Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Two new books
In recent months I have published two new books. In June came "Song After All," a collection of correspondence and related material between
me and the late poet Reginald Shepherd. In October came my essay
collection "Concerto in Q." Both can be ordered from bookstores or from
Amazon.
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Fantasy Concert
I am sometimes asked what my fantasy classical music concert would be. First, it would consist of music that is not often heard, in the hope that more people would come to appreciate it. With that in mind, allow me to program the following, assuming that I have a generous two hours to work with.
Song, William
Averitt (alive, U.S.). A more vigorous
and beautiful collaboration between piano and chorus you will not find. Part of
a set of related pieces. 4 minutes.
Symphony No. 1,
Colin Brumby (alive, Australia). Brumby is one of the best in the world, and
seems to be little known outside of a few choirs – much of his output is choral
music. The first and second movements of
his Symphony No. 1 are absolutely wonderful, and the third movement is lively
and a suitable conclusion. In
particular, the long melodic lines and excellent writing for winds in the
second movement is equal to that of anything by Elgar or Vaughan Williams, and
often brushes fingertips with Brahms or Mendelssohn. 27 minutes.
Sonata da Chiesa,
Adolphus Hailstork (alive, U.S.). As
good a short orchestral piece by a modern composer as you will find. Darkly beautiful, superbly paced, with a mix
of quick upper string work overlaid on a vigorous, melodically interesting low
string ground. Occasional lighter
segments offer a taste of more delicate sound, but the deeper thrum is never
far away. 19.5 minutes.
Someday, Mary Ann
Joyce-Walter (alive, U.S.). The
conclusion of her extraordinary Cantata
for the Children of Terezin. As the children of Theresienstadt are murdered
by the Nazis, their imagined future concludes with a short quotation from
Hatikvah. 9.5 minutes
Intermission
Fuggi, Fuggi, Dolor,
William Hawley (alive, U.S.). Hawley is
one of the best choral composers living, and FFD is both sprightly and serious,
a very traditional melodic sound with occasional modern tonal passages. 3.5
minutes
Santiago, Joby
Talbot (alive, UK). A gorgeous, lively,
powerful and often sublime choral work, it is the concluding part of a sequence
called Path of Miracles. 18 minutes.
Hail, Queen of Heaven,
Rihards Dubra (alive, Latvia). A modern
sound, a traditional sound, a lush choral swirl. 11 minutes.
Mountain Song, Ned
Rorem (alive – really – U.S.). This
lovely flute-piano duet is Rorem at his finest.
As I write, he is approaching his 90th birthday and still
composing. Bravo ! 3 minutes.
Fecit Potentiam,
Alan Hovhaness (dead, U.S.). This short
segment from his greatly underappreciated Magnificat
is a tight, formal showpiece for alto, brass and orchestra. Seldom has so much
deep, gorgeous low sound been packed into such a short passage. 2.5 minutes.
Gloria, also Alan
Hovhaness. Why not? The closing movement of the Magnificat is early Hovhaness, one of
his most original pieces, with long, luscious brass solos and simple, uplifting
choral work. 6 minutes.
Building the Barn,
Maurice Jarre (dead, France). This
simple, lovely passacaglia is from the movie soundtrack for Witness, and like the finest music for
movies, it has lasting musical value. 5 minutes.
Hear You Me, Jimmy
Eat World (alive, U.S.) performed by University of Oregon “On The Rocks.” A perfect mix of the serious and the
delightful. Music does not get better than this. Hear you me my friends, on sleepless roads the sleepless go – may angels
lead you in. Since my concert takes place at the Hult Center in Eugene, OTR
is available. 4.5 minutes.
Viva la Vida,
Coldplay (alive, UK), piano duet version by Anderson and Roe. They are available because they were the
featured pianists in earlier pieces.
Hey, it’s my concert, I get to pick the players. 4.5 minutes.
Hymn to a New Age,
Lee Hoiby (dead, U.S.). Not exactly
unknown, but certainly underperformed.
As pure an example of the songwriter’s art as you will ever hear, and a
nice major-key closing piece with chorus, orchestra and organ. 5 minutes.
Enjoy !
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Learning vs. Testing
College
is not just measuring what people know.
That's called testing.
College involves
human interaction at many levels, including learning to change one's mind based
on new information (critical thinking) and learning ways of interaction with others.
The New POO
The GOP has become the Party Of Obstruction and so long as it is such a thing it shall be known by its new acronym, the POO.
Friday, March 8, 2013
My Optics
I am a well-known birder and author of bird books. I am often asked what optics I use. The answer is: a lot.
I
have used many different brands of binoculars and telescopes over the years,
and there are so many good products on the market today that I could not
possibly even try them all. However,
I’ll share a few tidbits about what I use and why. My only caveat is that I have done product
testing for Leupold optics and have a casual connection to the company. They
don’t pay me but I do get complimentary products now and then. I keep the ones
I like.
Binoculars
I
own several pairs of binoculars. Right
now my main everyday pair is an older-model Swarovski 8.5x42 EL. These
are really glorious for a bright, flat, crisp view at any distance. They are
amazingly crisp at long distances. I like them a bit better than the new
“Swarovision” kind. Why? I’m not sure.
But I do.
Would
I spend that kind of money for binoculars again? No.
There are many excellent bins out there in the $300 to $700 price range.
