this week i

published on the national sample survey of registered nurses and the national agricultural workers survey.  also learned hippos nocturnal to stay cool

drank perhaps never left the province coffee beans, perhaps my first cup since urrao.  two views of mount meru, plus a sneak behind billboard leak


 

 

sat down to my supper, 'twas a bottle of red whiskey.  i said my prayers and went to bed, that's the last they saw of me.  want some?  it's music


read..

(1) rotating locomotion in living systems

given the ubiquity of wheels in human technology, and the existence of biological analogues of many other technologies (such as wings and lenses), the lack of wheels in nature has seemed, to many scientists, to demand explanation

wheels have several drawbacks relative to other means of propulsion (such as walking, running, or slithering)

dung beetles form spherical balls of animal excrement, which they roll with their bodies, generally by walking backwards and pushing the ball with their rear legs.  phylogenic analysis indicates that this rolling behavior evolved independently several times.  the behavior of these beetles was noted in ancient egyptian culture, which imparted sacred significance to their activities.  although it is the dung ball that rolls rather than the beetle itself, the beetles face many of the same mechanical difficulties that rolling organisms contend with

among animals, there exists a single known example of an apparently freely rotating structure, though it is used for digestion rather than propulsion: the crystalline style of certain bivalves and gastropods

the only known example of a biological "wheel" or "propeller" - a system capable of providing continuous propulsive torque about a fixed body - is the flagellum, a corkscrew-like tail used by single-celled prokaryotes for propulsion.  the bacterial flagellum is the best known example.  about half of all known bacteria have at least one flagellum; thus, given the ubiquity of bacteria, rotation may be in fact the most common form of locomotion used by living systems - though its use is restricted to the microscopic environment

wheeled locomotion..will not evolve if its incomplete form does not serve to propagate the organism's genes

richard dawkins describes the matter: "the wheel may be one of those cases where the engineering solution can be seen in plain view, yet be unattainable in evolution because it lies [on] the other side of a deep valley, cutting unbridgeably across the massive of mount improbable..wheels might sit on a highly favorable "peak", but the valley around that peak may be too deep or wide for the gene pool to migrate across by genetic drift or natural selection

recruitment of previously evolved structures to serve new functions is called exaptation

the central question can be reversed: not "why does nature not produce wheels?", but rather, "why do human vehicles not make more use of limbs?"  the use of wheels rather than limbs in most engineered vehicles can likely be attributed to the complexity of design required to construct and control limbs (see robot locomotion), rather than a consistent functional advantage

when the empire collapsed and its roads fell into disrepair, wheels fell out of favor..stephen jay gould explains this curiosity of history, asserting that, in the absence of maintained roads, camels required less manpower and water than a wheeled cart pulled by oxen

the hoop snake, a creature of legend in the united states and australia, is said to grasp its tail in its mouth and roll like a wheel towards its prey

sonic the hedgehog

arthritic axles




(2) kizhi pogost

in harmony with the surrounding landscape

37m high nail-less church using nothing but an axe

an onion dome covered with shingles





(3) the russo-japanese war

rival imperial ambitions

the imperial japanese navy opened hostilities in a surprise attack..at port arthur

in 1901, tsar nicholas ii told prince henry of prussia, "i do not want to seize korea but under no circumstances can i allow japan to become firmly established there.  that will be a
casus belli"

the 1890s and 1900s marked the height of the "yellow peril" propaganda by the german government, and the german emperor wilhelm ii (r. 1888-1918) often wrote letters to his cousin emperor nicholas ii of russia, praising him as the "saviour of the white race" and urging russia forward in asia

russian logistics were hampered by the fact that the only connection to european russia was the trans-siberian railway, which remained incomplete as at lake baikal the railway was not connected.  a single train would take between 15 and 40 days to traverse the railway, with 40 days being the more common figure.  a single battalion would take a month to transport from moscow to shenyang.  after the line's eventual completion, 20 trains ran daily and by the conclusion of the war some 410,000 soldiers, 93,000 horses and 1,000 guns had been carried down it

