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Louis Pasteur and the Pasteur Effect

Science / Chemistry & Microbiology

French Chemist and Microbiologist who pioneered the theory that germs cause disease. He is known for Pasteur Effect.

Louis Pasteur (December 27, 1822 – September 28, 1895) was born in Dole, France. He came from a family of tanners. As a child, it was apparent to his teachers that he was academically inclined. He was also a keen artist.

At 21, Pasteur was admitted to the fine Parisian training college, the École Normale Supérieure. He became a master of science in 1845. Two years later, he presented a thesis on crystallography earning him a doctorate.

His prestigious academic background and ground-breaking research into physical chemistry immediately gained him a professorship in the science faculty at the University of Strasbourg where he met his future wife, Marie Laurent, the daughter of the university rector. They were married in 1849 and had five children.

Verdi Opera Aida

Classical Music / Opera Datebook:  December 24

Verdi opera Aida is first performed in Cairo's Khedival Theater, on December 24, 1871.


Aida is a four-act melodrama opera. Composed by Giuseppe Verdi (October 9/10, 1813 – January 27, 1901), libretto is written by Antonio Ghislanzoni, after a scenario by French Auguste Mariette and a French prose version by Camille du Locle. It was composed by Verdi between 1870-1871. The first performance was on December 24, 1871, Opera House, Cairo, Italy, and on February 8, 1872, in La Scala, Milan.

One of the most famous opera by Verdi,  Aida was commissioned by Ismail Pasha, Khedive of Egypt. Production was delayed by the Franco-Prussian war and Giuseppe Verdi donated a portion of his considerable fee to the victims of the siege of Paris. Today, Aida is as popular as ever all over the world, including many recordings. Act one has some famous and best-loved scenes. Verdi did not attend this premiere.  

Set in Ancient Egypt, opera Aida is a timeless tragic tale of forbidden love and betrayal against the backdrop of war. The story is a roller coaster of emotions told through Verdi's powerful music. It follows the struggle of the Ethiopian princess Aida held captive as a slave in ancient Egypt, in love with a young Egyptian warrior, General Radamès, and he with her. They need to decide between love or loyalty to their countries.  

ACT 1

Outside of the royal palace near Memphis, Egypt's High priest Ramfis informs Radames, a young Egyptian warrior, that armies from Ethiopia are making their way towards the Nile valley. Radames expresses his hope of being appointed the commander of Egypt's army where he can lead his troops to victory, as well as rescue Aida, his Ethiopian lover captured by Egyptian troops. He is unaware, as well as the rest of Egypt, that Aida is the daughter of Amonasro, Ethiopia's king. Since her capture, Aida has served as a slave to the Egyptian princess, Amneris, who is in love with Radames, but senses he is in love with another woman. It isn't long before Amneris figures out who the mystery woman is when she sees the longing glances shared between him and Aida. Amneris maintains her composure from deep-rooted jealousy. She continues to keep Aida as her slave.

The king of Egypt arrives and announces that Ramfis' information was correct and that Ethiopian troops, lead by the King of Ethiopia himself, have already made their way into Thebes. The king appoints Radames as the leader of the army while simultaneously declaring war on Ethiopia. A joyful Radames makes way to the temple to complete his coronation ritual. Left alone in the hall, Aida becomes distraught as she is forced to choose between her Egyptian lover and her father and country.

ACT 2

Radames and his troops return from Thebes after their victorious battle. Inside Amneris' chambers, she has her slaves entertain. Doubting her suspicions of Aida and Radames, she decides to test Aida. She dismisses all of her slaves except for Aida and tells her that Radames has died in battle. Aida breaks down into tears who confesses her love for Radames, which instantly infuriates Amneris, who vows revenge.

The triumphant Radames makes his return with his army to Memphis, marching through the city while the captured Ethiopians trail behind. Aida sees her captured father and rushes to his side. He makes her promise not to reveal their true identities.

The King of Egypt, so delighted with Radames' performance, honors him by granting him anything he asks for. Before Radames can make his request, Amonasro declares that the King of Ethiopia was killed in battle and asks the Egyptian king to set them free.However, the Egyptians join in chant asking for the death of the Ethiopians and the King grants their desires. In order to save his lover's life, Radames cashes in on the King's generosity and asks him to spare their lives. The King happily grants him his request and declares Radames his successor and future husband of Princess Amneris. Aida and her father are taken into custody to prevent any Ethiopian revolt.

