I love this music
I recently bought a book of Jazz Duets by Richard Jasinski.
A lot of them are pretty simple, but I really liked this piece:
The book doesn’t contain any backing track music, so I entered the chords into “Band in a Box”, and created my own backing track thru my secondary Yahama MU50R synthesizer.
The solo instrument is a “Pan Picolo” (number 57) voice from my VL70M synth that I played on my beloved Wx5.
I had a lot of fun playing it, and hope you like it 🙂
Help the drought
Woolworths Ltd has made a significant contribution to drought relief by committing its entire profits for the day from its supermarkets to the Country Women’s Association and research into sustainable famring practices.
The total amount should be $3 million.
The big day is Tuesday, January 23 2007.
So if you’re planning a big grocery shop soon – why not wait till the 23rd and shop in aid of drought relief at Woolies?
Don’t forget to tell your friends.
Emma and Mark
Congratulations, Emma and Mark on your wonderful wedding last Sunday.
It was an honour to be able to share in the ceremony by playing some songs
for you.
Here are recordings of some of those songs.
A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square.
I Love You Just The Way You Are
Unforgettable
Until The Real Thing Comes Along
Till There Was You
Petite Fleur
As Time Goes By
Georgia
Stardust
Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man
At Last
Prelude – Don’t Believe
Entry – Don’t Believe
When I Fall In Love
Have I Told You Lately That I Love You
What A Wonderful World
Beyond The Sea
Just The Way You Look Tonight
You must remember this…
I love the song “As time goes by” by Herman Hupfeld.
Here’s my rendition of it on the Wx5.
A couple of months ago I upgraded my synthesizer to a VL-70m so I could get some more realistic voices, and this is the result.
The backing track is a lovely arrangement from Ameritz in the UK.
No pun intended, but as time goes by I find myself increasingly enjoying the slow, sensual, simple, beautiful melodies of previous eras.
They’re timeless.
This is just so much fun!
I wanted to share this with you, not because I think I’m great, but because I had so much fun making it.
Friends and family will know I’ve bought myself a Yamaha WX5 Wind Midi Controller for my 44th birthday. It looks like a clarinet, but it is more like a synthesizer keyboard that you play like a wind instrument. You can see a picture of it here.
I thought you might like an idea of what it sounds like, so I’ve uploaded some of my own recordings to give you an idea.
Some of them I just played from memory by ear because they’re tunes I love (Like the Dark Isle, The Parting Glass, and Basin Street Blues). Some of them are from a “Play along” music book I recently bought which has the backing tracks that you can play along to. For one of them (Beauty and the Beast) I took a midi of the the tune, removed the melody line, and dubbed my own melody line over the top. (I’ll promise to explain how to do this in my technical blog soon).
“Beauty and the Beast” is a very pretty melody. If you only listen to one of these tunes, I hope you listen to this one.
Anyway – here they are – the sounds of me having fun.
Piccolo voice:
The Dark Isle
The Parting Glass
Sway
Beauty and the Beast
Trombone voice:
I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free
Trumpet voice:
Basin Street Blues
Clarinet voice:
God Bless The Child
Tenor Saxophone voice:
Hit The Road Jack
The Singing Ship
Emu Park is a small town south of Yeppoon on the Central Queensland coast.
In May 1770, Captain James Cook sailed into the bay off the coast of this area, and named it Keppel Bay. It’s a stunning area dotted with coral reefs, idyllic tropical islands, and long wide beaches to the south.
“The Singing Ship” was erected in 1970 to honour the bicentenary of Cook’s voyage.
It is a magnificent sculpture which captures the essence of a sailing ship, with a small difference.
It sings.
Cleverly constructed tubes descend from “sail” to the “deck” of the structure. The prevailing winds pass through strategically placed holes in those tubes, causing them to resonate like a huge pipe organ. Or perhaps like the wind in the shrouds of a sailing ship.
The result is a gentle pleasant musical chord that rings out over the water.
I think this is wonderful work of art which aptly honours the memory of the great navigator, James Cook. It’s large and bright, with huge sweeping sail shape that gives an impression of motion. The musical tones add to that feeling. As you stand at its base, its not difficult to imagine that you’re on the deck of fantastic sailing ship, ploughing the waters of Keppel Bay.
This is public art as it should be – creatively capturing people’s imagination, engaging the senses, and reminding us of the great lives that have preceded us.
Save a man’s life
I think drug trafficking is a terrible crime. Offenders should be dealt with severely.
But I strongly oppose the death penalty, and especially “Mandatory Execution” where a government stipulates that someone found guilty of a crime MUST be executed, without reference to any mitigating circumstances.
This is the case in Singapore today.
Van Nguyen is a convicted drug trafficker who will be hanged on 2 December 2005 unless by some miracle, the Singapore government changes its mind.
So far they have been unmoved by legal appeals, or by appeals for Clemency on moral or ethical grounds. So I fully support the efforts of Rights Australia to urge companies and people that hold significant investments with the Singapore government to lobby them.
Do you have an Optus phone, or internet account? Optus is 63% owned by the Singapore government. Other large Singapore concerns include SP Ausnet (Victorian Power Company) and Singapore Airlines. Click here for information about how you can ask these companies to support the campaign for clemency for Van Nguyen.