Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Android Central Live: It's a wrap!

The final word from the folks who brought it all to you live

Grab a frosty beverage and see what the AC Live crew has to say about the inaugural Samsung Developer Conference.

We all had a lot of fun, learned a thing or two, and most importantly — got excited for all the great stuff software developers are going to be able to do with some of the most popular mobile hardware in the world.

Now it's time to rest, then get ready to do it all again next year!

More: Samsung Developers Conference portal


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/LTwbFIbmazQ/story01.htm
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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Apple iPhoto '11 Version 9.5 (for Mac)


Apple wasn't content just to introduce the astounding new iPad Air, cylindrical Mac Pro, and OS X Mavericks on the same day, but the tech titan also released new versions of its home media and office software, too—for both iOS and Mac OS. That's 12 updated apps in addition to all the big stuff the company announced in San Francisco. The Mac version of iPhoto has not only been updated to support Mavericks (which it requires to run) with full 64-bit performance and iOS 7 features, but also adds new possibilities for sharing, printing, and new maps to locate your photos.



A lot of what's good about iPhoto remains the same—an excellent full-screen mode, tight integration with Facebook and Flickr, and excellent output options such as cards and books. The software comes with all new Macs, and as part of the bargain-priced $49 iLife suite, or is available standalone for $14.99 from the Mac App Store. Though Picasa is free, it can't match iPhoto in interface design and support for online services. Those looking for even more photo-editing power might consider moving up to Adobe Photoshop Elements or even Lightroom. I tested the new iPhoto on a 15-inch MacBook Pro with Retina display and a 2.3GHz Core i7 CPU running OS X 10.9 Mavericks.




What's New in iPhoto?
Maps.
iPhoto's new maps look beautiful, and allow for fluid pinch and unpinch zooming on a trackpad. GPS-tagged photos appear on the spot they were shot in the map with pushpins, that, as you zoom in, separate into multiple pushpins. Clicking on one of the pushpins opens a gallery view of the photos shot at the map location. I only wish that smaller thumbnail views of the photos on the map would appear right on the map, as they do in Photoshop Elements.


If a photo doesn't have GPS data, you'll have to assign a location in its Info panel—there's no ability to drag its thumbnail onto the main map. But the search bar in the Info panel map makes finding locations easy, and I do like how a mini map of the photo's location appears in the Info panel.



iCloud Features. iPhoto already supported the most important iCloud photo feature—Photo Stream. In fact, unlike on a Windows PC, where you can just see your iCloud Photo Stream photos in a regular desktop folder, on the Mac you're required to use either iPhoto or Aperture to see your iCloud Photos. With this update, iPhoto adds support for another Photo Stream feature—Photo Sharing, which is simply a folder where multiple users can upload and view photos. Normally Photo Stream is just a personal backup and access to your own photos.


The new iPhoto now has an iCloud entry under the new Shared section of the left panel where before, you got a Photo Stream entry under Recent. You can add video clips as well as photos to a Sharing folder (but not to your main Photo Stream). When uploading either to a shared album, you can add a comment, to which your co-sharers can reply and even tap a smile to "like" on any of their iDevices.


Strangely, you don't get iPhoto for iOS's Journals feature, which lets you create clever Web-based albums, but you can actually publish a Photo Sharing Stream as a public Web page. You don't create new Shared Streams from this iCloud section, but by using the Share button when in any Event, Album, or other photo view. One interesting option is to create a publicly viewable website, meaning you could use Apple as your photo site host, with the expected classy design values that implies.


New Share Button. This iPhoto update dispenses with the Create button, now delegating all its functions to the Share button. The Facebook share option is still there, but I wish it let you post to a Friend's timeline or in a message instead of just to an album. Flickr sharing, too, lets you specify a photo set, maintains the photo title and description you enter in the app, and lets you set the viewing privacy.


New is simple posting to Twitter, which gets a button on the Share panel. This worked flawlessly, adding a photo viewable right in my Twitter stream. A minor quibble was that when I told the tweeter to add a location for the photo, it used my current location rather than the photo's GPS data. But all of these online sharing options beat the pants off Picasa, which offers no built-in way to share to Facebook, Flickr, or Twitter.