ACT 3

Preparations are made for the upcoming wedding between Radames and Amneris. Aida waits for Radames outside of the temple in a place previously agreed upon. Amonasro pressures her daughter Aida to find out where the Egyptian army is being kept. Feeling homesick, she agrees to her father's wishes. When Radames comes out of the temple to meet Aida, Amonrasro hides and eavesdrops on their conversation. After their lovers talk about their future lives together, Aida asks Radames where the army is located.

Amonasro comes out of hiding and reveals his identity to Radames just as Amneris and the High Priest come out of the temple. Before Aida and Amonasro escape, Aida pleads for Radames to follow them but instead, Radames submits himself as a traitor to Amneris and the High Priest. 

ACT 4

Amneris is frustrated with Radames but pleads with him to deny his self-accusations. Full of pride and love for his country, he does not. He accepts his punishment but is happy to know that Aida and her father have escaped. This hurts Amneris even more. She tells him that she will save him if he renounces his love for Aida, but again, he refuses. The High Priest and his court condemn Radames to death by being buried alive. Amneris begs for their mercy, but they do not budge.

Radames is taken to the lowest level in the temple, sealed away into a dark tomb. Moments after being locked away, he hears someone breathing in a dark corner. It is Aida. She confesses her love for him and has chosen to die with him. The two embrace as Amneris weeps above them.

 

Triumphal March from Verdi Opera Aida

 
 
 
Verdi: Aïda - San Francisco Opera (starring Luciano Pavarotti)





Video Credit:

Triumphal March from Aida, uploaded by ClaudioDavidT. Accessed, Dec 26, 2011. Triumphal March from Aida by Giuseppe Verdi ; Metropolitan Opera House(1989)

Verdi: Aïda - San Francisco Opera (starring Luciano Pavarotti). YouTube, Warner Classics. Accessed April 26, 2021.  

Resources:  

Eaton, Quaintance. Opera Production A Handbook. Univ of Minnesota Press, Minneapoilis. 1961. 
Martin, Nicholas Ivor. The Da Capo Opera. New York: Da Capo Press. 1997.
Morley, Sir Alexander F.  The Harrap Opera Guide. London: Harrap. 1970.

 
 
 
(c) 2011. Updated April 26, 2021. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved. 

Gutenberg Printing Invention


Beginnings of Writing


The earliest printed book was the Diamond Sutra produced in China in 868 CE, although printing had started before that time. The earliest writing was etched into clay tablets with a chisel or stylus or into stone, bone, or wood. Paper first appeared as papyrus, made by Egyptians from the stems of the grass like plant, then later as untanned animal skins the Greeks called parchment. Finally, it’s the paper we know today, invented in China in about 10 CE.

Gutenberg Printing Invention


In 1450, Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press, with moveable type. It played a key role in the development of the Renaissance, Reformation, the Age of Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution and laid the material basis for the modern knowledge-based economy and the spread of learning to the masses.


The use of movable type was a marked improvement on the handwritten manuscript, which was the existing method of book production in Europe, and upon woodblock printing, and revolutionized European book-making. Gutenberg's printing technology spread rapidly throughout Europe and later the world.

Verdi Opera Luisa Miller

Giuseppe Verdi's Opera Luisa Miller

This day, on December 8, 1849, the 3-act opera Luisa Miller by Italian opera composer Giuseppe Verdi premieres in Teatro San Carlo, Naples.  It is written to an Italian libretto by Salvadore Cammarano, based on a German play Kabale und Liebe by writer Friedrich von Schiller.

Opera Luisa Miller was Verdi's 15th opera.



MOZART Burial, St. Marx Cemetery

Mozart / Death Anniversary: December 5

St. Marx Cemetery, in Vienna, where Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had been buried.




Historic graveyard in Vienna (St. Marxer Friedhof), the exact position is unknown. It's now used as a park for recreation, jogging, and tourist attraction. There were three busloads of Japanese tourists when I was last there. My soliloquy ended upon their arrival with all the excitement, and all I heard was the euphoric "Mozart!" "Mozart!".

Background music is Mozart's famous last unfinished work, Mozart Requiem, completed by his student and friend Franz Xaver Suessmayr.