the city of liaoyang had the misfortune to be sacked three times within three days: first by the russians, then by the chinese police, and finally by the japanese

after a stopover of several weeks at the minor port of nossi-be..the russian baltic fleet proceeded to cam ranh bay in french indochina passing on its way through the singaporean strait between 7 and 10 april 1905.  the logistics of such an undertaking in the age of coal power was astounding.  the squadron required approximately 500,000 tons of coal to complete the journey, yet by international law, it was not allowed to coal at neutral ports, forcing the russian authorities to acquire a large fleet of colliers to supply the fleet at sea

in compliance with the rules of war, the two trailing hospital ships had continued to burn their lights, which were spotted by the japanese armed merchant cruiser shinano maru..the japanese were able to position their fleet to "cross the t" of the russian fleet

following the victory of the battle of tsushima, japan's erstwhile british ally presented a lock of admiral nelson's hair to the imperial japanese navy, judging its performance then as on a par with britain's victory at trafalgar


(4) reality tv hooks its audiences with both its outrageous antics and its invitation for viewers to dissect what is real and what is not

the real world co-director alan cohn followed cast members home from a blind date and told them, "he wasn't going to leave until they kissed"

the clip shows cops and america's funniest home videos (both premiered in 1989) were also "the first draft of internet culture"

it's in our smartphones, which normalize the concept of an ever-present camera, always ready to capture the material of "real life" and transmogrify it into entertainment

the alternatively chilling and thrilling fact that reality-televisual modes of acting and interacting have pervaded contemporary life

 

(5) the procurator of judea by anatole france

why, on resigning your governorship in judaea, did you withdraw to a voluntary exile on your sicilian estates?

a tribal deity, named moses

does it matter in the least what estimate men may form of us hereafter?

my house stands on the seashore, at the extreme end of the town in the direction of misenum.  you will easily recognize it by the porch, which bears a painting representing orpheus surrounded by tigers and lions, whom he is charming with the strains from his lyre

refuse an aqueduct!  what madness!

they worship jupiter, yet they abstain from naming him or erecting a statue of him

they judge worthy of the extreme penalty all those who on divine subjects profess opinions opposed to their law.  and as, since the genius of rome has towered over them, capital sentences pronounced by their own tribunals can only be carried out with the sanction of the proconsul or the procurator, they harry the roman magistrate at any hour to procure his signature to their baleful decrees, they besiege the pretorium with their cries of 'death!'  a hundred times, at least, have i known them, mustered, rich and poor together, all united under their priests, make a furious onslaught on my ivory chair, seizing me by the skirts of my robe, and by the thongs of my sandals, and all to demand of me - nay, to exact from me - the death sentence on some unfortunate whose guilt i failed to perceive, and as to whom i could only pronounce that he was as mad as his accusers.  a hundred times, do i say!  not a hundred, but every day and all day.  yet it was my duty to execute their law as if it were ours, since i was appointed by rome not for the destruction, but for the upholding of their customs

a young galilean thaumaturgist..i cannot call him to mind

 

(6) dead internet theory

in 2024, google reported that its search results were being inundated with websites that "feel like they were created for search engines instead of people"

ai-slime

 

(7) an interview with robert caro and kurt vonnegut

stern: who was his medici, who was his patron?
caro: al smith..when smith was old, moses never let an afternoon go by without being in touch with him
vonnegut: during the depression they called the empire state building al smith's last erection
 
if you went out to johnson city and you said lyndon's best boy-hood friend was truman fawcett, well, truman fawcett still lived there, in the same house.  and lyndon's first girlfriend was kitty clyde leonard, now she was kitty clyde ross, but she still lived in johnson city
 
i was interviewing lyndon's brother, sam houston johnson
 
i was wondering if devoting so much of your life to other people's lives has done anything to your mind?
 
