bunrab: (Vlad)
1. We had cake for dessert, a packaged stollen someone had given us for xmas. Nutrition information: Serving size: 1/6 cake. Servings per package: 9.

2. Finally got around to doing our taxes - it's not complicated, it doesn't take long, but I always put it off. Hardest part is finding things. Anyway, we're due $1K refund from the feds, and then conveniently, we owe $1K on state-and-local for Maryland/Baltimore.

3. I am transcribing music into Finale, from handwritten parts; the great-grandfather of one of the Montgomery Village Community Band's flute players wrote several marches, in little teeny handwriting, and without parts for any instruments that the village band he originally wrote them for didn't have. So I'm entering the tuba part and transposing it for bari sax and bass clarinet, entering the Bb clarinet parts and transposing them for flutes, etc. Finale is not a perfect medium, and I still haven't figured out how to put in a "repeat the previous measure" sign.

4. We'll be flying back down to Texas 4/16, and returning 4/22. The estate sale is Thursday-Friday-Saturday the 17-18-19.

5. I am putting off cleaning the remaining one of the three rabbit litter boxes, and also cleaning the hedgie cage. Procrastination is my second middle name!
bunrab: (kelly2007)
We had a few drops of champagne at midnight - we went to the New Year's Eve Gala at Lorenzo's Timonium Dinner Theater in - you guessed it - Timonium, and saw "And Then There Were None" which ended at 11:45 and then the cast, which were also the waitpeople, served champagne to everyone and we all made noise and sang Auld Lang Syne, and then we split. Dropped Cindy off, passed a wreck on the highway that seemed to have at least one law enforcement vehicle as one of the crunch-ees. Home safe, drink some decaf tea.

Some goals for the new year - not resolutions, but things I'm going to aim toward:
1. I noticed that my 105 books in 2007 list was awfully heavy on murder mysteries, and fiction in general. I think I'll aim for reading at least 25 non-fiction works that aren't crafts books or cookbooks, in 2008; that should be about one every 2 weeks. Expect a lot more pop science books.
2. I've got a list of nine specific crafts projects I have started that I want to finish before too long - preferably, before I start any other new ones. And while I'm at it, use up more of my yarn backlog, and buy less new yarn than last year. It's a goal, not a promise.
3. Cindy wants a crocheted rag rug - start in on one of those after I finish goal number 2.
4. The usual weight loss thing.
5. I've got seven pieces of music that are either still in my head or have barely been started on paper; finish at least one of them to the point of full score and parts! (°Freethinkers March, °Rejoice, °Bad Kitty, °Solemn Fanfare, °Canon on Maoz Tzur, °SAD Song, °Hora, Hora, Hora. That's just enough to remind me what I'm thinking of.)

That's more than enough. And so to bed.
bunrab: (bass)
And there were a great many of them.
Getting onto an army post (I am told it's not a base - the navy and the air force have bases, the army has posts. OK.) involves going through security. Luckily, we know about the North Gate, where the lines are considerably shorter than at the West Gate. One time this weekend, we even had the underside of the car inspected with mirrors.

Anyway, I did not attend all the events, so I can't report on everything. I enjoyed John Stevens' class in how to start in on arranging and composing for the tuba-euphonium ensemble; at this point in my would-be arranging career, everything is helpful, but Dr. Stevens was particularly accessible and handed out excellent notes.

The Army Strings seem to be quite short of strings - at the concert on Friday night, they had hired outside players for the last stand in every string section. The first half of the concert was the combined Armed Forces Tuba-Euphonium Ensemble, which this year included people from the UK Royal Navy and the German Air Force. I really need a field guide to uniforms, because not all the people from "the Marines" wear the same uniform, for example - so who the heck is the red jacket with the gold braid and no black frogs instead of white braid and frogging up the front? Who are the people in suit jackets instead of tunics? The second half of the concert Friday night was the Army Orchestra, which is the Army Strings plus various wind players from other Army ensembles, with the aforementioned ringers to beef up the strings; they had two euphonium soloists for euphonium concerti, and one tuba soloist for a tuba concerto; one of the euphonium soloists was one of the UK Royal Navy guys.

