Jill
« Reply To This #20 on: September 18, 2011, 06:14:36 PM »
Still am on that El Sistema roll. Obviously, I could control myself if I tried. And
if I wanted to. Turns out, though, that I have one of those too often aching innards of a disposition where apparently for emotional survival’s sake, I’m forever on the lookout for things that will bring me (
and I hope, others ) joy and life-savor. And this stuff very much does.
The spirit in the love-generating (himself-) El Sistema-trained conductor,
Gustavo Dudamel , that clearly permeates and dances around in the kids he conducts, and that’s so obvious,
especially around and after about the 8 minute mark of the last of the 4 videos below , I don’t know how anybody could ever have too much of something like that, or, again, not
wish the same for every single kid in the universe. Ave Maria. MPG
Niños Cantores de Venezuela (Selección Metropolitana)
How Music Saved Venezuela’s Children
Orquesta Juvenil Simón Bolívar de Venezuela - BBC Proms 2007
EDIT :
Okay. So, now you can shoot me. For sure you can ignore me. You could save us all and banish me forEver from the Forum, or, you can partake of a bit more (for me ) exaltation by checking out the video at the following link, especially, from about five minutes twenty seconds on . http://tedxkidstokyo.com/announce/gustavo-dudamel-leads-el-sistemas-top-youth-orchestra/ In the process, you might be turning yourselves onto some music that I know that I never before had heard of but found, somewhat to my surprise, that I very much liked. Super sweet-looking Gustavo and his kids having been the ones to introduce me to it no doubt helped a lot, but it’s kind of neat music in its own right, Danzón Nº 2 by a Mexican composer (and it ain’t even mariachi ), Arturo Márquez . At least, I thought it was pretty neat music, and this is coming from someone whose “catalogue” of cared about classical music is pretty embarrassingly slim. “Young children play with papier-mache instruments in a scene from "El Sistema: Music to Change Life..”
« Last Edit: September 18, 2011, 07:47:59 PM by Jill »
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Jill
« Reply To This #21 on: December 12, 2011, 10:29:31 AM »
Apparently, I can’t help myself. Or, maybe it’s just that I don’t want to enough. I just now sent the following, along with the attached pics, to some music-and kid-loving friends of mine. These are all from “
El Sistema ," which I seem to love more and more, the more that I learn about it.
“The video gets better with repeated viewings of it (smile). (It's nice, too, if you close your eyes and listen, after the first time, just to the audio portion of it. Gustavo Dudamel's exceptional kindness, compassion for the kids, and humor is really accentuated that way -- but then, you miss his great dimples and wonderful expressions).” Maybe you’ll like this stuff. Maybe you won’t. Maybe/probably obviously, I hope that you will.
Jill
EDIT :
No, not related, but this may be of interest to some of you, anyway. Just came across the following which made me think of when I was a kid, and being then, the high-powered intellectual that I have remained to this very day, of when I used to read the “And, Boy, Was My Face Red?!? ” section of Readers Digest. http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/former-mass-governor-had-uncomfortable-moment-diner-hampshire-153559334.html EDIT #2 ,
I'm entitling, "There's Just Something About Those Buffetts... " This particular link, the one I'm going to give you isn't going to be about the musical Buffett, Peter Buffett , whom I highlighted earlier in this thread. He's very neat. Turns out that neat dad, Warren (and now gone, but presumably neat mom) had more than one neat kid. Their son, Howard Buffett , was featured in a 60 Minutes segment last night, and I just discovered that that segment is available online for the watching. So, if you like farmers, you like great big and compassionate hearts, if you're interested in the issue of how to feed the world's hungry, and you just respond, positively, as I seem to, to down home, real and unpretentious caring people, you'll like watching this: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7391360n EDIT #3 : At 2 o’clock in the morning, I thought you all probably needed a little “
Dude Dog ” to go along with your
Gershwin .
