February 14, 2008

Kina Grannis

I'm scouring my music collection for a soundtrack list for a new scrapbook I'm working on, and came across this gem.  Kina is the girl who won the chance to have her song played during a commercial break during the Superbowl.  Her voice is pure delight and the song she sang for the contest is pretty rad.  But this is my favorite after a few spins:

People

Swarms of people they move in every direction
Some eyes they wander while others are just glued to their feet
And how I wonder what goes on behind those eyes,
There are lives, growing older and they're growing wise

So amazed by all the many different faces,
Searching for traces of emotion wondering places they have been
And on occasion, someone will take a look at me,
But do they see a unique person, or am I part of a vast sea

[Chorus:]
Sing me your song, solve my mystery
I wont do you no harm, just wanted to see
Sing me your song, solve my mystery
I wont do you no harm, just wanted to see
That you're a person just like me

They are they background of your everyday situation
Look all around you start to wonder really who these people are
They might be watching, wondering quite the same of you
So break this auto pilot path and try to start something new

And really, this is the perfect lyrics for what scrapbooking means to me.  Sing me your song, solve my mystery!

January 07, 2008

Artist of another sort

I have three fabulous children and really sometimes they scare me.  I mean who am I to have such talented, amazing kids?   Lucky is what I say!

Many of you have seen my daughter's beautiful artwork, and more can be seen at www.Tallyscrapper.com.  Her name there is ErinElise2884. 

But many of you have never seen what my eldest son Jason can do.  He's started doing some recording and posting at YouTube, so now you can!  His name is NoLongerSlave on YouTube, and here is one of his songs.

Isn't he fabulous?  To be able to play, write and sing, and he taught himself how to play the guitar and bass and drums, the only music lessons he had were for piano years ago and sax.  He just blows me away!

December 13, 2007

Every Valley

Last night Lisa treated me to a lovely concert. Messiah by G.F. Handel holds a special spot in my heart.  Besides being part of a choir that performed it when I was a teen, my ex has a beautiful professional tenor voice and he sang this many times.  It is one of the few remaining things from that marriage that I hold dear. 

Before Lisa and I went, we needed to do a quick photoshoot, because, being we are two photographers, we of course have no pictures of the two of us together.

So we set up my "photo studio"

mindaandlisashootprep

Yeah, my husband started shooting before we had transformed it fully.  See the cute little christmas ornaments made out of clay sitting on the stove?  Yes, that is a microwave...and a pizza. Speaking of pizza, mindaandlisa-shootprep2

Lisa did a little pizza modeling while I continued to struggle with my makeup.  That ghost in front of her is me rushing to the bathroom to "put my face on".

I was gonna make a wisecrack about this photo and the fact that my husband was our photographer... mindaandlisashootprep3

Until I realized this was actually one that Lisa took when I asked her to get some pictures of just me.  Should I be alarmed? mindaandlisaedit1

But in the end, all the hard work and goofing off netted us a couple of decent shots.  Then we were off to the Basilica of St. Mary in downtown Minneapolis.  And SHHHHH, don't tell my husband, but not only did we park under the bridge, we parked UNDER the BRIDGE.  As in not in a parking space.  Naughty girls! jadin-01

This is what the Basilica looks like.  During the day.  In summer.  Using a camera worth more than my vehicle. Basilica18mm-vi

And the inside.

_DSC5516_17_18_19_20_21-vi 

Imagine the sound quality in such a magnificent building.  Divine. kitshouse 038

And here we have the chorale and the orchestra playing....no wait, that is my friend Kit jumping my moms car that wouldn't start when we were up north in our UNHEATED house.  Did I mention is was subzero the whole time we were there?  I did.  Oh, sorry.

Anyway, the concert was wonderful and the soloists were quite amazing.  Here is a link to a clip that is one of my favorite solos.  This was not from last night, but you get the idea.

http://www.spiritsound.com/audio/mp3/ComfortYe2000.mp3

Anyway, I came home with a cold.  So I'm in jammies, laying in my favorite easy chair trying to get better by tomorrow because seriously, I do not have time to be sick!

November 19, 2007

Ahhhhh the symphony!

Last week was NUTS!  Something planned every single day for homeschool, and we finally tanked out on Friday and just hung out at home.

It wasn't bad though, because the things we did were so fun!

My favorite of the week of course was the MN Orchestra Young People's Concert.  Last year I picked and chose the concerts according to the age recommendations, but we had such a great time that this year I bought tickets to them all.