New Printing Interface. For starters, the print interface is now accessible from the Share button, where before you had to dig into menus to get to it. It's more businesslike now, with a full screen preview of the print layout. You can have the photos fit or fill a page, or choose standard sizes like 8x10, 5x7, or 4x6. Contact sheet printing is flexible, letting you choose the number of rows and columns and the margin size. You can also have captions that use common metadata elements like ISO, Shutter Speed, Date, and so on.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/W7ElMQcnqaA/0,2817,2375040,00.asp
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Never Back Down: Fresh Air Remembers Lou Reed





"[Lou Reed] really saw the beauty of life, and wanted to be a person who could live in that beauty as often as possible," longtime publicist Bill Bentley says.



Karl Walter/Getty Images


"[Lou Reed] really saw the beauty of life, and wanted to be a person who could live in that beauty as often as possible," longtime publicist Bill Bentley says.


Karl Walter/Getty Images


Lou Reed, the transgressive and transcendent songwriter, singer and guitarist, died Sunday at 71 of liver disease, several months after undergoing a liver transplant. He co-founded The Velvet Underground and then embarked upon a long solo career. Fresh Air's Terry Gross interviewed him in 1996, but he walked out after just a few minutes, annoyed by the questions. But that didn't change her love of his music.


Reed was famous for his prickly, sometimes combative relationship with the press. And it was up to Bill Bentley — Reed's publicist from 1988 to 2004 — to work the very press Reed combated. Reed and Bentley became good friends, and their friendship continued for the rest of Reed's life. "In Lou Reed's world, when you were Lou's friend you knew it," Bentley tells Gross. "And I'm very lucky to count myself among those few, I think."


Before meeting Reed, Bentley played in a band with Sterling Morrison after Morrison left The Velvet Underground. Bentley produced one of Lou Reed's albums, and wrote liner notes for a couple more. He's now head of A&R at Vanguard Records. In this full hour dedicated to Reed, Fresh Air listens to his music, as well as excerpts of interviews with original Velvet Underground members John Cale and Maureen Tucker — plus Mary Woronov, who used to do the whip dance when the Velvets were part of Andy Warhol's multimedia show, The Exploding Plastic Inevitable.



Interview Highlights


Bill Bentley on the Velvet Underground song 'Heroin'


"When I think of Lou Reed, the first image that comes to mind is a rock 'n' roll warrior who would stake his ground and never back down. In 1967, the rock 'n' roll world was not really ready for a band like The Velvet Underground, but more importantly, surely not ready for a song like 'Heroin,' which basically was 'a love song to a drug,' as Lou once said. And when it came out, it pretty much leveled the playing field for The Velvet Underground — there was nothing even remotely in that world. And for a lot of the rest of his life, people would always preface Lou Reed's career by saying 'the man who wrote and recorded "Heroin."'



"One of the musical things about 'Heroin' that nobody else was really doing in 1967 is that it's seven minutes long. Lou often said that that was one of the reasons that no major label would sign them. All the meetings they would have with the different representatives, it was always like, 'Well, you're going to have to cut all of your songs down to three minutes' — and, of course, Lou and the band would never do that. So it sort of put them off in the corner from the very start. Besides that, it's the kind of song that includes incredible improvisation and feedback guitars and tribal drums that rock 'n' roll players weren't doing then. It just had a completely original sound, above and beyond all of the San Francisco bands, or whatever rock bands were big at the time — especially the British Invasion bands like The Beatles and The Rolling Stones in 1967 — were not doing anything like this. It was a unique sound that set The Velvet Underground on a path that never stopped."


On Lou Reed's approach to writing lyrics


"Lou's whole contribution to rock 'n' roll was — at the very start of his career he said, 'You should be able to write about anything.' Anything you could read about in a book, or talk about in a play, he felt should be in a rock 'n' roll song. He set that out as his No. 1 goal: to change the parameters of what rock lyrics could be. You should be able to write about hard drugs, you should be able to write about gay sex, you should write about anything. And nobody was really doing it then, but he had studied literature at Syracuse University and had met a poet named Delmore Schwartz who had instilled in Lou the ability to tell the truth in his work. And that really guided Lou's life."