« Last Edit: December 13, 2011, 06:48:32 AM by Jill »
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Jill
« Reply To This #22 on: December 15, 2011, 08:24:06 AM »
Without in any way intentionally setting out to do this, for whatever reason, I’ve been on a little mini-journey, this morning, on which I’ve kept on coming across different stories, where, (as I alluded to in my earlier Learning Through Pictures post), I’ve been reminded of how lucky I am to live in the country I live in and to have the life, the family, and the circumstances I was born into.
It was this picture (
click on it for full impact ) that first caught my attention on this article. And then, its headline. It’s quite a story, and particularly, that whole concept the Indonesian authorities employed of “
spiritual cleansing ,” has to give us reason for pause and reflection.
Rock music fans shaved and shamed in Indonesia EDIT : Just saw that there was
a photo gallery that accompanied this article. So, I’m adding a couple more pics, the last one showing some of the Indonesian kids being subjected to that “spiritual cleansing” I mentioned. No doubt there are a bunch of people in our own countries who wouldn’t mind doing some “spiritual cleansing” on some of us.
As an aside, but still somehow related to this same theme, while I was zipping about on the Internet this morning, I was watching what ended up being a really fascinating Charlie Rose show. In the first segment, he interviewed the Time Magazine honchos who explained why they’d selected “The Protester ” as their Time’s Person of the Year . (Turns out that Ai Wei Wei , apparently, had been their runner-up choice). And then they interviewed the wonderfully sharp, versatile and engaging actress, Viola Davis , most recently, of “The Help ,” who spoke of what it was like to grow up black and poor in 1960’s America and how that life experience compelled her to do what she does and do it so incredibly well.
« Last Edit: December 15, 2011, 12:54:57 PM by Jill »
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Jill
« Reply To This #23 on: December 15, 2011, 11:09:16 AM »
Am putting this post here instead of in the Movie thread where I’d started to put it because I got afraid that there might be some here who would be less than enchanted with my peppering the Forum with news of El Sistema . At least this way, if people want to avoid any more mention of it, they can decline the opportunity of clicking on this thread. Ever since I first heard about the film,
Dudamel: Let the Children Play ,
a film described as focusing on the various El Sistema offshoots that have been springing up all over the world , I’ve been very much on the lookout for it. As in very,
Very much.
http://dudamel.net/ (
NOTE :
I didn’t make the preceding a live link here because I think it’s one of those where the music and the video start playing, automatically, without you initiating it. Thought that that had the potential of being a little too aggravating for those who have yet to fall quite so thoroughly and madly in love as I ).
I look, every few days, in the hope that some website is going to tell me that the DVD for
Let The Children Play has finally been released and that it will tell me how I’ll be able to get a hold of it.
So, that’s how, this morning, I came across the 2 video clips I’m giving you. Turns out that the first one is actually for the original El Sistema DVD which I know I’ve likely driven a bunch of you nuts with for how much I love it and have talked about it. Somehow, kind of amazing to me, for all my enthusiasm, I’d never seen this first video, a different promotional video than the one that had gotten me started.
This one for the original El Sistema , I think, is beyond irresistible. It just
fills me.
The second video is one I’d seen, for the film I’ve been looking for. If you love kids and you love music and you love the idea of raising the poor out of the sometimes desperation of their lives and circumstances, I can’t imagine that you wouldn’t embrace this ongoing and ever-beautiful story.
EDIT : Okay, here's this one LAST one that just came jumping out at me from my laptop. After this, I'm going to throw my computer into the pond to save us all! But before I do, I have to ask, first:
Is it really possible that there could be anyone in the world who could watch this and NOT want this kind of joy, this kind of opportunity for EVERY KID?! EDIT #__ : If I said that this was going to be my last “edit” of the year, would any of us believe me? I guess I’d just better not come across any more priceless gems like the ones that follow. They depict the next generation’s Nadja Salerno-Sonnenbergs & Itzhak Perlmans, joyously well on their way.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&feature=endscreen&v=8x3cj98o1hkFinally, I’m giving you a link and a picture promoting
Gustavo Dudamel ’s upcoming appearance on
Sesame Street .
http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/Gustavo-Dudamel-muppet-music-master-130587923.html and There's
a new book , hot off the presses. I've only just read the beginning of it so far, but surprise, surprise, so far, I
really love it.
