The Beatles: Magical Mystery Tour

the-beatles-magical-mystery-tour

Click image for larger view

via: visual.ly

The Beatles: Love Me Do single (50th Release Anniversary)

beatleslovemedo

click image for larger view

source: TheMissingGraph

Grand piano design strikes a modern chord

PH_Grand_Side-668-450-450-80The PH Grand by Poul Henningsen

Though the design of this grand piano is more than eighty years old, in an industry where classics are king, something so radically different might strike just the right chord for a modern musician.

According to manufacturer Blüthner’s website:

Poul Henningsen introduced his futuristic design in 1931. At that time, it was a total departure from the common perception of aesthetic piano design, and remains an outlier in the world of design cabinets to this day. True to the design ideal, “Form follows function”, the transparent lid and desk lend an extraordinary and delicate visual impression while allowing the player to see his entire ensemble, wherever they might be placed.

 

PH_curvecorner-726-450-450-80

PH_Grand_Front-673-450-450-80

 

PH6_corner-728-450-450-80

PH_Grand_Side-668-450-450-80

While the pianist’s eye might be on the ensemble, the audience would have a tough time focusing on anything but this beauty of an instrument.

Be inspired by German quality and a Scandinavian design icon.

Width: 145 cm, length: 187 cm  Leather banding available in a variety of colors.

Full story at Blüthner World

The Music of Wood [photos]

wooden cello

wooden band

The grand piano gets a modern makeover [video]

piano2It isn’t often one sees something as iconic as a grand piano get a makeover, but Peugeot Design Lab decided to buck tradition and bring this essential instrument into the modern age.

Though traditionalists may scoff at the sleek exterior, don’t jump to the conclusion that this startling instrument wasn’t lovingly and painstakingly crafted, as can be seen in the video below. It might not be your grandfather’s grand, but at least it’s not a synthesizer.

piano2

pinao 1

read all about it here.

Early Music Lessons Have Longtime Benefits

kids musicThough developing an early appreciation for classical music in your children may save your sanity on long car rides, putting headphones on a pregnant belly doesn’t necessarily do a little brain good scientists have found. Yet, it appears that the active engagement taking music lessons bestows does, whether they continue with lessons or not.

In some rare good news for the music education crowd who has seen their jobs and funding cut drastically in recent years, a number of studies are finding early music training has a positive impact long term.

At Northwestern University, a study found that college students who had taken lessons in their youth were better able to recognize pitch and tease out particular elements in complex sounds.

“To learn to read, you need to have good working memory, the ability to disambiguate speech sounds, make sound-to-meaning connections,” said Professor Nina Kraus, director of the Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory at Northwestern University. “Each one of these things really seems to be strengthened with active engagement in playing a musical instrument.”

Studies on older adults experiencing hearing loss and the study of “perfect pitch” have also yielded interesting results concerning the effect playing music has on brain development, but scientists say they haven’t stumbled on the magic formula to make a little Mozart.

“We want music to be recognized for what it can be in a person’s life, not necessarily, ‘Oh, we want you to have better cognitive skills, so we’re going to put you in music,’ ” Ms. Parbery-Clark said. “Music is great, music is fantastic, music is social — let them enjoy it for what it really is.”

Full story at NY Times.

5 Bizarre Musical Instruments

MusicA few years ago in japan, members of the hokkaido industrial research institute started carving thousands of very precise grooves into nearby roads. the slightly loopy brainwave belonged to a mr. shinoda, a guy who accidentally cut a road in several places with a digger and then later drove over the damage in his car. He realized that with some planning and time to kill he could create rows of grooves which, when driven over at a certain speed, would ‘play a tune’.

5. Musical Road: plays music as you drive over

The results, the ‘melody road’, can be seen above and the grooves are between 6 and 12mm apart: the narrower the interval, the higher the pitch. these stretches of road, each playing a different tune, can currently be found in 3 places in japan – hokkaido, wakayama and gunma – with the optimum musical speed being a depressingly slow 28mph. Don’t expect a virtual orchestra – from what I’ve heard, it’s not exactly beautiful music, but it’s unique and it’s mental. a winning combination. Until they create roads which can sing, you can either listen to a recording of one the ‘tunes’ here or watch the video below for an example.

