Screen grabs of the HTC Mozart, which runs Microsoft Windows Phone 7 and will arrive in Europe in October, were reportedly leaked from a UK retailers inventory system. – Details on an HTC smartphone running Microsofts soon-to-launch
Windows Phone 7 operating system appear to have been leaked. Screen
grabs showing the device, called the HTC Mozart, were posted by
Engadget Oct. 4, via an internal inventory system from U.K.-based
retailer Phones 4U. T The images, p…
Posts Tagged ‘Mozart’
HTC Mozart Windows Phone 7 Device Leaked: Report
Aretha Franklin to perform with Condoleezza Rice
”Queen of Soul” Aretha Franklin and former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice will be sharing the stage for a duet performance in Philadelphia next month. The pair will perform songs such as ”Natural Woman” and ”Say a Little Prayer” for a fundraising event for inner city children on 27 July at the Mann Centre [...]
Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey | 06.12 | Oklahoma
Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Rachel D. Hoefling
Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey :: 06.12.10 :: OK Mozart Festival :: Bartlesville, OK
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Messing with Beethoven is serious business. Foundational artists like Ludwig Van test one’s mettle and force them to grabble with fundamental structures and attitudes, particularly if one wants to put their own stamp on such a codified composer. Few are better suited to the task than Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, who took their joyously avant sensibilities right into the heart of traditionally snooty classical music by overhauling Beethoven’s 3rd & 6th Symphonies using arrangements by Noam Faingold and JFJO. A longtime coming, Ludwig had its world premiere as part of the OK Mozart Festival in Bartlesville, Oklahoma with the 50-piece Bartlesville Symphony Orchestra melding with the forward leaning jazz quartet in an experience that proved as playful, unpredictable and gently exciting as one might hope.
Brian Haas (piano), Josh Raymer (drums), Chris Combs (lap steel) and new addition bassist Jeff Harshberger looked as squeaky clean as I’d ever seen them, excited in their crisp suits and itching to jump into the fruition of a journey that began years ago. Haas has been struggling to adapt Beethoven for ages, and after a false start in Brooklyn earlier this year they found their ideal creative foils in Faingold and Bartlesville Symphony music director Lauren Green, who both grokked how JFJO isn’t like the other children, even when they are playing with a very known quantity like Beethoven. In a pre-concert discussion, Faingold said he realized some time ago that “a classical symphony with acoustic instruments could be way bigger than a metal band.” It’s this kind of outside-the-box perspective that makes him such a good fit for this particular band; though he admitted he was “initially paralyzed by [JFJO's] approach, which really pushed everyone’s boundaries.”
This last point is vitally important with Ludwig because if classical works aren’t doomed to be artifacts laboriously recreated the boundaries must be pushed. We aren’t reading by whale blubber lanterns anymore, and kings don’t decide what’s appropriate music and what isn’t. We are wireless citizens of the world with whole record collections in our pocket. As such, antiquated modes of interpretation come off as particularly dusty, like the French in Vietnam in the ’60s desperately clinging to their privileged colonial existence before the populist uprising. If Beethoven isn’t going to be a relic studied and admired under glass he needs wild creatures like JFJO to dig their nails into his hide and pull out the meat underneath.
Jeff Harshberger & Chris Combs :: 06.12.10 |
Amongst other changes from stoic tradition, Haas pushed for “an old-timey, early 1900s call and response” feel between the orchestra and quartet. Perhaps more so than any other symphonic performance I’ve witnessed, these pieces had the feel of a big, bold conversation, and not just with the players present but also with Beethoven and the long line that’s tried their hand at his works. JFJO always has this kind of reaching-through-time vibe in their “regular” gigs but to achieve even a fraction of that with such a large ensemble was an accomplishment in itself.
What first grabbed my attention was the level of swing infused into what can be somewhat academic music. Face it, much of the appeal of classical music is cerebral, and those that know things about this music are often prideful and disdainful of those that don’t. Beginning with the pastoral inflections of the 6th Symphony, the ensemble immediately had more hips than one usually associates with Beethoven, inspiring some gentle head-nodding with their collective gait.