On punk



"I think Lou really was the forefather of punk. When the Velvets started, they were just bashing away; they had no intention of playing in public. Lou had had bands before, and [John] Cale had played in experimental groups. Sterling [Morrison] had played, as he said, 'in biker bars out on Long Island,' and they just met in New York and started playing at home. They were not trying to be in the music business at all. So it started as a very elemental pursuit.


"They had a drummer named Angus MacLise that had left the band because he refused to play in a group and be told when to start and when to stop, so he quit, and that's when they got Maureen [Tucker] to play drums. And one of the genius things I think in getting Maureen, they insisted she play drums standing up; that made her approach the kit from a whole new perspective. You couldn't really get into hard backbeats if you're playing standing up. One of her favorite drummers was the African drummer Olatunji, and so she styled some of her song beats on African drums, which was way before its time back then. I think just that whole mismatch of different styles and not over-thought; that really was what punk was about, too. You get up there and do it and worry about it later. It's the inspiration and the emotional content that makes it so powerful."


On Reed's relationship with the press and Bentley's role as publicist


"Being Lou Reed's publicist was easily the most challenging thing I've ever done, but also, I must say, it was the most rewarding. Because I knew going in — I had been reading magazines since Rolling Stone and Creem and those magazines started — I kind of knew the lay of the land, so I really handled trying to set up the writers that would be speaking with Lou with real care; hopefully the ones who could figure out a way to open Lou up, which wasn't always easy.




Anything you could read about in a book, or talk about in a play, [Lou Reed] felt should be in a rock 'n' roll song. He set that out as his No. 1 goal: to change the parameters of what rock lyrics could be.





"I would always tell writers, 'Maybe for the first 15 or 20 minutes, let him guide the conversation' — which, even if it started slowly, to give Lou a little degree of comfort, because he's very, very sensitive and if he snapped [it was] that the writers were trying to take him somewhere he didn't want to go. He would shut it down. I saw him walk out of a lot of interviews, and sometimes [it would] become sparring with these people verbally — [it would] be very hard to watch. [For] a lot of the early interviews, I was told to sit in the room with him while he did them. He wanted me in the room in case it went bad, and he had signals he would give me if he felt it was going bad and I had to end the interview. It was almost like this drama that was always going on."


On Lou Reed's personal demons


"I think Lou's demons were how to control the side of him that made him less than loving. I think he might've come up in an era where being different was a really bad thing, and it probably gave him either some guilt or definitely some turmoil. I know there have been reports that he received shock treatment when he was a teenager and he was given medicine to try to control [him]. I don't really know that any of that was ever true. I never talked to him about what happened when he was a teenager, but I think with Lou, he really saw the beauty of life and wanted to be a person who could live in that beauty as often as possible. And sometimes trying to find that sense of contentment might take you to drugs, might take you to drink, might take you to a lot of things that aren't that good for you.


"I think there [were] a lot of questions in [Lou's] mind of, How do you become a good person? How do you fight off the demons and the devils that take you down the other road? And that was his lifelong struggle, but I think that's also what made him such a great artist, because he never backed down from it. He acknowledged it. He wrote songs about it, like, What is that line between good and bad in a person? And where does it take you?"


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/29/241437872/never-back-down-fresh-air-remembers-lou-reed?ft=1&f=1039
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Security concerns prompt subpoena for HealthCare.gov data


A U.S. House committee chairman, citing security concerns, today ordered a HealthCare.gov contractor to provide detailed information about its work on the project.


Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), chairman of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform chairman, Tuesday issued a subpoena for Quality Software Services Inc.'s contract with the U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services (HHS) to work on the Affordable Care Act's (ACA) website.


[ Also on InfoWorld: How federal cronies built -- and botched -- HealthCare.gov. | For a quick, smart take on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief -- subscribe today. ]


The subpoena also orders QSSI to disclose how much it has been paid so far for its work on the project for the project, along with details about all HealthCare.gov-related internal communications and that between the company and workers at HHS and the White House.


Issa said he issued the subpoena after QSSI failed to voluntarily hand the information after it was asked for it by the committee last week.


QSSI did not respond to a request for comment on the subpoena.


"It is crucial that you provide information quickly because of the serious concerns about data security related to the lack of testing," Issa said in a letter sent to QSSI and 10 other HealthCare.gov contractors on October 23. "This lack of testing is concerning due to the amount of sensitive consumer information flowing through the data hub and exchanges."


