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Showing posts with label Lives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lives. Show all posts

Monday, July 18, 2011

Bolshoi Theatre archives reveal lives of musicians (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) – The death of a tyrant, abduction by the secret police and insight into the minds of some of the greatest composers in history are all part of the details that Russia's Bolshoi Theater have discovered in the margins of the centuries-old sheet music in its archives.

The discoveries have been made during the digitalization of the Bolshoi's music archives, which are some of the oldest and most extensive in the world and include rare treasures such as a 15th century Italian songbook score containing handwritten words in Latin.

Amid the pieces of music are also notes and doodles by ordinary musicians, written and drawn during countless hours spent in the orchestra pit or rehearsal rooms of the 18th century theater, bringing touches of humor and reality.

At the bottom of one music score, written in Cyrillic capital letters are the words "The Great Stalin is Dead," referring to the Soviet dictator who died in 1953.

The word 'Great' has been scratched out. No one knows whether that was the original author or one of the next musicians to use the score.

Until the Soviet Union collapsed two decades ago, the theater was the scene of official events and performances and it is clear the musicians had their own opinions on the political climate of the day, said Bolshoi archivist Olesya Bobrik.

"It seems they came for Tatiana," one violinist wrote during rehearsals of Pyotr Tchaikovsky's opera "Eugene Onegin" in 1968, referring to the frequent disappearances of people taken away by the Kremlin's secret police for interrogation.

Another note from 1940 on the side of an opera by composer Carl Maria von Weber read: "It was 8 degrees today (Celsius) and we played. Some people's noses froze."

Bobrik said the repetitive nature of orchestra life, playing the same pieces of music over and over can be boring and sometimes minds wandered.

"They get bored and try entertain themselves with doodles, cartoons, writing notes to each other," she said.

MUSICAL HERITAGE

The Bolshoi has digitalized around 20 percent of the archives, under a project it embarked on two years ago. The results will eventually be made available online.

The cream-colored, eight-columned ballet and opera house suffered three fires during the 19th century and much of the early archive collection was destroyed.

The documents which survived the fires in 1805, 1812 and 1853 are counted amongst its most treasured pieces.

"Most of the oldest and most valuable things of course originate from the Italian composers...and several French and German (composers) who worked in Russia," archive administrator Boris Mukosey told Reuters.

"Many of them were the best-known musicians in Europe, earning quite big money - it must be said that the Russian monarchs (tsars) had quite elevated taste and invited first-class musicians here," he added, with a touch of pride.

Russia's own national musical heritage is widely represented in the archive, with manuscripts by composers such as Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Sergei Rachmaninov and Dmitry Shostakovich.

Renovators are fighting against the clock to finish the $1-billion remodeling of the Bolshoi, which is expected to be complete in October of this year.

But officials investigating allegations that massive amounts of money destined for the rebuild were stolen has shrouded the revamp in scandal and embarrassed cultural authorities.

The theatre's main seating hall is expected to be finished by September, allowing for ballet and operatic troupes to rehearse ahead of the planned October opening.

(Editing by Amie Ferris-Rotman and Paul Casciato)


Yahoo! News

Friday, July 1, 2011

Underwood, stars align at ACM Lifting Lives camp (AP)

By CHRIS TALBOTT, AP Entertainment Writer Chris Talbott, Ap Entertainment Writer – Fri Jul 1, 3:49 pm ET

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Carrie Underwood turned in one of the most-talked about performances with Steven Tyler at this year's Academy of Country Music Awards. Three months later, though, it was another performance that night in Las Vegas that was on her mind.

Underwood met with participants in the ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp this week. Developmentally disabled campers who attended the session last year joined Darius Rucker on stage during the awards telecast in April, an emotional highlight on a night with a lot of strong performances.

"Just what a special thing that was," Underwood said. "Everybody sitting in the audience and for everybody sitting at home, and obviously the campers on stage, they were loving every single second of it."

The campers were scheduled to reprise that song Friday night at the Grand Ole Opry with Rucker and perform another song they wrote and recorded during the camp, which was founded by the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities. It's aimed at teens and young adults from around the country with Williams Syndrome and other disabilities like autism and Down Syndrome.

Campers spent time with Gary Allan, Wynonna Judd, Little Big Town, songwriters Brett James and Odie Blackmon, and producer Mark Bright during the week leading up to their Opry performance. Underwood met with campers Wednesday, talked about her recording experiences, gave advice and posed for pictures.

"I was like shocked," said camper Mackenzie Mansour, a 16-year-old from Lone Oak, Texas. "I didn't know what to do. I was like, `Um, should I say hi to her or should I hug her?' I was like, `Gotta think.'"

Mackenzie didn't waste any time making an impression on Underwood, though: "I said, `Do you want me to sing with you?' She said, `No, I'll sing to you.'

"You can just tell how much they love it and how proud they are of themselves just from recording a song, writing a song," Underwood added. "I think we all kind of forget what a special gift that we have and we're able to participate in every single day. And music is definitely a universal language. Anybody can speak it. Anybody can love it. Anybody can be involved in it. You can just tell how happy it makes them.'"

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AP writer Caitlin R. King in Nashville contributed to this report.

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Online:

http://www.acmliftinglives.org

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Contact Chris Talbott at http://www.twitter.com/Chris_Talbott or http://www.twitter.com/AP_Country.


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