I think my favorite concert of the whole conference was the Tennessee Tech Tuba Ensemble 40th Anniversary Alumni All-Stars. This concert featured nine pieces written for this ensemble, for this 40th anniversary. While some of the pieces were forgettable, several were quite memorable. I'll get the negative out of the way first: I would be very surprised if the Gunther Schuller piece ever gets played again after the ensemble finishes this 40th anniversary tour - if it gets played at all by any other group in the next decade, or any group other than this one, I'd be able to count the number of times on my thumbs and have thumbs left over, I'm sure. It was technically challenging and mathematically interesting, and totally unpleasant to listen to. I mean, 10 separate euphonium parts, 12 separate tuba parts, plus two percussion? Tone clusters. Ugh.
OK, now that I've got that out of the way, let me tell you about the stuff I liked. First, John Cheetham's "Bassa Nòbile" was wonderful, and I am quite sure it will become a favorite and a standard in the tuba literature rapidly as soon as it's published for general use. Watch for it, you music directors on my flist. You'll like it. Eric Ewazen's "Basso Cantante" was also quite nice, and also accessible. My favorite overall was Martin Ellerby's "Epitaph VI: Phoenix Rising (Coventry/Dresden)." It was truly beautiful. Because it is commemorating the bombings in WWII of the English city of Coventry including the Cathedral of St. Michaels (and later the bombing of Dresden and its historical buildings), it includes extensive variations on "The Coventry Carol" and I am afraid that will make the piece popular for misuse as a Christmas piece rather than a solemn memorial piece. It was so pretty, though, with the melody often shared by the lower tuba line and the orchestra bells, an unusual combination that worked with surprising clarity.

The Grand Concert at the end was the Army Band - "Pershing's Own" - with soloists. Nickitas Demos' piece "Air Metal and Roll" featured both a euphonium soloist and a trombone soloist, so there's a good chance it will get re-performed at the Eastern Trombone Workshop in March, for those of you considering whether to attend that. It was a lot of fun. My favorite on this concert was another Ellerby piece, his Tuba concerto, and I think Ellerby is one of my new favorite band composers.

A good time despite mediocre food was had by all. We were talking with our friends Jim & Barbara afterwards at the party, and plotting next year to bring a picnic supper of some sort for Saturday night dinner, so we wouldn't have to eat at the Quarterdeck three nights in a row, and particularly, wouldn't have to leave base and then come through security again, and find a parking space again, for the Grand Concert. That'll depend in part on the weather next January - who knows what the heck the weather might be like then? - but I am already plotting a menu.
bunrab: (alien reading)
OK, OK, the reading continues apace.
Tail end of 2006:
Essential Dictionary of Orchestration, the by Dave Black, Alfred Publishing - Amazon.com review here - I was annoyed at how it was organized, and at how it included recorders and banjos as somehow essential to orchestrating, while not including Sousaphones or mellophones, which are far more commonly used in scoring pieces!
I'm the Vampire, That's Why by Michele Bardsley - Amazon.com review here - not very good as vampires go.

And on to 2007:
My Big, Fat, Supernatural Wedding, a short story collection edited by P.N. Elrod, stories of varying quality. I liked the Esther Friesner the best. Rachel Caine's blatant rip-off of Captain Jack Sparrow was funny for all that it was a rip-off, and led me to finally getting around to starting a series of hers that I've had recommended to me - see below. Elrod's own Elvis story was pretty funny, too. The authors who always annoy me, such as Sherrilyn Kenyon, continue to annoy me; no news there. I liked Jim Butcher's story, in which Harry Dresden is the best man at a wedding, but I suspect it would be totally incomprehensible to anyone who wasn't already conversant with the Harry Dresden series, and with Bob The Skull and Karrin Murphy. Worth taking out of the library, not worth paying $13 for a trade paperback for. And what's with so many trade paperbacks lately, anyway?? Blatant profit move from publishers. I'll hold out for mass market paperbacks at half the price, thank you very much.

Ill Wind by Rachel Caine. This is the first in her Weather Warden series; I happened to spot it on the library racks and grabbed it, since I had been recently reminded of the existence of the series by seeing her story in the anthology. It seems OK; a little bit long for the actual plot involved, but I liked a lot of the details about the weather. Could have lived without the details of the classic cars. Liked the Djinn. Don't know whether I liked it enough to pay cash for any of the series, but I'll certainly bother to look for the next one at the library.

Zookeeper, the by Alex MacLennan. The title is what made me grab this off the library shelf, but it's plain old non-genre fiction, full of angst about relationships and trying to figure out what the protagonist wants to do with his life, and wound up just making me feel angsty, despite the interesting details of his job. Too much time spent trying to control other people, not nearly enough tamarins and lemurs.

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