QSSI is responsible for building HealthCare.gov's core Data Hub, which is designed to support ACA health exchanges. The hub is operated by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and is designed to let health care marketplaces quickly verify the eligibility of individuals seeking insurance coverage.


HealthCare.gov's Data Hub doesn't store data, but it's designed to connect insurance exchanges with federal databases at various government agencies, including the Social Security Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, the Dept. of Homeland Security, and the Dept. of Veterans Affairs.


QSSI also oversees the testing of software code developed by other HealthCare.gov contractors and last week signed a contract to be the general contractor in charge of fixing glitches that have plagued the site since it went live on Oct. 1.


Issa said that QSSI's firsthand knowledge of the design and implementation of the Data Hub could help committee members better understand the decisions that went into building the website.


The subpoena is the latest sign of a growing unease over the security controls in HealthCare.gov. Though the site does not store much personal data, critics fear that it could nonetheless expose users to identity theft and other types of fraud.


Jaikumar Vijayan covers data security and privacy issues, financial services security and e-voting for Computerworld. Follow Jaikumar on Twitter at @jaivijayan, or subscribe to Jaikumar's RSS feed. His email address is jvijayan@computerworld.com.


Read more about gov't legislation/regulation in Computerworld's Gov't Legislation/Regulation Topic Center.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/federal-regulations/security-concerns-prompt-subpoena-healthcaregov-data-229751
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Vulnerability lets attackers hijack iOS apps' web requests over WiFi (video)

Be careful which WiFi hotspots you use -- Skycure has just revealed a web-based exploit that lets attackers hijack a iOS device on the same network through its mobile apps. The technique intercepts some apps' attempts to cache a web status message, redirecting the request to a hostile server; after ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/pdxe0NTU7zc/
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Bach Unwigged: The Man Behind The Music





This rare portrait of Bach, by Elias Gottlob Haussmann, hung in John Eliot Gardiner's home during World War II.



courtesy of William H. Scheide, Princeton, N.J.


This rare portrait of Bach, by Elias Gottlob Haussmann, hung in John Eliot Gardiner's home during World War II.


courtesy of William H. Scheide, Princeton, N.J.


Johann Sebastian Bach has been a central figure in the life of British conductor John Eliot Gardiner since he was a youngster. On his way to bed, he couldn't help glancing up at the famous 18th-century portrait of Bach that hung in the first floor landing of the old mill house in Dorset, England where Gardiner was born. It was one of only two fully authenticated portraits of Bach by Elias Gottlob Haussmann, painted around 1750, and came to the Gardiner home in a knapsack, delivered on bicycle by a Silesian refugee who needed to keep it safe during World War II. Bach's music also hung in the air of the Gardiner home. Each week the musically inclined family gathered for serious singalongs, which included Bach's motets.


It's a scene Gardiner sets at the beginning of his new book, BACH: Music in the Castle of Heaven, published today by Knopf. From his childhood interactions with Bach, Gardiner would grow up to become one of the composer's greatest champions, creating his own orchestras (English Baroque Soloists and Orchestre Révolutionaire et Romantique) and choir (Monteverdi Choir) to play the music in historically informed performances.


Gardiner's obsession with Bach culminated in 2000, when he and his musical forces (and a team of recording engineers) embarked on a massive pilgrimage. Traveling around Europe and the U.S., they performed all of Bach's sacred cantatas (about 200 of them) on their appropriate Sundays in different churches.



Gardiner's new book was more than 12 years in the making, and one of its goals is to get to know Bach the man a little better, since scant information has been passed down about his personal life. Bach was filled with contradictions, Gardiner discovered. He had anger management issues, and yet he had the capacity for tenderness.


"He had normal flaws and failings, which make him very approachable," Gardiner says. "But he had this unfathomably brilliant mind and a capacity to hear music and then to deliver music that is beyond the capacity of pretty well any musician before or since."


Despite Bach's contradictions, Gardiner says, in my conversation with him below, the composer would have been a great guy to hang out with.



In your book, you're saying Bach's music is well-known, but we end up knowing very little in comparison about Bach the man. How do you try to crack that nut in your new book?


