Contemplazione

DeRank : 9,45
DeAge™ : 6870 days • Here since 20 august 2007
Benny Goodman Stompin' At The Savoy
Voto:
YEAH!! Anyway, just because Woody likes it, otherwise there’s no way in hell you’d review it!! SCREW YOU!
Woody Allen Sogni e delitti
Voto:
uxoooooooooooooooohsifhrencvusdgbvi kdjalovesupremekcnskfjckskindofblue gaudbeus
Paul e Chris Weitz American Pie
Voto:
Animal House is unbeatable if you like the genre. American Pie borrows heavily from it and from Porky's.
Auguste e Louis Lumière L'uscita Dalle Fabbriche Lumière (1895)
Voto:
Come on, how mean, the intention was good!
Kenny Garrett Beyond The Wall
Voto:
Anyway, at the end of the day, I think Muffin is right in saying that this technique isn’t that impossible to learn; however, probably not everyone uses it, but for stylistic and phrasing reasons, as Metamatic says. I still believe that some use it “partially,” maybe just enough to extend their flow of ideas a bit, or to hold a long note after a sentence that might be fragmented and fast; in short, the possibilities are endless, and as always, technique must serve creativity!
Kenny Garrett Beyond The Wall
Voto:
Metamatic, that's exactly why I had put "young" in quotes. Anyway, Sonny stated these things in an interview from '96, twelve years ago, and then everything is relative, compared to a Great Old One like him ;-)
Kenny Garrett Beyond The Wall
Voto:
Musicians known for circular breathing
Some musicians who do not play the instruments mentioned above are known for using circular breathing.
* Michael Sadler – North Carolina resident, multi-instrumentalist
* Daniel Goode – avant-garde clarinetist
* Jeff Coffin – jazz musician best known as a saxophonist but also plays clarinet and flute. Is a member of Béla Fleck and the Flecktones
* Rahsaan Roland Kirk – jazz multi-instrumentalist
* Roscoe Mitchell – jazz multi-instrumentalist
* David Murray – Plays tenor saxophone and, on occasion, bass clarinet
* James Carter – saxophonist, flutist, and bass clarinetist
* Irvin Mayfield – Grammy Award-nominated jazz trumpeter, composer and cultural ambassador to New Orleans
* Akikazu Nakamura – shakuhachi player
* Evan Parker – saxophone player
* Lenny Pickett – saxophone player with the 1970s funk band Tower of Power and SNL band
* Pharoah Sanders – tenor saxophonist
* Kenny G – American jazz saxophonist
* Rudy Wooten – saxophonist, Wooten Brothers Band
* John Surman – baritone and soprano saxophonist
* Jimmy Owens – trumpet player
* John Zorn – avant-garde saxophonist and composer
* Peter Zummo – avant-garde trombonist
* Femi Kuti – Afrobeat and jazz saxophonist
* Mark Pender – jazz trumpeter
* The late Cynthia Steljes, oboist for the Canadian classical group Quartetto Gelato
* Wynton Marsalis – classical and jazz trumpeter
* Ferhat Erdem – kaval and sipsi player at the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation
* Dan Regan – trombonist in the ska punk band, Reel Big Fish
* Flavio Celkevicius – Brazilian saxophonist
* Harry Carney - baritone saxophonist with Duke Ellington's Orchestra
* Paul Hanson - American jazz bassoonist
Kenny Garrett Beyond The Wall
Voto:
Method
The person inhales fully and begins to exhale and blow. When the lungs are nearly empty, the last volume of air is blown into the mouth, and the cheeks are inflated with this air. Then, while still blowing this last bit of air out by allowing the cheeks to deflate, the person must very quickly fill the lungs by inhaling through the nose prior to running out of the air in the mouth. If done correctly, by the time the air in the mouth is nearly exhausted the person can begin to exhale from the lungs once more, ready to repeat the process again.
Physiologically, the process is similar to drinking at a water fountain and taking a breath of air while water remains in the mouth, without raising the head from the water stream. The body "knows" to not allow water into the lungs. It is this same instinct that a circular breather uses to play his instrument. (Wikipedia)
Kenny Garrett Beyond The Wall
Voto:
I would emphasize: "A FEW (alcuni) jazz and classical wind players also utilize some form of circular breathing." and "Kenny G (even Wikipedia confuses Kenny Garrett with this idiot Kenny G!) is perhaps the world's most famous circular breather, setting a world record for holding a single note for 48 minutes."
Kenny Garrett Beyond The Wall
Voto:
La respirazione circolare è una tecnica utilizzata dai suonatori di alcuni strumenti a fiato per produrre un suono continuo senza interruzioni, e si realizza respirando attraverso il naso mentre si soffia attraverso la bocca, utilizzando l'aria immagazzinata nelle guance. Viene utilizzata ampiamente nell'esecuzione del didgeridoo australiano, delle launeddas sarde e dell'arghul egiziano, oltre che in molti oboi e flauti tradizionali dell'Asia e del Medio Oriente. Anche alcuni musicisti jazz e classici di strumenti a fiato utilizzano una qualche forma di respirazione circolare.
Sebbene molti musicisti professionisti a fiato trovino la respirazione circolare estremamente utile, pochi brani musicali composti prima del XX secolo richiedono realmente il suo utilizzo. Un'eccezione notevole è "Moto Perpetuo" come trascritto da Rafael Méndez da Paganini. I trombettisti che suonano questo brano devono avere un pieno controllo della loro respirazione circolare per poter eseguire il pezzo come previsto.
Kenny G è forse il respiratore circolare più famoso al mondo, avendo stabilito un record mondiale per aver mantenuto una singola nota per 48 minuti. Questo record è stato quasi raddoppiato dal sassofonista costaricano Geovanny Escalante meno di un anno dopo.