Apr 5 2011

Music Therapy? Why not?

One definition of therapy is a process that aims to reduce the level of man’s behavior and simultaneously enhance the ability of adjusting one’s self. What is the method?
Many studies show that classical music is one of the best music for relaxation and meditation. Classical Music Baroque era music proved as the most effective way to reduce stress. The famous composer from this era include JS. Bach, GF Handel, Brahms, Vivaldi and Mozart. Those who studied the influence of classical music on stress reduction or relaxation also found that when listening to classical music and was associated with a machine EEG (electroencephalogram) = machine which measures brain wave activity, demonstrated record brain wave activity similar to brain wave activity that is meditation. In more specific they found that the composition of the Adagio from the era of Baroque music (which has a rate 60 per minute) is the most able to provide the relaxed atmosphere and increase alpha wave production or activity which is equivalent to the perfect relaxation, hypnosis and meditation. Mozart’s music is an example of this Baroque Adagio, and therefore became very popular as a tool of music therapy which is now known as “the Mozart Effect.”

New Age is the flow of other music which also has grown, well accepted and effective for Stress Management. Included in the flow of New Age, among others, New Instrumental, Space Music, Music for Meditation, Ambient Music, Jazz, Fantasy, World Fusion, Celtic Music, and Acoustic Guitar. Usually this type of music is played in instrumental, without words or poetry
Music turned out to be therapeutic and healing.

Music produces rhythmic stimuli that were captured and processed by the hearing organ in the body’s nervous system and glands of the brain reorganize the interpretation of the internal rhythms of sound into the audience. These internal rhythms affect human metabolism so that the process is going better. Better metabolism will result in the body can build a better imune system, and with a better system body imune system becomes more resilient against possible infections (in Campbell, 1997)
So Let’s Beat The Music:)

 


Mar 21 2011

Music Hall (Mo) Event Tickets – April Events In Kansas City

Classical music lovers in the Kansas City area will be pleased to know that April holds a very special event.  The Trans Siberian Orchestra comes to town for an April 25th performance that anyone in attendance is sure to remember.  Those who get <a rel=”nofollow” onclick=”javascript:_gaq.push(['_trackPageview', '/outgoing/article_exit_link']);” href=”http://www.stubhub.com/music-hall-mo-event-tickets/”>Music Hall (MO) Event tickets</a> to see the performance will be treated to some of the finest orchestral work they’ve ever heard.

The orchestra was founded in 1996 by Paul O’Neil and has been touring since 1999.  On this particular tour, the orchestra will be telling the story of Ludwig van Beethoven through music, which is the concept of their album Beethoven’s Last Night.  Beethoven is one of the most recognizable names of all the great composers, rivaled only by Mozart, and his music has been cherished around the world for centuries.  Much of Beethoven’s music is featured throughout the performance.  This is a concert that any classical music fan would not want to miss out on.

If classical music isn’t your thing, then grab your baseball cap and glove and head to Kaufman Stadium for a Kansas City Royals game.  The Royals kick off their 2010 season in April and hopes are running high throughout the organization.  The Royals finished in last in the American League Central last season, but were able to make some significant strides that have fans hoping 2010 can be a successful campaign.

The Kansas City pitching staff is headlined by 2009 American League Cy Young winner Zack Greinke.  Greinke burst onto the scene last season as a relative unknown, despite being a high draft pick several years earlier.  The young hurler was able to win each of his first six starts last season and got off to an 8-1 start on the year.  After his eighth win his ERA stood at a microscopic 0.84 and people started asking whether he was the best pitcher in baseball.  While there was no way Greinke could keep up such a torrid pace, he performed well for the rest of the season, finishing with a 16-8 record, a 2.16 ERA and 242 strikeouts in 229 innings.