Well, with great difficulty and that was a big challenge. But I think basically there are three elements that you have to draw on. Number one is the contextual information that you can gain from the sources, from the local, parochial sources about conditions in Germany at the time of Bach's birth, conditions pertaining to the schools that he went to, conditions pertaining to the whole difficult social life of Germany recovering from the 30 Years War and on the brink of enlightenment but still hanging on to a pre-Galileo view of the world — very medieval in a way — and not allowing yet the full flood of enlightenment thought to change their weltanschauung.


The second area which I found very useful to explore was his own annotations and comments that he introduced in his copy of Abraham Calov's Bible commentary — Calov being a 17th-century theologian — a book in Bach's private library which Bach annotates very carefully and very meticulously and things that draw his eye like, for example, how to deal with the concept of anger and that Calov makes it clear that you can be, you must turn the other cheek if somebody is being angry about you or if you feel angry in response to a personal slight. But if the attack is on your profession, your skill, your office, not only can you respond with anger but you should respond with anger. And that to me explains a good deal of Bach's very competitive and antagonistic response to the authorities who were employing him at different stages in his lifetime, and made life difficult for him, or in his own words, "caused a life of envy and hindrance." So that was a big resource.


And the third area of research that I really plunged into with a great deal of enthusiasm was of course the evidence that can be gleaned from a deep immersion into his compositions of music with a text attached to them. In other words, the passions, the motets, the Masses and above all the cantatas that he wrote in such a concentrated period in Leipzig in particular. And I was fully aware in writing the book that I was treading on treacherous ground in so far as one man's reading can be very different from another person's and it's a very subjective source of evidence, if you can call it that. But I felt convinced that my deep immersion into that music did allow me the occasional glimpse of the chinks in his armor plating as it were, when his personality sort of grinned through the fabric of the music. And that gave me huge encouragement to persist and to try and get to the end of the book, because it's not, as you I'm sure realize, a conventional life at all.


About your immersion into the music. You mention in the book that part of your aim is to show how Bach's approach in his vocal music reveals his mind at work, his temperamental preferences as well as his philosophical outlook. So how does the music reveal the mind?


Well, music is a much more elusive and ephemeral form of communication than words alone and yet it has its own precision. I mean, it's Mendelssohn who famously said that he found that music was much more precise than words. The problem comes in actually defining that precision and saying what exactly the music is saying. But I think the one thing you can extrapolate from studying Bach's setting of religious texts is that there is a counterpoint going on between the meaning of the texts per se and the affect and impact of the music surrounding the text setting, and it divides into two broad categories, really. One is collusion and a direct sense of sympathy and empathy between the import and the meaning of the words and the type of music that Bach uses to surround it and explain it — the text. And then there's at the other extreme, collision — those moments where the music and the text seem to end up pointing in opposite directions.





In his new book, conductor John Eliot Gardiner searches for the real J.S. Bach.



Matthias Baus


In his new book, conductor John Eliot Gardiner searches for the real J.S. Bach.


Matthias Baus


Can you give some examples of those two types?


Well, there are quite a number of cantatas where the text is quite genial and talking about, "God is right, all you have to do is to comply and just get on with it," and Bach is writing music of wonderful frippery and irrelevance as if to pull the leg of the listener. It's not that he's saying, "God isn't right," but he's saying, "You don't have to take it in such a literal way — you can enjoy it." The cantatas are full of instances where just by prolonging a single syllable or a single word or repeating things, he gives a different emphasis than the one the preacher would have done when announcing the scripture from the pulpit. And music has this extra — particularly Bach's music — expressive potency which is so extraordinary and it's something that leaps out of its initial context and appeals to us now in the 21st century in a way that perhaps he never acknowledged. I mean, he was writing this music for a very specific moment, for a very specific time of year, in a very specific liturgy in a parochial context. And yet such is the breadth of his vision that it can reach us now.


In a similar vein, you mention in the book that you were "keeping a weather eye out for the instances in performance when his personality seems to rise through the fabric of his notation." And I'm wondering if there are specific examples you have in mind, where Bach the man, whom we seem to know so little about, rises up through the music.


