/ Divers
SKU: HL.48183130
UPC: 888680875619. 9.0x12.0x0.07 inches.
Charles Chaynes: Interferences (Cello & Piano).
SKU: UM.54890
ISBN 9790224406849. A3 inches.
SKU: HL.1308968
Chauvet DJ produces a variety of cables for all of its fixtures, including DMX three- and five-pin connector cables in varying lengths as well as extension cables. All Chauvet DMX cables are made specifically for lighting and meet stringent standards of suitability and quality to provide safety, shielding and prevent transmission interference.
SKU: HL.50581953
SKU: HL.48187922
UPC: 888680836290. 7.5x10.5x0.167 inches. French.
For 12 instruments.
SKU: HL.367913
ISBN 9781705140482. UPC: 840126966817. 11.0x17.0x0.382 inches.
Prelude and a Basket of Fresh Bread (1993) for 2 Violins, 2 Violas, 2 Cellos by Michael Ellison. Dedicated to Sextour Interferences.
SKU: HL.50489616
SKU: BT.EMBZ8710
German.
SKU: BT.ALHE31823
French.
SKU: HL.50603681
UPC: 840126952995.
Waves of sound, water or light behave similarly. Waves move through a substance with a certain frequency or energy. Waves interfere with each other and new structures are shown. The combination of frequencies gives every sound a unique audible quality.
SKU: HL.14033723
ISBN 9788759891322. Danish.
Together Apart/Apart Together for Saxophone, Accordion and Double Bass was composed by Karsten Fundal in 2004. Written for and commissioned by Poing. Programme note: This piece is the 3rd in a row of pieces, which concentrates on a rhythmical relationship that continues to puzzle me. It is actually two relationships embedded. The 1st is a pattern that is very inspired by the composer Per Norgard, who in the beginning of the 90's got very preoccupied with the idea that you can have rhythms that never meet. This happens if you start a rhythm, like a quintuplet, on the beat and one, like a triplet, off beat. This can, with different rhythms, give very intricate interwoven patterns, that gives the illusion that they are not cyclic. In my case I use the two ratio five to seven, in the described way. This rythms have the strange property that if you take each 5th note of the seven and each 7 note of the five you get a ratio almost identical: 49:50. This is very intriguing, as you can use the possibility of letting them be equal or the possibility of letting them interfere. In the first case you get an interlocking rhythm which is smooth: an equal rhythmic pattern. In the second case you get a similar situation, but where one of them is one short after 50 of the other ones, which results in a disturbing almost equality, but not quite. Therefore the title: because when I use the unequal rhythm I put the two layers in a similar tone register, or a similar way of playing, and when I use the equal one I put them a part tone wise speaking. This is a very technical description, but it is very hard to put it in more wide terms, but you might compare it with driving in a train and looking at two fence rows behind each other: if the poles are placed exactly halfway between each other you will experience an illusion of a fast jump if there is enough distance between them, as a result of the perspective. If they are placed in a way that there are almost the same numbers of poles, like 49:50, you will experience a very complex pattern, which seems unpredictable. But of course when using it in music the whole thing is somewhat different, but even then it gives an idea of my preoccupation. What also intrigues me is that the relations are very hard to use in a musical way, and that is also quire a challenge.' Finally I have to say that I enjoyed very much writing for Poing, as these crazy guys are capable of doing almost anything you want in an nearly literal sense. - Karsten Fundal summer 2004.
SKU: BR.BV-445
ISBN 9783765104459. 8.5 x 11.5 inches. German / English.
This compendium of experimental playing techniques for brass instruments has been written for composers as well as for interpreters. Exploring new areas of technique always means crossing boundaries, since conventional solutions and recipes of standard instrumental methods are seldom satisfactory and can even be counterproductive. The usual judgement of 'right' and 'wrong' ways to produce a tone interferes with the productivity and creativity necessary to go off the beaten path to make new musical and playing experiences possible. During this process, the rapport between composer and interpreter is invaluable, as well as seeing each other's role in the process. (Malte Burba & Paul Hubner) Here, from the perspective of the interpreter, essential aspects of sound creation, noise combinations, tonal-space expansion, transformations in terms of mechanics and playing techniques, fragility and nonlinearity, etc., are competently analyzed in an exemplary way. It is as if at the moment of its genesis the interior sound space is enlarged, transported to the outside and explained. Ultimately, this fascinating book is proof that the exploration of the brass instruments with their endless possibilities of sound and noise modeling is far from being complete. (Adriana Holszky).