4. LEGO Harpsichord

Created and built by Henry Lim, with the exception of the wire strings, the LEGO Harpsichord is entirely constructed out of LEGO parts–the keyboard, jacks, jack rack, jack rail, plectra, soundboard, bridge, hitch pins, tuning pins, wrestplank, nut, case, legs, lid, lid stick, and music stand are all built out of interlocking LEGO plastic bricks and related pieces.

With a 61 note range, the instruments size is 6 x 3 ft. weighing approximately 150 lbs., and built with an estimated 100,000 LEGO pieces!

3. Nano Guitar: world’s smallest guitar

The world’s smallest guitar is 10 micrometers long — about the size of a single cell — with six strings each about 50 nanometers, or 100 atoms, wide. Made by Cornell University researchers from crystalline silicon, it demonstrates a new technology for a new generation of electromechanical devices.

The guitar has six strings, each string about 50 nanometers wide, the width of about 100 atoms. If plucked — by an atomic force microscope, for example — the strings would resonate, but at inaudible frequencies. The entire structure is about 10 micrometers long, about the size of a single human blood cell. A nanometer is one-billionth of a meter. For comparison, the diameter of a human hair is about 200 micrometers, or 200,000 nanometers.

2. Sea Organ: Olayed by the sea

The musical Sea Organ (morske orgulje) is located on the shores of Zadar, Croatia, and is the world’s first musical pipe organs that is played by the sea. Simple and elegant steps, carved in white stone, were built on the quayside. Underneath, there are 35 musically tuned tubes with whistle openings on the sidewalk. The movement of the sea pushes air through, and – depending on the size and velocity of the wave – musical chords are played. The waves create random harmonic sounds.

This masterpiece of acoustics and architecture was created by expert Dalmatian stone carvers and architect Nikola Basic in 2005, who recently received the European Prize for Urban Public Space for this project. Many tourists come to listen to this unique aerophone, and enjoy unforgettable sunsets with a view of nearby islands. Famed director Alfred Hitchcock said that the most beautiful sunset in the world can be seen from precisely this spot on the Zadar quay. That was how he described it after his visit to Zadar, a visit he remembered throughout his life by the meeting of the sinking sun and the sea.

1. Atlantic City Convention Hall Organ: World’s largest and loudest musical instrument

The Convention Hall Auditorium Organ is the pipe organ in the Main Auditorium of the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey, built by the Midmer-Losh Organ Company. The great hall itself is also part of the world’s largest pipe organ and was formerly known as the Atlantic City Convention Hall, which can seat 41,000 people in the main auditorium.

The massive organ has 33,112 pipes in 455 ranks, including a full-length 64 foot Diaphone Profunda, ten 32 foot ranks, and manual and pedal reeds that are under 100 inches of wind pressure, while most organs never exceed 10 inches of pressure. In total, there are 4 stops on 100 inches of wind pressure, and there are 10 stops on 50 inches of wind pressure, ear bursting stuff, but all in order to fill the giant room with sound. The electric blowers that power the organ approach 1,000 horsepower, the kind of power needed to fill a hall larger than 15 million cubic feet. A tour of the entire organ takes 4 1/2 hours.

source

John Williams’ Life in Movies

john-williams-life-in-movies

SOURCE

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

burn-carved-vintage

Australian based artist Scott Marr has created a collection of carved vinyl records. Old vinuyl 78’ records that were manufactured in the early 1900’s to play the sounds of clasical music, have now a new purpose – to be visually communicative remade with a method of carving by burn-markings whit a heated pocker, known as pypografy. The texture of Marr’s carvings on the vinyl records now results in an amazing visual reminder of an era from which they were created, but with a twist, tempering them with natural components such as fire, bones and time gave these old vinyls a touch of our time.

‘What do you do when you have a whole heap of scratched up 78’s? You carve in new information, and hope that the people understand.’ Scott Marr   

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

‘records bones’ carved record and ochre by Scott Marr

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

‘records dark matter’ carved record

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

‘records fire’ carved record and ochres

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

‘records strings’ carved record and ochre

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

‘records time’ carved record and ochre

Remade Vinyl by Scott Marr

‘records revert to time’ carved record and ochre

source