Category Archives: Music

This Blog is Moving!

 

Dearest readers,  I’m happy to tell you that as of February 11, 2013, this blog will have a new home.

You can access the new page by clicking here.

You’ll notice that the new page looks almost exactly the same.  I have received such great responses to recent content, and so I’ve made this decision in order to enhance your experience and offer more to all of you.  I’m very much looking forward to growing this content for you!

And I am SO excited about the authors, metaphysicians, and creative people that I have lined up for interviews for the next few months. I cannot wait!

Don’t worry!  The archives will still be available, nearly exactly as they are here.

Current email subscribers will receive a link confirming uninterrupted subscription in their inbox shortly.  Simply click on the provided link to reconfirm your subscription and posts will continue to be seamlessly delivered directly to your inbox.

For those using RSS feeds, please visit the new site.

I can’t tell you how happy and excited I am to make this change and I look forward to seeing you there!

Thank you so much for reading!

Brand New Blog!!!

I finally did it!  I created a blog.  Folks have been asking me recently:  Do you have a blog?  Have you started a blog yet?  When are you going to start your blog…?  I’ve been reluctant.

Then, yesterday, Kristina Walsh sent me a link to a video.  She said: “KL!  Check out this composer!”  It was the second link that I had been sent in two days time about a TED talk–which are all equally amazing.  The link she sent was to Eric Whitacre’s Virtual Chorus 2.0.

It’s one of the coolest things I’d seen in awhile.  And I thought to myself:  I should start a blog.  And the the first post should be about the Virtual Choir.  In those moments watching the Virtual Choir it was as if technology no longer seemed a plastic divider between people, and I started to feel it could be a real means of connection.  I got the chills.

I’m an old-fashioned writer.  I write by hand.  I don’t have a smart phone.  I still write and mail letters–I love to write and mail letters.  I love stationary.  I use stickers and novelty stamps often.  I relish in the slowly paced traditional forms of connection despite that our society lurches ahead at light speed.  Sometimes I won’t even send an email when I easily could, and phone someone instead–not text message–but phone.  I like to hear a live voice on the other end.

But watching the Virtual Choir shifted something for me.  I began to see technology not as a means of separation, as a device that allows us all to hide in our homes, emailing our next door neighbors to ask to borrow a cup of sugar before walking over and ringing the doorbell….who am I kidding?….do any neighbors ever ask to borrow a cup of sugar anymore?

Still, in the moments watching Whitacre’s display of more than 2,000 voices in 58 countries, I began to see, finally, that our technology can aid us all in making genuine–if even virtual–connections.  Not by text message or video conferencing.  But by being a part of a cohesive project where real connections can be made  using the resonance of voice and sound.  We are all living in a state of vibration.  Sound travels.  Sending out a vocal call to others to connect changes this virtual machine of pings and trackbacks and tags and IP addresses into something more.  Something warmer, less distant.  Something that can connect us to feeling.   And while it’s true that none of the singers in the Virtual Choir met in person to record this project, I have no doubt that energetic connections were being made.

So here I am, connecting now with you.  In the virtual world, every moment is now.  And whether you are reading this now, or now, I’m honored to connect with you, wherever you are.  Until we connect again, enjoy the Virtual Choir 2.0~

p.s. If you don’t hear from me for a little while, it’s likely because I’ve gone to the neighbor’s to borrow a cup of sugar, or an egg or two, so I can bake a loaf of bread–from scratch.