Video Credit:
Cemetery, where Mozart had been buried. Youtube, uploaded by Gerard Schwertberger.


(c) December 2011.  Tel Asiado.  Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.

Gaetano Donizetti

 Classical Music / Composer's Datebook: November 29 


Italian Opera Composer and rival of Vincenzo Bellini, masters of 'Bel Canto'

Brief biography of Italian composer Gaetano Donizetti, his life, career and list of major opera works.  Best known for the comedy opera L'Elisir d'amore.


 
   

Donizetti's Early Years

 

Italian composer Domenico Gaetano Donizetti was born in Bergamo, Italy, on November 29, 1797. He came from humble beginnings and unmusical background, unlike his contemporary and rival, Vincenzo Bellini who was guided by his composer grandfather. Donizetti was born in Bergamo, Italy on November 29, 1797, the same year as Schubert, and studied music locally.

 

Donizetti's Training, Influence and Marriage

 

As a boy, he learned so quickly that he was sent to Liceo Filarmonica in Bologna. Then his talent was greatly recognized by Johann Mayr, opera composer and conductor, who supported and provided him a solid musical education. Nearing adulthood, he continued his lessons with Padre Mattei, a renowned counterpoint maestro. At 27, he married Virginia Vasselli, a daughter of a Roman lawyer.  

 

Donizetti's Operatic Works, Career and Recognition

 

At the age of 21, he received his first operatic commission. He was writing four to five operas a year.

Donizetti composed more than 70 operas including Lucrezia Borgia, Lucia di Lammermoor, based on the classic The Bride of Lammermoor by Scottish writer Sir Walter Scott containing the famous "Mad Scene', La fille du regiment, La favorite, and Don Pasquale. The opera that made his name widely known was Anna Bolena, based on Anne Boleyn the second wife of Henry VII, produced in 1830 at Milan, although by this time he had already produced over 30 operas. His Lucia di Lammermoor, produced at Naples in 1835, was another tremendous success.

Donizetti excelled not only in serious operas like Lucia di Lammermoor but also in comic operas such as L’elisir d’amore (The Elixir of Love). These two operas are regularly performed worldwide. In his 40s, he visited Paris where he was warmly accepted and produced operas there.

His last major opera Don Pasquale was completed in 1843. About this time, his physical and mental health began to fail, and he became paralysed in 1845. His mental disorder and paralysis were caused by syphilis. He died aged 50, on April 8, 1848, also in Bergamo his birthplace.   

 

Donizetti Legacy

He is best remembered the ‘master of the mad scene’, for which ironically, he also died in the same state of mind he portrayed so tragically on stage. However, he should also be remembered for his most delightful comic operas.

 

Donizetti's Operas:

Anna Bolena (Anne Boleyn) 1830

L'Elisir d'amore (The Elixir of Love) 1832

Lucrezia Borgia 1833

Maria Stuarda (Mary Stuart) 1834

Rosmona d'Inghilterra 1834

Lucia di Lammermoor (The Bride of Lammermoor) 1835

La Filled du regiment (The Daughter of the Regiment) 1840

La Favorita (The Favorite) 1840

Linda de Chamounix (Linda of Chamonix) 1842

Maria de Rohan 1843

Don Pasquale 1843

 

Image Credit:

Portrait of Gaetano Donizetti by Giuseppe Rillosi, 1848.  en.wikipedia.org / Public Domain.

 

Resources:

Gaetano Donizetti. Wikipedia. en.wikipedia.org. 

Sadie, Stanley, Ed. The Grove Dictionary of Music. London: Macmillan Press Ltd, 1994. 

 

 (Note: I originally wrote & publish this article for suite101.com, October 7, 2007. / Tel)

 

(c) October 2007. Updated November 29, 2021.  Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved. 

Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op.30

Classical Music / Piano Concerto 

Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30 



The Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30 composed in 1909 by Sergei Rachmaninoff considered one of the most technically challenging piano concertos in the standard classical repertoire. It is used in the 1996 film Shine, based on the life of pianist David Helfgott.

The video below is performed by piano virtuoso Martha Argerich, with Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Riccardo Chailly.




