Radiolab on Music

November 29, 2009 at 10:10 pm (Music, Uncategorized) (, , , , , , , )

I’m not a huge podcast person, but I love Radiolab. They have two really good full episodes on music.  The first one is focused on perfect pitch, with some side notes on the infamous Rite of Spring riot and a computer program that imitates the composition style of great composers.  As for the Rite of Spring thing- I always thought if I could go back in history I would want to see like Jesus or something, but I mean, to be a fly on the wall that day in Paris.  Man.  And I dunno about everyone else, but I totally don’t find Rite of Spring offensively dissonant.  I like the loud chord.  But of course this is 100 years later and we’ve lived through 100 years of largely awful (but some sublime and some of my favorite) dissonant music.

Listen to it here

So, they’re talking about perfect pitch in tone languages, like Chinese.  Starting with talking about how people who speak tone languages, who don’t supposedly have perfect pitch, will pronounce their words on exactly the same pitch.  And how it was this huge fascinating discovery.  OK, for me this is not surprising at all.  I would almost have been more surprised if the opposite were true.

For me, I “don’t” “have” “perfect” “pitch.”  If you ask me to sing a certain note, there is probably a 70% chance I’ll sing the right one if I have a chance to think about it.  I don’t think I could necessarily identify a pitch I heard.  But I’m one of those people who will always start singing a piece I know already on the right pitch, with no outside hint.  In context, it’s just in my ear.  And I don’t think it’s necessarily muscle memory, I have tested myself to see if I could mentally hear the correct pitch before singing it and it’s never been a problem (I have to really concentrate though).  Oh, and sight-reading a piece I don’t know?  If we transpose, like in a choral, a capella situation?  I don’t have across-the-board problems, but sometimes when there’s a large interval, and I don’t have time to calculate it, I will end up singing the note on the page instead of the transposed note.  Is that perfect pitch?  Well, it’s a kind of half-assed, sorta-kinda, subconscious version of perfect pitch.  I can’t count myself among the illuminati that have pitch, but it seems clear that if I had really nurtured my musical abilities from a young age I would have pitch (maybe not that ridiculous insane absolute pitch where you can tell what pitch a dripping faucet is making, but at least to know the notes without reference).

I guess my point, besides bragging about my musical skills and trying to make me feel better about not having perfect pitch, is that it’s a lot more common for someone, like me, to have this sort of pitch memory, without truly having perfect pitch.

The second show is more about how music gets stuck in your head.  I’ve always been interested in this, and even though I’ve read about it and stuff I still don’t really get it.  If somebody can explain it to me I’d love to hear it.  Either a brain chemistry explanation or a justification for why we need imaginary music would suffice.

Listen to it here.

They focus on this really really interesting phenomenon of people who literally HEAR the music in their heads- like they can’t tell the difference between it and music in real life.  Fascinating.  I really want to read this guy’s book.

And again, since it’s all about me, here’s my personal version of the story: I always have a song stuck in my head.  In fact, it wasn’t til high school that I found out that not everyone does.  I just assumed everyone, all the time, had mental music playing, like me.  It hasn’t really come up since my shocking discovery that it wasn’t a universal trait.   At that time, I took a poll of all my friends and not a single other person said they consistently had their brain radio on, EXCEPT my high school choir director.  Although this story is on a different aspect of the song-stuck-in-head routine than mine, it made me start wondering about it again.  How many people have music in their brains without cease?  Is it more prevailant among musicians?  Crazy people?

The reason I found out in the first place that it was uncommon was that I went through a phase when I used “what song is stuck in your head” as a conversation starter, just something to bullshit about with my friends, like other people might say “What are you thinking about?”  Besides noticing that sometimes people said “Nothing,” I also knew one girl who always had the same song in her head.  For about a month, every time I asked, it was always “If you want to destroy my sweater.”  This is also fascinating.  Only one song for months?  Wouldn’t you want to kill yourself?  Of course, maybe some people would say the same thing about my situation.

Here’s what I get stuck in my head, from most to least:

1. The last music I heard.

2. Music I am working on, ESPECIALLY hard stuff.  I can tell this is my brain subconsciously working the kinks out, decoding the tricky parts and rehearsing them.  I love this.  I love that the brain works this way AND I can see it working.  I mean you’re always told your subconscious is at work learning things, but in this case, when I catch myself at it, I can actually feel the process.  The hardest lines, the trickiest series of intervals, those will loop over and over.  And it really works.

