Posts Tagged ‘Add new tag’

New Albany’s Opera House

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009
New Albany Opera House

New Albany Opera House

Yeah, you read the title correctly. While doing some local historical research I came across Ted Fulmore’s Our History in New Albany blog again (I hadn’t thought of it in some time) and immediately remembered his posts about New Albany’s Opera House (see here and here).

In the first link listed above, Ted posts some info about the interior of the Opera House from the New Albany Ledger (November 23, 1866):

The hall is on the second floor and is reached by a broad flight of steps of easy ascent. At the foot of the stairs on the north side is the ticket office, a neat and nicely organized room. Immediately at the head of the stairs is the entrance to the dress circle and parquette: while a flight of broad stairs on the right and left lead respectively to the family circle and gallery.

The dress circle and parquette are most elegantly and elaborately finished. They are supplied with spring cushion seats, covered in red damask, with green damask and stuffed backs. The seats in the dress circle are of the same kind of material. The parquette or orchestra boxes are separated from the dress circle by a beautiful iron railing in semi-circle form. The brackets that ornament the gas burners form a really magnificent ornament to the front and sides of the circle. A larger number of brackets add to the elegance of other parts of the house. The house was lighted by 150 gas burners.

I would love to find some of the old programs from productions at the New Albany Opera House–but what I would love more is to archive all the productions that took place at there.

Non-Western Cello Techniques

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Eventually I will blog more about using non-Western cello playing techniques. There’s a whole world of music out there and finding ways to adapt those styles to the cello isn’t without some precedent, but obviously it’s not something that’s easy to find. Until then I leave the reader with a few videos and links.

A cello (Turkish) taksim:

If you like the above, then visit Uğur Işık’s MySpace page (I especially love his Alamanti–I’ve already downloaded it from Amazon.com and have started learning it).

Shubhendra Rao and cellist, Saskia Rao-de Haas, playing (Indian) Hindustani music:

Visit Saskia’s website and check out her really cool modified cello

Nancy Kulkarni playing (Indian) Dhrupad:

Enjoy!

Scala

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

Scala: http://www.huygens-fokker.org/scala/index.html

A powerfool tool programmed by Manuel op de Coul, for the experimentation, creation, editing, comparison, analysis, storage, digital adjustment, and MIDI sounding and recording of Western & non-Western, just intonation, equal, microtonal, and macrotonal tunings. SCALA is accompanied by a library of more than three thousand scales, is free of charge, and is downloadable from the internet.

I came across it while reading Ozan Yarman‘s Doctoral Dissertation, 79-tone Tuning & Theory For Turkish Maqam Music (from where the comment about Scala above is quoted).