a dream cast, or what?  How did the producers ever manage to get such a lineup of luminaries together in one recording studio?  And how did they convince Mozart to come out of retirement to conduct?  These producers have some serious connections.  Beyond that, I was surprised to learn Wagner had collaborated with Bartok, Chopin, et al., although I did know Alex Ross has helped the master with orchestration on occassion.

Meanwhile, from my friend Victor, it's possibly the most brazen example of using plain truth to tell a lie in the history of marketing:  meet the GFX-100.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Dillon Does Ypsi

Lawrence Dillon is in town.  By "town," I mean Ypsilanti, Michigan.  For simplicity's sake I usually tell people I'm from Ann Arbor, but my mailing address is Ypsilanti, home of Eastern Michigan University.  Having lived in both cities at different times, and possessing degrees from both UM and EMU, I feel loyalty to both places, and I don't get caught up in the rivalry you sometimes see between the two close neighbors.

Anyway, the blogging composer Lawrence Dillon is guest of honor at the Music Now Fest '07, hosted this week by EMU's music department.  I'll be attending whatever events I possibly can.  It's been an interesting week here at the ranch, with my wife in the hospital for a diagnostic procedure that involved cutting another hole in her skull, followed by days of anxious waiting for the results.  We now know there was no sign of infection or cancer, thanks be to God.  Meanwhile, I've been busy keeping the household together while Julie recovered from the surgery -- but I should be able to get away for one or two events.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

The Proof

I am delighted to offer you a recording of my piece The Evidence, as performed by the San Francisco Choral Artists under the direction of Magen Solomon.  The 3.5 minute work is yours for the downloading in mp3 format.  By all means, leave a comment here if it makes any kind of impression on you.  Enjoy!

A bit of background:  last year, the San Francisco Choral Artists honored me by premiering my piece The Evidence for their concert entitled Wisdom of the Ages.  I was included among several contemporary composers chosen by open competition.  Magen is committed to promoting new music for choir, for which I offer her ten thousand thanks, plus another few thousand for graciously permitting me to make this recording public.  If you are in San Francisco sometime and run into Magen, please be awfully nice to her.  She's one of my favorite people.

The text is a poem by the 17th century English mystic Thomas Traherne:

The Evidence

His Word confirms the sale :
Those Sheets enfold my Bliss :
Eternity itself’s the Pale
Wherin my true Estate enclosed is.
Each ancient Miracle’s a Seal :
Apostles, Prophets, Martyrs, Patriarchs are
The Witnesses ;  and what their Words reveal,
Their written Records do declare.
All may well wonder such a ‘State to see
In such a solemn sort settled on me.

Did not his Word proclaim
My Title to th’ Estate,
His Works themselves affirm the same
By what they do ;  my Wish they antedate.
Before I was conceiv’d, they were
Allotted for my great Inheritance ;
As soon as I among them did appear
They did surround me, to advance
My Interest and Lov.  Each Creature says
God made us Thine, that we might shew His Prais.

The Services they do,
Aloud proclaim them Mine ;
In that they are adapted to
Supply my Wants ; wherin they all combine
To pleas and serv me, that I may
God, Angels, Men, Fowls, Beasts, and Fish enjoy,
Both in a natural and transcendent way ;
And to my Soul the Sense convey
Of Wisdom, Goodness, Power, and Lov Divine,
Which made them all, and made them to be mine.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Lynx

My buddy Steve alerts us to a bizarre fraud in the world of classical music recording: if you digitally shrink by 2% a recording of Liszt etudes played by Laszlo Simon for BIS Records, Mr. Simon "becomes" "Joyce Hatto."

For all your cinema needs, see Luther At the Movies. (Most intriguing headline: Screwtape Hits the Big Screen!) In related developments, my friend Jeremy declares the Beerbelly to be the greatest invention ever, and the University Lutheran Chapel of Ann Arbor sponsors a Theology Pub Tour.

A parish boychoir director in South London records his kids with a spacey synthesizer accompaniment, and creates a minor pop music sensation. The cheese factor is not completely absent, but I didn't dislike it. Call them Libera. Hear more here, and don't miss the stratospheric pitches of "Sanctus." Gosh, what is that tune? I just know I've heard it before.

UPDATE:  Jessica Duchen has more, much more, on "Hattogate."

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

The Vastness of iTunes

Via StumbleUpon, a video about the vastness of space.  I disagree, however, that anything from the Hubble Telescope is the most important image ever taken.  That image would be this one.  Unrelatedly, in response to Steve Job's recent comment that he would abandon copy protection within iTunes "in a heartbeat" if only the record companies would let him, here's a truly inspirational song:  "Imagine There's No DRM."  (More background here.)

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Whiffenpoofs

The Whiffenpoofs are Yale University's oldest and best-known a cappella group.  On Saturday they put on a workshop for the Boychoir of Ann Arbor, of which my son, Der Drübermensch, is a member.  They sang wonderfully, and gave the boys lots of performance tips during a Q and A session. 

I was particularly impressed with the heft of their low bass section, which is typically disappointing in amateur groups.  The prestige of the group brings in top singers, in spite of the fact that they draw from a pool of only 6000 students.  (To this U-M grad, Yale seems a tiny school.)  Indeed, the Whiffenpoofs admit only senior men (thus, the entire personnel changes each year) so the pool is really only roughly half of one fourth of the whole student body:  maybe 750.



Here they are, singing the Whiffenpoofs Song.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Good News Toward Men

There's lots of good news coming in lately.  Have you seen these?
DCA, A drug already in use may be a miracle cure for cancer.
Please God, make it so.
Chiles may cure diabetes.
Almighty Father, we ask for mercy.
A new capacitor may solve all kinds of energy problems, and make zero-emissions cars cheap and easy.
And Lord, while your at it, please get me one of these if it's not too much trouble.

Sadly, the bad news persists:
The wrong underwear can kill.

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