Last week's concert was entitled Wacky Sounds and taught us about using unusual instruments in the orchestra, about impossible compositions and about using instruments in unusual ways.

Andrew LOVED this concert and came home bursting to tell his Papa about some of the pieces.  Here are two that were his favorites.

The first piece that he loved was the last they played.  It is called Blur: The Fragrance Free Collection and is nearly impossible to find online.  Download Blur_Todd_Levin.mp3 Luckily as part of the Young People's concert recordings of the program are held online for six weeks following the concert.  This piece was written by Todd Levin, a young composer, and includes a breathtaking finish using metal sheets as part of the instrumentation.  The kids literally were UNABLE to sit still during this rousing finish, which is even more powerful when you are in the front row a few inches from the musicians. 

I loved EVERY piece they played in this concert, but both Andrew and I loved the eerie, unusual feeling found in listening to Banshee Download Cowell_Banshee_for_piano.mp3 .  Cowell, the composer, was an early American composer who liked to stretch the definition of instrumentation to its limits and beyond.  In this piece a pianist plays along with the orchestra, INSIDE the piano, making strokes, scratches and slides on the inner workings of the instrument.  After the concert I was able to go up to the stage and ask the conductor (who played the piano part for that piece) about the musical scoring for such an odd instrumentation.  She was very generous to show me the music and explain how to interpret the different sound requests.  She also explained that she had put little sticker dots to label the keys inside, so she would be able to tell which notes to use. 

June 13, 2007

Too busy living to blog!

Spending more time with my bro and that means more time thinking about music.

He sent me this link today...oh brotha!  If you haven't experienced Prince this is a good taste.  Too short, but a good taste.

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoID=632523312

May 02, 2006

Mozart's Requiem Mass in D Minor

Ax930191 Too long I have neglected the topic of music and today finds me back at it.  On Sunday, I had the pleasure, thanks to a new babysitter extraordinaire, Luke, of attending the College of St. Catherine's performance of a choral and orchestral piece credited to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart entitled Requiem in D Minor, catalogued as K.626.  The origin is from Vienna in approximately 1791, and is scored for Soprano, Alto, Tenor, Bass; four part choir and instrumentation of 2 basset horns (a type of tenor clarinet), 2 bassoons, 2 trumpets, timpani, 3 trombones, strings, and organ.  There is much written about this piece, and the layers of legend have increased in these 215 years since its first performance.  Most of the stories agree that there was some mystery surrounding the commission of the piece.  All of the stories agree that Mozart did work on the piece, but did not finish it before his death.  Something I was not aware of until Sunday is that there are more than one "version" of this piece performed today.  The performance on Sunday was of the "original" finished work, or the Sussmayr completion.  Franz Sussmayr was a student of Mozart at the time of his death, and is credited as one of the students that finished the Requiem, attempting to stay loyal to Mozarts original intentions for the piece.  Sussmayr set the text of the concluding "Communio" to the music of the opening movements to round out the work. Some of the movements, primarily the overly brief "Osannas" and the Tuba mirum are somewhat awkwardly scored in this original version, and this adds some credibility to his claim claimed "student's hand". 

A number of revised scores have been produced in the last 80 years.  The revisions range from modest corrections of "wrong" notes and awkward part writing, to complete reworkings of certain movements from the original sketches, including a recently discovered fragment of an "Amen" fugue at the end of the "lacrymosa", to radical attempts to remove everything that is not demonstrably attributable to Mozart.

I own two recordings of this piece and have my eye set on a third.  Because I don't have the liner notes, I am having some difficulty tracking down information as to which version these recordings used, but I look forward to the effort of the search.  Currently I have the two entwined on my ipod, each movement of the Leipzieger Kammerorchester recording paired with the same movement on the other recording (of which no information carried over from the original disc I had.)  Its interesting to hear each section in two formats.  The german recording is more stern and formal, as I expected.  Both appear to be the same scoring, although of course I am not yet sure of that.

If you would like to learn more about this piece and about the stories surrounding it, may I recommend this site?  And if you haven't heard this piece, treat yourself.  The Leipzieger Kammerorchester recording is available on Itunes for only $5.99 and it is a pretty good recording, if you want to get in cheap.  For $9.99 you can have the version I am seeking, also on Itunes, performed by Sir Neville Marriner and the Academy and Chorus of St. Martin-in-the-Fields.  Lovely.

I'll leave you with some of the text translation from the latin:

Sequenz No 4 recordare

Remember kind Jesus

that I am the reason for your life on earth.

