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Bach
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by
Héctor
(last edited Apr 03, 2008 10:17PM)
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Apr 03, 2008 10:09PM

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I don't like this particular video but this is the song at least: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0Pyua...
He just doesn't play it my style, lol.

*condemns*
*corrects matters*
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZmQwkv...


I agree! I love playing (or attempting to play) that particular piece on the organ. It just doesn't sound the same on a piano.
His other fugues do sound really good on a harpsicord, also...





As I was waking up, one of the Brandenburg concertos was playing on the radio, and I saw cubes being built in the air.

They play at wineries and in churches. Last July, they played ten concerts in six days. It was sooo enjoyable--I was very happy to be there!

This quartet has performed together since they were teenagers, so, erm... about twelve years.

Taken from


I'm an atheist, but certainly playing Bach has provided me with what I can only describe as a spiritual experience. I notice, Tara, from a previous post, that you dislike the sound of a harpsichord. Have you ever heard a clavichord? Admittedly, it's like a foreign language at first, but if you keep at it, it can teach you things about Bach. . . .
I've built two, in the past twenty years.
jplathrop.net

I put a bit of the Goldberg Variations in my novel, The End of the Monsoon, to help bring out character and a sub-theme. Do you play it? If so, what's your 'take' on the 25th variation? How would you describe your interpretation?

Pablo Casals once said that at least once a day, every day, he would play Bach, no matter how he felt or what was happening. "No matter what," he said, "the sun is still the sun."


I named my daughter after Jordan Baker in The Great Gatsby. I love Gatsby, but mainly I loved the sound of the name, Jordan Baker. Our last name is Voelker (pronounced Velker here) so 'Jordan' works well with it for sound.
Raising a musician was great fun. I loved everything about it, and now the daughter soars. She plays in two orchestras (Boston Philharmonic and Plymouth), a string quartet, and three bands (alternative country, jazz, and appalachian music -- in Boston and New York City.


You have a lovely name yourself. I'm not surprised to
hear that your daughters have great names. We 'ear people' do our best to give our kids names they will love. I wanted my three daughters' names to have beautiful sounds and attractive rhythms. My second daughter didn't have a name until she was seven days old because my (then) husband and I couldn't agree on a name.
My first daughter is a fine athlete and not at all musical. The second daughter played piano and violin for a while, and she could have progressed very well, but her passion was to do whatever the first daughter did.
The third daughter was born much later and took to music quickly and enthusiastically, making excellent progress all along. Since I love music so much, this was very gratifying.
That said, it's my feeling that music lessons with a good teacher are never wasted. The child is going to learn something.

Not the baby photo, though. That is her baby, Henrik, playing piano.
Jordan also plays 'musical saw' (in addition to viola, violin, and fiddle music) and makes it sound good. When she first told me she was adding this, I looked on 'You Tube' to see/hear people play saw, and the sound was fairly awful -- but those people aren't musicians. The sound of musical saw is similar to a theramin, but there's a lot more control of the tones (if the musician plays it well.)

I saw on your profile that you would love to have been a brilliant conductor. Fabulous! My fantasy career is brilliant composer. Well, I never had the training, so I compose stories instead. Although, I do have one theatre piece in the works -- starring the grand kids of course. I've written twelve songs for it. My daughter Jordan saw my music and said, "Why are these all I, IV, and V chords?" I said, "Because that's what I know!" Heh! The songs are 'camp song style' anyway, so it doesn't matter, but Jordan did improve some for me.


We're all entitled to choose a fantasy career. It has nothing to do with actual ability, only love of the work... or in some cases, love of the image.
When I was a child, all the little girls (except for me) wanted to be actresses. I wanted to be an 'author'.I'm finally working on it. But my fantasy career is composer.