As the second movement emerged, the melting notes and unruly tone of Combs’ lap steel REALLY set this performance apart. Combs’ presence and instrumentation was likely the most contentious aspect of this re-imagining to many of the OK Mozart regulars, who perhaps didn’t appreciate how wonderful a lap steel can be in the hands of an innovator like Combs. Combs’ high reaching guttural tones played nicely against Haas’ music box piano. And it was Haas who seemed the most uncharacteristic, curtailing his usual penchant for robust improvisation and serving something larger, something that required a delicacy and humility that a normal JFJO show does not. Raymer, too, exhibited real control and focus, placing each stick strike with care and caressing his cymbals like a lover. Where jazz seemed to come into play was in the general glide and individual solos, which didn’t bow to the church of violin like much classical fare.
JFJO with Orchestra :: 06.12.10 |
As pleasant and refreshing as the 6th was, it was the boldly reconfigured 3rd Symphony that really showed the merits of this collaboration. Neither as bombastic or stiff as many interpretations, this struck at the heart of Beethoven’s disappointment in Napoleon declaring himself emperor, a great man lost to vanity and power’s madness. It was a dramatic and highly playful new vision for the 3rd filled with glorious double bass work from Harshberger that conjured gail force winds and light breezes depending on how his thick fingers or bow touched the strings. Perhaps the most invisible guy up there, he was all the more effective for the lack of spotlight, moving in and around the music with the skill of someone who doesn’t need attention to be great at what they do.
I’d hazard a guess that this is the most rim-shots and hard snare taps the 3rd has ever experienced, not to mention the uniqueness of the strong samba flavors in the 2nd movement, which brought to mind Antonio Carlos Jobim and film composer Bernard Herrmann, and made the symphony dance in a new, alluring way. Sexy stuff.
The third movement was a wondrous sandbox of ideas for everyone to toy with, moving things around from pomp to romp. Classical music is rarely funny, except in perhaps a very dry, droll way. Here, the players delighted in tickling the audience, tossing notes into the air in a manner that suggested a childlike rediscovery of what had drawn them to this music in the first place. This infectious feeling carried the symphony to an honestly rousing conclusion where the faces of JFJO and their collaborators signaled their awareness that they’d pulled off something significant.
Beethoven’s writing – like most classical music – has a mathematical logic to it but this felt closer to today’s theoretical mathematics and its string theories and quantum logic. Instead of being locked away by the culture police, Beethoven got to stretch his legs a good bit. Ludwig has the potential to connect with younger audiences who wouldn’t know Dvorak from Devo. Ludwig will likely be refined as big city orchestras take a shot at it and Haas and company tweak it further, but in the moment one could be sure they were present at the birth of something lovingly crafted and deeply felt.
JFJO released their swell new studio album Stay Gold on June 22. Find out more here.
JFJO Tour Dates :: JFJO News :: JFJO Concert Reviews
JamBase | Oklahoma
Go See Live Music!
June 21-27
TUESDAY, JUNE 22
DON’T miss the Irish Chamber Orchestra, Ireland’s top ensemble featuring some of the best international strings musicians. The group, fresh from performing at the Shanghai Expo, presents a programme of well-loved classics and virtuoso pieces from Vivaldi, Mozart to Piazzolla.
Date: June 22
Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Esplanade Concert Hall
Tickets: $15 to $85 from Sistic
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Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey Ludwig Premiere, New Album
YOU GOT FRED ALL OVER MY BEETHOVEN!!!
Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey is less than a week away from the world premier of Ludwig, their project reinterpreting Beethoven’s 3rd & 6th Symphonies using arrangements by Noam Faingold & JFJO. The project premieres with the 50 piece Bartlesville Symphony Orchestra on Saturday, June 12, kicking off the 26th annual OK Mozart Festival in the gorgeous PAC at the Bartlesville Community Center. Tickets are still available and can be purchased here.
Here’s Brian Haas discussing the project and the Fred rehearsing with the full orchestra.
This special performance will be extensively recorded in its entirety for a full release on JFJO’s Tulsa-based record label Kinnara Records. JFJO has partnered with Kickstarter to help raise funds for the video production of the event. Click here for more information on how you can help make the documentation of this historic evening possible.