vonnegut: where'd you go to college?
caro: princeton.
vonnegut: i've heard of it
 
i was a prisoner of war with the brits and the french and listened to all their plans for after the war, wanting justice and distribution of power
 
you can lose a reader in the blink of an eye
 
in slaughterhouse five i wanted a person who dies of carbon monoxide poisoning to be a beautiful blue..well, that was a mistake and i got a letter from a doctor who said a person who is a victim of carbon monoxide poisoning is rosey..i got letter after letter about that for about two or three years
 
dostoevsky, gogol, tolstoy, wrote for a very small audience in a barbarous nation where almost nobody could read.  and they were content with a small audience of peers
 
the hostage crisis was going on in iran and i said, "jimmy, what would george washington have done about this?"  he thought a minute, and he said, "he wouldn't have heard about it yet"
 
robert mcnamara, if he wasn't insane, who the hell was?
 
it seems to me that everybody, no matter what his or her field is, can be truly intelligent for about four hours a day



(8) notes on guinea by matt lakeman

a little smaller than michigan, a little larger than the united kingdom

there are no guinea pigs in the guinea region; they're native to south america..wikipedia also doesn't know why "guinea pigs" are called "pigs," so they are clearly just a mysterious animal in general

the only country on earth without any telephone lines

in the garage system, vehicles don't leave at a set time; they leave whenever they get enough customers

i am american, and therefore rich, and thus the driver believed that i should have purchased most of the vehicle's seats from the start so that we could have left earlier, so we wouldn't have hit this traffic.  i tried to laugh it off but the driver really did look pissed

the driver was very rude "like all french people"

soldiers, many from the presidential guard, burst into the stadium and fired at close range on the thousands of people who had gathered there in a carnival-like atmosphere, dancing and praying.  once the troops ran out of ammunition, they attacked the unarmed civilians with daggers, bayonets, bludgeons and even catapaults..soldiers shoved a gun inside one victim of gang rape and pulled the trigger

alpha conde (cool name)

50% of china's annual bauxite requirements, a huge figure for the largest industrial power on earth

doumbouya is only 43, making him the second youngest head-of-state in africa behind fellow military coup leader, mali's colonel assimi goita (age 42)

as almost certainly the most well-trained and experienced military individual in all of guinea, conde invited doumbouya back to guinea in 2018 after his long military absence to form the special forces group (sfg), a sort of praetorian guard for the presidency.  in retrospect, this was not a great decision

"...although numerous u.s.-trained officers have seized power in their countries - most notably, gen. abdel fattah el-sisi of egypt - this is believed to be the first time one has done so in the middle of an american military course"

if this thing ever actually gets going, guinea could become the largest per capita iron producing country on earth

omnipresent giant photos of a scowling dictator

more condemnations of my character and failed americanness

what if a tourist brought a torn visa to the american border?

the driver's anger was quickly muted as he saw me being interrogated by two scary military guys.  the driver said something, and then the head guard held up my torn visa and said something like, "look what this american did."  the driver's face tightened up and anger came to his eyes as if he had just witnessed me defecating on a guinean flag

why do you tear everything?

conakry has a cool statue of an elephant kicking a soccer ball 

 

(9) notes on mauritania by matt lakeman

virtually every old car is a de facto taxi

desert pro-tip - wear a turban.  most of the men in mauritania wear them for a reason.  i guess i always thought they were just a religious thing, but turbans in the desert are amazing.  they somehow cool you down while also keeping the sun off your skin and hair, and you can optionally cover your face to keep out dust and sand.  you're only one quick trip to the nouakchott central market and a youtube tutorial away from wearing your very own turban

the practice of force-feeding women to make them obese to get a husband..'leblouh' or 'gavage,' a french term that refers to 'the process of fattening up geese to produce foie gras..only 7% of urban women undergo the fattening process, but 75% of rural women do..the current mauritanian female obesity rate at almost 27%, and overweight rate at about another 27%, which isn't terribly high by global standards, but is very high by regional standards in a part of the world not known for its food abundance.  ex. - senegal is at 6%/16% and burkina faso is at 6%/7.2%..then again..obesity estimates are all over the place.  plus, i am inherently skeptical of big statistical estimates about very poor countries with terrible infrastructure and internal records.  so i have no idea

eventually i figured out they were advising me not to try to bribe the soldier

covered in tens of flies..do mauritanians have a weak sense of touch?  have they mastered stoicism?