3. Sometimes a word or thought will trigger a song- kind of like the gentleman in the podcast realizing that the music he was hearing was always aymbolic of what was going on in his life at that time.  Except much more literal.  A word or phrase that appears in a song will trigger it and it will run until something else takes its place.  You know, like when you’re walking down Broadway and you realize you have the song “On Broadway” in your head.  “Champs-Elysees” is even worse!!  And whatever you do, don’t walk by the Molly Malone statue in Dublin unless you really, REALLY like the song “Cockles ‘n’ Mussels!”  This is where it can be fun playing detective- “What made me think of this song??”

4. The only times I don’t hear music in my head are when there is music playing in reality (and there are exceptions, like right now), and brief moments if I am like meditating or having a Zen moment where my mind is empty.  That’s not really my thing so doesn’t happen all that much.

So right now I’ve had the Nymphs trio from the beginning of Act 2 (aka The Opera) of Ariadne in my head.  Why?  Because even though I’ve kinda known how it goes for years (I sang Zerbinetta in that scene in college, even though it was only one line for me), yesterday for the first time I tried to sing it.  See, turns out we only have one Naiade in our double-cast, no-understudy production, and I started thinking if she gets sick or something happens, somebody is gonna have to step in and sing her part, and that somebody would of course be me, as it’s also a high, coloratura role, and I learn and memorize music really really fast, and, well, basically it’s always me.  So I decided to give it a look, it was a lot harder than I expected, I spent like a full hour on it even though I’d planned to just read through it (oops, I actually had to work on it, silly me underestimating Strauss), and ever since then it’s been in my head.  Pretty much nonstop.  I don’t mind, it’s a wonderful piece of music!!!

Well this was a lot more than I expected to write about somebody else’s podcast.  Oh yeah, and the Afghanistan story at the end got me choked up a little.  Really worth a listen!

Anyways, I’m interested in hearing other people’s experiences, both in degrees of perfect pitch and songs in your head.

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Update auf Naxos

November 27, 2009 at 5:36 am (Uncategorized)

Hi!  Hard to believe how fast our opening of Ariadne auf Naxos is approaching. The first show is a week from tonight (Friday), although I’m not singing that one- I’m singing the matinee on Sunday, December 6, and the Friday night show on December 11.  You’re coming, right??

Actually it’s a pretty good show to go to.  It’s an amazing opera- plot’s a little weird but not incomprehensible.  Gorgeous music.  Not too many boring parts.  And we’re doing it in English (a translation that doesn’t suck) so you can understand it.

So here’s what’s up with it lately!

I was really worried about the orchestra.  Every time I would ask someone how they were they just said diplomatically, “You’ll see!”  I got the impression that they were going to be awful (I’ve suffered through some pretty bad orchestras in my day), but they were pretty good!  Actually the orchestra is way bigger than I expected.  We have almost the full orchestra!!  I mean what Strauss wrote for Ariadne was not as big as a lot of his other stuff, but still.  I was expecting maybe a dozen people, but we have more like 30-odd.  Wow!  It means a lot more to do this opera with approximately the full orchestra.  See, whatever research and speculation you do, it’s hard to tell what roles you can REALLY SING until you’re up there with the orchestra.  I don’t have a huge voice (that’s why I can sing so high and fast, that’s how it works), so I sometimes get a complex about it and worry that I’ll never get A-house gigs because I’m not loud enough.  But I proved in this case that I could easily handle this orchestra.  Which is important, because basically Zerbinetta is THE role that is MADE for me, and if I can’t think that in a professional setting I can’t sing anything.  So the verdict is that I can sing it.  So, career moves forward. :)

The staging is mostly pretty decent.  I wasn’t given any for my aria and don’t have any creative ideas for what to do with 11 minutes of coloratura and an empty stage, but since I’ve been using it for aria performances and auditions for so long (yeah people ask for it!) I’m comfortable toning it down and just being out there on my own singing the whole freaking thing.

