20 June 2009
Acoustic Treatment
After I got back from Buffalo, I installed some acoustic panels in my studio to reduce standing waves and early reflections. I also put the computer in the closet, and put panels to reduce reflection of noise out of the closet since I can't close the closet completely because of heat considerations. This still made a significant improvement in my listening experience. You can see me discuss the technical issues in a video on Youtube, "Cheap Acoustic Room Treatments".
Children and the love of music
A high-school friend of mine sent me the following letter on facebook:
Hello! looks like you had a nice visit to WNY. You were introduced to music at a very young age, I am assuming. What did your parents do to surround you with music so that you grew to love it (and play so beautifully)? Were your parents musicians?
My 3 year old is always singing everything...making up songs about the slug she found and made her fingers sticky. She enjoys music, classical to sing-alongs to alternative. Do you have any ideas that impacted you personally in your youth to pass along to me? I did purchase a very small violin that she "plays" from time to time, but I have not started Suzuki lessons or anything else for that manner.
We are well here. I hope you are able to open my eyes to ways to encourage Frances to love and take an interest in music.
Keep smiling!
Thanks for the very nice message- I think my musical bent comes almost completely from my mother's side. My dad doesn't seem to listen to music much, except maybe to see the big-busted ladies of Hee-Haw, or more recently, a TV special with Shania Twain. I think the only record he ever bought was "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald", because he knew some of the guys who died on it (he worked on the boats in the Great Lakes). My mom also didn't play any instrument, but we listened to the radio and records a lot. We mostly listened to WKBW, a Buffalo AM station that played a wide variety of pop, rock, country, and novelty music. I also remember my mom putting a stack (that was the playlist of the 70's) of Johnny Cash records on the stereo to occupy me while I stayed on the couch while she waxed the floors (I was scared of "Ring of Fire", and liked it at the same time).
My parents didn't push me to play music, it was something that I came up with on my own. When I was in 1st and 2nd grade, at school there was a lady (Mrs. Fluker?) who would come in once a day and play piano for sing-alongs or marches around the room with little instruments. We were forbidden to touch the piano in the classroom, which made it very attractive. I bugged my parents to get a piano, and in 3rd grade we got one and I started lessons. Around the same time, Mr. Mears (who became my violin teacher for the next 9 years) and another music teacher from the middle school came to our class and demoed different instruments. I liked the different bowing techniques that Mr. Mears used, and decided I wanted to try violin. As for guitar, my sister had a crappy toy one laying around that she wasn't using, and one day I heard the opening riff of KISS's "Calling Dr. Love" coming out of her bedroom, and I decided I really wanted to make that kind of noise. So I started teaching myself guitar with the help of a book, and imitating KISS records.
Most of my youth I was really into rock and pop music. First there was the KISS obsession for a couple years- I had "Alive" and "Alive II" memorized, and would give daily "KISS concerts" in the garage in the summer, complete with Paul Stanley's exhortations to the crowd, which in my case were my two dogs.
John: "Do you want a little bit of rock and roll? I said Do you want a little bit of ROCK AND ROLL?! Well SHOUT IT OUT LOUD!!"
Dogs: "Woof! WOOF!".
Then I got "Best of the Doobies" out of the library and that got me interested in more sophisticated stuff. Then there was the Beatles phase, and Genesis, YES, Rush, Pink Floyd. When I went to the School of Orchestral Studies in Saratoga, that's when I started to listen to classical music. I really liked "Pictures at an Exhibition" and the last movement of Shostakovich's 5th symphony that we played. All those bright colorful Russian harmonies really did it for me. Also Howard Hanson's 2nd Symphony is a huge favorite of mine.
Recently I've drifted back toward listening more to pop and rock. I don't have the technical skills on piano I used to, but my violin and guitar playing is still pretty good. My own music is a mix of all those influences I picked up along the way. Though I didn't go into music as my main profession, if I'm honest with myself I'd have to say it's the thing I'm most obsessed with. It also got me out of my shell, and allowed me to get to know a lot of nice people. I'm glad I never saw it as a "chore". My parents didn't force me to practice, and I could quit any time (almost did near the beginning). It's nice to have something so fun, and something that I can get totally wrapped up in and forget my everyday problems, and even explore new and strange worlds, so to speak. I hope your daughter has fun with her little violin!
Cheers,
John
Hello! looks like you had a nice visit to WNY. You were introduced to music at a very young age, I am assuming. What did your parents do to surround you with music so that you grew to love it (and play so beautifully)? Were your parents musicians?
My 3 year old is always singing everything...making up songs about the slug she found and made her fingers sticky. She enjoys music, classical to sing-alongs to alternative. Do you have any ideas that impacted you personally in your youth to pass along to me? I did purchase a very small violin that she "plays" from time to time, but I have not started Suzuki lessons or anything else for that manner.
We are well here. I hope you are able to open my eyes to ways to encourage Frances to love and take an interest in music.
Keep smiling!
Thanks for the very nice message- I think my musical bent comes almost completely from my mother's side. My dad doesn't seem to listen to music much, except maybe to see the big-busted ladies of Hee-Haw, or more recently, a TV special with Shania Twain. I think the only record he ever bought was "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald", because he knew some of the guys who died on it (he worked on the boats in the Great Lakes). My mom also didn't play any instrument, but we listened to the radio and records a lot. We mostly listened to WKBW, a Buffalo AM station that played a wide variety of pop, rock, country, and novelty music. I also remember my mom putting a stack (that was the playlist of the 70's) of Johnny Cash records on the stereo to occupy me while I stayed on the couch while she waxed the floors (I was scared of "Ring of Fire", and liked it at the same time).
