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Saturday, June 3, 2023

Say a Little Prayer




Say a Little Prayer · Beegie Adair Save The Last Dance For Me ℗ 2011 Green Hill Productions Released on: 2012-01-01 Producer: Jack Jezzro Associated Performer, Piano: Beegie Adair Associated Performer, Bass: Roger Spencer Associated Performer, Drums: Chris Brown Composer: Hal David Composer: Burt Bacharach

Why Russian Classical music is unique


What is distinctive about Russian Classical Music? Let's try to find out... _________________________________________________________ Borodin Polovtsian Dances:    • Borodin - Prince ...   Prokofiev Scythian Suite:    • Prokofiev: Scythi...   Stravinsky Rites of Spring:    • Stravinsky: Le sa...   Khataturian Sabre Dance:    • Aram Khachaturian...   Rimsky-Korsakov Flight of Bumblebee:    • Flight of the bum...   There's also Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov for the Harmonics Title screen, and Shostakovich's Fifth for the Russian Soul Title..

Friday, June 2, 2023

Theme from The Magnificent Seven | The Orchestra at Temple Square


The Orchestra at Temple Square performs "The Theme from Magnificent Seven" (Magnificent Seven) by Elmer Bernstein, during the 2015 Pioneer Day concert

Russia's Most Influential Composer...


A look at one of Russia's most influential composers - a teacher of Stravinsky, Prokofiev, and many others, and composer of such great works as Scheherazade, Antar, and Flight of the Bumblebee. 🎁 FREE Accelerate your ear training, sight reading, and musicianship skills with this free mini-course: https://www.insidethescore.com/fast-t... Your journey towards musical mastery begins here... 🛤️


Rhythm on the brain, and why we can’t stop dancing

by Peter Keller, Interlude


Mod1PartnerCreateMusic and dance are far from idle pastimes. They are universal forms of expression and deeply rewarding activities that fulfil diverse social functions. Both feature in all the world’s cultures and throughout history.

A common feature of music and dance is rhythmic movement, which is often timed with a regular pulse-like beat. But the human capacity for rhythm presents something of a puzzle.

Even though rhythmic coordination seems fundamental to human nature, people vary widely in ability. Some have the machine-like precision of Michael Jackson, others are closer to the case of “beat-deaf” Mathieu.

What are the underlying causes of these individual differences? By looking at the way the brain responds to rhythm, we can begin to understand why many of us can’t help but to move to a beat.

Power of rhythm

Rhythm is a powerful force. It can regulate mood, ranging from the arousing effect of pounding war drums to the pacifying effect of gently rocking a baby. It can even induce altered states of consciousness, as in spiritual rituals and shamanic traditions involving trance.

Rhythm and music can also be used for therapeutic purposes in the rehabilitation of conditions characterised by motor impairment, such as stroke and Parkinson’s disease.

Even more fundamentally, rhythmic skills displayed in the context of music and dance may have been essential to our evolution as a species.

In The Descent of Man (1871), Charles Darwin mused that:

it appears probable that the progenitors of man, either the males or females or both sexes, before acquiring the power of expressing their mutual love in articulate language, endeavoured to charm each other with musical notes and rhythm. 

Rhythmically coordinated body movements may function similarly to fuel sexual attraction by providing an “honest” signal (one that can’t be faked) of an individual’s health and fitness.

Outside the competitive arena of finding a mate, coordinating with others through music and dance facilitates social cohesion by promoting interpersonal bonding, trust, and cooperation.

These prosocial effects of music and dance may have contributed to the flourishing of human culture by preventing the disintegration of early societies into antisocial mobs.

Today, they remain potent enough to be relied on, even in maximum security prisons.

Entrainment

But if music and dancing are so universal, why are some people simply unable to hold a rhythm?

The key to answering this question lies in how the human brain locks onto rhythms in the external environment, and how this process of “neural entrainment” supports the coordination of body movements.

Neural entrainment occurs when regular sensory input, like music with a clear beat, triggers periodic bursts of synchronised brain activity. This periodic activity can continue independently of external rhythmic input due to interactions between already excited neurons. It is as if they expect the sensory input to continue.

Entrainment can thus enhance processing of incoming information by allocating neural resources to the right place at the right time. When performing or dancing to music, entrainment allows the timing of upcoming beats to be predicted.

A recent study on individual differences in rhythmic skill identified relationships between the strength of neural entrainment and the capacity to synchronise movements with musical rhythms.

We measured entrainment to the underlying beat in two types of rhythm using electroencephalography (EEG), a technique where electrical signals reflecting neural activity are recorded via electrodes placed on the head.

One rhythm had a regular beat marked by periodically occurring sound onsets. The other was a relatively complex and jazzier “syncopated” rhythm in which sound onsets were not present on all beats: some were marked by silence.

Results indicated that the strength of neural entrainment was related to people’s ability to move in synchrony with the beat. Individuals with strong neural responses were more accurate at tapping a finger in time with the beat of the two rhythms.

We also found individual differences in brain responses to the two rhythms. While some individuals showed a large difference between strength of entrainment for the regular rhythm versus the syncopated rhythm, others showed only a small difference.