Following the form of a standard concerto, the piece is in three movements: 0:28 - Allegro ma non tanto, 16:27 - Intermezzo: Adagio, and 27: 27 - Finale: Alla breve

Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 5

Classical Music / Orchestral


Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64, by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was composed between May and August 1888 and was first performed in St Petersburg at the Mariinsky Theatre on November 17 of that year with Tchaikovsky conducting. It is dedicated to Theodor Avé-Lallemant. 

The fifth symphony was composed in 1888, between the Manfred Symphony of 1885 and the sketches for a Symphony in E-flat, which were abandoned in 1892 (apart from recuperating material from its first movement for an Allegro Brillante for piano and orchestra a year later). As for the numbered symphonies, Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 was composed between Symphony No. 4, which had been completed ten years earlier, and Symphony No. 6, composed 5 years later, in the year of the composer's death. 

Watch on YouTube (for reason of copyright infringement) --->  Here

Also highly suggested listening pleasure: 

TCHAIKOVSKY - Symphony no. 6 (Pathétique) - Herbert von Karajan & Wiener Philharmonic. YouTube, uploaded by PermafrostIndustries. Accesed January 12, 2019.

Instrumentation.  Symphony No. 5 is scored for 3 flutes (3rd doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in A, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in F, 2 trumpets in A, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, and strings.

Structure.  Like the Symphony No. 4, No. 5 is a cyclical symphony, with a recurring main theme. Unlike No. 4, the theme is heard in all four movements, a feature Tchaikovsky had first used in the Manfred Symphony, which was completed less than three years before No. 5.

The symphony is in four movements:

  1. Andante – Allegro con anima (E minor) – Molto più tranquillo (D major – E major)
  2. Andante cantabile, con alcuna licenza (B minor – D major) – Non allegro (F minor) – Andante maestoso con piano (D major)
  3. Valse. Allegro moderato (A major) (Trio in F minor)
  4. Finale: Andante maestoso (E major) – Allegro vivace – Molto vivace (E minor) – Moderato assai e molto maestoso – Presto (E major)

The symphony's recurring main theme is used as a device to unify the four movements of the symphony. This motto theme, sometimes dubbed "Fate theme", has a funereal character in the first movement, but gradually transforms into a triumphant march, which dominates the final movement. A typical performance of the symphony lasts somewhat less than 50 minutes.

Program. Symphony No. 5 has no clear program. On 15 April 1888, about a month before he began composing the symphony, the composer sketched a scenario for its first movement in his notebook, containing "... a complete resignation before fate, which is the same as the inscrutable predestination of fate ..." It is however uncertain how much of this program has been realised in the composition.

Video  Resource: 

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky - Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64 (Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra, Valery Gergiev). From the Salle Pleyel in Paris, 2010 All six Tchaikovsky Symphonies with Valery Gergiev conducting the Mariinsky Orchestra. Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra. Valery Gergiev - conductor. YouTube, uploaded by WocomoMusic. Accessed February 19, 2021.

0:00 Intro 

1:05 I. Andante: Allegro con anima

17:48 II. Andante cantabile con alguna licenza

33:50 III. Valse. Allegro moderato 

39:42 IV. Finale. Andante maestoso. Allegro vivace (Alla breve). 


Text Resource:

Symphony No. 5 (Tchaikovsky). en.wikipedia.org. 

 

(c) November 2011. Updated Feb 20, 2022. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved. 

Brahms Piano Concerto No.2

Classical Music Milestone: November 9

Composer Johannes Brahms is soloist in the first performance of his Piano Concerto No.2 at Budapest.


Johannes Brahms' Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat major, Op.83 is a composition for solo piano with orchestral accompaniment. November 9, 1881 marks the day that the composer first performed it in Budapest, himself the soloist.   It is separated by a gap of 22 years from his first piano concerto.

He began work on the piece in 1878, completing it in 1881 while in Pressbaum near Vienna, Austria.  He dedicated this piece of music to his teacher, Eduard Marxsen.  The premiere was an immediate success. Brahms performed it in many cities across Europe soon after.


Ignacy Jan Paderewski

Classical Music / Composer's Datebook: November 6

 

Polish pianist, composer, and statesman who became a spokesman for Polish independence.

 

Ignacy Jan Paderewski brief biography – his life and major works. In 1919, he was the new nation's Prime Minister and foreign minister during which he signed the Treaty of Versailles, which ended World War I. 