« Last Edit: December 16, 2011, 08:48:25 AM by Jill »
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Jill
« Reply To This #24 on: December 25, 2011, 10:22:37 AM »
Thought this was an interesting article…..
For politically aware songs, the '00s were all for naught And I remember, years ago, when KF Brooke and I had the great pleasure of hanging out for a few days at
the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival , the same concern was raised there about the relative quiet of the poets, too, in these complex, trouble-fraught times…
Here’s hoping that even more of those who happen to have a special ear, a special sensitivity, and a special musical or poetical voice will sing them out with even greater impact and fervor in the year/s to come. Apropos same, check out some of the old songs and other treasures that can be found at the
Social Justice Song Index ,
here * .
And, as long as I'm posting in one of the music threads this morning, anyway, let me turn you onto a place that I only, super recently, discovered. I found out about it when I was googling
El Sistema-related programs in the United States . Came across this gem (
definitely check out their 8 minute introductory video- see, below),
the Oakland Public Conservatory of Music , learning about the existence of which gave me great gladness.
EDIT :
* Went leafing through some of the subject headings at that link I gave you, in part, to see how difficult it might be to locate an audio/video version of the songs that the website simply gives you the beginning lyrics for. (Sorry about my English). Figured I could try to locate them by going either to
youtube ,
iTunes ,
Amazon , or
by simply googling the title of the song, as a last resort.
So, I s’pose because the words they had written there “spoke” to me, I decided to see if I could track down the song,
Ella’s Song , by
Bernice Johnson Reagon , which I’d never heard and which I’d happened upon under (which, by the way, as will come as a surprise to some of you, was not the first subject heading I skimmed through), “
Race and Racism Songs .” I didn't see this written anywhere, though I'm sure it is written there, but I'm guessing that the Ella for whom the song is named is probably the incomparable civil rights activist and humanitarian,
Ella Baker .
Happily, I found the song almost immediately, and ended up thinking it was pretty nice. Maybe you will, too.
Check it out if you feel like it, here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6Uus--gFrc And here are
the original lyrics for it .
And lastly ,Go to pixdaus.com When there, type the word, music , into the search space. Then click on “Search” for 11 pages of purportedly music-related pics. There are some apparently irrelevant ones, a few throwaways, but many many pleasure-giving others. and, really really lastly….http://pixdaus.com/?sort=tag&tag=dance And lastlylastlyreally lastly… I love this stuff. Many of us already knew about the healing quality of music , but for people like the central characters of the stories below, that healing quality borders on miraculous.http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2011/12/26/144152193/singing-therapy-helps-stroke-patients-speak-again http://popwatch.ew.com/2011/11/15/gabrielle-giffords-healing-music/ Turns out I lie. So, you can go ahead and sue me. But, do yourselves a favor and sue me after you watch the wonderful video clips in the Giffords story link, above, and those that I just now found, below, that ended up costing me the price of a new DVD I decided I needed to order. You know, "for science."http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mejPllxcEJI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oswz2UuwFp4&feature=related
« Last Edit: December 26, 2011, 10:15:35 AM by Jill »
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Jill
« Reply To This #25 on: December 30, 2011, 08:48:07 AM »
Last night, some friends and I watched one of the most special, uplifting and in certain ways, incredible stories I’ve ever seen recounted in a DVD called “
Soweto Strings .” I’d come across it when googling, while trying to locate global offshoots, or, at least, distant relatives of the Venezuelan program,
El Sistema , about which I am currently and absolutely enthralled and, (as has undoubtedly become painfully obvious to some of you) rather happily obsessed
* .
The classically trained English viola player,
Rosemary Nalden , who ended up helping transform these South African township kids into consummate musicians seemed, especially early on in the story, as different from the charismatic
Gustavo Dudamel and his infinitely gentle maestro,
José Antonio Abreu , as you could imagine (but, as it turned out, only in certain less than the most fundamental of ways). Still, the results she achieved, the gifts she helped nourish, and the magic she helped the kids to make were no less miraculous.