riding the iron ore train is the main hardcore tourist thing to do in mauritania..i recommend doing it once, and then never again

of course you won't actually sleep, but closing your eyes makes the night go faster

nouakchott, nouadibou, zouerat, rosso, terjit, fderik, choam, aleg, bon lanuar, iwik, tintane, rachid... does mauritania have the best sci-fi city names of any country in the world?

 

(10) notes on tajikistan by matt lakeman

kyrgyzstan: shaped like a squid

the most-remittance based economy on earth

like uzbekistan and kyrgyzstan, tajikistan was largely relegated to cotton production by the ussr despite cotton being extremely water-intensive and the region having very little water [thus leading to the death of the aral sea].  cotton is still a fairly significant portion of the tajik economy, but its proportional value has been waning, and in 2023, the cotton industry was a net-loss for the country

it is 165 meters high, which i know not through wikipedia, but because four separate tajiks quoted the figure to me without prompting..sadly, the dushanbe flagpole lost its status as the world's tallest in 2014, only three years after its construction, to the jeddah flagpole in saudi arabia, which i have already seen without knowing its illustrious status in the world of flagpole standings

the tajikistan national museum..just mea and the 50 babushkas stationed throughout the museum making sure i didn't steal any pottery shards

i, appearing russian to locals, would be considered a foreigner on sight

a lot of tajik men have a hair style that i can only describe as "beetles"

supposedly, the tajik government has arrested hundreds of thousands of men for beard violations and forcefully shaved at least 13,000 men in 2016 in a single reason.  beard permits are available for actors and other men who have good secular reasons for needing hair on their faces

i asked a taxi driver with surprisingly good english, "is the president good"?  his verbatim response: "of course, how else could he rule for 32 years?"

say what you want about the ussr, but it apparently allowed individuals to rise from obscurity to great power

an obviously rigged vote which he nevertheless only won with 58%

the border has been relatively quiet but completely shut down for travel for native tajiks or kyrgyz.  only tourists can get through

i met a few non-russian tourists, but every single one of them was an experienced traveller..if i go back to tajikistan ten years from now, i doubt the traveller cohort will be the same

dushanbe was previously known as "stalinbad" from 1929 to 1960

"dushanbe," derives from the persian word for "monday," which was the traditional market day for this settlement on the silk road

buzkashi..tajikistan's unique form of the game largely does away with teams in favor of a free-for-all individual play

 

8/29

this week i

safaried with five italians, my surname four syllables. in mambo swahiliano, polepole dancing is slow dancing. ngorogoro masai cowbell onomatopoeia
















 

read..

(1) why read the classics? by italo calvino

reading in youth can be rather unfruitful, owing to impatience, distraction, inexperience with the product's "instructions for use," and inexperience in life itself.  books read then can be (possibly at one and the same time) formative, in the sense that they give a form to future experiences, providing models, terms of comparison, schemes for classification, scales of value, exemplars of beauty - all things that continue to operate even if the book read in one's youth is almost or totally forgotten.  if we reread the book at a mature age we are likely to rediscover these constants, which by this time are part of our inner mechanisms, but whose origins we have long forgotten.  a literary work can succeed in making us forget it as such, but leaves its seed in us

when reading kafka, i cannot avoid approving or rejecting the legitimacy of the adjective "kafkaesque," which one is likely to hear every quarter of an hour, applied indiscriminately