In other words: some people required external physical stimulation to perceive the beat, whereas others were able to generate the beat internally. 

Remarkably, people who were good at internally generating beats also performed well on a synchronisation task that required them to predict tempo changes in musical sequences.

So the capacity for internal beat generation turns out to be a reliable marker of rhythmic skill. This adds new meaning to Miles Davis’ reported maxim that “in music, silence is more important than sound”.

But we still don’t know why individual differences in the strength of neural entrainment occur in the first place. They may reflect the efficiency of neural responses at early levels of auditory processing, such as brainstem responses. Or the degree of connectivity between higher-level auditory and motor cortical regions.

Another open question is whether rhythmic skills can be boosted by recent advances in neuroscience. Brain stimulation techniques that induce neural synchrony at specific frequencies provide a promising method for enhancing entrainment and thereby improving an individual’s capacity for rhythm.

Peter Keller
Professor of Cognitive Science, Western Sydney University

Thursday, June 1, 2023

Valentina Lisitsa plays Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2


Pirates of the Caribbean (Auckland Symphony Orchestra) 1080p


Just For You (Concerto) - Ernesto Cortazar


Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Aquarius (Let the Sunshine in)


Monday, May 29, 2023

Antonín Dvořák - Serenade for strings in E major (1876)


Antonín Dvořák - Serenade for strings in E major (1876) - II. Tempo di valse The 1990 Philips recording of both Dvorak's String and Wind Serenades is an elegant venture for Academy of Saint Martin-in-the-Fields under Neville Marriner. Music: While the whole serenade is a unified stream of the utmost gentility, I've ultimately decided to post solely the second movement - a particularly handsome waltz - which constitutes, for me, the height of Dvorak's inspiration in the piece. The movement is remarkably simple in execution yet all the more striking in its freshness. From a dramatic point of view, it is a series of elegant dances, suggesting, in its juxtaposition of emotional unsteadiness and genuine ardor, a meeting between two lovers on the dance floor. The piece is built around the familiar ABA construct with a few surprising touches. The A section is divided into two contrasting segments. First, an elegant, vaguely agitated and even melancholic principal motive that is stated by the first violins and then repeated three times with light ornamentation (in particular, its second half is elaborated by the progressive addition of a new note, moving from duplet to quadruplet), while the remaining forces play the booming bass line, suggesting the dancers' feet clicking on the floor (0:08). The section is restated complete (0:28), overflowing into the second segment which opens with broad descending passages (0:48) before moving, after a playful violin rise (1:01), to a charming (though a hint frantic) polka, played by the second violins and the cellos (1:04) with the remaining instruments slowly adding their voices, gradually elaborating and augmenting the material. Just as earlier, the segment is repeated without changes (1:13). A series of bold violin runs lead into a repeat of the first two phrases of the principal waltz (1:36) which is then slowly deconstructed by the violins and cellos in the subsequent coda (1:50). Two fortissimo chords herald the beginning of the B section, an altogether more introverted experience, a trio for violins, playing extended lyric lines, violas and cellos, doubling and echoing the violins' ardent cantabile (2:05). The music slowly grows into an impassioned romanza, delicately contrasting the pizzicatos of the cellos and the high-flying line of the violins (2:25), an episode very much in the style of Tchaikovsky. Once again, the section is restated complete (2:47). This moment of pure serenity is set against a much more emotionally unhinged agitato, moving from ornamental lines passed between the various strings (3:29) to a surprising return to the thematic material of the A section in the quadruplets of the first violins over the long lines of violas/cellos (3:57), ultimately reaching a restatement of the main lyric theme of the B section (4:24). Finally, we return to the principal waltz for just one statement of each musical segment (5:05). Though perhaps one does wish for a certain variety in the recapitulations of the main themes, Dvorak's creation is one of the loveliest waltzes that I've had the pleasure of encountering for a while.

‘ISLANDS IN THE STREAM’ (DOLLY PARTON & KENNY ROGERS) Cover by The HSCC


‘ISLANDS IN THE STREAM’ (DOLLY PARTON & KENNY ROGERS) Performed by The Hindley Street Country Club featuring Nikki Heuskes & Danny Lopresto Produced by The HSCC Arranged by Constantine Delo Recorded Live by Monty Ruggiero at House Of Bamboo Recording Studio, Adelaide, South Australia Mixed by Dave Ross Filmed & Edited by Dan Donato www.thehscc.com Lead Vocals: Nikki Heuskes & Danny Lopresto Drums: Brad Polain Percussion: Steve Todd Keyboards: Dave Ross Guitar & Vocals: Dusty Stephensen Sax: Jacky ‘Boy’ Degenhart Bass: Constantine Delo Connect with the HSCC https://linktr.ee/HSCC Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hindleyscc Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hscc_band Twitter: https://twitter.com/hindleysccmusic Subscribe to our artist's channels! Nikki Heuskes (Vocals)    / @nikkikosmiderheu...   Danny Lopresto (Vocals)    / @dannylopresto9438   Constantine Delo uses LANEY Amplification & Speakers and Jim Dunlop Strings USA Song written by Barry, Robin & Maurice Gibb