The film, the story behind it, was absolutely beautiful.
(Don’t know, at this point, how realistic it is to hope so, but if there is any way that my friend and I might be able to stop by the school that was featured in the film when we’re in South Africa next spring, well, you might guess, we’re very much going to try ). Watch the first two and a half minutes of this to know some of this story’s joy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nO9nq5I9s9I http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-AUsvD_WY1I(Not quite 3- minute-long “60 Minutes” introduction)
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=617092n&tag=contentBody;storyMediaBoxhttp://www.buskaid.org.za/ http://www.africultures.com/php/index.php?nav=groupe&no=702 http://africlassical.blogspot.com/2009/11/samson-diamond-head-of-buskaid-soweto.html * As I wrote my sibs yesterday,
“... Since this program ties together KIDS, MUSIC, SOCIAL JUSTICE, HELPING THE POOR and DIFFERENT CULTURES, it's like it was sort of tailor-made just for me.” EDIT :
Not exactly related, but this is a happy morning (afternoon, evening) slideshow I’d once posted and that had gotten lost amongst a bunch of other links. I watched it early this morning, myself, completely perhaps, for the very first time, and thought it was worth tagging onto this, as long as I was going to be here, anyway. EDIT #2 : Talk about music being the universal language….
Just came across this. Loved it. (I know that Maestro Abreu would love it, too). The joy of this stuff abounds and abounds, and it just keeps abounding.
http://www.classicsa.co.za/site/features/view/buskaid_back_from_columbia_and_ready_to_wow_local_audiences/ http://www.mio.co.za/topic/buskaid-ensemblehttp://www.facebook.com/Buskaid?sk=wall See if you can recognize one of the lovely women in the picture I'm just now adding......EDIT #3 (and then I think I’m done).
Went off in hopes I could find either pictures or better yet, a video of the coming together of the kids from Soweto with the kids from Cartagena, Colombia, as described in the first of the three links, just above. No such luck, but….
I did come across this one video, the one that will be the last one of this post, which gives you the really wonderful flavor of the school and the Colombian dancers that the Soweto kids got to go exchange with. Most people here at KF, of those relatively few who have even gotten to this point, are not going to want to take the time to watch this video, but….
If you have any feelings for the ARTS, even if you’re a pure dilettante like I am, if you have any love of learning about different cultures, here, that of Colombia, and if you have a special caring for young people, let me just tell you-- there are some riches to be found if you’ll just take the time to look.
Start at about 1 minute and continue through to about 6 minutes 10 seconds .
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1393DuaNgQ
« Last Edit: December 31, 2011, 07:00:02 AM by Jill »
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Jill
« Reply To This #26 on: February 06, 2012, 04:27:45 PM »
I know that touching stories, as with just about everything else, that they're in the “eyes,” the heart, the particular sensitivity of the beholder, the experiencer. With that caveat out of the way, I’m here to tell you that a movie we watched last night,
Thunder Soul , was easily one of the sweetest, one of the most satisfying films I’ve
ever seen. One of those deals where life works out just about exactly how you’d hope and wish it would.
Think about checking it out. And if you do, try to watch it with/share it with someone you love, someone who hopefully will make all those grownup notquitegurgle sounds that signal pleasure and joy and sheer contentedness. Try to watch it with someone who will turn to look at you just as you’re turning to look at them when the movie elicits one of those “Isn’t this just DEAR?!”/ “Isn’t this just SWEET?! full-face smiles that burst forth to celebrate the perfection of a moment. I
loved this movie.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vea-nOKEGFY http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdgsNnBWx0MEDIT : As long as you're here having your musical horizons expanded (I hope), anyway, I thought I'd go ahead and share something with you that really is quite STUPENDOUS! You'll find it at the youtube clip that follows:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QEZj0yjfzbc
« Last Edit: February 06, 2012, 10:22:38 PM by Jill »
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