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davmar

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Everything posted by davmar

  1. I ordered the cd anyway...Join em-lick em I forgot...
  2. WHAT IF THEY HAD A WAR AND NOBODY CAME?-1968
  3. hay BBB he probably does not have a match either
  4. Possibly it is just me, but I usually read the forum several times a day and I always use the Posted Today tab, so to me it does not matter where you post it at, how if I may ask do you guys use the forum? I have made several great discoveries on what you guys (and two lovely ladies) are listening to!
  5. Milton: Congrats on owning one of Ricks Newtonians! If I did not live in Alaska I would consider it myself! The view through a Pronto is as much an eye opener as listening to you first horn!!! Right on the www.astromart.com connection, I bought ALL my eyepieces through them, heck I even bought my Meade 10 there also. Welcome the Forum, and I hope you got those Heresy's working
  6. Ill bet you could have seen the cow jumping over the moon though, the astromomy should have been great! No light pollution for 5 states!
  7. Fini, I am already popular with the ladies, dont you know, I am a Manley Man! Here is a shot of my LX200
  8. Guilty as charged! (look close at my avatar) If I could lug my klipshe out with my big ten inch, I would really be set. The below link is an excellent page where you can buy and sell astronomy stuff. If you have any questions, I will be glad to answer http://www.astromart.com/ By the way how do you make a hyper link work on this place
  9. You are so right Moon, sorry I cannot see to well, I turned up the Scallas and the blood got into my eyes. You are up late!!! It is 11 pm Alaska time???
  10. Moon, Quake the game. Quake III is the third edition, and Arena is a Mod pak. If you tire of killing and being killed by aliens with unreal (sic) weapons, try Urban Terror that uses the Quake engine. You can download it off the internet
  11. Nice camera work FINI, what do you use? Here is a shot I took over weekend. Olympus E-10 with 300 mm
  12. One of the coolest live drum cuts I know is on the Genesis Live Vol. II. Drum DUET!! (one of the few duel drummer bands A good drum album is Mickey Heart Planet Drum
  13. The other MOONDOG Hay JT, no I havent tube rolled the Russia EL84s, I sent them off to get the labels taken off first! I did want to reply about the Moondog I made a reference to, I thought you would like him, I know you like classical keyboard work. I especially like Chaconne in G Major. Musical Heritage Society 3803 (1978) Side 1 1. Canon in C Major (harpsichord) 2. Canon in C Minor (harpsichord) 3. Ground in the Ionian Mode (harpsichord) 4. Canon in the Mixolydian Mode (harpsichord) 5. Chaconne in G Major (string quartet) 6. Heimdall Fanfare* (Canon in the Dorian mode for 9 horns) 7. Romance (Second movement of String Quartet in C Major) 8. Chaconne in C Major (organ) Side 2 Selections from Logründr Book 1 for Organ 1. Logründr No. XV in B Major 2. Logründr No. XVII in E Major 3. Logründr No. XIII in F-sharp Major 4. Logründr No. XII in B-flat Minor 5. Logrundr No. VII in E-flat Major 6. Logründr No. IX in A Major (Portrait of my Mother) Gavin Black, Harpsichord Fritz Storfinger, Organ Guy Carmichael, Horn Louis T. Hardin, Percussion * Conducted by Dave Kamien Pannonia Quartet Gabor GUI & Ludovik Sandrik Violins Klaus Koenig, Viola Bertalan Ikrenyi Cello Co-Producers and Publishers: Managarm & Rhein & Ruhr-Film (GEMA) Engineering: Helmut Rohlfing, Friedbert Keuken The organ pieces were recorded on the Brell organ in Herz-Jesu Kirche, Oberhausen, W. Germany. The harpsichord pieces were recorded in New Haven, Ct. Photo by: W. Beyna Cover Drawing: IIona Goebel All music by Louis T. Hardin (Moondog) Sleeve Notes In the beginning was tonality. Then came atonality which was revolutionary. Tonality continued in folk music and popular music, in spite of atonality, but in the case of serious composers, it was taboo to even think of writing tonal on pain of being ignored and unperformed. I persisted in writing tonal music, and by opposing the atonal revolutionaries, I became a counter-revolutionary. I maintained the tonal tradition, unaware that the founder of atonality himself had repudiated the 12-tone System, which he had conceived. But that was not the end of atonality, for even though its founder gave it up, his pupils did not, and so, for the time being, at least, it survives. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, Tonality! I write much keyboard music which can be played on piano, harpsichord or even on the organ manuals. I did not start writing organ music until 1974 in Germany for my friend, the organist Paul Jordan. For the first time I began writing music for the pedals, resulting in my first Logrundr Book. I combined two forms into one, the canon and the ground, giving the ground to the pedals and the canon to the manuals. I coined the word Logrundr: Log meaning Law or Canon, Grundr means Ground. I like to write chamber and choral music, especially for orchestra. But since it is not always easy to have orchestral works performed, the organ is the next best medium to give the composer vast tonal resources. In fact, I prefer the organ when it comes to writing contrapuntal music because of the sustaining power of the organ in long melodic passages. The orchestra is best in music which is harmonic and rhythmic. A Bach fugue, transcribed for the orchestra, à la Stokowski, is impressive, but not nearly so impressive as