How many legs does a dog have if you call the tail a leg? Four. Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg. - Abraham Lincoln

2005, July 28

Add some cats

Cats in our family make the house a home.


In the kitchen

Baby in the grass

In bed

Sister

2005, July 26

Catcher?

I took the Quiz at the Blue Pyramid. Here is the amazing result. This was one of my favorite books when I was in my twenties, and Franny and Zooey and Raise High the Roofbeams, Carpenters are still on my list of very good books to re-read.


You're The Catcher in the Rye!
by J.D. Salinger
You are surrounded by phonies, and boy are you sick of them! In an ongoing struggle to search for a land without phonies, you end up running away from everything, from school to consequences. In this process, you reveal that many people in your life have suffered torments and all you really want to do is catch them as they fall. Perhaps using a baseball mitt. Your biggest fans are infamous psychotics.

Take the Book Quiz at the Blue Pyramid.

2005, July 24

Air on a G string

Air from Orchestral Suite 3 in D, BWV 1068.2

We are now working on this short piece of music, short only in the number of notes it comprises. Bach could not let even a short aria go by without creating a masterpiece of counterpoint. Essentially, though it is often played as a solo piece, it is really a duet for two violins.

Learning, as my teacher puts it, the "choreography" of the bow makes this a very full sized piece. Here I am faced with a concept that takes as much assimilation as the idea of "no dead notes" in the Two Part Keyboard Inventions, the holding of non-moving notes in the mind while playing the moving part of the counterpoint.

Of course, the ideas, to the mind seem simple enough. However the doing of the thing is much more difficult.

Bass, viola and violin 2, with 4 eighth notes for tempo, music minus one


Full piece


Score

2005, July 18

BWV 650 Corrected

Schübler chorale 6, Come thou, Jesu, from heaven to earth (Kommst du nun, Jesu, vom Himmel herunter)

This morning I realized that the QT file of the sixth Schübler chorale has the chorale melody an octave too low. I missed the organ pedal marking, 4 fuss, meaning that it sounds an octave higher than written.

Since it is an alto aria, this makes sense, since it would be in the wrong range as I had it.

Here is the corrected file:

BWV 650

And since I have developed a fondness for the chorale an octave lower, here is the uncorrected version.

BWV 650, chorale an octave low

Chorales • (0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink

2005, July 12

How Brightly Beams the Morning Star

How Brightly Beams the Morning Star (Wie schön leuchtet der morgenstern)

This chorale melody is attributed to Philipp Nicolai (1544-1608), in 1599. Charles Sanford Terry comments that "it is improbable that Nicolai composed the melody" but rather more likely that he adjusted older material to his hymn. Terry goes on to state that the melody bears a partial resemblance to a 14th century carol, Resonet in laudibus.

Resonet in laudibus, harmonized by Ralph Vaughn Williams

According to Terry, the source of the hymn text is Psalm 45, but I personally cannot see a connection.

Besides the pieces below, the melody also appears in BWV 37.3 as a soprano and alto duet, and in BWV 49.6 where it is an aria duet for soprano and bass.

The music: BWV 1.1   The opening chorale of Cantata 1. A complex chorale fantasia with the chorale in the soprano part.
  BWV 1.6   The final chorale of Cantata 1. The soprano part is doubled by the first horn and the first violin. The alto part is doubled by the second violin and the first oboe da caccia. The tenor part is doubled by the viola and the second oboe da caccia.
  BWV 36(2).4   Another four part chorale.
  BWV 61.6   This piece uses the final Amen from the chorale.
  BWV 172.6   A violin obligato part accompanies this 4 part chorale, "How Brightly Shines the Morning Star". This is the final chorale of Cantata 172, "Erschallet, ihr Lieder" or "Ring Out, Songs, Resound".
  BWV 172.6, Vocal parts   The four part harmonization without the violin.
  BWV 172.6, violin obligato   Violin part only.
  BWV 436   A four part chorale.

MP3 files of these chorales are available. If you want one, leave me a note in a comment with your email address and I will send it. Unfortunately, the files are too large to put them on my ftp server for general distribution.


Some names under which this chorale is known:


Wie schön leuchtet der morgenstern
How Brightly Beams the Morning Star


Discussions from the Bach Cantatas website:

BWV 1
BWV 36
BWV 61
BWV 172

Discussions from the Emmanuel Music website:

BWV 1
BWV 36
BWV 61
BWV 172 (translation)

Chorales • (0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink

2005, July 09

The Gooloo Bird - Shel Silverstein (1930-1999)

Hopeful mother, without resources


The Gooloo bird
She has no feet.
She cannot walk
Upon the street.
She cannot build
Herself a nest,
She cannot land
And take a rest.
Through rain and snow
And thunderous skies,
She weeps forever
As she flies,
And lays her eggs
High over town,
And prays that they
Fall safely down.


Gooloo, a poem from A Light in the Attic, Shel Silverstein


WebSites:
Biography
Kid's Site
Banned Hamlet
Memorial

Scrapbook • (0) Comments • (0) TrackbacksPermalink

2005, July 06

Dorothy Sayers

As my Wimsey takes me.

Here are all the books Dorothy Sayers wrote with the characters Lord Peter and Harriet Vane. Harriet does not appear in two of them, but she is referred to marginally. These are great books to read and re-read; she is certainly a favorite of mine.


Strong Poison 1930

Have His Carcase 1932

Murder Must Advertise 1933

The Nine Tailors 1934

Gaudy Night 1935

Busman’s Honeymoon 1937

Striding Folly 1973

Thrones, Dominations (co-author Jill Paton Walsh) 1998

A Presumption of Death (co-author Jill Paton Walsh) 2004


WebSites:

Dorothy Sayers Society

Dorothy Sayers


2005, June 25

Dounis

Dounis’ Daily Dozen for vioinists

After searching and searching, I have given up on finding my copies of Harvey Whistler’s Developing DoubleStops and my Dounis’ Daily Dozen.

I know they are here somewhere, I would never get rid of them, but I can’t find them anywhere. I was able to find Whistler’s DoubleStops, it is still in print.

The Dounis is not, but a kind soul put a pdf file on the web for download. I have put a copy on my ftp site for download.



Dounis Daily Dozen

Page 14 of 18 pages « First  <  12 13 14 15 16 >  Last »

Category Archives

Powered by:   PHP
     MySQL
     Apache
     Mac OS X
     QuickTime
     ExpressionEngine

<< Back to homepage

to the Inauguration

JSBChorales.net

JSBChorales.net offers free midi, QT and PDF files of Bach's four-part harmonized chorales. They can be downloaded individually or in complete sets. Be aware that other sites offering files downloaded from this site in the past may not have current updates. Please see Chorale Editions, File Accuracy.

Search

Search



Photos | Flickr

  • www.flickr.com
    This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from jsb margaret. Make your own badge here.

Archives

  • Complete Archives
  • Category Archives

Visitors

  • Locations of visitors to this page