There are quite a few instances in the cantatas but they're not that well known. I can give you one instance in a piece that is very, very well known and that's the B Minor Mass, where I think that really applies. In the credo there is this monumental chorus, "Confiteor unum baptisma" — I believe in the universal baptism and the resurrection of the dead. And Bach starts off in really good, solid Lutheran card-carrying fashion by inserting a cantus firmus, a sort of almost plainsong statement, in the basses followed in stretto with the altos and then with the tenors. And you think, "Oh, this is a really major ex cathedra statement" — and so it is until the point when the music seems to crumble and it just simply dwindles and the tempo slows down.




Bach's B Minor Mass


Bach's B Minor Mass.

 




These great girdle-like proclamations cease and the music enters into a sort of twilight zone full of dark modulations. And a searching quality enters in the music to the point where you don't know which direction it's going to move in. There are extreme insecurities of harmonic movement and it feels at that moment that Bach himself is saying to himself and allowing us to share his momentary doubts as to whether there is going to be a life beyond our earthly existence.


And only at the last moment is there a scalar descent in the bass line and suddenly there is this eruptive chorus with trumpets and drums, "And I look for the resurrection of the dead" — Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum. And suddenly, there's a sprint to the line and it finishes in a flourish and that's it. The impressiveness of that jubilant chorus, which is so affirmative, would I think be a lot less if it hadn't been for the transitional patch of murky self-doubt that comes before it, and I think that's something that humanizes Bach the man to us. It makes us feel that he, too, had his doubts and had his wobbles.


You have a very intriguing chapter in the book called "The Incorrigible Cantor," where you talk about a side of Bach that I think many people, even fans of his music, really don't know that much about.


Well, that's all to do with anger management and attitude towards authority and I think the seeds of that are to be found in the unsavory atmosphere that pertained in the schools that he attended and in the gang warfare that took place in the towns between the rival choirs who were busking to raise money for their schools and their education.


Even though you can't pinpoint Bach's direct involvement with any of these incidents, that is the typical background of the schools that he was attending. And it all comes to an eruptive moment in Bach's own life when he's age 18 and in his first job in Arnstadt, and he has a silly disagreement with a bassoon player who can't manage to play an obbligato little riff that Bach writes for him, which is difficult. But, patently, the guy made a bit of a mess of it and Bach swears at him and calls him something quite insulting. And the bassoonist, in order to gain his own back, awaits for him with his gang in the town square. When Bach is on his way back from the castle going home, they set up on him and with knives and cudgels and Bach is obliged to defend himself by drawing his sword and there's a nasty incident and eventually they're separated and Bach goes on his way. And the next day he goes to the Consistory and lodges a severe complaint and the Consistory don't back him up, they give the moral victory to the bassoonist.


And that, I think, is a sort of paradigm, or it's a foretaste anyway, of the problems that Bach encountered at so many different stages in his career. Like when he was in Weimar, he is really disappointed to be passed over in the hierarchy and he doesn't get appointed Kapellmeister when the guy that's appointed ahead of him is manifestly less talented, less competent. And Bach looks for a job elsewhere and he gains a job elsewhere and the Duke of Weimar imprisons him for cheekiness and subversive behavior and on it goes.




Cantata No. 8 - 'Liebster Gott'


Bach's Cantata No. 8.

Cantata No. 8 - 'Liebster Gott' (chorus)


  • Artist: John Eliot Gardiner

  • Album: Bach Cantatas, Vol. 8: Bremen/Santiago

  • Song: Cantata No. 8 "Liebster Gott, wann werd ich sterben" (first version), BWV 8 (BC A137a) [1. Coro. Liebster Gott, wenn werd ich sterben?]



 




When he gets to Leipzig, he signs a very elaborate contract with the town council and he falls foul of their regulations in so many different ways and he finds himself in battles either with the clergy or with the town council or with the headmaster of the school, and it wears him down and he then describes, in one of the few private letters we have, how his life is full of "vexation and hindrance" and how the people here in Leipzig are little interested in music and have a curious disposition.


So there's a sense that he's always the outsider, that he's up against something, that he's incorrigible to some extent. And he carries on right until the bitter end fighting battles which really he didn't need to, maybe. And that is one side of his personality. And maybe it was a creative side because it — in his embattled state — fired him up to write the music that he did. On the other hand, there's a totally different side to him — the convivial family man who welcomed all visiting musicians and who took infinite pains to look after the musical education and the career steps of his children. So there is a fault line running right through his personality, I feel.