(2) one writes fables in periods of oppression.  when a man cannot give clear form to his thinking, he expresses it in fables

i wish every book i write were the first 

 

read italian folktales by italo calvino. dario asked if actor after rendition of lose your temper, and you lose your bet. simone shared same bday secret

day had dawned, and the bridegroom turned into a tortoise and crawled off to begin his journey around the world

the girl spent her time trying on gowns and jewels, eating soup and lasagna, and got to the last day with all the hemp still waiting to be spun.  she was weeping over it when, lo and behold, something dropped down the chimney, and into the room rolled a bundle of rags.  it came to rest on its feet, and there stood an old woman

so the king issued a proclamation for all marriageable girls to come to the garden, under pain of death, to try to pick the pomegranates

stella diana gave him a quick kiss, and he gave her the fish for the sewing mistress's supper

a crab so enormous that one pair of eyes was not enough to take it all in

the young man, who happened to be a prince

"the goose goes where i go.  it's too fine a goose to stay in a barn

they picked up some of the bones and a skull and went back upstairs into church, where they stood the bones in a straight line on the floor.  "these are our ninepins."  they picked up the skull.  "this is our ball."  and they began bowling

the wedding was celebrated immediately.  giricoccola's sisters learned of this from the astrologer and died of rage right then and there

give me a paper bag full of live hornets that have fasted for seven or eight days

she felt herself being taken by the hand, but saw no one

the king sank into a black armchair he reserved for his bad days

and i do believe everyone is there to this day and still dancing

the next morning pirolo rose early, shined the archpriest's shoes, put on a white shirt, washed his face, and went to wake up his employer.  they left the house together, but as soon as they got out on the road it began to rain and the archpriest said, "go back and get my wooden shoes.  i don't want to muddy my nice shoes i say mass in.  i'll wait for you under this tree with the umbrella."
pirolo ran home and said to the servants, "quick, where are you?  the archpriest said for me to give you both a kiss!"
"kiss
us?"  have you lost your mind?  we can just hear the archpriest saying such a thing!"
"upon my word, he said to kiss you both!  if you don't believe it, i'll let him tell you himself!"  he called out the window to the priest waiting outside, "one, father, or two?"
"why, both of them, of course!" cried the archpriest.  "both of them!"
"you see?" said pirolo, who gave them each a kiss

the knight knelt at her feet and said, "here is the monster.  i was under a spell and obliged to remain a monster until a beautiful maiden promised to marry me as i was"

the lad pulled out the harmonica and began to play.  the prisoners started dancing around him, with their ankle-chains clanking loudly.  they broke into minuets, gavottes, and waltzes, and couldn't stop.  the jailer rushed in, and he too started dancing, with all his keys jingling at his side

she prepared a poisonous pastry for him and said, "we call this pizza"

the two women embraced and made a big to-do over each other, telling their stories in turn.  "but how are we going to get away from here?" asked the queen. "have you no opium?"

the sorcerer awakened, but he was already dead, with his head cut off by a sweep of the saber and sent flying to the bottom of the well

one morning campriano slipped a few gold pieces he had saved into his mule's rear end.."why campriano, your mule makes droppings of money!..you must sell him to us!"

the murderer started piercing the cotton with his sword and, before long, wounded the girl hiding there.  but as he drew his sword out, the cotton wiped the blood off, and the sword came out clean

the giant tiptoed up to him and dealt him a blow to the head.  but it so happened that every night jack put a pumpkin on his pillow and slept with his head at the foot of the bed.  as soon as the giant smashed the pumpkin, he heard jack say, "little do i care if you've beaten my head.  but you're going to pay for disturbing my sleep!"

and swish!  her head flew off before she could say a single "amen"

every last warrior lay lifeless on the ground beside his splintered lance and dead horse

in portugal, so as not to be recognized, the youth decided to hide his golden hair and therefore bought an ox bladder from a butcher.  he put it on his head, and thus looked as if he had the mange.  he tethered horseradish in a meadow, and nobody could steal him, for during his stay in the devil's stables, the horse had learned to eat humans

(abruzzo)

the jordan river did not lower his waters, and the ogress was swept away in the current.  from the bank the little girl made faces at her

every day he went to the woods to gather firewood, and he would sell the bundle to buy bread and thus keep body and soul together

"puffarello," he replied.  "i can imitate all the winds.  fooooooooooo!  that's the north wind.  pooooooooooo!  that's the southeast wind.  fffffffffff!  that's the east wind."  and he went on imitating winds, blowing with all his might.  "if you order a hurricane, i can even produce a hurricane."  he blew, and trees began crashing to the ground and rocks flying through the air with all the fury of the gods

stabbed him all over, until he looked like a strainer

the sirens' choir

the earth yawned beneath the princess, and she disappeared into the flames

the next day he went shopping and spent the coin, but he always found it in his pocket and lived happily ever afterward

goose pimples

"just where do you expect to find figs this time of year?"