A few days after the Ludwig premiere, JFJO begins their album release tour in support of their 20th album, Stay Gold, available from Kinnara Records as CD & double gatefold vinyl on June 22. here to watch a video featuring the title track and click here to pre-order the album.
JFJO Tour Dates :: JFJO News :: JFJO Concert Reviews
10 Most Notorious Womanizers in History
Don Juan may be the original lady-killer, whose breeches no woman could resist, but he was a fictional lothario whose exploits were bound to the stage, or the libretto, or the page; or, perhaps, if we can find ourselves once again in this post-feminist, enlightened age, to the reveries of women desirous of a little… [...]
Google commemorates 170 years of Tchaikovsky
Swan Lake, The Nutcracker, Sleeping Beauty all is familiar with the famous melodies from the ballet by Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. The musician was born 170 years ago; Google is dedicated to his anniversary as a Google Doodle today.
The composer Peter (Pyotr) Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born on 7 Born May 1840 in the Russian [...]
Brilliant Thinkers Relish Ambiguity
Brilliant thinkers are very comfortable with ambiguity – they welcome it. Routine thinkers like clarity and simplicity; they dislike ambiguity. There is a tendency in our society to reduce complex issues down to simple issues with obviously clear solutions. We see evidence of this in the tabloid press. There have been some terrible crimes committed in our cities. A violent offender received what is seen to be a lenient sentence. This shows that judges are out of touch with what is needed and that heavy punishment will stop the crime wave. The brilliant thinker is wary of simple nostrums like these. He or she knows that complex issues usually involve many causes and these may need many different and even conflicting solutions.
Routine thinkers are often dogmatic. They see a clear route forward and they want to follow it. The advantage of this is that they can make decisive and effective executives – up to a point. If the simple route happens to be a good one then they get on with the journey. The downside is that they will likely follow the most obvious idea and not consider creative, complex or controversial choices. The exceptional thinker can see many possibilities and relishes reviewing both sides of any argument. They are happy to discuss and explore multiple possibilities and are keen to challenge conventional wisdom. People around them and subordinates can sometimes consider this approach to be frustrating and indecisive.
Albert Einstein was able to conceive his theory of relativity because he thought that time and space might not be immutable. Neils Bohr made breakthroughs in physics because he was able to think of light as both a stream of particles and as a wave. Picasso could paint classical portraits and yet conceive cubist representations of people.
How can you welcome ambiguity? First by admitting that there are few absolute truths and that for most common beliefs the opposite view might also be true. If the general view is that you can either get high quality or low price the brilliant thinker will ask, ‘Why can’t we get both? How can we deliver great quality at really affordable prices?’
Cognitive dissonance is the concept of holding two very different ideas in your mind at the same time. This is something all the great composers do when they think of two melodic themes and how they can intertwine, adapt and combine them. We would find it very difficult to whistle one tune while thinking of an entirely different one but that is the sort of thing that Beethoven or Mozart would consider trifling. When we mull over the interaction of two opposing ideas in our minds then the creative possibilities are legion. A wind-up clock and an electrically operated radio are two very different concepts but by imagining their combination Trevor Bayliss was able to conceive of the clockwork radio. Most of us would dismiss such an idea out of hand. It seems incongruous to have a large mechanical winding device inside a small radio. And we can immediately see the drawback that the programme we were listening to would stop when the winder ran down so that we would have to get up and wind the thing again. That appears a very tedious operation. But Bayliss saw beyond these limitations and considered the needs of people in the developing world who did not have access to reliable mains electricity and who could not afford batteries. For them winding up a radio is a minor inconvenience. The clockwork radio has transformed their lives.
If we want creative solutions and real innovations then we should welcome ambiguity. We should explore the possibilities of two different things interacting together. We should let opposites play.
Paul Sloane is an author and speaker on leadership, innovation and lateral thinking. His most recent book is The Innovative Leader. He helps organizations improve innovation, creativity and leadership. He is the founder of Destination Innovation. He has written 15 books of lateral thinking puzzles and hosts the lateral puzzles forum.Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/PaulSloane.
