Hot Images1Hot Images2Hot Images3Hot Images4Hot Images5
Hot Images1Hot Images2Hot Images3Hot Images4Hot Images5
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Sunday, May 1

Three Qualities for Success in the Arts


When I was very young, perhaps eight years old, I liked Mickey Mouse a lot. Early on, I happened to acquire step-by-step instructions for drawing the face of Mickey Mouse. An oval here, a circle there, connecting lines here, here and here, and - voila! Mickey Mouse. It was magic.

And I was the magician.

I repeated that process over and over, in no way tiring of seeing Mickey's face emerge at my command. 1 day while doing the magic at school, 1 of my little pals saw it and asked in awe, "Did you do that?" I proudly admitted I had. He called over some a lot more buddies and they were all equally impressed. They called me an artist.

And I believed them.

With that type of encouragement, I sought out the directions and mastered the drawing of the faces of Donald Duck and Goofy. Now I had a repertoire.

It wasn't long prior to my teacher saw what I could do and said, "My! What an artist you are!"

And I believed her.

I absolutely loved becoming the magician who could create something from absolutely nothing.

1 day I was bragging to my younger sister, Cathy, about what a wonderful artist I was, when my mother overheard me. She had studied at an art school immediately after high school and decided I needed a reality check. So she sat me down with a pad of paper and a pencil, put my sister in front of me and told me to draw Cathy.

I did, and the result looked strangely like George Washington. (Lest you think my sister is some genetic deviant, she in no way did resemble George Washington.)

That was fine. I was suitably humbled by the experience. But a couple of months later there was a contest in our school to draw a picture of George Washington in honor of the upcoming anniversary of his birth. I submitted the picture of Cathy. And I won initial prize. Now the whole school knew that I was an artist.

And I believed them.

A few years later my mother gave me her old oil painting set and I dabbled at that from time to time. 1 day I had an notion for a painting and squeezed out the paints for it on my pallet. At the last minute I decided I didn't really feel like painting, but realized I couldn't leave the paints to waste. So I took the paints and smeared them on an old framed corkboard in my room. A year or two later Mom suggested I enter that painted corkboard in the five county art contest. I did and I won initial prized for my "abstract painting." Now my reputation as an artist was securely established.

Years passed and I began university as a Marine Biology main but the tug of my initial adore, becoming the magician, wouldn't leave me. I switched to be an Art key. When I got in my first drawing class I saw the amazing work other people were doing although my clumsy function still reminded me of the George Washington--Cathy picture. I was not the good artist I had thought I was. I was ashamed of my lack of talent. I changed majors to Graphic Style where I wouldn't have to draw, but could still be creative and work with the images of others, not my own.

But I couldn't hide from drawing forever. 1 of the courses I had to take for my Graphic Style degree was Illustration, and I couldn't steer clear of it forever. In it, I had to confront my old demon: drawing. An intriguing factor happened, though. Even though I wasn't gifted, I recognized that I had returned to my initial adore, the magic of creating images.

Near the end of that course I heard that my illustration teacher was telling his other classes about an unnamed student of his that "couldn't draw a stick figure with out a ruler" but still managed to create beneficial images due to the fact he could "outsmart what he couldn't do with native ability" and simply because "he was willing to put in the time until it was ideal." I was certain he was talking about me.

Somewhat offended, I confronted my teacher and asked if I was the person he had been talking about. He said I was. I asked him what he meant by his statement. He told me, "Michael, there are three qualities that assure success in the arts. They are: 1) talent, 2) an capacity to accomplish laterally what you can't do directly, and 3) a passion for the work that compels you to work until it is correct. If you only have 1 of those qualities you just won't make it in the arts--even if that good quality is talent!" Then he looked at me seriously and said, "Michael, you have the last two qualities. You just may possibly make it."

I have pondered that counsel a great number of times and think it to be true. Over the years given that then, I have come to think that talent is not a mystic endowment which is either present or not in a person at birth. I believe talent is merely an understanding or skill already acquired.

