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EveryNote.com EveryNote is a pioneer and leader in digital classical sheet music downloads since 2002. Instantly download, view and print your favorite classical music score.

http://www.everynote.com Founded in 2002, EveryNote.com, today is one of largest and most complete digital music libraries in the world. EveryNote currently offers over 670,000 popular and hard-to-find compositions by 1,240 composers. EveryNote provides a short biography of every composer listed on its website. EveryNote's 152,000 customers are professional musicians, teachers and music lovers fr

om 75 countries, and the number grows daily. The download categories are: Piano, Violin, Cello, Flute, Clarinet, Guitar, Voice and Opera, Chamber music, Choral music, Sacred music, Orchestral parts and scores sheet music downloads. More instruments, composers, genres are added every day.

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Revealed: the violent, thuggish world of the young JS BachJohn Eliot Gardiner's research has shattered 'sanitised' versi...
22/09/2013

Revealed: the violent, thuggish world of the young JS Bach

John Eliot Gardiner's research has shattered 'sanitised' versions of the composer's life

Dalya Alberge

The Observer, Saturday 21 September 2013 09.34 EDT

Johann Sebastian Bach is arguably the greatest of all composers, with the St Matthew Passion and the Mass in B Minor among the most sublime masterpieces in classical music. But biographers over the past half century have "sanitised" his life, in the belief that only a saintly man could have written such heavenly music, according to one of the world's leading conductors and foremost interpreters of Bach.

After years of research, Sir John Eliot Gardiner says biographers have been so "overawed" by the composer that they have presented a misleading image of the man. They have depicted him as a "paragon of rectitude, studious and dull, with the false assumption that music of such extraordinary and sublime quality must have come from somebody who was beyond criticism".

Gardiner added: "The reality seems very different … You'd expect a more accurate and less rosy-tinted version of him."

Archival sources, including school inspector reports, reveal that Bach's education was troubled by gang warfare and bullying, sa**sm and so**my – as well as his own extensive truancy.

His first school, Eisenach Latin school in Thuringia, Germany, was largely attended by the children of bourgeois tradespeople. However, Gardiner said that documents damn the boys as "rowdy, subversive, thuggish, beer- and wine-loving, girl-chasing … breaking windows and brandishing their daggers". He added: "More disquieting were rumours of a 'brutalisation of the boys' and evidence that many parents kept their children at home – not because they were sick, but for fear of what went on in or outside school." For punishment, Bach's contemporaries endured beatings and the threat of "eternal damnation". Such experiences must have left "lasting scars" on him, Gardiner believes.

Gardiner examined records in three schools Bach attended – Eisenach Latin, Ohrdruf Klosterschule and Michaelisschule, Lüneburg. "From the tone of the school reports, it sounds as if the authorities were really worried that the situation had got out of hand. There was something exceptional, certainly in Eisenach." A "villain of the piece", Gardiner discovered, was a form master and church cantor at Ohrdruf, where Bach was a chorister. The teacher was a sadistic disciplinarian meting out "intolerable punishments". He was eventually sacked as "the plague of the school, the scandal of the church and the cancer of the city", but the 12-year-old Bach had endured "unusually close exposure to him", Gardiner said.

Among Lüneburg's town records, he found reports on antisocial behaviour of two schoolboys in a local hostelry – "thoroughly drunk and … slashing … with [their] dirks and hunting knives". One is believed to have been Bach's mentor. Gardiner writes of sufficient evidence "to dent the traditional image of Bach as an exemplary youth … surviving unscathed the sinister goings-on in the schools he attended. It is just as credible that [he]… was in a line of delinquent school prefects – a reformed teenage thug." He added that Bach's repeated absences – 258 days in his first three years – are traditionally attributed to his mother's illness and his work in the family music business. But there could be a more sinister interpretation, he said, that the school conditions may have been so unappealing and even threatening.

Gardiner was "taken aback" to find that such archival evidence had initially been researched in the 1930s but "completely ignored and sanitised in biographies of Bach". He added: "It puzzled me why the standard biographies have just ignored that."