Do not let me be lost on that day

Though weary, you resolutely sought me.

You redeemed me by your suffering on the cross.

Let not such great labour be in vain.

Judge who punishes justly,

give me the gift of forgiveness

before the day of reckoning.

I groan like the guilty man.

My face is red with guilt.

Spare me, who kneel before you, O God.

You who absolved Mary Magdalen

and favourably listened to the good thief--

to me also, you give hope.

My prayers are unworthy,

but you, full of goodness, treat me kindly

so that I will not burn in fire forever.

Find a place for me amongst they sheep

and separate me from the loathsome goats

and stand me on your right side.

The audacity of this text astounds me.  It reminds me of some of the writings in Psalms by David.  It strikes me as carrying the signature of a proud male hand.  "God, you are gonna look bad and will have wasted your time if you do not make me victorious."  Would that I could be so brave and forthright in my communication with the Creator.  I tend to speak more in the mode of, "If it's not too much of a bother and if you have time in your busy schedule, I know this is petty and unimportant, but if you could help me out that would be wonderful."

Luke.

Warm.

Sigh.

December 31, 2005

ITunes Kinda Day

So it's 3:30pm and I've been downloading and sampling music since noon.  Yep, 3.5 hours of music bliss.

First I created a mix called Four Square, originally planned as four songs from each music genre I own.  Well, since some categories such as Pop and Rock and Inspirational had nearly 100 songs each, that just wasn't going to be sufficient.  I did come up with an initial mix of about 100 songs with AT LEAST four from each category and more from my favorites.  It will be fun to listen to this on rotation for awhile and see if any get kicked off.

Then, in honor of my music expert brother I created a new mix of 30 songs that were either recommended by him, or were found along the way to finding the songs recommended by him.  There's even a piece by Philip Glass, because a quote of his is sparking an interesting discussion between us.

Here's the Brendan mix:

Debra by Beck

Take Me Out by Franz Ferdinand

Why Do People Play You Like That by Ronnie Jacobsen

When You Got Somebody by Smokey Robinson

Le parapluies de Cherbourg played by Itzak Perlman

Etude No. 1 by Philip Glass

Ragas in Minor Scale by Philip Glass

The Blue Eye Ear by Paris Zax

Too Legit to Quit by M.C.Hammer

Be Your Own One Self by Children of Possibility

Only Time by Enya

Waiting 4 Stars 2 Fall by Ottmar Liebart

Sumiregusa by Enya

Go Away by Gloria Estefan

I Will Always Love You by Whitney Houston

Ghetto Child by Curtis Mayfield

Superfly by Curtis Mayfield

Cruisin' by D'Angelo

Funny, Not Much by Marvin Gaye

Lonely's the Only Company by Maxwell

Baby by Prince

Te Amo Corazon by Prince

Tell Me Something Good by Rufus & Chaka Khan

My Vision by Seal

High Road by Annelise Lecheminant

Fly Like an Eagle Seal

29 by Ryan Adams

I'm laughing right now, because he may be horrified by some of the stuff that snuck in here while I was looking up the stuff he recommended!

Anyway great music day. 

And here's a couple of pages from my day and a half of scrapbooking!Packinghouse_blues Time_is_flying

November 09, 2005

Powerful

I finally found something as mesmerizing as the Daughter in a House of Fools vid I've been playing on this site for the last several days.  Lindsay Lohan is a secret (not any more) crush of Scott's, and so when she had a new video come out on ITunes today I had to check it out.  Whoa.  Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father) is the name of the song, and if it doesn't move you, you don't have a heart.  Plus, its a based on events in Lindsay's life.  Or so speaks the media.

Nothing much new to talk about here.  Just life living itself out, with plenty of challenges, fun and routine.  We did find a special place for Darlene, Scott's mom to live, as soon as they have an opening.  Felt like home from the minute we walked in the door.  They have tons of pets, the floor plans and units come in a variety of shapes and sizes so each feels very homey, the staff is employed by the facility, not by an agency, the rooms were nice sized and allowed for some personalization and privacy.  They have pets galore that actually live onsite, not just visit once a week.  Lots of little alcoves where they can gather.  Smelled clean.  It just felt right.  They don't have any openings right now, but we are going to move forward with the procedure so that when they do, she can move in if she is still excited about it at that time.  This is really the first place of all the places we've looked that just felt right.  Hopefully all will work out for the best.  I'd love to see her happy with her home again.

Well, I'm off to make squirrel toys for the rest of the evening.  More later!

Other places I visit often...