 

Ignacy Jan Paderewski,  Polish composer, pianist and statesman, was born in Kurylowka, Poland, 6 November 1860. He was an outstanding Polish musician during his time, internationally acclaimed pianist, and the only musician to head a government. As a pianist, Paderewski was renowned for his dazzling technique and luxuriant head of hair.  He began composing at the age of six.

Paderewski studied at Warsaw Conservatory becoming a pianoforte teacher there (1879-83). Then he studied in Vienna for three years, from 1884 to 1887. He debuted in Vienna 1887, Paris 1888, London 1890, and NY in 1891. After his debut in Vienna, he became celebrated in Europe and the USA as an interpreter of Chopin’s music, as composer of the exciting Polish Fantasy for piano and orchestra, and the romantic ‘Polonia’ Symphony

The Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 17, is the only piano concerto written by Ignacy Jan Paderewski. It was written in the composer's twenties, with the first movement dating back to 1882, although the majority of the work was composed in 1888 and scored in 1889.

The video below is  a classical concert celebrating Ignacy Jan Paderewski. Event: 2 January 2016, Melbourne Town Hall. Paderewski's Piano Concerto in A minor, Op.17, interpreted by Konrad Olszewski, pianist.  Zelman Memorial Symphony Orchestra (ZMSO, Melbourne) conducted by Mark Shiell.

13th National Polish Arts Festival - PolArt2015 

1. Allegro 2. Romanza: Andante17:25 3. Allegro molto vivace 27:15 

 

 

Paderewski wrote mainly pianoforte solos including the Tatra Album (1885) based on songs and dances of the Polish Tatra mountain-dwellers. In the 1890s, he composed a violin sonata, the 6 Huoresques de Concert for pianoforte, and the Polish Fantasy for pianoforte and orchestra. His tragic opera Manru (1897-1900) considered his masterpiece, was presented in Dresden in 1901 and NY Met in 1902. 

From 1903, he wrote more sonatas and songs. Patriotic, during World War I, he worked tirelessly for the Polish cause. In 1919 when Poland became independent, he became Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of the first government, then retired a year later after some political disagreements, but became Poland’s delegate to the League of Nations. 

In 1922, he resumed his recitals, raising large amounts of money for war victims. Paderewski sponsored several competitions and established scholarships such as $10,000 trust fund for US-born composers in 1900. In 1936 he appeared in the film Moonlight Sonata. In 1936-38, he supervised publication of Chopin’s complete music 'Chopin'. 

He was made president of the Polish National Council in Paris in 1940. Paderewski married twice. He died in New York, 29th June 1941. Pending liberation, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, but reburied in Warsaw with a state funeral in 1992. He was made an Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE) in 1925. 

Trivia:Artists on Paderewski.  Among the portrait painters and caricaturists who drew Paderewski were: Tavik Frantisek Simon (1901), Sir Leslie Ward, and Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1890). English sculptor Sir Alfred Gilbert also sculpted Paderewski's bust whilst the composer was playing the piano in Sir Gilbert's studio.     

I.J. Paderewski by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadena (1890). Arts & Culture Google.com

 
I.J. Paderewski by Sir Leslie Ward, from Media.vam.ac.uk (Victori and Albert Museum). Link: Pinterest

 

Image Credit: 

I.J. Paderewski by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadena (1890). Arts & Culture Google.com.  

I.J. Paderewski by Sir Leslie Ward, from Media.vam.ac.uk (Victori and Albert Museum). Link: Pinterest

Jan Ignacy Paderewski. circa 1900. en.wikipedia.org (Theodore C. Marceau - Project Gutenberg).  Public Domain. 

Video Credit:  

Paderewski, Piano Concerto in A minor, Op.17 - PolArt2015.  YouTube, uploaded by Grzegorz Macnacki. Accessed November 6, 2018.

Resources:

Ignacy Jan Paderewski - Biography. culture.pl

Ignacy Jan Paderewski. en.wikipedia.org 

Kennedy, Michael & Joyce, and Tim Rutherford-Johnson, Ed.  Oxford Dictionary of Music, Sixth Edition. London: Oxford University Press. 2012.  

Sadie, Stanley, Ed. The Grove Dictionary of Music, New updated edition. London: Macmillan Publishers. 1994.