A.R. Rahman’s three albums being released in the near future
Oscar winner musician A.R. Rahman’s (Slumdog Millionaire) three albums will be released in the near future, according to reports.
“Sivaji the boss†(Hindi version) has seven tracks and Rahman himself has sung one song “Aandhiki Tarha†in it with Sayonara on the lyrics of Raqueeb Alam. Directed by Shankar, its lyrics have been provided by Nitin [...]
A.R. Rahman marketing his “Best†album
Oscar winner musician A.R. Rahman (Slumdog Millionaire) has come up with “The Best of A.R. Rahman†album which is selling at his official web-Store for 16.49 dollars.
Titled as “The Best of A.R. Rahman: Music and Magic From the Composer of Slumdog Millionaireâ€, this CD by Legacy label claims to compile “much of A.R. Rahman’’s finest [...]
A.R. Rahman marketing his “Best†album
Oscar winner musician A.R. Rahman (Slumdog Millionaire) has come up with “The Best of A.R. Rahman†album which is selling at his official web-Store for 16.49 dollars.
Titled as “The Best of A.R. Rahman: Music and Magic From the Composer of Slumdog Millionaireâ€, this CD by Legacy label claims to compile “much of A.R. Rahman’’s finest [...]
A.R. Rahman in Hollywood film Son of a Preacher Man
Oscar winner musician A.R. Rahman is facing the camera in upcoming film “Son of a Preacher Man†about the life and times of Grammy winning singer-songwriter-producer PJ Morton.
Besides Rahman, other cast includes American Gospel musician Kirk Franklin (Norbit), Grammy nominated American Idol Winner Ruben Studdard (Life on a Stick), and producer Warryn Campbell (Stomp the [...]
Jaguar reaches out
I guess they really mean it at Jaguar when they talk about taking the brand to a new demographic. An email today informs me that Jaguar announced in the US last night that the new XJ will be making its ‘entertainment debut’ in the New Year with a ‘high profile role’ in the new Jay-Z video for his new single: “On to the next one”. The video is out in January.
So you can perhaps forget that rather out-of-date stereotype with the big Jaguar sedan-driving late middle-aged gent in his tweed jacket, smoking a cigar, listening to Mozart, well thumbed FT on the passenger seat, driving gloves, country estate in Scotland etc.
Fair enough. Jaguar has to extend its appeal and that takes time to do. Product placement initiatives like this one with Jay-Z make some sense. The traditional customer, by and large, won’t even see it and you get the brand out to new people, alter perceptions among young people who may eventually move towards considering the brand or influence people who may purchase. It’s a long-term project. And Sting in an S-type is, well, so late nineties.
The email from a PR/media agency continues: ‘The video isn’t released until January but we thought you might like to see a sneak preview in this ‘making of’ video. The preview can’t be downloaded or distributed from this website – infact Jay-Z’s record company will only allow us to have it up on this password protected site for the next few hours – so it is for information only. At least it gives you a flavour of some of the exciting ways we are taking the new XJ to a different audience when we launch it next year.’
No mate, you’re alright. I think I can wait.
A.R. Rahman in cross-cultural music-heavy film project
Oscar winner A. R. Rahman will write the score of “Street Dancing†with Golden Globe winner English musician David A. Stewart, according to reports.
Directed by Bille Woodruff (Beauty Shop) and scripted by David B. Harris (American Dreams), this pop-cross-cultural movie around cutting-edge dance competitions of New York and Singapore will star Cindy Gomez (Tribulation Force). [...]
45 Coolest Piano Videos on YouTube
If you are a fan of the piano, like hearing the sound of a great pianist play, or even just like to giggle while a house cat tries a tune, you are going to love this list!
Here are the 45 coolest, most impressive, Piano videos on YouTube that I could find. The list includes everything [...]
Music enhances brain’’s ability to recognise sounds
Listening to music can significantly enhance human brain’’s ability to distinguish between various sounds, say researchers.
While analysing brain’’s electrical and magnetic signals, lead researcher Laurel Trainor, from McMaster University in West Hamilton, Ontario found that those with some training showed larger brain responses on a number of sound recognition tests given to the children.
The study [...]