They tried to give us staging for the first quintet, but it didn’t really work- the directions we were first given were at the same time dull and distracting, and didn’t really fit with the music.  So finally they just told us to improvise the whole thing, and it really worked!!  The guys are wayyyy funnier than I’d expected.  I mean, basically, this is an opera with a LOT of men’s parts, and they’re double-cast, so I figured they’d be scraping the bottom of the barrel for these little, challenging, thankless parts- not Harlekin, who has that PERFECT aria and more solo focus; but Brighella, Scaramuccio, and Truffaldin- I didn’t even expect the guys to get the music right, let alone memorize it, let alone be able to do it at a decent tempo, let alone be able to really act and clown at the same time, let alone be able to improvise their own blocking.  Um, guess what?  I was DEAD WRONG.  Whether through personal dedication or intense coachings, the quartet really thoroughly learned the music, is doing fine with memorization (with a few helpful cues from Maestro at tricky entrances), the tempo is pretty standard, and they are hilARious.  Brett basically just told them to look like they were from “The Department of Funny Walks” and they just ran with it.  There are two casts (except for Truffaldin as they couldn’t find another one who could learn the music and work out the rehearsal schedule) and- I sang with the other cast this week because of scheduling conflicts- they are both doing fabulously.  I’m glad I can’t see them more because I would probably crack up.

The composer duet, we kinda threw out the staging that Brett gave us.  I mean basically he borrowed the staging from someone else’s production, but it just wasn’t working for us… specifically, me.  Sooooo not working.  I mean basically it had Zerbinetta being really agressive and all over the Composer from the beginning, which I think contradicts the language at least at the beginning of the duet.  I mean how are you going to be saying “I’m not REALLY a coquette” while rubbing all over a guy who’s name you don’t even know yet?  I mean I guess that’s one direction you could take it, but the music is refined and delicate and beautiful.  And it’s the Composer’s music, not Zerbinetta’s.  Her Act 1 idiosyncracies I mean; “Noch glaub’ ich” is more lyric but even that is in 3/4, and you know Zerbinetta likes the 3’s- 6/8 etc, you know, the traditional peasant/folksong meters (just ask Mozart), and yeah Zerbinetta’s commedia dell’arte character is (as far as I can tell) based on the stock Colombina character (I think specifically she is a Smeraldina), which is supposed to be a servant-type, which is pretty folksy-peasanty.  I dunno, maybe I’m stretching- Ariadne, the nymphs, and even the Composer have some 3/4 and 6/8 stuff and Zerbinetta has plenty of 4/4 and 2/4 stuff.  This isn’t a research paper, actually it’s pretty stream-of-consciousness.  Anyways.  I was talking about the staging of the duet.  Yeah the conductor is telling me I get sucked into the Composer’s world here.  He has me change my style to match the composer’s legato style and not so chirpy.  (Actually I was doing that anyways at “Ein Augenblick,” he just asked me to move it back to “Courage” which I thought was a brilliant comment.)  And then the stage directions are telling me to be like throwing myself at his feet and stuff.  I dunno.  It wasn’t working for me.  So my Composer and I more or less improvised our staging and worked that out, and it’s fantastic if I do say so myself.  As a perfect climax we put in a kiss.  I won’t tell you where, or why, I’ll just tell you that it’s perfect, and that I KISS A GIRL IN THIS OPERA SO YOU BETTER COME SEE IT.  GOT IT???

One of the cast members staged the ending, it’s pretty cute and kinda ends with me getting the last laugh so that’s fine with me.  I dunno if it’s musically correct to have Zerbinetta be the focus at the end, but as both the text and the music establish, Zerbinetta can fit herself into any situation, she’s extremely adaptable, that’s her thing.  I’m not saying she doesn’t do her share of hijacking the music, but you know, the Composer duet as a perfect example, like “OK I’m going to sing in YOUR music now,” and does it perfectly.

So I’ve been doing a ton of research on Commedia dell’Arte (not like I haven’t before, but I mean, there’s just such a wide array of information out there, it’s like you can always wade through more), which has been really fun.  And watching/listening a lot.  I now own 4 Ariadne DVDs, which is more than I currently own of Fille du Regiment, Traviata, or Orphee aux Enfers (the runners-up).  A bunch of CD’s too.  Not all of them yet.  Eh, sooner or later!