If I were starting from scratch I’d probably get mid-price Leupold, Kowa,
Pentax, Vortex or any of the other brands that offer decent optics in the price
range. There are really not many
differences in mid-price mid-size binoculars.
I am
shopping for some 10x42 bins to use at the coast. I’m not sure what I’ll get yet. The new Kowa
line of mid-priced (under $1,000) binoculars is superb and I hear good things
about the Leupold McKinleys, which are brand-new and I have not yet seen. A lot
depends on ergonomics in the hand; the optical differences are minimal. I don’t
mind heavier binoculars; some people do.
I
have some “mini-bins” for special purposes. One pair never leaves the car,
because you never know when you might see a bird. They are Leupold
Katmai 8x32, an excellent, rugged super-compact that lives easily in a
corner of the glove compartment. Their
little sister, the Katmai 6x32,
stays at home and is the “feeder-watch” binocular. They are also excellent for sporting events.
Their only drawback is that the eyecups get stiff to move up and down. I wear glasses so I don’t move them.
Scopes
My
scopes have changed many times over the years.
Right now my main birding scope is a Leupold Boone & Crockett 20-60 x 80mm. It is optically wonderful, clear up to 60x,
but has a couple of issues. One of these
is that the focus mechanism takes a lot of turns and is a little stiff. The other is that the groove on the mounting
plate that is intended to take a stabilizer pin is slightly too narrow for some
pins. The groove concept is excellent,
as it means you don’t have to aim your pin for a hole. However, you may have to shave your pin a
little.
I
also have an Orion Apex 127mm Maksutov-Cassegrain mirror scope.
The Orion scope is superb for “deep-water” birding under good conditions, that
is, sitting on a headland scanning for seabirds. The body is inexpensive, about $400, and the
eyepieces are standard 1.25 inch astronomicals. I use Orion Edge-On eyepieces, which are fairly expensive (about $100
each) but give a splendid view. You can,
for example, get a perfectly bright, usable 81x or even higher powers. I also
have a fancy Celestron zoom eyepiece
that fits the Orion scope and goes to 125x, which is usable only under the best
conditions of atmospheric clarity. This scope is NOT waterproof at all and
needs good atmospheric conditions to be truly effective. It is also bulky. However, on the days when I can use it, it is
amazingly good for things like distant murrelets.
Finally,
I keep a Leupold Golden Ring “scopelet” in the car at
all times, wedded to a window mount. This
is a 10-20 x 40mm pocket scope that is absolutely perfect for those sudden
pullovers when you see waterfowl, hawks or shorebirds from the road, and your
“real” scope can’t be quickly hauled into position. The 20x through a 40mm
objective is enough power to sort out most of what I see.
The "Scopelet" mounted for use
I
have also recently used the 80mm Pentax.
It has the advantage of having eyepieces interchangeable with the Orion mirror
scope and a very bright image, but is so large that it’s like carrying a harbor
seal on a tripod (Leica owners will know what that’s like). For a couple of
years I used the Leupold Kenai
(comes with two eyepieces, a mediocre 30x wide-angle and a fairly good 25-60 zoom),
Leupold Variable (a superb 15-40
zoom with huge eye relief, but stops at 40x and sometimes on the coast I want
more) and the Nikon Fieldscope, both
the small and large sizes, all of which are good. Nikon makes a wonderful fixed-power 60x
eyepiece for its scopes.
Kowa
is making some remarkably good scopes these days, and Leica, Zeiss and
Swarovski continue to be the upper scrapings of the market, and the cost. The
best scope I have ever looked through is the top-end Zeiss, which is
astonishing at high powers. You can also
take a ten-day WINGS tour for what the scope costs.
The Changing World of Optics
So
what are the trends that I am watching as an optics user? The latest Swarovski
binoculars are excellent but in my view don’t represent a real advance over the
next-oldest EL models. I think their EL
models are just as good as the “Swarovision” things. If somebody buys a
Swarovision and offers to sell you their EL at a good price, take it.
Leupold
is making some very solid mid-range binoculars and so are Pentax, Kowa and
other companies. Many of these are in
fact produced at the same Chinese factories and badged as needed, with minor
differences. Slightly further down-market, the Vortex and Eagle Optics brands
scorned by some birders because they don’t have a fancy name are perfectly good
for most users under most conditions.
Leica
is making superb optics these days, and Kowa, which faded a bit in the 1990s
and early 2000s, has probably improved the most in the last ten years and has
some really excellent binocs and scopes out there now, closing in on the
upper-crusties.
The
good news is that the general level of quality is absurdly high these
days. I don’t think you need to buy
really expensive toys to get good optics and have a good field experiece. You do need to find something that works for
you, which might be different from what works for me.
Good
birding.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
A world-class birder's requiem
For a superb commentary on the late Rich Stallcup, see Harry Fuller's compilation at:
http://www.klamathbird.org/the-klamath-call-note/category/people
I had the privilege of meeting Rich twice, once when I was in high school and went to a pelagic trip out of Arcata and once when his tour group happened to arrive at Malheur NWR moments after I had found a singing Worm-eating Warbler. He recognized its chip note from halfway across the compound. Fly on.
http://www.klamathbird.org/the-klamath-call-note/category/people
I had the privilege of meeting Rich twice, once when I was in high school and went to a pelagic trip out of Arcata and once when his tour group happened to arrive at Malheur NWR moments after I had found a singing Worm-eating Warbler. He recognized its chip note from halfway across the compound. Fly on.
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