Monday, November 23, 2009

Time for an update.

We haven't posted anything in quite some time. So, I think we should put something else on here. It should probably have been on here the whole time. I guess we don't know if anybody besides us looks at this though.

One of the things we do on a regular basis is a radio show on KRNL 89.7 FM, hosted right here on Cornell's campus in Mt. Vernon, Iowa. Our shows are Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 9pm to 10pm. We take breaks for holidays and for our block breaks, but we do a lot of shows. These shows focus on themes we set for each month. Last month (November, it's almost over) was American music and this month (December, what little of it we have to work with) we're focusing on religious music. Expect some Christmas carols. If you want to listen, and I know you do, simply follow this link (KRNL's website is one of the Community Links on the left, for the record): http://orgs.cornellcollege.edu/krnl/index.php?page=shoutcast and follow the directions to listen live. I've found more success using Internet Explorer than Firefox, but try it out and see what works. Please listen and enjoy Octave Radio. We happily expand your horizons, and at no extra charge.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Thank You Public Domain

Often free sheet music download sites suck. This one does not.

Petrucci Music Library

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Cool Little Website

Courtesy of April Johnson. If you want to know if you are tone deaf or not, now you can check. Considering that my ear is pretty bad, I did rather well. I missed two.

http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/tunetest/dtt.asp

Monday, September 14, 2009

Haydn was a Brutal Dude


Dr. Ellis mentioned this as something the quartet could do this semester since we are currently looking to perform some Haydn. Even if we're not playing, I still think we should go. I think it's hilarious.

Haydn Quartet Slam

Sunday, September 13, 2009

U2 Live in Chicago 9/12/09


So I missed Octave's weekend festivities, but I got to see two bands in Chicago instead. I think it's a pretty good deal.

Snow Patrol was the opening act of the night and they really set the tone for an excellent show. I admit to not being familiar with very much of the band's material, but they played the three songs I know, "Run", "Chasing Cars" and "Hands Open". All three were performed to perfection. "Hands Open"was particularly good. It had great energy and the crowd was really into it.
As for the negatives of their performance, the singer made some mistakes. He fully acknowledged them as well. He smiled and laughed about them all. It was cool, in a way. The lead guitarist disappointed. The solos lacked creativity and one of them was hard to hear. That may have been a sound board issue, but it hurt the feel of what was otherwise a great show.
Snow Patrol was a pleasant surprise. I did not know what to expect and was impressed. Their songs even used dynamics, which really impressed me.

After Snow Patrol left the stage, an army, and I mean an army, of roadies came out to reset it for U2. Now, the army can be easily explained by the stage itself. It is called The Claw, and it is enormous. The picture is from a Paris show because I don't take cameras to concerts. The point is to listen, not to try and get the perfect shot.

Anyway, after a 45 minute set change, U2 took over. The show was incredible; one of the best shows I've seen. They played for two and a half hours and played a spectacular set list. Some of the highlights were "Bad", "Elevation", "Unknown Caller", "Ultra Violet (Light my Way)", and "Pride (In the Name of Love)". My friend Sam, who went with me, listed his top 5 as "Magnificent", "Beautiful Day", "Elevation", "The Unforgettable Fire" and "Bad". The lists are pretty close all things considered. It was really hard for me to leave "Beautiful Day" off my list, and he said the same thing for "Pride (In the Name of Love)".
The energy was incredible. Bono, whose singing has declined, but was still pretty good, worked the crowd at almost the level of Freddy Mercury in his prime. He even had us doing the double clap, a la "Radio Ga Ga". It was quite the experience. There were two pretty amazing effects during the encore as well. First, during "With or Without You" they aimed a bunch of spots on a disco ball at the top of the claw and dimmed all the lights creating a swirl of lights on the entire stadium. To close the show, with "Moment of Surrender", they had the lights way down and had the entire audience take out their phones. I realize it's cliche and not as cool as lighters, but the effect was magnificent.
Bono, regardless of what can be said about his politics, is an excellent front man. When he introduced the band, he made fun of himself for his lack of humility. With The Edge playing what Bono described as "sky-scraping guitar" and Bono continually dancing around the stage, U2 never lacked energy. Adam and Larry kept the beat rock solid and the time was never an issue. Even the remix of "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" impressed. Having all three instrumentalists walk around the entirety of the stage, playing guitar, bass and djembe, did not hurt the energy either. The crowd went crazy too. It was awesome.
If you ever get the chance, I would recommend seeing U2 if possible. Snow Patrol's front man, Gary Lightbody, claimed it was the best live show him or the rest of Snow Patrol had ever seen. U2 did not disappoint. The only thing that is keeping Zappa Plays Zappa ahead of it for me is the length of show. Zappa played for an hour more than U2 did, but Zappa didn't have an opening act either.

To end this rambling post, let me quote Bono by saying "All you need is love. And a spaceship. The spaceship is good too."

Monday, August 3, 2009

It's boring in Mt. Vernon during the summer.

I was sitting here on the internet this evening and I found this. The pentatonic scale rocks!! And it's science, which is just cool.

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/08/01/bobby-mcferrin-hacks.html

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Scratchy Old Records You've Never Heard

I have been working on Asian long zithers this week and during some reading today, I found this site. More old Asian traditional recordings than you could ever listen to. Lots of pictures and additional links. All very cool.
HAJI MAJI

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

The archivist whom I work under at the National Music Museum is currently researching electronic music interfaces. I am totally into this.

New Interfaces for Musical Expression - Homepage

NIME Performance 2008: Hyperflute
NIME Performance 2008: Window

Sunday, May 31, 2009

More Things to Listen to...

I am clearly addicted to podcasts. Although Robert Harrison and the whole Stanford intellectual circle may be rather high falutin, Stephen Hinton is really good in these interviews. One is on Beethoven and the other on Kurt Weil.

Entitled Opinions (about Life and Literature.)

Also, everyone has administrative privileges so feel free to change or add anything to the blog layout and appearance.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Things to Listen to

If you don't already follow WNYC radio, I highly recommend it. The Radiolab podcast is wonderful.


Radiolab: Musical Language

Radiolab: The Ring and I

Radiolab: Quantum Cello