Archive for December, 2008

Mozart Trivia

Saturday, December 27th, 2008

Mozart is a renowned musician but how well do you know him? Answer these trivia questions to get to know him better!

  1. At what age was Mozart presented  as an artist in the imperial court in Vienna?
    a. four years old
    b. six years old
    c. eight years old
    d. ten years old
  2. What was the name of Mozart’s sister?
    a. Nannette
    b. Nannerl
    c. Bernadett
    d. Bernice
  3. What did Mozart like to play, as he composed symphonies?
    a. Chess
    b. Poker
    c. Billard
    d. Tennis
  4. What was the first opera by Mozart?
    a. Mitridate
    b. Bastien und Bastienne
    c. Idomeneo
    d. The Marriage of Figaro
  5. Mozart’s Figaro is based on a piece of this dramatist?
    a. Dumas
    b. Ducange
    c. Beaumarchais
    d. Becque
  6. Mozart didicated six string quartets to what composer?
    a. Bach
    b. Beethoven
    c. Haydn
    d. Gluck
  7. What was the name of the wife of Mozart?
    a. Armand
    b. Constanze
    c. Maria
    d. Reigen
  8. Who did mozart succeeded as chamber musician and court composer to Joseph II?
    a. Da Ponte
    b. Gluck
    c. Schubert
    d. Brahms
  9. What was Mozart’s last opera?
    a. The Marriage of Figar
    b. Don Giovanni
    c. Cosi fan tutte
    d. The Magic Flute
  10. Who completed  Mozart Requiem, which remained unfinished at the time of his death?
    a. Freystadtler
    b. Stadler
    c. Süssmayr
    d. Salieri

African American Musicians

Monday, December 15th, 2008

In 1926, a researcher at Harvard by the name of Dr. Carter G. Woodson organized the first week of the annual Negro History. The event occurred on the second week of February, which also coincides with the birthdays of two great civil rights leaders – Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. Today, the month of February is known as Black History Month. In honor of this celebration, here are several profiles of famous African American musicians.

  1. Louis Armstrong was a musician and composer of jazz, known as one of the founding fathers of jazz.
  2. Chuck Berry was a blues and rock and roll guitarist and singer.
  3. James Brown was the singer and keyboardist of the Soul, R & B, Funk, Pop and Dance music genres.
  4. Ray Charles was known as “The Genius”; he was a gospel singer and pianist.
  5. Nat King Cole started as a pianist and later became known as a singer. He has recorded jazz mainly in the 1930s to 40’s and then most of the pop music of the 1950s to 60’s.
  6. John Coltrane was an  influential jazz tenor saxophonist.
  7. Edmond Dede was a prodigy in violin and conductor at the Théâtre de l’Alcazar for 27 years.
  8. Duke Ellington was a composer, conductor and jazz pianist; he was affectionately called “The Duke”.
  9. Ella Fitzgerald was known as “The First Lady of Song” and her incredible scat-singing.
  10. Dizzy Gillespie was one of the founding fathers of jazz and one of the inventors of bebop.
  11. Billie Holiday was nicknamed “Lady Day”  and was one of the first blues singers in history, known for his soul voice.
  12. Francis Johnson was the inventor of cotillas and was the first great master of the band in the United States.
  13. Scott Joplin was known as the “King of Ragtime” because of his rags to classical piano.
  14. B. B. King was known as “The King of the Blues.”
  15. Charlie “Bird” Parker influenced the development of “bop” in the 1940s and was one of the greatest soloists in jazz improvisation.
  16. Florence Beatrice Price was the first female African-American composer whose work has been done by a leading U.S. orchestra.
  17. Ma Rainey was known as the first great blues singer;  she made over 100 recordings under the Paramount label.
  18. Bessie Smith was known as “Empress of the Blues”, one of the greatest blues singers of the 1920s.
  19. Sarah Vaughan was one of the greatest jazz singers in history whose career spanned nearly 50 years.
  20. Fats Waller was a jazz organist, pianist, singer, composer, conductor and conductor of small groups during the 1930s.

Indian Flute: Bansuri

Monday, December 8th, 2008

The bansuri is a flute used in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal. It is  a single length of bamboo with six or seven open finger holes that is 14 inches long.

The wikipedia states that ” the word comes from the Sanskrit bansuri bans [bamboo] + Swar [notes]“.

Two kinds of bansuri are widely known and used in India. The first is the cross, and  the second type is the fipple which is usually played in folk music and isimilar to a whistle when held and played.