Saturday, April 17, 2010

What's blooming in St. Louis

Photo by Don Sessions taken in his garden.


















Click images to enlarge.


Photo by Jan Sessions on her iPhone takin in Des Peres, MO.


Friday, April 16, 2010

Word of the Day

oneiric


\oh-NY-rik\ , noun;

1. Of, pertaining to, or suggestive of dreams; dreamy.


Quotes:

On this score, the novel might easily drift off into an oneiric never-never land, but Mr. Welch doesn't let this happen.

-- Peter Wild, "Visions of Blackfoot", New York Times, November 2, 1986

Her large images, which are cloaked in an elegant oneiric mist, transport the viewer to an ideal world where bodies seem to have become weightless ghosts of themselves.

-- Simona Vendrame, "Nature and the solitary self, translated by Jacqueline Smith", Temaceleste

Some -- not all -- of Caravaggio's painting uniquely compels you to grope for words in order to describe the optical novelty and disturbing immediacy of the images. They're at once coldly precise, voluptuously real and strangely oneiric.

-- Peter Robb, "Candid camera", The Guardian, October 20, 2001

Origin:Oneiric comes from Greek oneiros, "dream."


Sunday, April 11, 2010

Bobby McFerrin

clipped from www.npr.org
Bobby McFerrin's Improv-Inspired 'Vocabularies'


April 11, 2010
To Listen to the Story: Click Here

Bobby McFerrin's name has been part of the world-music lexicon for more than two decades. His infectious, hummable 1988 mega-hit "Don't Worry Be Happy" ended McFerrin's musical life as he had known it — at least for a while. He skyrocketed to fame and couldn't seem to hide from the song that brought him mainstream success. But he followed his heart and dug deeper, seeking broader possibilities for music, whether on stage or in a recording studio.



Bobby McFerrin


On any given night, McFerrin can be found delicately walking a tightrope of vocal improvisation, carrying nothing more than his four-octave vocal range and his childlike sense of play. Next month, he'll sing and conduct an orchestra in Italy. It's not a big stretch for the vocalist, who spent time doing similar work as creative chair of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra.


Born From Improvisation


McFerrin's projects have varied from singing daring duets with pianist Chick Corea to breathing new life into classical treasures with cellist Yo-Yo Ma to finding inspiration through his well-honed singing ensemble, Voicestra. Now, he's released his first album in eight years, called Vocabularies.


The album was born out of requests by choir directors and choral organizations to make the arrangements for McFerrin's pieces available to them. Roger Treece, McFerrin's arranger and collaborator, drew upon recordings of McFerrin with the Voicestra to write new material for Vocabularies. In arranging songs for the album, Treece listened to hundreds of McFerrin's improvisations.


"I was the well he drew from," McFerrin says.


Though McFerrin says he prefers the art of improvisation, he records to document where he is at the moment, musically speaking.


A Family Of Singers


McFerrin's father, the late Robert McFerrin, was the first African-American soloist in the Metropolitan Opera. He sang the part of Porgy in the film version of Porgy and Bess, with Sidney Poitier. His sister and mother also sang, and McFerrin says that might be why it took him so long to realize he was a singer. He wanted to be different.


"I always had a nagging suspicion that I wasn't a pianist," he says.


McFerrin didn't realize he was a singer until he was 27, and he says he hasn't looked back since.


"My whole goal this whole time was to be a working musician," he says. "It wasn't about being famous or being a celebrity. It's just work."


But for McFerrin, it's also play.


"When we're doing our lessons, the teacher doesn't say, 'Ready, set, work,' " he says. "They say, 'Ready, set, play,' and I always took that word seriously."