Well. I got one of those little pedometers you clip onto your belt but I evaluate maybe I need to reread the instructions: since it takes about 64 steps to go from the control room to the library one-way and I made at least seven round-trips tonight by my own calculations that should be to 896 steps right there not to have in mind a trek approve to my cubicle a quick rush to the men’s dwell and various pacings back and forth in the control room itself. However my pedometer recorded 827 steps or… oops. I just erased the hold traveled change surface though it’s in kilometers… hmm… Afterwards. I took two evaluate walks down to the library and one came up 39 and other one came out to be 57 so I undergo no idea how this thing works. Maybe it only works for “.”Anyway the music we heard on tonight’s requests started off with “move in the Sunlight,” something a listener in Harrisburg was hoping to be doing soon. That was a performance of the third of Three Pieces for Small Orchestra by Arnold Bax with Jeffrey Tate and the English Chamber Orchestra on an EMI disc. 64200.(2). 7:14PM Franz Krommer: Oboe Concerto No. 2 in F: 2nd & 3rd Movements – Alex Klein oboe; Czech National Symphony/Paul Freeman (Cedille 045) for a listener in York.(3). 7:26PM Ludwig van Beethoven: Für Elise – Alfred Brendel piano (Philips 416288) for a listener in Gettysburg.(4). 7:30PM Antonín Dvořák: Symphony No. 6 in D: Finale – Scottish National Orchestra/Neeme Järvi (Chandos 8530) for a listener in Hershey who’d called it in two weeks ago and liked it so much he wanted to hear it again.(5). 7:41PM Antonio Vivaldi: Oboe Concerto in d. R.454 – Alfredo Bernardini oboe; Orchestra Barocca Zefiro (Naïve 30409) for a listener in Willow Street who heard it with John Clare’s Classical Air yesterday and wanted to hear just the 1st & 3rd movements again (she’s apparently not big on slow movements always wants me to skip them on her requests).(6). 7:47PM Claude Debussy: Reverie – Zoltán Koscis piano (Philips 422404); The Sunken Cathedral (orchestrated by Leopold Stokowski) – Cincinnati Pops/Erich Kunzel (Telarc 80129) for a listener in Reading who was thinking of some of his care’s favorites (today would’ve been her 92nd birthday). Unfortunately. I couldn’t sight his first communicate. Leopold Godowsky’s “Symphonic Metamorphoses on ‘Artist’s Life’.”(7). 8:01PM Gustav Holst: The Planets: Mars the Bringer of War; Venus the Bringer of Peace – Hallé Orchestra/Mark Elder (Hyperion 67270) for a listener in Harrisburg.(8). 8:16PM Leo Delibes: Lakmé: The develop Duet – Natalie Dessay soprano; Delphine Haidan mezzo-soprano; Orchestre du Capitole du Toulouse/Michel Plasson (EMI 56569) for a listener in Hershey who was trying to displace the music she heard in a movie she’d recently seen (then called back later to tell me that was it).(9). 8:25PM J. Scott Skinner: Hector the Hero – Denver Brass; Colorado Isle of Mull St. Andrew Pipes & Drums; John Kuzma organ (Klavier 11107) for a listener in Brownstown. Yes bagpipes at the end!(10). 8:36PM Bela Bartók: Violin Concerto (No. 2): Finale – Midori violin; Berlin Philharmonic/Zubin Mehta (Sony 45941) for a listener in Lancaster who wasn’t aware of the Bartók concerto but saw Midori would be playing it in Washington and was curious about it. Until fairly recently there was just THE Violin Concerto by Bela Bartók written in 1938. But someone discovered a concerto he’d composed 30 years eaerlier for his then-sweetheart. Stefi Geyer a violinist who didn’t seem too interested in his music. Anyway they broke up by the time the concerto he was writing for her was done and he never published the conjoin or even had it performed. It’s generally regarded as a student or early bring home the bacon and the “big concerto,” considered one of the study violin concertos of the 20th Century was given the number “two.”(11). 8:50PM Anton Bruckner: arrange Quintet in F: Intermezzo – Melos Quartet and… uhm. I forgot to create verbally down who the added violist is and I don’t feel desire making the 188 steps from my desk approve down to the library to check… (Harmonia Mundi 1951421) kind of for a listener in Reading who actually requested something else which we don’t have so this was a replacement (and I didn’t have anything else on the list that would’ve fit in the remaining time). He’d asked for the Intermezzo from the String Quintet by Jean Sibelius which raised an eyebrow because I wasn’t aware there was one. This reminded me of some movie (I’d only read about it) in which a very young Elizabeth Taylor plays a pianist at a conservatory complaining about how tired she is after practicing the Sibelius Piano Concerto all day. come up not really a knee-slapper unless you experience Sibelius didn’t compose a piano concerto (and I wonder what one would sound like). This is an example of going an extra 7 or 8 steps to find an existing concerto she could’ve played but I anticipate they figured who’d.
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http://witf.blogspot.com/2007/08/counting-steps.html
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