I think we tend to think of Bach as the bewigged "grand arbiter and lawgiver of music" who would be far from being jailed or drawing a sword on someone. And I think we tend to romanticize Bach's big job in Leipzig where he landed in 1723 and where he wrote so many great pieces — the St. John and St. Matthew Passion, the Goldberg Variations, the B Minor Mass. We imagine him just quietly churning out his church music but ...


It wasn't like that at all.


Right. You reveal in your book it's so much different than that. Tell us just briefly what a day in the life of Bach might have been like when he was in Leipzig.


Well, he was responsible not just simply for writing the music but also as a schoolmaster, for disciplining and for being a kind of house father to a lot of the boarding school choristers who were in his charge and who had their dormitories right up next to his private living quarters in the Thomas school in Leipzig. So how Bach had any time for a private life, God knows. But he would have taken prayers. He would have taken early lessons. He would go into daily rehearsals and daily classes, and then he would get to his desk and start composing the cantata for the week that was going to last up to 35 minutes depending on the occasion. And it didn't end there.




Cantata No. 82


Bach's Cantata No. 82.

Cantata No. 82 - 'Ich habe genug' (aria)


  • Artist: John Eliot Gardiner

  • Album: Bach: Cantatas, BWV 82, 83, 125, 200

  • Song: Cantata No. 82, "Ich habe genug," BWV 82 (BC A169) ["Ich habe genug, ich habe den Heiland", Aria for bass]



 




He then had to see to its copying out. And there was this little kind of mini factory, or sweatshop, of copying that was under his supervision with students, sometimes family members, doing the copying out of the parts of the score, readying for the one and only rehearsal. There may have been a few private, tuitioned rehearsals when he could have dealt with particularly difficult solos or obbligatos but basically it was rehearsed in breakneck speed on a Saturday before the performance on a Sunday.


In addition to that, he was also assessing organs in different parts of the country, around Saxony, and he was writing recommendations, he was supervising a harpsichord hire system. Some of his works went through publication and he was publishing other people's works. He was tireless, absolutely tireless. And he kept up that rhythm for at least the first three years — before he either burnt out a bit or else became disillusioned by the lack of support and responsiveness on the part of the town authorities from the clergy.


And not to mention that he was a father and a husband and a bandleader and a recitalist.


All that. It's true.


Your book is not a typical chronological bio of Bach where he was born here, then he did this, he did that, and then he died.


It's not intended to be a conventional life work.


Instead you tackle aspects of Bach in each of the chapters and I'm wondering why you chose that approach.


Well there are plenty of life-and-works of Bach and I didn't feel qualified to write that and certainly not to speak with authority on the keyboard music and the organ music in particular, where that's been dealt with very well by other authors. Where I did feel there was a strong case for emphasis was on the church music and particularly on the cantatas — the music that I know best. And so what I tried to do is to take the reader by the hand and take him or her through a series of different perspectives of looking on Bach.




There is a fault line running right through his personality, I feel.





I start off explaining in the preface why I think the book could be written that has a different approach. Then in the first chapter I describe my own approach, my own curious and upbringing and experience of Bach, which at the time it didn't strike me as being odd or exceptional, but it was only when I got to school that I realized that it was a bit odd and how I came to interpret Bach and to have a lifelong fascination with him and found that the models that were held up before me of how to perform him were to some extent unsatisfactory and how, if I was ever going come to terms with his music, I would have to do it in my own way, which meant forming my own choir and a period instrument orchestra and how that led to the Bach Cantata Pilgrimage in 2000 and so on.


Tell me a little bit about the wording in the title of the book. It's called BACH: Music in the Castle of Heaven and that title seems to me to put Bach up on a pedestal a little bit. And that's the kind of veneration, or 'hagiolatry' as you put it, that you seem to try to work against in the book.


Yeah, I guess you can accuse me of that because I do revere Bach. The castle of heaven is a translation of the Himmelsburg in German. It was a chapel in the Red Castle of the Dukes of Weimar from which Bach performed, and the music floated downwards, out of sight of the Duke and the congregation. And what I was trying to suggest by calling the book Music in the Castle of Heaven, is that Bach was producing the most heavenly music that perhaps has ever been heard on Earth and yet his sights were set on the castle of heaven of performing music as a good Lutheran to a much higher degree of perfection in the afterlife. And I'm trying to suggest that we're the beneficiaries of a kind of celestial vision.