His research will be published by Penguin on 3 October in Music in the Castle of Heaven: A Portrait of Johann Sebastian Bach. Gardiner argues that Bach's compositions became a receptacle for the turbulence in his life, including the loss of his parents as a child and later his first wife and 12 of his 20 children before they had reached the age of three – "well beyond the average, even at a time when infant mortality was ubiquitous".

Although the impact on Bach of the violence and family losses is speculative, any insight into his early years is all the more significant as less is known about his private life than that of any other major composer of the last 400 years, says Gardiner. "We yearn to know what kind of a person was capable of composing music so complex that it leaves us completely mystified, then … so irresistibly rhythmic that we want to get up and dance to it, and then … so full of poignant emotion that we are moved to the very core of our being."

10/06/2013

Why Music Makes Our Brain Sing

MUSIC is not tangible. You can’t eat it, drink it or mate with it. It doesn’t protect against the rain, wind or cold. It doesn’t vanquish predators or mend broken bones. And yet humans have always prized music — or well beyond prized, loved it.

In the modern age we spend great sums of money to attend concerts, download music files, play instruments and listen to our favorite artists whether we’re in a subway or salon. But even in Paleolithic times, people invested significant time and effort to create music, as the discovery of flutes carved from animal bones would suggest.

So why does this thingless “thing” — at its core, a mere sequence of sounds — hold such potentially enormous intrinsic value?

The quick and easy explanation is that music brings a unique pleasure to humans. Of course, that still leaves the question of why. But for that, neuroscience is starting to provide some answers.

More than a decade ago, our research team used brain imaging to show that music that people described as highly emotional engaged the reward system deep in their brains — activating subcortical nuclei known to be important in reward, motivation and emotion. Subsequently we found that listening to what might be called “peak emotional moments” in music — that moment when you feel a “chill” of pleasure to a musical passage — causes the release of the neurotransmitter dopamine, an essential signaling molecule in the brain.

When pleasurable music is heard, dopamine is released in the striatum — an ancient part of the brain found in other vertebrates as well — which is known to respond to naturally rewarding stimuli like food and s*x and which is artificially targeted by drugs like co***ne and amphetamine.

But what may be most interesting here is when this neurotransmitter is released: not only when the music rises to a peak emotional moment, but also several seconds before, during what we might call the anticipation phase.

The idea that reward is partly related to anticipation (or the prediction of a desired outcome) has a long history in neuroscience. Making good predictions about the outcome of one’s actions would seem to be essential in the context of survival, after all. And dopamine neurons, both in humans and other animals, play a role in recording which of our predictions turn out to be correct.

To dig deeper into how music engages the brain’s reward system, we designed a study to mimic online music purchasing. Our goal was to determine what goes on in the brain when someone hears a new piece of music and decides he likes it enough to buy it.

We used music-recommendation programs to customize the selections to our listeners’ preferences, which turned out to be indie and electronic music, matching Montreal’s hip music scene. And we found that neural activity within the striatum — the reward-related structure — was directly proportional to the amount of money people were willing to spend.

But more interesting still was the cross talk between this structure and the auditory cortex, which also increased for songs that were ultimately purchased compared with those that were not.

Why the auditory cortex? Some 50 years ago, Wilder Penfield, the famed neurosurgeon and the founder of the Montreal Neurological Institute, reported that when neurosurgical patients received electrical stimulation to the auditory cortex while they were awake, they would sometimes report hearing music. Dr. Penfield’s observations, along with those of many others, suggest that musical information is likely to be represented in these brain regions.

The auditory cortex is also active when we imagine a tune: think of the first four notes of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony — your cortex is abuzz! This ability allows us not only to experience music even when it’s physically absent, but also to invent new compositions and to reimagine how a piece might sound with a different tempo or instrumentation.

