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#528816 - 11/21/07 03:37 AM
What are you reading?
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 02/22/07
Posts: 3946
Loc: Banned
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What could be more of a compelling subject for the pianist than the hand? I am in the middle of a very interesting book "The Hand - How its use shapes the brain, language and human culture" written by the American neuroscientist Frank R. Wilson.
This is an ambitious work sprawling across evolutionary biology and the importance of the hand to our success as a species towards new ideas on human creativity and how to nurture it. Special attention for music and music making and the recent, peculiar cultural evolution in the West turning music into something primarily performed by thoroughbred professionals for the consumption of the masses versus music making as something that everyone does as a matter of course.
Highly recommended.
Sample quotes:
"It may well be that the social and cultural inhibitions that prevent the flowering of musical genius are more significant than any individual ability that may seem to promote it."
"When we form something through artistic activity, we are formed and changed in the process, and that spurs the developmental process."
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#528819 - 11/21/07 11:27 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 16712
Loc: Victoria, BC
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Cortot, Alfred. Aspects de Chopin Opienski, (trans. by Danysz). Lettres de Chopin.
Regards,
_________________________
BruceD - - - - - Estonia 190 in satin ebony
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#528820 - 11/21/07 11:34 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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500 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/26/07
Posts: 794
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Tony Faber: Stradivari's Genius: Five Violins, One Cello, and Three Centuries of Enduring Perfection
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#528822 - 11/21/07 01:05 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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Full Member
Registered: 08/24/02
Posts: 101
Loc: UK
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Oliver Sacks: Musicophilia. Tales of Music and the Brain.
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#528823 - 11/21/07 07:03 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 10/13/07
Posts: 1239
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Just picked up Beethoven's Hair by Russell Martin.
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#528825 - 11/21/07 07:10 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/27/02
Posts: 13063
Loc: Iowa City, IA
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Spin, by Robert Charles Wilson
The World Before, by Karen Traviss
Shadows Linger, by Glen Cook
(yeah, I'm a big sci-fi nerd)
A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives, by Anderson, Krathwohl, et al.
Nobrow : The Culture of Marketing, the Marketing of Culture, by John Seabrook
_________________________
"If we continually try to force a child to do what he is afraid to do, he will become more timid, and will use his brains and energy, not to explore the unknown, but to find ways to avoid the pressures we put on him." (John Holt) www.pianoped.comwww.youtube.com/user/UIPianoPed
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#528826 - 11/21/07 07:58 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 4906
Loc: McAllen, TX
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Originally posted by keyboardklutz:  I've just ordered a copy of Bruce Lipton's Biology of Belief. He is a biologist who seems to be saying that all 50 trillion cells in your body are the same as the 50 trillion cells in mine. The only difference is on the OUTSIDE of the cell. Attached to the outside of the cell wall are the individual's identity markers. He concludes that identity is EXTERIOR to the body. Relevance to piano playing? Hmm, you got me there. [/b] That sounds interesting. Does it read like Stephen Hawking or is it more approachable? Current list: Hemingway - To Have and Have Not Kenneth Drake - The Sonatas of Beethoven as He Played and Taught Them Franz Cumont - Astrology and Religion Among the Ancient Greeks and Romans In studying for my comprehensive exams, I rediscovered a lot of material that I originally rolled my eyes at. I'm going back and trying to independently "start over" beginning with the Greeks. It's been very rewarding so far and I only wish that I hadn't been a snobby 18-year-old at the time. Oh wait...
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#528827 - 11/22/07 12:00 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 12/07/04
Posts: 1037
Loc: San Francisco, CA
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I'm wait-listed at the liberry for Grand Obsession and Lost Genius...also there's a new (2007) Chopin book - it's on reserve. Otherwise, I'm re-working the Battle of Kursk, Operation Citadel...
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#528828 - 11/22/07 12:58 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8178
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
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"John Stainer: A Life in Music" by Jeremy Dibble. Don't laugh. Stainer's contributions to Anglican Church music are incalculable in importance. As organist and music director at St. Paul's Cathedral in London, his musicianship was a model for the country, and his church compositions set new standards. With the reaction against Victorian musical values, Stainer's stock fell precipitously and only a pittance of his many -and fine- hymn tunes remain in New English Hymnal.
_________________________
Jason
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#528829 - 11/22/07 01:28 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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Full Member
Registered: 11/01/06
Posts: 271
Loc: Jacksonville, FL
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Herbert von Karajan: A Life in Music by Richard Osborne.
Craig
_________________________
NY Steinway A 2005; Roland FP-7F/ FP-4
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#528830 - 11/22/07 02:06 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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Full Member
Registered: 10/17/06
Posts: 269
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The Perks of Being a Wallflower- Stphen Chbosky
Pride and Prejudice- Jane Austen [Boring so far]
The Fountainhead- Ayn Rand
Becoming a Writer- Dorthea Brande
Madame Bovary- Gustave Flaubert in orig. french [challenging for me]
_________________________
well I'm 20 years old, and I'm teaching myself piano.
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#528831 - 11/22/07 04:14 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/24/05
Posts: 2230
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The Back Door of History by R. A. Lafferty. Iäm readin ti while rwiting this..,.
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#528832 - 11/22/07 08:29 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/02/03
Posts: 4654
Loc: New York City
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Originally posted by pianoloverus:  Lost Genius-The Curious and Tragic Story of an Extraordinary Musical Prodigy by Kevin Bazzana. This is a bio of Nyiregyhazi. [/b] I forgot that book should be out now. I'll order a copy. I'm reading: - Ian Rankin: Black and Blue. - Karin Slaughter: Faithless (I read a lot of mysteries) - Barbara Tuchman: The First Salute.
