As a cellist, I refuse to read more than 3 ledger lines. We have clefs for that. 3 ledger lines above treble and I'm just not playing that.
Hope everyone who is able to fast for Yom Kippur has an easy one! I am psyched for Kol Nidre, my parents’ synagogue always has a cellist (years ago the cellist for the Pittsburgh Symphony was a temple member) and my dad will be on screen holding a torah (and getting the scrolls off the high shelf)
The Cellist, Self Portrait https://www.wikiart.org/en/gustave-courbet/the-cellist-self-portrait-1847
I recorded these songs 20 years ago in my bedroom in Chicago on a digital 8-track I bought from cellist Fred Lonberg-Holm. I still they still hold up: oweihops.bandcamp.com/album/chicka...
20 track album
Went to a performance of Dvořák's New World Symphony a few nights ago and it sounded like the violins and the brass were (subtly) fucking up, and today I got confirmation from a cellist in the orchestra that the violins and the brass DID fuck up and I'm very pleased with myself
Doch mal die Vita bei Wikipedia überflogen. Cellist mit durchaus ungewöhnlicher Laufbahn, Musikerfamilie, Schallplatten, Lehre. Fragt man sich doch, wie der bei der afd landete.
The best ever viewing i've had of nosferatu was when they had a classical cellist providing mood music and an accordionist doing counterpoints and the occasional sound effect, like key tapping for horse hooves
more gently she's worked with cellist Jean-Guihen Queyras on a piece for Bach's cello suites. www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhYe...
YouTube video by MEZZO
A name for something you may be experiencing right now: screen apnea. "The 20% of participants who did not show signs of screen apnea included a former military test pilot, a triathlete, dancers, singers and a cellist—people who had trained to breathe and perform a task or skill simultaneously."
Do you have "screen apnea"? Former Microsoft executive Linda Stone coined this term around 2007 after noticing she'd developed an unhealthy habit while answering emails: She held her breath. On this episode, she tells host Manoush Zomorodi how she tested her friends and colleagues for screen apnea and what she has done since.Then, Manoush talks to the bestselling author of Breath, science writer James Nestor, who explains how shallow breathing impacts our physical and mental health. He takes us through a simple exercise to "reset" our breath and relieve screen time stress.Binge the whole Body Electric series here.Sign up for the Body Electric Challenge and our newsletter here.Talk to us on Instagram @manoushz, or record a voice memo and email it to us at BodyElectric@npr.org.
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers. DAY 9 #BookSky#Books#BookChallenge