Well, I think we are. After studying and performing Bach's music for so much of your life — and now you've written this book — you must feel somehow like you know him. So what is the answer? What was Bach like?


Convivial, cantankerous, remote, present, full of humor but deeply serious.


All dichotomies.


All dichotomies. But a great guy to go out and have a beer with.


Do you feel like you're closer to knowing who he is after writing this book?


Yeah but I might be just deluding myself, but yes I do.


Do you think he was basically just a normal, not too interesting, guy who happened to be a genius at writing music?


He had normal attributes. He had normal faults and failings which make him very approachable, but he had this unfathomably brilliant mind and a capacity to hear music and then to deliver music — in terms of improvisation and then in notated music — that is beyond the capacity of pretty well any musician before or since, yes.


You know it's quite obvious that for this book — at over 600 pages including a glossary, a chronology, 20 pages of notes — that you've done countless hours of research. And I'm wondering what was the single most surprising thing you discovered about Bach that you hadn't known before?




Cantata No. 106: 'Actus Tragicus'


Bach's Cantata No. 106.

 




I think that would have to be his compassion towards those who've lost a dear one. Where you'd expect it to be gloomy and lachrymose, Bach writes music of ineffable tenderness and consolation and music that doesn't require you to be a Christian, or let alone a Lutheran, to be able to have access to that wonderful compassionate solace that his music can bring you. You can hear it in some of the motets and you can hear it in some of the cantatas, famous ones like Ich habe genug, but also in the cantatas for the 16th Sunday after Trinity which are particularly concerned with infant mortality. You sense that he's really befriended death in a way that no other composer I know of has done to that degree, and with that degree of persuasiveness. That's something I cherish, and that brings me personal comfort. And also I can extend it by suggesting people listen to or approach or perform that music if they're in a state of bereavement or loss.


If you had to pick one piece of Bach's music that you have recorded to recommend to someone who's not really all that familiar with Bach, what would you pick?


"Actus Tragicus," Cantata 106.


And why that one?


Because it's a precocious, early example of what I've just been talking about: somebody who is dealing with eschatology, dealing with the ends of things, dealing with the eternal mysteries of life and of death and of finding a path through all that pain and grief to find a serene ending.





Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/deceptivecadence/2013/10/25/240780499/bach-unwigged-the-man-behind-the-music?ft=1&f=1032
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China Box Office: 'The Wolverine' Wins Again, Hits $33 Million


Late arrival on Chinese screens appears to have done no harm to The Wolverine, with the Japan-set comic book franchise taking $14.5 million in the week to Oct. 27 for a total of $33 million in 11 days.



The movie opened in July in most other markets, which normally gives the pirates in China plenty of time to flood the market with fake DVDs and downloads, but the appeal of going to the theater to see the Hugh Jackman movie is strong in the world's second biggest market.


PHOTOS: Inside Hollywood's Surprise Trip to 'China's Oscars'


There were 2.4 million admissions during the week for The Wolverine, data from Entgroup showed.


Data this month showed that China's box-office take was $2.7 billion in the first nine months of 2013, a 35 percent hike on the same three quarters last year, with domestic movies racking up a powerful display in the period.


However, foreign movies proved strongest in Chinese theaters last week as The Wolverine again contained the challenge of local favorite Donnie Yen's Shenzhen-set cop movie Special ID, which took $10 million during the week and has clocked up nearly 2 million admissions in its 10-day run.


Arnold Schwarzenegger opened during the week in The Last Stand, taking $4.75 million in the first four days. Now You See Me notched up $3.47 million, while the French comedy Fly Me to the Moon (Un plan parfait) took $2.45 million during its first three days, a strong performance for a non-Hollywood film.


Tsui Hark's Young Detective Dee: Rise of the Sea Dragon is now just shy of the $100 million box-office mark, taking $1.66 million to bring its cumulative total to $96.4 million.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/eHqHT_s5dlg/china-box-office-wolverine-wins-651412
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