"if this face does not please you, none ever will"

the chief lazybones

peppi then sprinkled a little salt over everybody's food.  "see how it tastes now, majesty"

the boat was soon loaded with cats and went meowing across the sea

"you'll have to see that the cocks don't crow, the clock doesn't strike,  nor the bells ring.  cover the window with a dark cloth with the moon and stars embroidered on it, so that you can't see when it's daytime.  once the sun is high in the sky, pull away the cloth, and the fairies will turn into lizards and green reptiles and flee."
the next morning, the king had his crier announce this order: silence all bells and clocks, and butcher all your cocks!

 the king had the maiden brought to the palace, boiled the marquise and her daughter in oil, and lived happily from then on with his little queen

as soon as st. anthony's pig was inside hell, he began running around rooting everywhere, throwing the whole place into an uproar.  the devils scampered behind him picking up firebrands, raking up pieces of cork, standing up the tridents he knocked over, putting pitchforks and torture tools back in their places


8/22

this week i

circumnavigated libya (i assume).  nyerere (airport road) hindu crematorium, house porters head-carried 23kg suitcases four winding flights (of stairs)

i am amazed there are zero nonstops btw mombasa and arusha, are you amazed?
 take the bus you monster
what have i become
a monster, i was clear on that






stone town playground guard
sleeps sound on trampoline but
what bounds in his dream



could have just as easily called it our anxious system.  meteor formed chesapeake.  discovered 10 years earlier, tiffany's would've named it tanganite

attended #27, midnight van by carol coach odongo my fave.  how to pitch documentary idea: sound is 50% of your film // a teaser is not a trailer


 

attended masterclass by victoria nillson on stanislavsky's system & the actors studio method.  we discussed the importance of embodying emotions with a reading of "the audition" scene (starring chekov at the mic) in neil simon's the good doctor.  maybe james just pictured him wearing maga hat

sincerity took center stage

false, pretending laughter is offensive

public solitude

for three pages, she has the urn in front of her, wailing, moaning

the ability to react to imaginary stimuli

silence is better than applause 

 

attended a claymation workshop by sarah brown & greg smith.  my hand unsmushing red frosty, an icicle on a hot day is the perfect murder weapon

 classic animation speed is 12 fps, half of film speed

i literally glue gun the camera stand to the floor

wear black, wash your hands

last time i did this, it was a baobab

we always take two pictures of each shot, sometimes we have flies

with characters, we create a skeleton with wire

put styrofoam balls in the head so it's not so heavy

can we have a few more shots that are, like, awkward silence?

 

walked atop saltwater forest (leaves also salty) tho below aerial roots with nassor.  at the dhow regatta, i had a nice view but appear to be sexting


 



concluded with zanzibari snorkel safari.  who do i petition for a seahorse emoji?  medieval marine punishment, + (land-based) quartering (drawn out):

 

 🐴🐴🐴
🐴🐙🐴
🐴🐴🐴


🐌  🐌
🤸
🐌  🐌

 

what fresh fruit are in season?
octopus
you can't eat anything smarter than you



read notes on a last-minute safari by david sedaris

an african safari, the sort where you carry a camera rather than a gun

"what is it you would like to see?" .. "a panda"

couples with camera lenses the size of the hubble telescope

"the most killingest" - was the hippo .. "all they want is to get into our swimming pool..and if that happens, we will never get them out"

i'd told him from the get-go that photography was not my thing.."not even if we come upon a rhino?".."not even if we see one fighting a mother grizzly"

if i were to manufacture a perfume, it would smell the way that grass being ripped from the ground by elephants sounds

the income gap between the people who stayed at the resort and the people who actually lived on the island was so wide you couldn't really see anything else