In the decades given that my reawakening to a passion for creating images, I have learned quite a few abilities and grown in understanding. I have had to struggle to gain every bit of visual knowledge, but have usually found the identical thrill of being the magician and making an image work.

Of the 3 qualities mentioned by my teacher, skill, an capacity to sidestep your natural deficiencies and a adore of the function, the initial two can be increased by diligent study and effort. The only one of them has to be present to begin with is the last 1, a enjoy of the function and a willingness to function until it is ideal. I think men and women who have a true passion for their art can grow in abilities. It could possibly be slow, but it will occur.

The most exquisite portion is that you can consistently be studying. You will in no way know it all, but the learning is precious and the quest for the magic by no means ends.

And there's absolutely nothing much better than becoming the magician.

Monday, February 7

ACF 880: Cellist Se-Doo PARK performing at The Korea Society tomorrow night


The Korea Society
welcomes award-winning cellist Ms. Se-Doo Park, a 2010 Orchestre symphonique de Montréal Standard Life Competition laureate. Ms. Park, a masters candidate at the famed Juilliard School, will perform the prelude and sarabande from Bach’s Suite No.6 in D major, the 3rd movement from Cassadó’s Suite, Chan Ka Nin’s Soulmate, and Piatigorsky’s Variations on a Paganini Theme. Ms. Park’s violoncello performance is part of a series at The Korea Society celebrating Korea as a center of excellence for classical music. The performance concludes with a Q&A session and meet-and-greet with this rising star.

When: Tuesday, February 8th, 2011 at 6:30 PM

Where: The Korea Society
950 Third Avenue @ 57th Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY
(Entrance on 57th Streeet, Sout-West corner)

$10 (Members/Students); $20 (Guests)
(Walk-in registration will incur an additional charge of $5)
BUY TICKETS

About the Performer
Ms. Se-Doo Park has taken grand prizes at the National Music Competition of Korea, the Korean TV-Radio Competition, Kiwanis Music Competition, Academy Symphony Orchestra Competition, and Indiana University Cello Competition. Her performances have been broadcast nationally in Canada. Since her orchestral debut with the In-Eum Symphony Orchestra at 15, Park has appeared as a soloist with the Indiana University Concert Orchestra, Academy Symphony Orchestra, and Oakwood Symphony Orchestra. Park has appeared at Chicago’s Ravinia Festival, the Sarasota Music Festival, Aspen Music Festival, Banff Music Festival, Meadowmount School of Music, Centre d'arts Orford, and Le Domaine Forget. An avid chamber musician, Park is a founding member of Ensemble Sine Qua Non and has performed in England, Germany, and Scotland, where the ensemble will again perform in 2011.

Born in California, Park grew up in both Korea and Canada, and started playing the cello at age 8. She has studied at Indiana University, the Royal Conservatory of Music of Canada, and Seoul Arts High School. Park is pursuing her master's at Juilliard School under the tutelage of cellist Timothy Eddy. Her mentors include Bryan Epperson, Miriam Fried, Rafael Figueroa of The Metropolitan Opera, Menahem Pressler, and Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi. Park is an artist in Music & Arts at Trinity Wall Street for the 2010-2011 season, and returns the summer to the prestigious Ravinia Music Festival.

Monday, October 18

ACF 736: Free concert featuring violinist Brian Bak at The Korea Society

Juilliard @ The Korea Society
An Evening of Bach, Ysaye and Paganini
Thursday, October 21
6:00PM Refreshments
6:30PM Performance

The Korea Society
950 Third Avenue@57th Street, 8th Floor
New York, NY
Building entrance is on 57th Street
at the South-West corner of the intersection

Free Admission, but registration required. Register here.