My parents didn't push me to play music, it was something that I came up with on my own. When I was in 1st and 2nd grade, at school there was a lady (Mrs. Fluker?) who would come in once a day and play piano for sing-alongs or marches around the room with little instruments. We were forbidden to touch the piano in the classroom, which made it very attractive. I bugged my parents to get a piano, and in 3rd grade we got one and I started lessons. Around the same time, Mr. Mears (who became my violin teacher for the next 9 years) and another music teacher from the middle school came to our class and demoed different instruments. I liked the different bowing techniques that Mr. Mears used, and decided I wanted to try violin. As for guitar, my sister had a crappy toy one laying around that she wasn't using, and one day I heard the opening riff of KISS's "Calling Dr. Love" coming out of her bedroom, and I decided I really wanted to make that kind of noise. So I started teaching myself guitar with the help of a book, and imitating KISS records.
Most of my youth I was really into rock and pop music. First there was the KISS obsession for a couple years- I had "Alive" and "Alive II" memorized, and would give daily "KISS concerts" in the garage in the summer, complete with Paul Stanley's exhortations to the crowd, which in my case were my two dogs.
John: "Do you want a little bit of rock and roll? I said Do you want a little bit of ROCK AND ROLL?! Well SHOUT IT OUT LOUD!!"
Dogs: "Woof! WOOF!".
Then I got "Best of the Doobies" out of the library and that got me interested in more sophisticated stuff. Then there was the Beatles phase, and Genesis, YES, Rush, Pink Floyd. When I went to the School of Orchestral Studies in Saratoga, that's when I started to listen to classical music. I really liked "Pictures at an Exhibition" and the last movement of Shostakovich's 5th symphony that we played. All those bright colorful Russian harmonies really did it for me. Also Howard Hanson's 2nd Symphony is a huge favorite of mine.
Recently I've drifted back toward listening more to pop and rock. I don't have the technical skills on piano I used to, but my violin and guitar playing is still pretty good. My own music is a mix of all those influences I picked up along the way. Though I didn't go into music as my main profession, if I'm honest with myself I'd have to say it's the thing I'm most obsessed with. It also got me out of my shell, and allowed me to get to know a lot of nice people. I'm glad I never saw it as a "chore". My parents didn't force me to practice, and I could quit any time (almost did near the beginning). It's nice to have something so fun, and something that I can get totally wrapped up in and forget my everyday problems, and even explore new and strange worlds, so to speak. I hope your daughter has fun with her little violin!
Cheers,
John
Labels:
Howard Hanson,
Mears,
Saratoga,
violin,
WKBW
14 June 2009
Traveling 1
I went for a short vacation to see my family in the Buffalo area. The drive into the city, from the Southtowns where my parents live, was beautiful. Buffalo is much flatter than Pittsburgh, and has a beautiful sky. The drive up 219 is something I took for granted as a kid, but now I understand what people mean when they say it is scenic. Of course, Pennsylvania is also very scenic. The Pennsylvania part of 86 East, the road on which I based my piece "Southern Tier Suite", was a mess, with bumps every couple seconds where the road had cracked and been filled with patching asphalt.
I realized one day that I liked listening to old YES music as I drive, though I have to be careful not to let Bruford's propulsive drumming make me speed! A lot of the longer pieces, especially "Tales From Topographic Oceans", remind me of landscapes, that become more interesting as one becomes familiar with them, and all the detail within. This is what inspired me to write my first "geographical" music, the "Southern Tier Suite", and later things like "Niagara". The "Suite" refers to the three sections of the piece: "86 East", which represents the usually boring part from Erie to about Chautauqua lake- though a bit monotonous, it does have a "groove" to it; "Plateau" which represents all the places where the road feels as if it has reached some kind of summit, sometimes within view of either Chautauqua Lake or Lake Erie; and "The Senecas", which represents the Seneca Nation which lives around Salamanca. In this way, I never run out of inspiration- I can always just do a "musical landscape".
I realized one day that I liked listening to old YES music as I drive, though I have to be careful not to let Bruford's propulsive drumming make me speed! A lot of the longer pieces, especially "Tales From Topographic Oceans", remind me of landscapes, that become more interesting as one becomes familiar with them, and all the detail within. This is what inspired me to write my first "geographical" music, the "Southern Tier Suite", and later things like "Niagara". The "Suite" refers to the three sections of the piece: "86 East", which represents the usually boring part from Erie to about Chautauqua lake- though a bit monotonous, it does have a "groove" to it; "Plateau" which represents all the places where the road feels as if it has reached some kind of summit, sometimes within view of either Chautauqua Lake or Lake Erie; and "The Senecas", which represents the Seneca Nation which lives around Salamanca. In this way, I never run out of inspiration- I can always just do a "musical landscape".
Labels:
Bill Bruford,
Buffalo,
Niagara,
Southern Tier,
YES
demo track: Harbingers of Spring 2009
Here is a track I started working on during the "Quiet Revolution" sessions, which didn't make it on to the CD. It's a rock instrumental based on Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring", and it's called "Harbingers of Spring".
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