on the organ itself. Organ versus Orchestra! A case in point, which brings to mind both "King of Instruments" and "Instrument of Kings". Louis Hardin, born in 1916 in Marysville, Kansas, wrote his first song at the age of eleven. Only several years later, however, did he make the final decision to become a composer, inspired by the book "The First Violin." After musical study with Maud Manniny, Bernard Schaefer, Anna May Sansom, and Daphne Ivans, at the lowa School for the Blind, Hardin moved in 1943 to New York, which he felt to be the musical center of America at that time. Over the next thirty years Hardin remained in New York writing and playing his music. As a strong believer in tradition he chose to respect the ancient rules of counterpoint in his work, following them even more strictly than most composers of the past. He was attracted especially to the form of the canon: in the 1950's and 60's Hardin wrote 300 madrigals in the form of canons, and over a hundred canonically based keyboard works, including four books of The Art of the Canon for keyboard. As the canon is the strictest musical form, so the couplet is the strictest poetic form; and Hardin has authored over one thousand couplets and longer poems over the years, including the madrigal texts. In New York, Louis Hardin, who lost his sight at age 17, met many of the greatest artists of the day, such as Artur Rodzinski, Arturo Toscanini, Dmitri Mitropolous, Leonard Bernstein, George Szell, Martha Graham, Charlie Parker, Benny Goodman and Duke Ellington. Hardin began using the name Moondog in 1947, and under that name produced several records of his music from the early 1950's on. During a concert tour of Germany in 1974, Hardin, who in recognition of his affinity for classical tradition had previously described himself as a "European in Exile", decided to remain where he was. After a stay in Hamburg he settled near Recklinghausen where he lives today ("incognito", according to 'Le Monde'!). The present record contains a sampling of Hardin's recent music. The four works played on harpsichord are taken from collections put together in the early 70's. The Canons in C major and C minor are from The Art of the Canon, Book 1, and the two modal works are from Troubador Harp Book 1. Though these works were not originally conceived for harpsichord, composer and performer agree that they are well suited to the instrument. The harpsichord used here was built in 1977 by Keith Hill. The Chaconne in G was written in 1974. This piece is a Tonata in one movement. The Romance is the second movement of a three movement Tonata in C for string quartet, completed in 1976. The Tonata is a form conceived by Hardin. He says "it is an outgrowth of the Sonata, though different enough from it to require a new name. Each Tonata is a law unto itself, though they all have much in common, all relying heaving on counterpoint, featuring the canon and the ground, relieved here and there by harmonic and rhythmic effects." The development sections of the two quartet pieces are in canon form, double 2-part canons. In the Romance it has the added feature of being a mirror canon. The Pannonia String Quartet of Marl has been playing together since 1975. The Heimdall Fanfare forms part of the Creation, begun in 1971, Hardin's most ambitious contrapuntal work to date. The work tells the story of the Nordic Creation myth; in music and elegaic couplets the music is based on the first nine notes of the overtone series of the note g, used in order as a contrapuntal theme. The Fanfare is a nine-part canon in the dorian mode. Heimdall, a figure from the Nordic mythology, is the watchman of Asgard, who blows the Gjallar-Horn. The Chaconne in C for organ was written in 1967. Along with the other organ works recorded here, it is played on the Breil organ of the Herz-Jesu Kirche, Oberhausen. The works on side two are taken from the Logrundr Book One for organ, written between 1974 and 1976 and dedicated to Paul Jordan. Like the twelve books of Madrigals and the four books of The Art of the Canon, this collection contains 25 pieces in all keys, arranged according to the circle of fifths, beginning and ending with pieces in C major. The works are canons over a repeated bass, sometimes with a coda. The counterpoint in all of Hardin's canons is invertible, allowing the order of parts to be reversed in the middle of each piece. Logrundr XIX is a portrait of the composer's mother. About organ sound, Louis Hardin has said, "I like the diapason and the flutes the best, and care very little for the reeds. I like a clear, pure classic tone on the organ, without vibrato." On Hardin's being asked why some of the organ pieces as recorded here have reeds, the reply was, "Ask Storfinger". Hardin is currently at work on a second Logrundr Book, dedicated to Fritz Storfinger, which will contain organ duets as well as solo organ pieces. Gavin Black Fritz Storfinger of Oberhausen was born in 1951 as the son of an organ builder, and studied under Sieglinde Ahrens, among others. During the last two years he has been playing concerts of music by Louis Hardin in Germany. Gavin Black was born in 1957, and lives in New Haven, where he studied organ with Wendell Piehler and Paul Jordan. He has also studied in Princeton with Eugene Roan, and in Frankfurt-am-Main. P.S. Mike, yes the FIRST CAV
  14. Wow I missed that thread on fave live; I will have to check that out! My favorite live song now is Ritual on the Yes Symphonic Live DVD. By the way welcome home Mike! I was with the CAV.