About the Performer:

Born in 1986 in Seoul, Korea, Brian Bak began studying violin at 7 after immigrating to the United States. Brian has performed as a soloist with the Tampa Bay Symphony, Central Florida Philharmonic, Chicago Chamber Orchestra, Boca Raton Symphony, Florida Young Artists Orchestra, and Sewanee Festival Orchestra. An avid chamber musician, Brian has under the direction of notables Earl Carlyss, Tobey Appel, Jerome Lowenthal, Seymour Lipkin and Rohan De Silva. Brian is an active volunteer and member of Lincoln Center's Community Outreach Program.

Wednesday, September 29

ACF 703: "Autumn Leaves" performance piece at The Korea Society, October 7th

Park Sang-Won

Autumn Leaves in Stone Gardens: A Musical Journey

Autumn’s arrival, the splendor of leaves awash in color, and Resting Stones, Standing Stones on exhibit at The Korea Society Gallery inspire this evening of contemplative strings and flute. Kayagǔm master Park Sang-Won joins Chung Chang-Young on haegǔm and flautist Park Jung-Bae on tanso to perform several works. Master Park opens with Youngsan Hoesang, a Buddhist vocal piece that developed into a purely instrumental work in the early Chosǒn period. Kayagǔm Sanjo, an improvisational solo piece, offers a contemplative take on Korea’s most beloved folk song, Arirang. View Resting Stones, Standing Stones prior and after the performance, as well as traditional teas and sweets.

Thursday, October 7, 2010
- 6:00PM Refreshments
- 6:30PM Performance

The Korea Society is located at 950 Third Avenue @ 57th Street, 8th Floor. The entrance is on 57th Street.

$10 for members and students; $20 for nonmembers
(Walk-in registration will incur an additional charge of $5)

For more information or to register for the program, please contact Heewon Kim at 212-759-7525, ext. 355.

About the performer:

Sang Won Park is a master of the kayagǔm, a Korean 12 stringed zither dating back to the 5th century. Park's repertoire ranges from traditional music to contemporary and improvisational music. He studied at Seoul National University. He was a member of the Traditional Music Orchestra of Seoul and a researcher at the Academy of Korean Studies.

He made his western debut at Carnegie Recital Hall in 1979. He then tourned the U.S. and Europe's leading institutions. Les Amis De. L'Orient and Sono Disc in Pris have produced an album entitled Le kayagǔm de Park Sang Won.

Thursday, September 16

ACF 680: Screening of 77 Boadrum is part of special nightly J-Pop events in S.F.

The 77 Boadrum performance at Empire-Fulton Ferry State Park in Brooklyn, NY

NOISE POP MEETS J-POP IN A MUSICAL SCREENING OF 77 BOADRUM AS A SPECIAL WEEK OF NIGHTLY EVENTS CONTINUES AT NEW PEOPLE

J-Pop Week Offers 5 Nights Of Pop Culture Inspired Film, Fashion, Music
And Anime Events That Culminate In J-Pop Summit Festival
On Saturday September 18th

Still more news about J-Pop Festival in San Francisco. I love being in New York, with all the Asian film and cultural events it offers, but what's been coming out about this festival has really made me wish I could be there. Lucky for all you who can make it.

NEW PEOPLE teams up with Noise Pop, organizers of the leading independent music festival in the Bay Area, for a special theatrical presentation of 77 Boadrum today, Thursday, September 16th at 7:30pm at VIZ Cinema. A pre-screening reception begins at 6:00pm, hosted by Shochu distiller Haamomii.

77 Boadrum is a documentary of the Japanese free-rock group the Boredoms’s astounding concert that took place July 7th, 2007 at 7:07pm in the Empire-Fulton Ferry State Park in Brooklyn, NY and featured 77 drummers performing simultaneously. The film will be preceded by a music video screening of Cornelius’ Synchronized & Sensurround. General admission tickets for the film screening are $10.00.