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#528833 - 11/22/07 10:36 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/26/01
Posts: 16712
Loc: Victoria, BC
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Originally posted by argerichfan:  "John Stainer: A Life in Music" by Jeremy Dibble. Don't laugh. [/b] Jason : I'm not laughing. I've always had a "soft spot" in my heart for Stainer's "Crucifixion." If one can make allowances for the composer's Victorian sensibilities, it is a charming work. That is not to damn it with faint praise, but while it is not a great work of music it has an element of naive sincerity about it that appealed to me when I first heard it as a teenager. My musical tastes in music may have changed in the intervening eons, but I still enjoy the work for what it is. Regards,
_________________________
BruceD - - - - - Estonia 190 in satin ebony
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#528834 - 11/22/07 12:29 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 1692
Loc: Betelgeuse, baby!
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Finished rereading (3rd time) Swafford's wonderful Brahms biography a few months back. Am planning to reread Mann's Dr. Faustus as soon as I finish an orchestral piece. Oh, I'm in the market for a good translation of the Aeneid (no prose translations please). Can anyone recommend me their favorites?
_________________________
Die Krebs gehn zurücke, Die Stockfisch bleiben dicke, Die Karpfen viel fressen, Die Predigt vergessen.
Die Predigt hat g'fallen. Sie bleiben wie alle.
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#528835 - 11/22/07 08:47 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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8000 Post Club Member
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 8178
Loc: Pacific Northwest, US.
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Warning: off topic. Originally posted by BruceD: I've always had a "soft spot" in my heart for Stainer's "Crucifixion." If one can make allowances for the composer's Victorian sensibilities, it is a charming work. That is not to damn it with faint praise, but while it is not a great work of music it has an element of naive sincerity about it that appealed to me when I first heard it as a teenager. Thanks Bruce, as usual your comments are spot on and elegantly expressed. That said, I find The Crucifixion a bit dull -I have tried to love it- yet its modest difficulties are sufficient enough that when a parish church (either side of the pond) attempts it, the scenario is enough of an "event" so that a fair turnout may be expected. Good on this... Myself, I fail to understand why Stainer's settings of the Anglican canticles and hymn tunes are no longer considered de rigueur... they have a life-affirming excitement about them which quite exceeds some of the drivel his contemporaries were writing. Back to The Crucifixion, it was the moment of quiet before the storm. The next generation produced Elgar's Gerontius, and England finally got the choral composer to take on Handel and Mendelssohn.
_________________________
Jason
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#528837 - 11/22/07 09:19 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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3000 Post Club Member
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3288
Loc: Earth...hopefully
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I am slowly studying every word of Mr. Larry Fine 4th edition Matt
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#528838 - 11/22/07 09:27 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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5000 Post Club Member
Registered: 08/06/05
Posts: 5655
Loc: SC Mountains
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Chopin The Child and the Lad - a 1907 annotated elaboration of his Szarfarnia letters
The Practice Revolution
_________________________
Slow down and do it right.
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#528839 - 11/22/07 10:06 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 05/24/05
Posts: 2230
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Originally posted by Janus Sachs:  Oh, I'm in the market for a good translation of the Aeneid (no prose translations please). Can anyone recommend me their favorites? [/b] There's a new translation, which has been well received, available both in bookform and as an audio book: http://www.amazon.com/Aeneid-Virgil/dp/0143059025/
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#528841 - 11/22/07 10:21 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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Full Member
Registered: 02/12/05
Posts: 233
Loc: Wisconsin
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The Shipping News - Proulx Evidence for the Christian Faith - McDowell My Antonia - Cather (re-reading for literature class, probably my least favorite "classic") The Percussionist's Art: Same Bed, Different Dreams - Schick
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#528842 - 11/22/07 10:23 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 10/21/06
Posts: 1366
Loc: New Jersey
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How Babies Talk: The Magic and Mystery of Language in the First Three Years of Life.
Fascinating book on a fascinating subject.
_________________________
Practice makes permanent - Perfect practice makes perfect.
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#528843 - 11/23/07 01:46 AM
Re: What are you reading?
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1000 Post Club Member
Registered: 07/26/07
Posts: 1226
Loc: Atlanta
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This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession by Daniel J. Levitin
Tolstoy's Anna Karenina
_________________________
Pianist and teacher with a 5'8" Baldwin R and Clavi CLP-230 at home. New website up: http://www.studioplumpiano.com. Also on Twitter @QQitsMina
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#528844 - 11/25/07 07:05 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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Full Member
Registered: 05/09/07
Posts: 165
Loc: In a big country
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Lots of interesting books listed on this thread!
I bought "The Golden Ratio: The Story of Phi, the Extraordinary Number of Nature, Art and Beauty" by Mario Livio yesterday.
Started reading it last night and couldn't put it down.
Also reading bigraphies on Isaac Albeniz and Roger Quilter as study for my exam in two weeks.
_________________________
Daffodil - Onslow's twin. Hailun 178
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#528845 - 11/25/07 09:32 PM
Re: What are you reading?
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/01/03
Posts: 19862
Loc: Kansas
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Evening in the Palace of Reason
Bach meets Frederick the Great in the Age of Enlightenment
James R. Gaines
it's great... looking forward to 'Grand Obsession'
_________________________
accompanist/organist.. a non-MTNA teacher to a few
love and peace, Õun (apple in Estonian)
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