  15. My favorite scary movie "Something wicked this way comes" Ray Bradberry story made to the movie! My goddess JT, I cannot believe this setup, I was listening to John McLaughlin Trio that I got yesterday. I thank the day I came across the La Scalas and your ad for the Stingray! I use an equalizer, which I know some look down upon, but all the slides are all the way down except the four bass ones that I slide up to zero, and that seems to work out fine. Kai Eckhardts bass work sound phenomenal! Trilok Gurtu on drums is like he is in my living room. I am having my Alaska Permanente Fund start to burn a hole in my pocket, but I cannot think of anything I need to spend that $1500 dollars on. So despite what Joe Rosen said (I think) I think there is more gold in the Manly Stingray than the gold plate on the faceplate! And I quote I can drag Audio Note & Audio Innovations through the mud, but to be fair, if I'm going to get too carried away with that, then I should drag VTL along with them, with conrad-johnson & Jadis not very far behind. Post 1994, Eve-Anna assumed control of Manley Labs, so these products SHOULD be free of the glaring engineering deficiencies that the older David Manley "designed" products were so full of. Things like idiotically excessive plate & screen voltages (one VTL integrated amp I saw actually ran the tubes at DOUBLE the rated maximum voltages!), and equally lunatic excessive grid resistances that caused output tubes to just up & run away (The big VTL's were notorious for this, notably the 300 and rarer 500. Manley had his staff resoldering the tube pins on GE 6550's, quality American-made tubes that were still available at the time. Obviously, this didn't solve the problem, which was grid resistances anywhere from six to ten times the maximum ratings, on top of excessive plate & screen grid voltages. Then Manley would claim that he ran his tubes "conservatively", only because he used low idle bias currents...). If you want to complain about something that has nothing of value in the box, don't ever buy conrad-johnson! An ART preamp costs what, $20,000 last I heard a price mentioned? It looks like two mono preamps, but this is simply down to a machined groove the cheap buggers had milled into the common faceplate of the thing.
  16. I found a copy of PINK FLOYD LIVE AT POMPEII at a yard sale several years ago, no doubt a keeper; it will be good to have a more friendly DVD copy. I must also highly recommend YES SYMPHONIC LIVE out on DVD now. The cut Ritual is rapidly becoming my favorite LIVE song.
  17. I always watch the deleted scene option if it is available, I sometimes watch the about the movie bit, if I want to see some more of the actress (thank you Freud). I had to reply at this late date on account that I just watched the extra bit with 12 monkeys, and found it fascinating! It could be clyouless, that the extras on dvd are a feature you have to grow into, when you are 8 or 9 you may think what the hay, if it is on here, I may as well watch it, and if I dont like it, turn it off. Speaking of turning it off, it is like that guy who wanted to post about bodily hair, I myself didnt get too far into that paragraph before, like anything I read and dont like, and I skip it!
  18. I brought my own bunney the last time, thats how he got here!
  19. Live Music My newest DVD is Yes: Symphonic - Live in Amsterdam, and even though I am a Yes fan, this is the first time I have seen them, before I thought the words were from god, now I know it is a BAND! But I am now thinking that Ritual is one if not the best live song I have heard! I used to and still like what I call story albums, like Tommy by the Who, or Journey to the center of the earth by Rick Wakeman. I really like how the La Scalas play Live music, turn the Manley up to about 10 and close the eyesSo I am throwing the gauntlet down, I am saying that Yes: Symphonic, and Ritual is the best LIVE recording, what are your favorite LIVE recordings???
  20. Is your avatar the gif for TOOL?
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