Boredoms founder Eye Yamataka

The Boredoms are one of Japan’s most iconoclastic experimental musical acts. Formed in Osaka in 1986 by Eye Yamataka, along with frequent collaborator Yoshimi, the Boredoms acknowledge no limits of genre or form, there are no boundaries, and no ceiling on the possibilities of experience and expression. For more than 20 years, the band has redefined the concept of noise and experimentation within pop, punk, and psychedelic music.

For a pre-event reception beginning at 6:00pm, NEW PEOPLE will offer J-Pop gift bags and present inventive spirits and beverages provided by Bay Area Shochu distiller, Haamonii. Haamonii is a new low calorie Japanese spirit created from over 400 years of tradition that mixes like vodka but with far less calories and a very smooth, floral-inspired taste. Haamonii, which means harmony in Japanese, also won a gold medal from the Beverage Tasting Institute.

J-Pop Week continues at NEW PEOPLE every night through Friday, September 17th with a variety of events celebrating Japanese and Asian film, anime, fashion design, music and other forms of pop culture. Special gift bags containing a variety of fun premiums will be given to all ticket holders each night. Check www.J-Pop.com for a complete list of nightly events.

The J-Pop Summit Festival 2010 takes place Saturday, September 18th in San Francisco’s Japantown and will present a variety of fun Japanese pop-inspired attractions including fashion shows, a theatrical film premiere, live art performances, and mini-concerts by some of Japan’s hottest bands. Innovative artists and companies from the Bay area and Japan will join in with an array of products for sale in open air displays on both sides of Post Street and a food court highlighting Japanese cuisine will further complement the celebration. Complete details are available at: www.J-Pop.com.

VIZ Cinema is the nation’s first movie theatre devoted exclusively to Japanese film and anime. The 143-seat subterranean theatre is located in the basement of the NEW PEOPLE building and features plush seating, digital as well as 35mm projection, and a THX®-certified sound system.

About Noise Pop

Established in San Francisco in 1993, Noise Pop started as a yearly festival of independent music that featured the best local bands the city had to offer. Over the last 16 years it has grown into a widely respected brand. Noise Pop prides itself on bringing exposure to emerging artists, many of whom have gone on to widespread acclaim, including the White Stripes, Modest Mouse, The Flaming Lips, Death Cab for Cutie, The Shins, Bright Eyes, The Donnas, Jeff Tweedy (of Wilco) and Silversun Pickups. More info at: www.noisepop.com.

About NEW PEOPLE

NEW PEOPLE offers the latest films, art, fashion and retail brands from Japan and is the creative vision of the J-Pop Center Project and VIZ Pictures, a distributor and producer of Japanese live action film. Located at 1746 Post Street, the 20,000 square foot structure features a striking 3-floor transparent glass façade that frames a fun and exotic new environment to engage the imagination into the 21st Century. A dedicated web site is also now available at: www.NewPeopleWorld.com.

Wednesday, September 8

ACF 670: Upcoming events at Asia Society

©CANDY-NIPPON

Five very interesting events, several co-sponsored by New York-Tokyo, are coming to Asia Society starting tomorrow, September 9th, 2010:

ART: ASIA SOCIETY MUSEUM EXHIBITION

Yoshitomo Nara is one of the leading artists of Japan's influential Neo Pop art since the 1990s. Asia Society presents his first major New York exhibition Yoshitomo Nara: Nobody's Fool (September 9, 2010-January 2, 2011) featuring more than one hundred works. More info here.

DESIGN: SEPT. 9th - Asia Society Fall 2010 program co-presented with New York -Tokyo

Fashionable trends on the streets of Tokyo have inspired many across the globe. For the New York Fashion Week, TOKYO! LOOK! highlights some of the latest styles and their cultural significance with a talk panel by Yuniya Kawamura (Professor of Sociology, F.I.T.), Dan Bailey (Co-founder, TOKYODANDY) and others. The panel will be followed by a party featuring fashion showcase by CANDY, with live music, photo collections, and happy hour. We have a special promo code for our readers. Use discount code "asia725" to buy tickets at Asia Society member rate ($10) online. More info here.

