From the monthly archives:

April 2009

Chihara today

April 23, 2009

Today in my “music theory” class, composer and colleague Paul Chihara spoke to us about working in Hollywood, and showed four stages of the evolution of a musical cue. The cut the director gives the composer that will have SMPTE time code on it and little or no sound, nor sound effects; a version with [...]

{ 1 comment }

Meet Matt Alber

April 22, 2009




Matt is a real talent, has lots to offer and is someone to watch.

{ 1 comment }

Today I was invited to a graduate course in architecture taught by Visiting Professor, Benjamin Ball, of Ball Nogues Studio. Here is a sample of his work.

He has a class of young architect grad students, working in teams, each pitching their vision of what the space will be. Casey Reas, the Chair of Design Media [...]

{ 0 comments }

The best national anthem, IMHO.

{ 0 comments }

OMG
You go girls!

{ 0 comments }

Culture and catching up

April 19, 2009

On Wednesday I went to the opening of BELOVED UPON A TIME, a full length musical at Royce Hall with music by one our our graduate students, Adam Gilberti, who rose to the occasion a produced a wonderful set of songs. Having trouble sitting for long periods of times these days I only stayed for [...]

{ 0 comments }

We plowed through five decades of the three top selling singles — the last two decades got short shrift: no matter, they might as well have leapt to their feet singing along with Backstreet Boys or Kelly Clarkson.
We went from old to new. Few had heard of Bobby Darin, or the genre “bubblegum.” I kept [...]

{ 0 comments }

Music can color a scene in ways one might never suspect. [Thanks to John Schrag.]

{ 1 comment }

It occurred to me to look back at the top selling singles from the past 60 years in increments of 10 years. I’ll bring this to my class and use these songs for analysis and discussion. Questions: why do you think this song was so popular? What is unique about this song? What is the [...]

{ 1 comment }

I may be wrong, but I can’t help but wonder whether John Williams wrote this cigarette commercial and then recycled it for Indiana Jones. N’est ce pas?

{ 0 comments }