The Royals will need Greinke to put together another great season if they’re going to contend for a playoff spot, as the rest of their starting rotation is a bit shaky.  Gil Meche was brought in to be the staff ace a few years ago, but injuries and inconsistency have plagued his Kansas City tenure to date.  If Meche can stay on the field in 2010 and perform up to his ability, the Royals will boast a formidable one-two punch atop their rotation.  Another hurler that could be a major contributor for the Royals is Luke Hochevar.  A former number one overall pick, Hochevar has also struggled with consistency, but showed some real promise for stretches last season.   The club will need these two guys to help support Greinke.

The team’s lineup doesn’t exactly strike fear into the hearts of opposing pitchers, but they’ve got some underrated hitters than should contribute this season.  Billy Butler hit .301, smacked 21 bombs and drove in 93 runs at the tender age of 22 last season.  He should improve in both power and average this season and could develop into a marquee hitter in the American League if he realizes his potential.  He’s surrounded by guys that produce, despite their lack of big name recognition.  Guys like David DeJesus, Mark Teahan and John Buck should give Butler some protection in the lineup.

The Royals have some big matchups in April, perhaps none more important than their series with the reigning American League Central Champion Minnesota Twins.  The Twins took down the Detroit Tigers in a one-game playoff last season in order to earn the division crown and are looking to secure the title again in 2010.  Led by reigning American League MVP and batting champ Joe Mauer, the Twins are a balanced team that can beat you with pitching, offense and defense.  If former MVP Justin Morneau can return from some tough injuries and hurler Francisco Liriano can get himself right, this team will be incredibly tough to beat.  With Greinke on the mound, the Royals can beat anyone, but when it’s not his turn in the rotation other guys have to step up.  Division games are always important, so the Royals will surely be giving their all against Minnesota.

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Mar 18 2011

History of English Music Hall and Variety Theatre

As a child my first memory of visiting a theatre was at the Kings Theatre, Southsea in 1969 to see a Christmas Pantomine called Puss N’ Boots. This opened up a whole new world and since, I have been to the theatre many times. One of the best shows I have seen was in London’s West end to see a Musical play about Sir Winston Churchill. The Special effects and drama was brilliant and Robert Hardy who played Winnie was excellent.

Music hall and Variety Theatre was popular entertainment that featured successive acts by singers, comedians, dancers, and actors. The form derived from the taproom concerts given in city taverns in England in the 18th–19th centuries.

To meet the demand for entertainment for the working class, tavern owners often annexed nearby buildings as music halls, where drinking and smoking were permitted. The originator of the English music hall as such was Charles Morton, who built Morton’s Canterbury Hall (1852) and Oxford Hall (1861) in London. Leading performers included Lillie Langtry, Harry Lauder (1870–1950), and Gracie Fields. Music halls evolved into larger, more respectable variety theatres, such as London’s Hippodrome and the Coliseum. Variety acts combined music, comedy acts, and one-act plays and featured celebrities such as Sarah Bernhardt and Herbert Tree.

Before Music Hall was given its name, similar types of entertainment would have been going on for many centuries. In essence, Music Hall brought together a variety of different acts which together formed an evening of light hearted entertainment.

The origins of Music Hall are found in a number of institutions which provided entertainment in the populous towns and cities of Britain in the 1830s. These were:

- The backroom of the pub, where simple sing-songs gave way to the singing saloon concert.
- Popular theatre, sometimes in pub saloons but mainly at travelling fairs.
- Song & Supper Rooms, where more affluent middle class men would enjoy a night out on the town.
- The Pleasure Gardens, where entertainment became more low brow as the years passed.

By the 1850s, the tavern landlords had moved the entertainment function of pubs into purpose built halls; these new premises still retaining the traditional ambience of the inn. The format of the evening was unchanged: a chairman would introduce song and dance acts onto a simple stage, whilst trying to keep order with a gavel. In all cases, eating, drinking and smoking continued throughout the performances.