I’m already eying the 1912 version.  Anyone wanna put it on for me?  I swear I can sing the shit out of it.  I will own that shit.  Think about it. :)

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The Making (and Re-Making) of Ariadne auf Naxos- my college paper

November 21, 2009 at 6:41 am (History, Music)

This December will be my first time performing the role of Zerbinetta in its entirety, but I’ve known it was practically designed for me since I first laid eyes on it.  That’s why in college I wrote a music history paper on Ariadne auf Naxos. I can’t say its my best writing- I mean it was undergrad music history class in a conservatory, I wasn’t overly concerned with my prose (I probably spent 4 weeks reading and researching and then wrote the whole thing the night before)- but hopefully you can still get something out of it.  I’m not going to have my adult self fact-check my 2001-self’s research, but I’m pretty sure it’s right on.  So, enjoy!

The Making (and Re-Making) of Ariadne auf Naxos

In a letter to Richard Strauss, a letter discussing many operas and current projects, Hugo von Hofmannsthal mentions as an aside:

“…and by this I mean something important, not the thirty minute opera for small chamber orchestra which is as good as complete in my head; it is called Ariadne auf Naxos and is made up of a combination of heroic mythological figures in 18th-century costume with hooped skirts and ostrich feathers and, interwoven in it, characters from the commedia dell’arte, harlequins and scaramouches representing the buffo element which is throughout interwoven with the heroic…” (3/20/1911)

This concept was the beginning of the generation of Ariadne auf Naxos, a unique opera by Strauss and Hofmannsthal.  The process of creating this opera would be a difficult one for both librettist and composer, and would be drawn out over several years.  Originally conceived as incidental music and interludes for a Molière play, Ariadne later became a self-standing opera, following its relative failure throughout Germany.  Today it is a beloved piece in the standard opera repertoire.  But its history is troubled and messy.

Hofmannsthal originally wanted to create this piece as a tribute to Max Reinhardt, who was the director who premiered Der Rosenkavalier. He saw the Molière play Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme in France and decided that it would be perfect for the project.  The play has five interludes for ballet and song.  Hofmannsthal reworked the play to fit into two acts, and Strauss wrote the music for the interludes.  The highlight of the evening was to be the final “interlude.”  It was to be a performance that the main character had arranged for: a new opera, Ariadne auf Naxos. So the audience would watch the classic Molière comedy with incidental music, and then see the premier of a new opera by Richard Strauss worked into the play.

The Molière comedy dates from 1670.  It tells the story of a bourgeois (middle-class) man, Monsieur Jourdain, who is obsessed with being seen as a gentleman, a member of the upper class.  He makes a complete fool of himself, hiring music, dance, fencing, and philosophy instructors, having outrageous outfits made for himself, and attempting to court a Marchioness- all to the shame and embarrassment of his wife and daughter.  The action of the play involves a Count who flatters him to keep borrowing money from him, who is truly himself courting the Marchioness; his daughter, Lucile, who is in love with a bourgeois man, Cléonte, whom her father will not allow her to marry because he is not a gentleman (although the script makes it clear that he is truly in the same class as the Jourdain); and the maid, Nicole, who is in love with the Cléonte’s valet, Covielle.  Cléonte disguises himself as the “Son of the Grand Turk” (with Covielle as “translator”), in love with Lucile, who will promote M. Jourdain to a position of nobility in Turkish society and marry his daughter.  M. Jourdain undergoes a humiliating “initiation,” and agrees to the marriage.  At this point, the evening’s entertainment that M. Jourdain is sponsoring will take place.  This was to be the opera Ariadne auf Naxos, which Strauss and Hofmannsthal would write.

Strauss wasn’t very interested in this project at first.  He was looking forward to another collaboration they were planning, Die Frau ohne Schatten. He frequently brought it up in his letters, eagerly awaiting the completion of the libretto, as he found his other present work, such as symphonies, much duller.  But eventually Strauss as well became caught up in this exciting project.  When Hofmannsthal first sent him the libretto, Strauss’s reaction was not negative, but cool enough to offend Hofmannsthal.  The story of the opera is about the legend of Ariadne, a princess abandoned by her lover, Theseus, on the island of Naxos.  She is in extreme depression and awaits only death, but then the god Bacchus comes to her.  At first believing him to be death, she asks him to take her away.  They quickly fall in love.  This story is decorated by comic characters from the Commedia dell’arte, who try to cheer up Ariadne.  Strauss’s cold reception of the libretto inspired Hofmannsthal to explain the meaning behind the story.