AR Rahman set for music show in Los Angeles
Oscar winning composer A. R. Rahman is all set to stage a glittering musical show in Los Angeles, according to reports.
And those attending the event would include celebrities like Angelina Jolie, Sean Penn, Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, David Beckham, Owen Wilson, etc.
Soul singer P. J. Morton is also expected to participate in this event.
In a [...]
Oct. 1, 1982: Portable Music Enters the Spin Zone
1982: Sony starts selling the first CD players to the public. Change is in the air.
Once upon a time cassettes were the preferred method of storing music. These mighty rectangles of plastic and magnetic tape allowed for easy recording, flaunted ample capacities, and were effortlessly portable. (If you weren’t worried about portability, there was still [...]
Aug. 20, 1831: The Real Dr. Suess Comes to Life
1831: Eduard Suess is born — not the Dr. Seuss of Whoville and Mount Crumpit fame, but geology professor Suess of Vienna and Gondwanaland. Suess would become a founding father of structural geology and a pioneer of ecology.
Born in London to a German merchant family, the future scientist moved with his family to Prague [...]
Missing link
By Bethany Bell
BBC News, Salzburg
The BBC listens as two "crazy" pieces of music written by the young Mozart are played for the first time in nearly 250 years. Experts say the works show a youthful composer "running riot" to show what he could do.

With its polished parquet floor, the Tanzmeistersaal in the Mozart Residence Museum was full.
After all, it is not every day you get to go to a premiere of pieces by Mozart – played on his own piano and in his own house.
Posthumous discoveries of works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are rare but not unknown.
And the short two pieces unveiled in Salzburg appear to be a "missing link" in the young composer’s development, according to Dr Ulrich Leisinger, from the International Mozarteum Foundation.
The first piece to be performed was the Concerto in G molto allegro – probably the first movement of a harpsichord concerto written in 1763 or 1764, when the composer was around eight years old.
Only the solo part of the harpsichord was written down.
‘Studendous technique’
Researchers at the Mozarteum believe it forms an important link between the miniatures Mozart wrote as a very young child and the larger instrumental pieces he went on to compose later.
"This was a young composer running riot to show what he was capable of"
Dr Ulrich Leisinger
The Harvard professor, Robert Levin, says: "What the composer expects of the player in racing passagework, crossed hands and wild leaps is more than a bit crazy.
"I consider it quite credible that the movement was composed by the young Mozart who wished to show in it everything he could do."
There are anecdotes which suggest that Mozart began to compose concertos long before his "first" official piano concerto, K 175, in 1773.
The Salzburg court trumpeter and close friend of the Mozart family, Johann Andreas Schachtner, described being shown an inkblot-stained score of a part of concerto written by the young Mozart.
Mozart’s father, Leopold, had first dismissed the piece – but then looked at it a little more closely.
"Look here Mr Schachtner," he said. "See how everything is correct and regularly set – it is only useless because it is too difficult for anyone to play."
Technically demanding
The young Wolfgang was not abashed. "That’s why it is a concerto," he said. "You have to practise a long time before you can play the notes. Here’s how to do it."
The second piece, the Prelude in G major, is also technically demanding, but described by researchers as slightly more "refined".
It was the "crazy" and virtuosic nature of the pieces that helped the researchers at the Mozarteum identify them as being by the young Mozart.

The works were part of "Nannerl’s Music Book", a collection of music compiled by Leopold Mozart in in the archive of the International Mozarteum Foundation since 1864.
They are written in Leopold’s handwriting – but Dr Leisinger believes he transcribed pieces his son played on the piano.
"This was a young composer running riot to show what he was capable of," Dr Leisinger said.
"The piece does contain real technical mistakes and clumsy moments that an old hand like Leopold Mozart would never have made."
The Austrian musician Florian Birsak played both pieces on Mozart’s fortepiano – and then a short orchestral version of the concerto was performed.
The missing orchestral accompaniment was written by Robert Levin, who specializes in historical performance.
There will be another performance of the pieces during Mozart Week 2010 in Salzburg. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




JFJO with Orchestra :: 06.12.10
Jeff Harshberger & Chris Combs :: 06.12.10
JFJO with Orchestra :: 06.12.10