MUSIC: SEPT. 25th - Asia Society Fall 2010 program co-presented with New York -Tokyo

The Japanese all-women trio Shonen Knife has built a solid worldwide following with their Ramones meets the Beatles brand of sticky-sweet punk-pop. Shonen Knife will be performing a unique concert at the Asia Society in conjunction with and inspired by Yoshitomo Nara art exhibition. (Their album "Happy Hour" art is by Nara). More info here.

GAMING: OCT. 9th - Asia Society Fall 2010 program co-presented with New York -Tokyo

Celebrating the upcoming launch of CAPCOM's CAPCOM® SENGOKU BASARA™ SAMURAI HEROES on PlayStation®3 and Wii®, NYT will host a special hands-on event three days prior to its street release. Enjoy the game's new features, gift prizes, and also the great atmosphere at Asia Society Museum! More here. (Admission is free, but you must R.S.V.P. This link takes you to a web page with info about all the events. Scroll down to the Game section to fill out and submit the R.S.V.P. form.)

FILM: OCT. 29 - Asia Society Fall 2010 program co-presented with New York -Tokyo

Tokyo's reputation as a media saturated hub for global information and cutting edge innovation makes it the perfect sample for addressing a new outlook on music culture. "Live from Tokyo" is a documentary by Lewis Rapkin that takes the viewer through the back streets and alleys of Tokyo to explore the innovative musicians who create this multi-faceted artistic culture. More info here.

Friday, December 18

ACF 437: "Ear To The Ground: Tokyo" - Free, Legal 18 Track Music Download

LimeWire Store and New York – Tokyo Present:
EAR TO THE GROUND: TOKYO

I learned about this in an email from New York-Tokyo. It's not only a free, legal download of 18 tracks, but a damn fine one. A terrific offer you should take advantage of.

Here's the basic info:

Ear To The Ground: Tokyo is an exclusive collaboration between LimeWire Store and New York – Tokyo. LimeWire Store’s Ear To The Ground series of FREE digital music compilations spotlights a different city for each release, and Ear To The Ground: Tokyo is the series’ 15th installment! New York – Tokyo has selected a group of artists that represent the current progressive music scenes of Tokyo. They are the tastemakers within their scenes: from their fashions to the artwork on their album covers, these creative artists are making an effort to stand out in the crowded urban setting of Tokyo.

And here's the link to the LimeWire website for Ear To The Ground: Tokyo.

Monday, July 27

Notes from all over


ADVERTISING
I would love to have been in on the meeting that determined the language on the I-90 billboard advertising the current show at the Clark Art Institute. It says "This summer - Georgia O'Keeffe," with no mention of poor Arthur Dove (the show itself is called Dove/O'Keeffe: Circles of Influence).

Now, I understand that these are hard times for museums, and that summer is their best chance to rake in as much box-office as they can (especially the Clark, where admission is free in the off-season). I also understand that for every person who's heard of Dove there are probably 10,000 who've heard of O'Keeffe. But I'd like to think that a two-person show could be advertised as such and still draw viewers. Silly me! Clearly, the PR people making decisions for the Clark know on which side their bread is buttered.

BTW, watch this space for a review of the Dove/O'Keeffe show, to be posted on Aug. 10.

MUSIC
I ran into the incomparable chanteuse Jill Hughes on Sunday at the Salsa Celtica show in Schenectady's Central Park (big shout-out to Mona Golub for her 20 years of service to the global music-loving community), and she told me she is working on a new solo CD, set to come out at a release party at the Van Dyck in September.

The last time I heard Jill sing was a few years back, on the stage with the Funk Brothers at Albany's Washington Park, and she totally belonged up there with those R&B legends. This Thursday, she'll be in the mosh pit with the rest of us, as Tower of Power provides a much-needed soul vaccination at Alive at Five. Don't miss it.