“Zerbinetta is in her element drifting out of the arms of one man into the arms of another; Ariadne could be the wife or mistress of one man only, just as she can be only one man’s widow, can be forsaken by only one man.  One thing, however, is still left even for her: the miracle, the God.  To him she gives herself, for she believes him to be Death: he is both Death and Life at once; he it is who reveals to her the immeasurable depths in her own nature, who makes of her an enchantress, the sorceress who herself transforms the poor little Ariadne; he it is who conjures up for her in this world another world beyond, who preserves her for us and at the same time transforms her.

“But what to divine souls is a real miracle, is to the earth-bound nature of Zerbinetta just an every-day love affair.  She sees in Ariadne’s experience the only thing she can see: the exchange of an old lover for a new one.  And so these two spiritual worlds are in the end ironically brought together in the only way in which they can be brought together: in non-comprehension (7/1911).”

Strauss now understood the opera much more clearly and was better pleased with it.  But he warned Hofmannsthal that if he, the composer, couldn’t understand it right away, how could the public, and much less the critics?  For this reason, Hofmannsthal had the libretto published in a literary journal before the opera’s premiere.

The collaboration was taking off at last- but clashes between the two artists arose on every topic.  They had disagreements about characters, the ending, act divisions, and other assorted topics.  Hofmannsthal was often upset at Strauss’s suggestions, and Strauss had a hard time dealing with Hofmannsthal’s impractical temperament.  Some of the biggest arguments came not, however, over the content of the opera, but over its production.  Hofmannsthal was vehement about wanting Reinhardt to direct the opera.  In a lengthy letter to Strauss, he goes on and on about the subject:

“How am I to write a single line of Die Frau ohne Schatten if, over this affair, you not only upset my own relations with Max Reinhardt- and who, in the feverish world of the theatre, would ever get over a disappointment like that?- but face me with the certain prospect of having to abandon altogether every hope of Reinhardt’s assistance in the preparation of this future work; subtle and allergic to all routine as it is bound to be, and so of having to do without the very help I need about all else?…I beg of you, do not inflict on me this injury; do not injure us both, do not injure our relationship!… The subtly conceived exiguity of this play, these two groups acting beside each other in the narrowest space, this most careful calculation of each gesture, each step, the whole like a concert and at the  same time like a ballet- it will be lost, meaningless, a tattered rag in incompetent hands; only in Reinhardt’s, yours and mine, can it grow into a singing flower, the incarnation of dance (12/18/1911).”

Reinhardt was finally secured for the premiere.  But the location of the premiere was another problem to be worked out.  The original plan was to have it at the Deutsches Theater, but Strauss realized that the theatre would be inappropriate for the play-opera.  They considered many cities and finally decided on Stuttgart.  Hofmannsthal had objections, but not strong enough to convince Strauss, who saw no other possibilities.

After many cast changes, the show finally premiered in Stuttgart on October 25, 1912.  But the audience did not take kindly to the performance.  The theatre-going crowd didn’t know what to make of the opera, and the opera-lovers were unhappy about sitting through 2 hours of Molière before getting to the opera.  Critics were very hard on Hofmannsthal’s libretto.  One critic writes, “Hofmannsthal adds nothing to his fame by his mutilation of the Molière comedy and the weak libretto.  It is difficult to see wherein his fame is justified any how, for the Rosenkavalier libretto, too, has many objectionable features.  Strauss swears by him but the operatic world does not, and it, after all, has a weighty word to speak” (Finck 266).

Eventually, Strauss and Hofmannsthal decided that the only way to save their creation is to give it a complete reworking.   In 1913, they began to talk of a revision.  The original plan was to take the transition scene that Hofmannsthal had written between the play and the opera, and change it to secco recitative.  Instead, Hofmannsthal reworked the transition scene into a prologue.  They abandoned the Molière altogether, and instead the plot focused only on the opera performance.  The Prologue, extended from the original transition scene, now starred the Composer as the leading role.  The characters from the opera seria and the burlesque are informed at the last minute that their performances are to run simultaneously.  Zerbinetta, the lead comedienne, flirts with the composer, who agrees to the change in order to have his work performed.  The curtain closes on the Prologue just as the curtain is about to go up on the opera, with the composer furiously making cuts in his music at the last minute.  Then the opera itself is performed, much as planned, but without the comments thrown in by the Molière characters that were present in the original.  Some other changes are made- Zerbinetta’s virtuosic aria, for one, is considerably cut and simplified.  The opera was performed in this manner for the first time in 1916, and was much better received than the original version had been.