 

(c) November 2011. Updated April 30, 2023. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.

Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 "Pathetique"

Classical Music / Orchestral

 

The Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74, also known as the Pathétique Symphony, is Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's final completed symphony. It was written between February and the end of August 1893. The composer entitled the work "The Passionate Symphony", employing a Russian word, (Pateticheskaya), meaning "passionate" or "emotional", not "arousing pity," which was then translated into French as pathétique, meaning "solemn" or "emotive".  It is a word reflective of a touch of concurrent suffering. Tchaikovsky considered calling it "Program Symphony" but realized that would encourage curiosity about the program, which he did not want to reveal. 

Tchaikovsky led the first performance in Saint Petersburg on 28 October of that year, nine days before his death. The second performance, conducted by Eduard Nápravník, took place 21 days later, at a memorial concert on 18 November. It included some minor corrections that Tchaikovsky had made after the premiere, and was thus the first performance of the work in the exact form in which it is known today. 

The first performance in Moscow was on 16 December, conducted by Vasily Safonov. It was the last of Tchaikovsky's compositions premiered in his lifetime. His very last composition, the single-movement 3rd Piano Concerto, Op. 75, which was completed a short time before his death in October 1893, received a posthumous premiere. 

Highly Recommended Reading:

Symphony guide: Tchaikovsky's Sixth ('Pathetique'). Written by Tom Service,  Tuesday 26 August 2014. www.theguardian.com. Accessed November 6, 2023.  With gratitude, I'm quoting from Tom Service's touching article on Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 "Pathetique", one of my two all-time favourite symphonies from this beloved Russian composer (the other symphony is Symphony No. 5):  

"So yes, this symphony is about a battle between a stubborn life-energy and an ultimately stronger force of oblivion that ends up in a terrifying exhaustion, but what makes the piece so powerful is that it’s about all of us, not just Tchaikovsky... so when you’re listening to the performances, hear instead how the cry of pain that is the climax of the first movement is a musical premonition of the inexorably descending scales of the last movement, and how the second movement makes its five-in-a-bar dance simultaneously sound like a crippled waltz and a memory of a genuinely sensual joy. Listen to how the March of the third movement creates a seething superficial motion that doesn’t actually go anywhere, musically speaking, and whose final bars create one of the greatest, most thrilling, but most empty of victories in musical history, at the end of which audiences often clap helplessly, thinking they have arrived at the conventionally noisy end of a symphonic journey. But then we’re confronted with the devastating lament of the real finale, that Adagio lamentoso, which begins with a composite melody that is shattered among the whole string section (no single instrumental group plays the tune you actually hear, an amazing, pre-modernist idea), and which ends with those low, tolling heartbeats in the double-basses that at last expire into silence." (Thank you very much, Tom Service. You nailed it!

Video:

Maestro Herbert von Karajan conducts Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6, "Pathetique", with Wiener Philharmoker (Vienna Philharmonic). 


The symphony is in four movements:

  1. Adagio – Allegro non troppo
  2. Allegro con grazia
  3. Allegro molto vivace
  4. Adagio lamentoso

 The symphony is scored for an orchestra with the following instruments:

Video Credit: 

TCHAIKOVSKY - Symphony no. 6 (Pathétique) - Herbert von Karajan & Wiener Philharmonic. YouTube, uploaded by PermafrostIndustries. Accessed November 6, 2023.

Resource:

Symphony No. 6. (Tchaikovsky). en.wikipedia.org.

 

(c) November 2011. Updated November 6, 2023. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved. 

Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition


Pictures at an Exhibition by Russian composer Mussorgsky


"Pictures from an Exhibition" – A Remembrance of Viktor Hartmann  is a suite in 10 movements composed for piano by Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky in 1874. It is considered his best and most famous piano composition.  It is known for its various orchestrations and arrangements by other composers, the most famous of which is Maurice Ravel's most performed and recorded arrangement.


Pictures at an Exhibition: Promenade (part 1)




Valery Gergiev with The Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra play "Pictures at an Exhibition" Promenade (part 1) by Modest Mussorgsky.

Rossini Opera The Siege of Corinthe

Classical Music Datebook:October 9


Rossini Opera Le Siège de Corinthe First Performed, 9 October 1826


Le siège de Corinthe (The Siege of Corinth) is Gioachino Rossini's first French opera. Is is in three acts to a French libretto by Luigi Balocchi and Alexandre Soumet, based on Maometto II by Cesare della Valle. It is also known in its Italian version as L'assedio di Corinto.


