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#clarinet

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SEARCHING FOR MY LOVE

I always loved this tune and was super happy to have a chance to sing and record a version.

musicshop.themadmaggies.com/tr

The Mad Maggies play the classic Muscle Shoals soul tune, original by Bobby Moore & the Rhythm Aces with Chico Jenkins 1966

#theMadMaggies #Accordion #Guitar #Bass #Drums #Trombone #Tuba #Trumpet #AltoSax #Clarinet
#WomenComposers #BandCampFriday

Buenas tardes, camaradas.

Recientemente he dado un salto cualitativo para las grabaciones de mis #ClarinetAdventures :clarinete:

Me he agenciado un micrófono y una interfaz de audio decente para grabar. Y hoy he hecho una prueba a dos voces (sí, en estéreo, poneos auriculares para una experiencia extrasensorial!! 😎) y la verdad es que la ganancia de calidad es brutal con respecto a mis anteriores grabaciones.

Espero que la disfrutéis a pesar de ser más una prueba que otra cosa 😇

00:00/00:24

Moved server, new #introduction :)

I'm a local preacher in the #Methodist church, living in #Glasgow. I work as a software developer in C#/.NET and I'm interested in mobile linux. Background in physics.

I have a website: writing.straysong.co.uk/ which I'll host on a static IP one day...

Things I care about include #ClimateJustice, #inclusion and #Urbanism. I mostly get around by #bike. I play #clarinet #flute and #sax.

writing.straysong.co.ukWelcome | Jennifer C J Radtke

I have to say, learning to play the #clarinet has a steep learning curve, if you have no talent, not enough time to practice, and you're not very young anymore. Nevertheless, I still enjoy it quite a lot, even if progress is slow. Today I managed to play 'Ode an die Freude' (not the whole piece, but the important part) without major errors (but still very far from good). But it felt great anyway. I just wished I would have started 30 years ago.

Sabine Meyer, Berliner Philharmoniker, Claudio Abbado – Mozart / Debussy / Takemitsu (1999, Germany)

Our next spotlight is on number 741 on The List, submitted by t4s.

This album consists of five pieces spanning 200 years, performed by German classical solo clarinettist Sabine Meyer and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra and conducted by Claudio Abbado: 18th century Salzburgian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto (Klarinettenkonzert) in A major (K. 622); late 19th/early 20th century French composer Claude Debussy’s First Rhapsody (Première Rhapsodie; L. 116a); and, from mid-late 20th-century Japanese avant-garde composer Tōru Takemitsu (武満 徹), his Fantasma/Cantos (ファンタズマ/カントス). Because I unfortunately am a philistine when it comes to classical music, below I quote directly from the liner notes of this album, written by by English musicologist Richard Langham Smith.

I’m quite grateful for the inclusion of Takemitsu on this album – he seems to have been a rather fascinating character, and I’ve been digging into his works since getting this spotlight ready. If you’re not already familiar, I’d recommend doing the same!

On Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto (tracks 1 to 3):

The Clarinet Concerto was Mozart’s last orchestral work, completed in October of 1791, just two months before is death. It was written for his friend Anton Stadler, whose specialty was the basset-horn, a type of clarinet with an extended range a major third lower than the standard instrument…

The work is rightly considered a masterpiece: it has that hymnic maturity of the the composer’s late works…The composer delights in the exploration of sonorities, not only contrasting the different registers of the clarinet, with notable passages for the low ‘chalumeau’ register, but also using a reduced orchestra which omits the oboes, the more to highlight the reedy voice of the soloist.

…the first and second movements have darker passages which wander into unpredictable keys and exploit the slightly sinister qualities of the clarinet’s lowest register…The Rondo form of the final movement, with its jolly rhythmic theme, conceals hidden depths: against the episodes sometimes stray into deeper waters.

On Debussy’s First Rhapsody (track 4):

Debussy’s Clarinet Rhapsody was first written as…a competition piece for conservatoire students, with piano accompaniment…it was started in December 1909 and completed the following month.

Those who know Debussy’s piece in the version with piano will have an extra dimension of enjoyment added as they hear Debussy’s thoroughly pianistic sonorities transformed, rather than transcribed. Its piano accompaniment, often reliant on a cloud of resonance created by the sustaining pedal, here takes on quite a different character.

Maybe the piece ranks more among those pieces whose impetus was external rather than stemming from a burning artistic idea, but if it is a pot-boiler then it is none the worse for it…Why it was entitled the ‘first’ rhapsody is a matter of surmise: there is no sequel.

On Takemitsu’s Fantasma/Cantos (track 5):

[Toru Takemitsu] has come to be recognised as a major figure: perhaps best described as a voice of the East who expresses himself with the language and instruments of the West…he was largely self-taught, and if he may be allied to a French rather than a Germanic tradition it is perhaps because of his highlighting of timbre – and even silence – as a major component of his musical expression.

First performed in 1991, Fantasma/Cantos was commissioned by the British Broadcasting Corporation…The orchestra is large and includes a large percussion section including tuned percussion and Thai or Indonesian gongs. Takemitsu himself has explained the relevance of the title: “…’Fantasma’ (fantasy) and ‘Cantos’ (song) – are synonymous. After a brief introduction, a clear melody line, as a result of colourful orchestral figuration, ambiguously undergoes metamorphosis. The structure of the work is influenced by Japanese landscape gardens in the ‘go-round’ style. You walk along the path, stopping here and there to contemplate, and eventually find yourself back where you started from. Yet it is no longer the same starting point.”

#ScribesAndMakers 4/10 A book cover you like. What makes it special?

This is the book cover for Hidden, the first book I wrote in my Musimagium world (for an online prompt of ... wait for it.... "hidden")

The book features a sarcastic and magical bearded dragon, and I love the covers that are outlines with images filled in.

The second book in the series is Tonic Chords and I made these covers myself.

This weekend Foag Klarinetten released their giant "Oktokontrabassklarinette" at the Nürnberg Akustika show. An octave below the contrabass clarinet, this beast can be yours for a cool €60,000 with keys for low C, sounding B♭₋₁ nearly an octave below the piano's lowest note (more of a queasiness than a note).
#klarinette #clarinet #allaboutthebass
(Image shamelessly yoinked from their Facebook page)