ART
Last Thursday, a new experience was offered at the University Art Museum, when six of the artists in the current Mohawk-Hudson Regional participated in a Japanese-style slide talk they called Fast Talk. Brian Cirmo, Sharon Bates, Kelly Jones, Dorene Quinn, Richard Garrison and Harold Lohner were given 20 seconds per slide to talk about 20 images (that's less than 7 minutes total per artist) to an engaged and amused audience.

Before, between, and after the Fast Talks, DJ Truemaster spun house music while art fans mingled with each other and the Regional's diverse offerings. It was particularly fun to observe as gray-curled, bespectacled museum director Janet Riker introduced and thanked "DJ True," proving that you can be geeky, middle-aged, and hip all at once.

The artists appeared to have a ball with the breezy format, even when the wrong slide popped up, which only happened a couple of times but was still enough to keep them on their toes. All in all, it was entertaining, informative, and well received by a capacity crowd. I hope they'll bring the concept back again.

Note: the Regional - an annual must-see for local art lovers and lovers of local art - ends on Aug. 8, so if you haven't seen it yet, you still have time.

Sunday, May 31

Soul Vaccination

This is not a news flash - it was announced a couple of weeks ago that my favorite band in the history of the world would be coming back to Albany for a free concert this summer - but I need to add my enthusiasm to the mix.

So put it on your calendar: Tower of Power will play Alive at Five on Thursday, July 30, in the Corning Preserve. The last time TOP http://www.towerofpower.com/ played this series, around five years ago, the show was moved to a vast parking area under I-787 due to stormy weather, and the band blew us all away. Band leader Emilio Castillo summed up the experience in his usual understated way, opining that "under the bridge is a cool hang!"

If you don't know (or remember) TOP, just remember this: Their unique blend of funk, soul, jazz and salsa - also known as rhythm and blues - spawned hits in the '70s that haven't grown stale. What is Hip? remains a valid question; You're Still a Young Man still resonates with soulful yearning; and Bump City (Down to the Nightclub) may evoke the disco era but it hasn't stopped speaking to the fundamental human need to get down. Their newer tunes are just as good (if not as famous), and they have never lost the beat that got them started in Oakland, Calif., in 1968.

TOP just finished a tour in Japan, and we will be blessed to have their tight horns and hot licks back stateside this summer. The week following their gig, Alive at Five hosts the Neville Brothers, and the week after that it will be the original Wailers, for a triple shot of soul that will cure whatever ails you. If it doesn't, then there is no cure.
See you there.

Wednesday, February 6

ACF 066: Dawn of Japanese Animation

Japan Society is presenting a four part program of Japanese animations from the 1920s-40s, plus live-action add-ons for each program.

Part 1 : Chambara Action & Adventure
- Twelve animations and Fighting in Ashura Town (Program approximately 95 min.)
- Live benshi narration of some animations!
- Reception to follow screenings!
- Wednesday, February 13 at 7:00 PM

Part 2: Horror & Comedy
- Six animations and Kid Commotion (Program approximately 80 min.)
- Live benshi narration of some animations!
- Thursday, February 14 at 7:00 PM

Part 3: Propaganda
- Eleven animations and Mother of the Nation (Program approximately 75 min.)
- Live benshi narration of some animations!
- Friday, February 15 at 7:00 PM

Part 4: Music & Dance
- Nine animations and Singing Lovebirds (Program approximately 115 min.)
- Saturday, February 16 at 5:00 PM

Special Screening - Orochi (1925, 75 min.)
- An epic film about an innocent samurai falsely accused of a crime
- Live benshi narration in English by New York-based theater director & actor Leon Ingulsrud!
- Saturday, February 16 at 7:30 PM

All screenings will be at Japan Society, 333 East 47th Street, New York, NY 10017

For further information or to order tickets online, go to www.japansociety.org/film, or call 212.715.1258.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...