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    glenn gould

    Explore " glenn gould" with insightful episodes like "Auf dem Bach-Olymp angekommen: Víkingur Ólafsson", "Sprachkurs für Pianisten - Bachs Italienisches Konzert", "Als der Orient in Mode war - Mozarts Türkischer Marsch", "Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Türkischer Marsch (Sonate A-Dur KV 331)" and "Omniaudience: The Dead Can Dance, with Tashi Wada" from podcasts like ""hr2 Neue CDs", "WDR 3 Meisterstücke", "WDR 3 Meisterstücke", "WDR 3 Meisterstücke" and "Medium Rotation"" and more!

    Episodes (9)

    Auf dem Bach-Olymp angekommen: Víkingur Ólafsson

    Auf dem Bach-Olymp angekommen: Víkingur Ólafsson
    „Bach", sagt Vikingur Ólafsson, "ist der einzige Komponist, den ich den ganzen Tag lang spielen kann, ohne seiner jemals überdrüssig zu werden.“ Der barocke Meister begleitet den isländischen Star-Pianisten schon seit vielen Jahren, aber erst jetzt hat es Ólafsson gewagt, ein ikonisches Werk Bachs einzuspielen: die "Goldberg-Variationen". Die Konkurrenz auf diesem Terrain ist groß, die namhaftesten Pianist*innen haben sich fast alle mal daran versucht. Aber mit seiner Aufnahme ist Vikingur Ólafsson drauf und dran, seinerseits zur Referenz zu werden - noch vor Legenden wie Glenn Gould oder Murray Perahia. Eine reife Leistung!

    Omniaudience: The Dead Can Dance, with Tashi Wada

    Omniaudience: The Dead Can Dance, with Tashi Wada

    Tashi Wada joins Nikita Gale and Alexander Provan to speak about technologies that claim to capture the souls of performers. Wada presents a composition for a “high-resolution player piano” and asks how we discern between human expression and technical perfection, how we listen to virtuosos and machines. He speaks about the pandemic-era vogue for liveness at home, the displacement of pianists by piano rolls (or proprietary software), and the differences between people and marionettes. And, with Gale and Provan, he listens to Conlon Nancarrow, Glenn Gould, Perry Como, advertisements for hi-fi systems, the ghost of Art Tatum, and the stars of Hologram USA Theater.

    Tashi Wada is a Los Angeles-based composer and performer who founded and runs the label Saltern. His most recent album, Nue, was released by RVNG Intl. in 2018.

    The composition presented on this episode, Table of Visions, was commissioned by Triple Canopy as part of a residency at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, and written for the Steinway Spirio, a player piano designed to record and replay live performances. (Triple Canopy recently published an essay about the composition with recordings of two sketches, excerpts of which are played on this episode.) With Gale and Provan, Wada speaks about the history and future of “high-resolution” technologies, which aim to approximate (or supplant) liveness—and, increasingly, are aided by precise records of all that we say, do, and play. They discuss the age-old dream of perfect fidelity as manifest in musical automata, cutting-edge stereos, and holograms of Tupac and Michael Jackson. And they ask how the pursuit of performances that exceed human capabilities change us as listeners as well as laborers.

    In this episode, Gale, Provan, and Wada speak about Philip Auslander’s Liveness: Performance in a Mediatized Culture (Routledge, 1999); Heinrich von Kleist’s “On the Marionette Theatre,” 1810; and the work of Patrick Feaster, a specialist in the history, culture, and preservation of early sound media. In order of appearance, the music and other recordings played on this episode are: Steinway & Sons, “The Features of the Steinway & Sons SPIRIO | r,” 2019; Glenn Gould playing Bach’s “Contrapunctus IV,” “Glenn Gould on Bach,” Sunday Concert, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1962; Perry Como, “Goodbye, Sue,” (Victor, 1943); Conlon Nancarrow, “Study For Player Piano No. 13” Studies for Piano Player (Other Minds, 1977); “Study For Player Piano No. 42,” Conlon Nancarrow: Studies for Player Piano, Vol. V (Wergo, 2018); a film by RCA that introduces the company’s high-fidelity stereo system, 1957; “Variations on Glenn Gould,” Telescope, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 1969.

    Medium Rotation is produced by Alexander Provan with Andrew Leland, and edited by Provan with Matt Frassica. Tashi Wada composed the theme music. Matt Mehlan acted as audio engineer and contributed additional music.

    Medium Rotation is made possible through generous contributions from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and Nicholas Harteau. This season of Medium Rotation is part of Triple Canopy’s twenty-sixth issue, Two Ears and One Mouth, which receives support from the Stolbun Collection, the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation, Agnes Gund, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

    The Art & Science of Resilience in the Wake of Trauma with Laurence Gonzales

    The Art & Science of Resilience in the Wake of Trauma with Laurence Gonzales

    Each of us at some point in our lives will face traumatizing hardship — abuse or injury, lack or loss. And all of us must weather the planetwide effects of this pandemic, economic instability, systemic inequality, and social unrest…and find a way to live on with their consequences. Trauma isn’t evenly distributed. But it IS ubiquitous, and learning how to get on with our lives is one of our main tasks as human beings. 

    From this hardship grows the best of us: our wisdom, compassion, creativity, and service. By understanding the psychology and neuroscience of the body-mind’s response to trauma, we gain potent insight into how to “live with living without” — how to be both incomplete and whole. 

    Welcome to COMPLEXITY, the official podcast of the Santa Fe Institute. I’m your host, Michael Garfield, and each week we’ll bring you with us for far-ranging conversations with our worldwide network of rigorous researchers developing new frameworks to explain the deepest mysteries of the universe.

    This week’s guest is best-selling author and journalist Laurence Gonzales, a four-time SFI Miller Scholar whose writing has won widespread recognition, including the Montaigne Medal, two National Magazine Awards, two Eric Hoffer Awards, and the Distinguished Service Award from the Society of Professional Journalists. In this episode we talk about his book, Surviving Survival: The Art and Science of Resilience — and the lessons therein for those living in the wake of trauma.

    If you value our research and communication efforts, please consider making a recurring monthly donation at santafe.edu/podcastgive, or joining our Applied Complexity Network at santafe.edu/action. Also, please consider rating and reviewing us at Apple Podcasts. Thank you for listening!

    For more, visit Laurence’s Website & Bibliography.

    Visit our website for more information or to support our science and communication efforts.

    Join our Facebook discussion group to meet like minds and talk about each episode.

    Podcast Theme Music by Mitch Mignano.

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    Min tone i livet: Kasper Holten - Johann Sebastian Bach, Goldbergvariationerne (Aria)

    Min tone i livet: Kasper Holten - Johann Sebastian Bach, Goldbergvariationerne (Aria)
    "Jeg er ikke et troende menneske, men når jeg hører det her, er det lidt som om, at kaos falder på plads og bliver til en kosmisk ro." Teaterchefen og sceneinstruktøren Kasper Holten er som menneske fyldt med rastløshed og energi. Men han finder ro, når han lytter til Glenn Goulds indspilning af arien fra Bachs Goldbergvariationer. Den enkle melodi giver en oplevelse af struktur og mening - og er måske det tætteste, Kasper kommer på det religiøse. Varighed: 7:27
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