Today, the 1916 version is the only one that one is likely to see performed.  But some people prefer the 1912 version.  The two versions are so different that it is difficult to compare them.  This opera had a challenging formation, but Strauss and Hofmannsthal succeeded in what they set out to do: they made the piece succeed, and become a well-loved part of the standard repertoire, even to this day.

Bibliography

Finck, Henry T.  Richard Strauss: The Man and his Works. Lille, Brown & Company,              Boston, 1917.  Pg. 264-272.

Gilliam, Bryon.  The Life of Richard Strauss. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1999.  Pg. 96-101.

Hartmann, Rudolf.  Richard Strauss: The Staging of his Operas and Ballets. Oxford University Press, New York, 1981.  Pg. 90-107.

Kennedy, Michael.  Richard Strauss: Man, Musician, Enigma. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1999.  Pgs. 174-188.

Lehmann, Lotte.  Five Operas and Richard Strauss. The Macmillan Company, New York, 1964.  1-22.

Molière.  The Middle-Class Gentleman: A Translation of Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme. Trans. Herma Briffault.  Barron’s Educational Services, Inc., New York, 1957.

A Working Friendship: The Correspondance between Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Trans. Hanns Hammelmann and Ewald Osers.  Vienna House, New York, 1961.  Pg. 75-139, 152-153, 169-172, 241-250.

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Review in Street Voice UK Music Magazine

November 19, 2009 at 3:02 am (Uncategorized)

“AMANDA WHITE – Toyshop: Amanda White is more well known for her ties to opera scene but this venture into the rock scene is a welcome move though! What I like the most about this release is that Amanda manages to incorporate the opera sound into some of her vocals. This works really well and makes Amanda stand out from many of the female vocalist in rock doing the rounds today. The music is also well thought out and not predictable which holds your interest. Some really decent tracks on Toyshop and some of those include ‘Midnight Bride’, ‘Monica’s Getting Her Tits Done’, ‘The Sky Is Close’ and ‘A Carol’. This lady looks and sounds the part. I love what Amanda White is about and you will too!”

Thanks, Steve DIY!  Check out Street Voice UK Music Magazine here.

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CD Baby

November 12, 2009 at 3:43 am (Music) (, , , )

Hey all!  Great news. I’m finally on CDBaby.com!

Took long enough.  Basically, their website has been really buggy, at least lately.  (It’s my first time using them.)  They underwent some sort of redesign and haven’t got the kinks all worked out, so every time I would try to enter my album information I would get redirected to the same page, over and over.  I finally just called them and worked out the necessary stuff over the phone- although there are still some input fields I haven’t been able to fill out.  But all the important info is there.

You’d think that with such problems, I wouldn’t want to work with them.  But they are pretty much THE go-to site for independent (really independent, not fake independent) artists to sell their albums.  Plus they can get me on iTunes and Amazon (and then I can be on Pandora!!).

Other benefits?  Well, mostly I just feel more official now.  Like, there is an actual place people can buy my CD online from a company, not just sending me money via PayPal and trusting that I’ll mail them a CD.  And theoretically, people browsing CD Baby should stumble across my music and listen to it and want to buy it.

On the other hand, I still get a lot more money if people buy the album directly from me- either in person, or just ordering it off my website.  And for digital downloads, I get a lot more of the money if you order it off of my Bandcamp page.  But for that matter, I am drowning in CDs in my tiny apartment and would much rather unload them then people buy the digital version.  But whatever makes ya happy!  I’m always happy when someone buys my music.  Actually, you have no idea how happy I am.  Selling CDs is hard, and every single person who buys it makes me feel all fizzy like a soda pop. :)

Oh, and one last thing I almost forgot!!  The cool thing about my album being on CD Baby is that YOU GET TO REVIEW IT!!  As long as you have an account at CD Baby (which you DO… RIGHT?? You do support independent musicians and buy their albums, RIGHT?? o yeah you can make a wish list there too!!) you can write a review of Toyshop.  Hey, I don’t know who will read it or how much difference it will make, but being complimented in print is always a happy thing.

Just keep in mind, you’ll have to do this all over again when I get on Amazon!  Oh boy!

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Take the Toyshop personality quiz!!