We also know that these areas of the brain encode the abstract relationships between sounds — for instance, the particular sound pattern that makes a major chord major, regardless of the key or instrument. Other studies show distinctive neural responses from similar regions when there is an unexpected break in a repetitive pattern of sounds, or in a chord progression. This is akin to what happens if you hear someone play a wrong note — easily noticeable even in an unfamiliar piece of music.

These cortical circuits allow us to make predictions about coming events on the basis of past events. They are thought to accumulate musical information over our lifetime, creating templates of the statistical regularities that are present in the music of our culture and enabling us to understand the music we hear in relation to our stored mental representations of the music we’ve heard.

So each act of listening to music may be thought of as both recapitulating the past and predicting the future. When we listen to music, these brain networks actively create expectations based on our stored knowledge.

Composers and performers intuitively understand this: they manipulate these prediction mechanisms to give us what we want — or to surprise us, perhaps even with something better.

In the cross talk between our cortical systems, which analyze patterns and yield expectations, and our ancient reward and motivational systems, may lie the answer to the question: does a particular piece of music move us?

When that answer is yes, there is little — in those moments of listening, at least — that we value more.

Robert J. Zatorre is a professor of neuroscience at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital at McGill University. Valorie N. Salimpoor is a postdoctoral neuroscientist at the Baycrest Health Sciences’ Rotman Research Institute in Toronto.

http://musicalworld.com/artists/john-adams/Composer John Adams Talks Hollywood, Social Media, and His Sensitivity to Cou...
23/05/2013

http://musicalworld.com/artists/john-adams/

Composer John Adams Talks Hollywood, Social Media, and His Sensitivity to Coughing

America’s most celebrated living composer is in town for a two-week festival spanning multiple venues. This week, the Library of Congress hosts Adams in residency. Various chamber groups and soloists will perform his work beginning tonight, including the premiere of a newly commissioned piece on Friday with the International Contemporary Ensemble. The following week, Adams conducts the National Symphony Orchestra as they perform his City Noir symphony at the Kennedy Center. Adams spoke with the Washington City Paper by phone from his home in California.

Arts Desk is Washington City Paper's blog about D.C. music, film, theater, books, and performance.

http://musicalworld.com/MusicalWorld is a leader in artist career development connecting artists, managers and performin...
21/05/2013

http://musicalworld.com/

MusicalWorld is a leader in artist career development connecting artists, managers and performing arts presenters worldwide. Http://MusicalWorld.com

MusicalWorld is an ultimate promotion and networking service for artists, musicians, managers and presenters worldwide. MusicalWorld provides unique tools for artists to launch and enhance their careers.

The distinguished artists and musicians on MusicalWorld represent today's 'Who's Who' in the performing arts including many recipients of Grammy Awards, Tony Awards, Emmy Awards, Academy Awards and winners of the international music competitions. Their household names and worldwide reputation attract significant attention and traffic to MusicalWorld.com, thus, providing considerable exposure to every artist on MusicalWorld list and establishing the network and foundation for their careers.

20/05/2013

EveryNote is a pioneer and leader in digital classical sheet music downloads since 2002. Instantly download, view and print your favorite classical music score.

As our name suggests, EveryNote strives to bring every composition ever created for instant download by professional musicians and music lovers. EveryNote.com has been featured in The New York Times http://everynote.com/NYTimes.htm, Globe and Mail, Musical America and other major publications.

Founded in 2002, EveryNote.com, today is one of largest and most complete digital music libraries in the world. EveryNote currently offers over 670,000 popular and hard-to-find compositions by 1,240 composers. EveryNote provides a short biography of every composer listed on its website.

EveryNote's 152,000 customers are professional musicians, teachers and music lovers from 75 countries, and the number grows daily.

The download categories are: Piano, Violin, Cello, Flute, Clarinet, Guitar, Voice and Opera, Chamber music, Choral music, Sacred music, Orchestral parts and scores sheet music downloads. More instruments, composers, genres are added every day.

A Web site run by a Soviet-born pianist offers sheet music for more than 4,000 compositions for piano and violin by 160 composers.

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