If you are between the ages of 18 and 26 and live in the US, you've only got 7 more days to enter the Iron Composer competition. All you've got to do is email a representative score to Ken Bales. It couldn't be simpler.
You might be picked, along with 4 other finalists, to come to Omaha on September 4 to compete in the coolest quickdraw composition contest in the country. All the rules are here.
And if you're not a composer, we're still fielding suggestions for what the Secret Musical Ingredient should be. Just fill out this form or email us your ideas.
Heather Frasch's Speaker Objects are a way of bringing one of her favorite mediums for sound generation into plain sight. As an electronic music composer, she spends a great deal of time in the studio generating sounds with found objects like metal and glass, then sculpting those recorded sounds into finished pieces.
By recasting them as Speaker Objects, Heather is sharing the musical potential of these objects with the public for the first time in a way that they are invited to see and touch. The objects replace the vibrating component of a speaker. Sounds are projected through them and transmuted by their physical properties.
That's him holding the mic, and the surprised-looking fellow is beloved conductor Hal France. Luke was the winner of our Iron Composer Omaha competition last year. (Hal was the emcee)
Everyone had a ball with the competition, but it was only open to Nebraska residents. This year, we're going national.
We're looking for the next Luke Furman...er...Iron Composer.
If you're between the ages of 18-26 and a US resident, give it a shot. We hope to see you in Omaha!
Boy, when they say that Casablanca was just another film to roll off the major studio production line, they weren't kidding, and if you ever want proof, watch Sirocco. Made nine years later, it's almost a shot for shot retread of Casablanca. The setting is Syria in 1925. The French are occupying the country as a result of the division of the Ottoman Empire at the Treaty of Versaille. In this opening sequence, we get a snapshot of both the French and Syrian perspective on the situation, as well as the massacre of a French patrol by insurgents.
Antheil's writing, as usual, is thunderously obvious, and Bogart sleepwalks through the picture. His character, like Rick, is loyal to whichever cause pays, and, like Rick, he falls for a more important man's woman. Even, the closing shot of the movie is the same exact look at two broken-hearted men that we see at the end of Casablanca.
By the way, if you're tempted to watch this film as a cautionary tale for our current situation in Iraq (which was part of that same Ottoman Empire), allow us to share a more relevant (and recent) bit of video that warns against a US invasion:
There are a lot of wonderful blogs out there that focus on futurism, and we're syndicating them for easier reading. From time to time, we'll pull out chestnuts that cannot be missed, like this 1957 Walt Disney mini-series, courtesy of Infosthetics. Disney was the great futurist standard bearer in that heyday of the 50's and 60's, and this is their version of Kubrick's 2001: A brief history of time, with a look at what we can expect in the wild world of the Future.
Part 1: Wherein Walt introduces the series with a giant object that is presumably some sort of robot and we learn about man's historical perspective on the stars.
Part 2:A look at Mars in pop culture
Part 3:A Creationists's nightmare, this is a look at how life evolved on Earth, and how the process would work on another planet.
Part 4:A history of Mars observation and theories that cannot be missed
Part 5:An unhinged fantasia on what Mars would be like if the conditions to sustain life were present
Part 6:This is a snapshot of what our future in space would look like, according to Werner von Braun, who advised on the segment. Disney's authority was such that this clip was shown to President Eisenhower
George Antheil, "The Pride and the Passion" (1957)
That's the opening title sequence from the awfully mediocre movie starring Cary Grant, Sophia Loren and Frank Sinatra doing a regrettable Spanish peasant accent. The plot revolves around an enormous cannon that the Spaniards abandoned in defeat to the French. Grant plays a British officer who wants to salvage the gun and use it against the French. Sinatra helps him salvage it, but only if Grant will let him use it to liberate Avila.
Sinatra's girlfriend (Loren) gets the hots for Grant, of course, but everyone ends up dying in the end except for Grant. Like most of Antheil's film scores, the writing is very by-the-numbers. There are more flat II's than you can shake a stick at in this non-stop riff on 'Bolero'.
This "Ballet Mecanique" was originally written as a score to the first abstract motion picture of that name. However, since it was soon discovered that one could not synchronize a motion picture score thatt closely, (during 1924-25), it was written as an independent piece.
I have confined this editing mostly to cutting. Repetitous [sic] measures, intended to synchronize only with the film, have been cut out abundantly, reducing the playing time from the original of more than a half hour to less than eighteen minutes. The player piano has been deleted entirely, its role give to the pianos. The eight original pianos have been cut down to four; the four original xylophones to two, etc. But its basic character has, I hope, remained. It has merely been made more concise.
Interpretively speaking, BALLET MECANIQUE was never intended to demonstrate (as has been erronously [sic] said) "the beauty and precision of machines". Rather it was to experiment with and thus, to demonstrate a new principle in music construction, that of "Time-Space", or in which the time principle, rather than the tonal principle, is held to be of main importance.
To demonstrate. Up until Strawinsky and Schoenberg, most contemporary music had been constructed, architecturally speaking, on the tonal principle. A sonata allegro movement, for example, spread out a tonality, departed from it in the development, returned again in the recapitulation -- usually with a vengeance. It is still an excellent principle. But it neglects "Time-Space".
Strawinsky attempted to move away from its iron grip by making his music "super-tonal" so to speak. Schoenberg, going to the opposite pole, destroyed tonality entirely by removing all tonal centers in the 12 tone system.
BALLET MECANIQUE, while utilizing (subconsciouly, for at the time this work was written, 12 tone-ism was unknown as such) both systems, concentrated on what I then called "the time canvas". Rather than to consider musical form as a series of tonalities, atonalities with a tonal center, or a tonal center at all, it supposed that music actually takes place in time; and that, therefore, time is the real construction principle, "stuff of music", as it unreels. It is the musician's "canvas". The tones which he uses, therefore, are merely his crayons, his colors. The "Time-Space" principle, therefore, is an aesthetic of "looking", so to speak, at a piece of music "all at once". One might propose, therefore, that it is a sort of "Fourth Dimension"-al way of looking at music; its constructive principles may, or may not have been touched in this work, but they have been attempted.
I always hesitate to give any "program" to any piece of music, preferring to have it speak for itself. However, and if this piece had any program beyond that outlined above, it would be towards the barbaric and mystic splendor of modern civilization; mathematics of the universe in which the abstraction of "the human sould" lives. More locally, the first "theme" may be considered that of mechanical scientific civilization; the second and third barbaric ones, not unrelated to the American continent, Indian, Negro. These plus the mathematical 2,3,4,5,6,7,8,7,6,5,4,3,2 principle, and "Time-Space" make up the musical body and spiritual outline of this work, written so many years ago. It has seemed strange, yet prophetic, to delve back into these pages written as a youth of 23-24.
1) Lil Wayne, "Die For You"
2) Waylon Jennings, "Big Mamou"
3) La Monte Young, "2nd Dream..."
4) Joseph Rheinberger, "6 Pieces for Violin & Organ"
5) Louis Armstrong, "Go Down Moses"
6) Colin Farrell, "Gone Gone Gone"
7) Cybill Shepherd, "Give Him the Ooh La La"
8) Alec Ounsworth, "What Fun."
9) Sigfrid Karg-Elert, "Hommage a Haendel"
10) Meyer Kupferman, "The Celestial City"