November 11, 2009 at 6:04 am (Music) (, , , , , )

I had this idea to do something sooo blantantly idiodic and self-promotional, yet really fun and hilarious at the same time.

I made a Facebook quiz!!!

Which song from Toyshop are you???

I worked painstakingly on this tonight- started brainstorming ideas yesterday.  The app, Quiz Creator, was kind of a pain in the ass- at one point I thought I lost ALL my work, which was 3 hours worth of writing, most of which was not copied anywhere else- but it turned out I only lost HALF of it.

But I agonized over writing the results.  I really wanted answers that would hit home with people.  I know- it’s a stupid Facebook personality test, it has no weight in anything whatsoever- but I guess I’m just an overachiever, I took it really seriously!  I want to impress my friends. :)

I found really apt pictures for all the songs.  Interesting, because it did force me to stop and ask what my visual image was for each song, or how I would summarize it in one image.  I have a spooky cabin in the night sky for Midnight Bride, because I always imagine the lovers meeting at a summer cabin in the woods.  (“Way out here…”)  I have a fuzzy, dream-like image of a silhouetted guy standing under a willow tree for “Vision”- I guess that image always stuck in my mind, even though it’s just a toss-off line (“I had a vision of you standing by the willow tree”), written more for sound than for meaning.  Whereas other lines in the song are much more creative and interesting.  For Toyshop I have some really creepy-looking doll parts, for Monica I have a Successories parody poster called “Tits,” for ‘Kay I have a pair of hands streaming with blood, for “The Sky is Close” I have a silhouette of someone reaching for the blue sky, for “A Carol” I have a shining Christmas star, for “Snowshadow” I have snow in a lamplight- and again, that’s the visual image that I always get for that song, even though it’s one of the last lines.  And a good drawing of a hand reading for a more lightly-sketched hand, for “Pull Me Up”- I thought it represented well the idea of the girl in the song reaching for her dead mother.  Yeah, see, I don’t talk so much about what the songs are “about” because they are mostly non-narrative and all are non-autobiographical.  But I do have a lot of specific ideas in my head, at least visual.

So please take my quiz- and let me know what your results are!!!

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This is Your Life, Martin Bisi!

November 6, 2009 at 3:39 am (Music) (, , )

I call it that because I keep wanting the people from the albums to walk in the room and be like, “HEYYYY!  Martin!  Remember that time when we did that thing?  That was so sweet!!” or “What do you mean, you don’t remember my wife’s name!?”

This is an auto-retrospective of the career of Martin Bisi, who produced my album, Toyshop, as well as produced, recorded, and mixed for many other luminaries besides me (such as: Sonic Youth, Swans, The Dresden Dolls, John Zorn, Bill Laswell, Foetus, Helmet, Boredoms, Herbie Hancock [Rockit], Africa Bambaata, Bootsy Collins and Brian Eno).  In this video, he disintigrates his wall-o-album-covers, representing notable records that he has worked on throughout his years in BC Studio.  The series below may seem long, but it’s really worth a watch if you have any interest in the history of rock and other popular music from the 1980’s to the present day.

And if you liked that, check out Martin’s music video for one of his own songs…

 

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End of tour, selling albums, Zerbinetta, holding your breath

November 5, 2009 at 4:23 am (Uncategorized) (, , , )

Hi everyone!

Just a hodge-podgy update, I guess.  I mean, it’s been wayyy too long.  Except where I posted the Bubblegum Slut review the other day.  Still happy about that!  Hope you’ve all read it!

So, what is up… I finished my tour, it was fun.  I had been sick, and was trying to coax my voice back for a couple reasons- most urgently, to sing an audition with Fargo-Moorhead Opera.  I just barely, barely went through with it.  I wasn’t sure up til the night before (really, the morning of) if I was in good enough condition to sing.  I was still under the weather, but I had my high notes back, so I went through with it.  They even asked for O zittre nicht, which I offered as an alternate (I know small companies do Magic Flute a lot and aren’t such sticklers about voice size for their Queens of the Nights), and that goes up to an F, and my F was totally fine.  Yay!  I gotta say, I was chugging Emergen-C, and I also found that this one Vitamin Water which was vitamin C enhanced, I think it was purple and it was like reduced calorie or something.  I found it to be really soothing on my throat.  So I had a really nice audition with them, and my gig the night before in Fargo was really fun!  It started out with me playing just to one person, but several more drifted in as the show wore on.  I had a really fun time- played everything I knew, and the one kid who was there from the beginning asked me to sing Glitter and be Gay a capella.  (He had asked what my rep was, and wanted to hear it since he’d just started reading Candide.)  It was pretty hilarious.  This one guy in the audience- I hate to say “redneck” ’cause that’s like racist(?)… is there a non-offensive way to say “total hick”?  He said it was so loud I hurt his ears.  I was like, “OPERA WIN!!” I love my life sometimes.  Oh and the one really sweet kid who came to see me on purpose bought my CD.  Yay!