Opera History


Le Siège de Corinthe opera by Gioachino Rossini commemorates the siege and ultimate destruction of Missolongi town in 1826 by the Turkish during the ongoing Greek War of Independence (1821–1829). The reference to Corinth is an example of allegory, although Sultan Mehmed II had indeed besieged the city in the 1450s.



This same incident also inspired a prominent painting by Eugène Delacroix (Greece Expiring on the Ruins of Missolonghi), and was mentioned in the writings of Victor Hugo. He tried earlier versions but was not successful.

Steve Jobs Loses Fight with Cancer

Apple's co-founder Steve Jobs succumbs to pancreatic cancer

October 6, 2011 - 11:43AM

Steve Jobs, 56-year old co-founder of Apple, modern era visionary, technology legend, has died. His family and Apple have announced his passing away.  Jobs, who stepped down recently as chief executive, had been suffering from pancreatic cancer.  Rest in peace, Steve Jobs.  He will surely be missed in the technology world he had given so much of.

The Fibonacci Series, Phi, Shapes, and Numbers: Sacred Geometry in Nature and Culture



For eons, human beings have felt that certain numbers, ratios, and shapes have sacred significance. For instance, the number ‘7’ has had great significance in various aspects of many cultures, geometric shapes have been associated with numbers, and the Fibonacci series and Golden Ratio are still instrumental in everything from Art to Music.

Sacred Meanings in Geometric Numbers and Shapes

Symbolic and sacred meanings are also ascribed to certain geometric
numbers, shapes, and geometric ratios or proportions. Through the ages, especially in the ancient world, some numbers had symbolic meaning attached, aside from their ordinary use for counting or calculating. In geometry, figures such as triangles, squares, polygons, hexagons, and so forth are all related to numbers. Triangles, for example, relate to three angles, squares to four, and so on.
As an example of attaching sacred meanings to geometric numbers, the number ‘seven’ occurs consistently in diverse cultures around the world. And more, the religious and mythologies of the world are filled with sevens. Consider some of these:
Pyramids of Giza: Image by Darren Krape
  • The shape of the pyramids of Egypt produces the number seven by combining the three-sided triangle and four-sided square.
  • In music, the seven musical notes in a scale repeat at the octave.
  • There are seven terraces of purgatory in the Roman Catholic beliefs.
  • The Christian Church recognizes the seven virtues and seven deadly sins.
  • There were seven steps taken by Buddha at his birth.
  • There are seven heavens and seven earths in Islamic tradition.
  • There are seven worlds in the Hindu universe.
  • The seven-branched Jewish menorah is the oldest symbol in Judaism.
The ancient Greek philosopher Pythagoras believed that integers represented fundamental meanings. He regarded seven as the “vehicle” of life. To him, the number seven signified the union of spirit and matter – the union of three (the triple nature of the spirit) combined with the four elements of matter (earth, air, fire, and water).
Seven was also associated with growth, whereby a phenomenon tends to be completed in seven stages, such as the “seven stages of man” expressed by Shakespeare in  As You Like It, or the biblical Creation by God in seven days. According to some beliefs, the human body needs seven energy vortices known as chakras to be open for spiritual growth; that is, one has to move focus from the three lower (physical) chakras to the four higher (spiritual) centers.
The Fibonacci Sequence is present in the nautilus shell. Image by jitze
How then is the Fibonacci sequence related to Sacred Geometry? The Fibonacci sequence is a series of numbers in which each number is the sum of the previous two. It starts with 0 and 1,which equals 1. Then 1 plus 2 equals 3, 2 plus 3 equals 5, and so on. Why are these numbers significant? Simply, they are nature’s numbering system and they give rise to the mystical Phi, what is referred to as the “golden section” or “golden ratio.” It should be noted that the ratio of successive pairs from the Fibonacci series tends toward Phi or 1.618 and out of this ratio comes the golden rectangle and the spiral shape, which is the most widespread shape in the universe.
The Fibonacci numbers are represented practically everywhere. In the petals on a flower, or the arrangement of leaves along a stem, you will find this sequence of numbers. The petals on most flowers display one of the Fibonacci numbers. The numbers also appear in certain parts of sea shell formations. Parts of the human body also reveal these ratios, including the five fingers, and a thumb on each hand. Fibonacci also can be seen in a piano that produces harmony through a beautiful music. A piano has one keyboard with five black keys (sharps and flats) arranged in groups of two and three, and eight white keys (whole tones) for the 13 chromatic musical octaves.
The Phi or 1.618 was described in the past as a divine number because it signifies beauty and harmony. Egyptian architects made use of Phi relationships in the construction of temples and the Great Pyramid, and so did the Greeks in their Parthenon in Athens, and the Europeans, for their Gothic cathedrals.