The audience, often exuberant with alcohol, both heckled and joined in with their favourite songs and performers.The growth of the Halls was rapid and spread across Britain with the first great boom in the 1860s, so that by 1870, 31 large halls were listed in London and 384 in the rest of the country. This growth was not only in the number of halls, but also in the amenities and catering facilities. In addition, performers now became a professional workforce, appearing in London at several Halls each night and making frequent provincial tours.

At its peak, music hall was the television of its day. Its stars were enormously popular in a way it is hard to believe nowadays. They had their songs specially written for them, and permission would have to be sought if other performers wanted to sing them in public.

After consolidation during the 1870s, music hall then started another period of expansion. The London Pavilion was restyled in 1885 and incorporated much from traditional theatre’s ideas of house and stage design. This lead to the era of the de-luxe hall or Variety theatre. Now there was fixed seating in the stalls and the performer was more distant from the audience. With the increase in costs from the introduction of safety regulations and the inflation of the star’s fees, the music hall industry began to combine into a number of Syndicates. A number of nationwide chains such as Moss, Stoll and Thornton with their “Empires” and “Palaces” started to dominate the business.

Changes to licensing laws made a music and dancing licence a requirement. This allowed moral and social reformers the opportunity to challenge the style and operation of the halls; most notable in this respect was Mrs Ormiston Chant who campaigned against lax morals in the Empire, Leicester Square. Later, there was the prohibition of drink in all new halls such that by 1909, of the 29 halls belonging to Stoll, only 8 held a drinks licence.

With just a few proprietors controlling the majority of the halls, the owners attempted to extract the maximum work for minimum pay from the performers. This lead to the formation of the Variety Artists’ Federation, which in 1907 organised the first music hall strike. In 1912, music hall gained a level of respectability with the first Royal Command Performance.

The London County Council, after a series of fires in theatres and music halls finally banned eating and drinking in the auditorium in 1914. From that time, the music halls simply had to be run on the same lines as theatres. After this, music hall became known by its earlier name of Variety and, with the coming of cinema and later radio, became extinct by the time of World War II.

As far as sound recording goes, a convenient watershed is the year 1925 when the electrical recording process was first commercially introduced, making obsolete the previous mechanical “acoustic” recordings. In W. Macqueen-Pope’s book The Melody lingers on he attempts to give the difference between Music Hall and Variety. “Music Hall”, he states, “was Variety (although Variety is not Music Hall).” This shows the difficulty of any definition, although one can understand what he means. On this site, we have used the term “Variety” for recordings made after 1925, and Music Hall where Artists bridged both methods of recording.

Although generally regarded as a particularly British institution,one other countriy namely  the USA, also have a music hall tradition. In America vaudeville developed on parallel lines to music hall in Britain.

Attempts have been made at revival in Britain, both in the 1930s and on British television in the 1960′s to 1970′s with “The Good Old Days” which has been something of a pastiche. Unfortunately, sound recording came too late for most of very first generation of artists, for example George Leybourne. However, at the turn of the 19th/20th century a number of survivors such as Dan Leno, as well as younger artists, started to make recordings. Initially these were very expensive (typically you could buy twelve of the best seats in the house for the price of one record), but with time, prices fell and these records eventually became more affordable by typical music hall clientele.

Over the first three decades of the 20th century many artists committed their songs and performance to record, and these can still be heard and enjoyed today.

Music hall and variety died in the mid fifties with the arrival of Rock n Roll which attracted the youth of Britain. The previous clientele were the mums and dads which lost the habit of going to Music Hall and Variety shows and by the time of the 1960′s the end was nigh.

In the modern era the West End in London is the theatre centre of the world and has become a mixture of acting greats from the Movie World and Theatreland. In 1994 Shakespeare’s The Globe Theatre was rebuilt and is now one of the most popular theatres in London.

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The Chinese call Britain ‘The Island of Hero’s’ which I think sums up what we British are all about. We British are inquisitive and competitive and are always looking over the horizon to the next adventure and discovery.

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