So I’m back, I need to sell wayyyyy more albums.  Who wants to buy one???  Or ten?!?!?  You know you do.  I’m trying to hit up my friends, but I feel bad, especially ’cause it’s usually a matter of people not having money today but they’ll buy it next week, but I don’t want to keep asking again and again.  The simple truth is that since I’m not on any sort of label whatsoever, and am not yet famous, I actually do have to rely largely on people I know to buy my shit.  At least for now.  Oh yeah and you guys.  :)

For the record, it’s still in processing for CDBaby, so the only thing to do for now is to order it by PayPal off my website.  Which is me going to the post office and mailing it to you.  Oh, but if you want a digital download, that you can buy now, on amandawhite.bandcamp.com.  The iTunes thing, still processing, etc, but I get more money anyways if you buy it from bandcamp (and I’m not an expert on these things but I think the sound quality is better too).

So!  We’re in rehearsal for Ariadne auf Naxos.  Today was our first full-opera run.  It was my first time doing any of the second act stuff at all (we had already rehearsed the prologue).  So fun!  People are sounding better than I expected.  Like, I was really worried about the quartet of men (before hearing them), but they are actually really pulling it together.  I managed to impress the cast, but I think that’s because I was doing push-ups between phrases.  Hey, with Zerbinetta you have to be prepared for lots of physical activity!  Even though I doubt they are going to seriously stage it.  It’ll probably be largely a “do whatever you want, just start here and end there” kind of thing.  Nothing that will really knock my breath out- but at least I should be prepared for next time.

SPEAKING OF BREATH.  This is amazing.  Tim Ferriss’s blog (one of my like top 3 favorite blogs in the whole world) teaches you how to hold your breath for ridiculously long times. I got to 3 minutes on my first (bumpy, not sure what to do) try, without even pushing myself until the last like 5 seconds.  (I wasn’t willing to try to really push, as the author had mentioned being fuzzy-headed for a couple days after, but I am curious if I could do better now that I get it…)  But like seriously, I didn’t even start wondering how long it had been til about 2:30.

I wonder what kind of implications this would have for singers.  I’m curious to try it but instead of holding my breath, trying to sustain a tone.  Of course normally in an opera one doesn’t get all that prep time to work up your breathing, but it could still be a really interesting thing to experiment with.

I’ll leave you with that thought.  Everyone have a great night!  See you soon.

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Review in Bubblegum Slut Zine

November 2, 2009 at 10:46 pm (Uncategorized) (, , , , )

Buy it here

“Solo singer Amanda White is a curious character- glancing at the photos on her website (the brilliantly monikered notjustanotherprettyvoice.com) of a fresh faced beauty that makes references to opera and has song titles suggesting gothic tendencies (‘Midnight Bride’) as well as an irreverent sense of humour (‘Monica’s Getting Her Tits Done’), you’d be forgiven for thinking that perhaps this artist is one of many influenced by the recent school of quirky ‘punk rock meets classical’ musicians headed up by the likes of Dresden Dolls, Emilie Autumn and Rasputina to name a few. A spin of this CD confirms Amanda’s music is a little more straightforward than that- singing with a voice that is as sweet as the sugar she chants about in opener ‘Midnight Bride’- there are touches of electronica, goth and rock in her music which overall can be described at No Doubt meets Jack of Jill! It might sound strange but Amanda’s beautiful, Kate Bush/Gwen Stefani-like pop vocals mash with light punky, goth-metal tunes to create an alternative sound that is both unusual in the current climate and most captivating. Her blend of alternative pop might just split listener’s opinions straight down the middle, but if Ms White’s live show proves to be as arresting as this record, I’ll be first in line for tickets.”

by Sophia Rawlinson (thank you, Sophia!  I love it!)

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