 

8/15

this week i

published on insurance enrollment decisions of the elderly & disabled, the design of those private plans while working in a city mostly lovely


 



meh'd at goat cheese yogurt.  i wrote a poem (cuz with pizza and strychnine you won't need a feline) titled sprung trap rct and it's as bad as it's true

mouse corpses agree
mozzarella tastes better
than swiss, brie, and cheddar
they won't be caught dead near
paneer, blue, or feta



cancelled out.  what was beyond the fourth wall of da vinci's last supper?  ideally dnc introduces first first gentlemen with his song.  birthplaceigo



read musical instruments: an illustrated history from antiquity to the present by mary remnant

the angels, devils, animals and grotesques must help us to re-create the music of their own time

the romanesque harp was..frequently made of willow, and its strings were normally of gut, although metal and twisted hair were also sometimes used.  however, franciscan bartholomaeus anglicus, in his de proprietatibus rerum of c. 1250, warned against mixing the gut of sheep and wolves

pitches were relative to each other and not necessarily at a fixed pitch, as he recommends tuning the top string as high as possible without breaking it

in pesful felagheship

leonardo took with him a lyre [lira] that he had made himself

 

 

other alterations involved the neck and fingerboard.  as early as 1715, vivaldi's 'fingers almost touched the bridge, so there was hardly any room for the bow' .. the removal of the wedge enabled the performer to climb more easily into the higher positions than before.  these changes were accomplished just in time for the appearance on the scene of the supreme italian virtuoso nicolo paganini (1782-1840).  since that time no great structural changes have taken place in the violin itself, but the addition of the chin rest by louis spohr in c. 1820 gave the performer a better grip on the instrument, thereby allowing more freedom of movement to the left arm

the bow or fydylstyk of the middle ages



since 1964 a new violin family has been developed by mrs carleen hutchins and others of the catgut acoustical society of america


 

bach's italian concerto, which could not be played effectively on a contemporary single-manual harpsichord because it requires one hand to be playing forte while the other is piano

pizzicato

in the house of fame chaucer said that 'soun ys nocht but eyr ybroken' - sound is nothing but broken air

sackbuts (trombones)

adolphe sax of brussels

a free reed is a small tongue of metal, of which one end is attached to a frame while the other vibrates freely through pressure or suction of air


 

among the oldest idiophones in art msuic are the round cymbals, of which several bronze pairs survive from antiquity..they have, since 1623, been made predominantly by the armenian family zildjian, at first in constantinople and now in america

berlioz said of the cymbals:
combined with the high tones of the piccolo and with the strokes of the kettledrum, it is particularly suited to scenes of unbridled wildness or to the extreme frenzy of a bacchanalian orgy
 


chimebells (cymbala)

related to the glockenspiel is the xylophone, which is of primitive origins and can still be found as a folk instrument in many parts of the world.  it consists of tuned bars of wood (arranged nowadays like a keyboard) which are hit with sticks or hammers, and has been known in europe at least since the sixteenth century when hans holbein the younger showed it being played by a skeleton in his series of woodcuts the dance of death (1523)

an instrument comes of age when a concerto is written for it

in 1721, bach used instruments which were, or were fast becoming, regular members of the orchestra

the traverse flute..finally took precedence in the middle of the eighteenth century..because of its greatly suitability in the new 'expressive' music where the frequent crescendi and diminuendi would have wrought havoc with the intonation of a recorder

timpani, the chief percussion instruments of the baroque period, were joined for special effects by the triangle, cymbals and the bass drum, which had recently been popularized by the turkish janissary bands, and also by the tambourine

bassoons and hautbois

weber was also responsible for the introduction of the third kettledrum

 

 

7 trombones (3 offstage)

an advertisement for the apollo piano player - 'you supply the expression and soul.  we supply the technique'

 



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