The Sacred Geometry

Simply described, the Sacred Geometry arises out of the set of numbers from the Fibonacci series or the “golden ratio.”  Through the years since ancient times, it has been significantly used in the planning and construction of religious structures (churches, temples, mosques, tabernacles, altars and monuments), as well as sacred spaces (like holy wells and sacred groves), and the creation of religious art.
Consciously or not, humans seem to be genetically programmed to respond to these sacred numbers, ratios, and shapes. Thanks to Italian mathematician Leonardo Fibonacci for introducing his famous Fibonacci sequence, its associated mystical ratio, the Phi, and paving the way for the shapes that greatly defined the world’s magnificent structures and amazing wonders.
The Fibonacci Sequence appears in both art and nature. Image by labcstm
Fibonacci numbers, ratios and shapes have been used to explain creation, growth and harmony – from a number of petals on a flower and grandiose architecture, to a spiraling galaxy. And to music lovers, it’s one beautiful harmony of musical scale that pleases the ear and ultimately the spirit.  A sacred geometry!
Sources:
Bradley, P.  Great Mysteries. New Holland (2010).
Calter, P. Polygons, Tilings, & Sacred Geometry. Dartmouth. Accessed September 22, 2011.
Sacred Geometry. Spiraloflight. Accessed  September 22, 2011.

George Cadbury Chocolates


Cadbury chocolates, anyone?



Any chocaholic will easily recognise the name "Cadbury." It doesn't matter whether your favourite chokkie is Lindt or Belgian or any other confectionary. Perhaps Vienna's Mozartkugeln? A chocolate is a chocolate is a chocolate (with apology to Gertrude Stein's "a rose is a rose is a rose... by any other name.)

George Cadbury, the founder of famous chocolate manufacturing company, George Cadbury, was born on September 19, 1839. He was the third son of a Quaker, John Cadbury, who pioneered Cadbury's cocoa and chocolates.

Anton Rubinstein Romance in E-flat Major, Op. 44, No. 1

Classical Music / Anton Rubinstein Music

Anton Rubinstein "Romance in E-Flat Major, Op. 44, No. 1" 


Enjoy this lovely piece of music "Romance in E-flat major" by Anton Rubinstein.  Isaac Stern: violinist, with Columbia Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Frank Brieff, 1972. Arranged by Arthur Harris.



This heart-warming music is popularised by Frank Sinatra, with a song of the same name, "If You Are But a Dream," written in 1942 by Moe Jaffe, Jack Fulton and Nat Bonx, based on Anton Rubinstein's "Romance in E flat, Op. 44, No. 1." It was recorded by Frank Sinatra, for Columbia Records on November 14, 1944 in New York, arranged and conducted by Axel Stordahl. In 1945 it was included in the Academy Award-winning short film, The House I Live In, which featured Frank Sinatra. The song can be found on the Columbia CD box set, The Best of the Columbia Years, 1943-1952 and The Columbia Years 1943 -- 1952: The Complete Recordings: 12 CD Box Set.  Enjoy this all-time favourite piece, both the music and the song. 

Andreas Vesalius and De Humani Corporis Fabrica



Andreas Vesalius was a Belgian physician, anatomist and teacher. He is the founder of modern human anatomy, and is famous for his textbook Fabrica, considered the greatest medical book in his time. The actual name of the book is De humani corporis fabrica (On the Fabric of the Human Body), written in 1543.


In the early 16th century, before Vesalius came into the medical scene, knowledge of human anatomy was based essentially on guesswork, and surgery was something unheard of. Medical students learned human anatomy not by studying bodies and dissecting them, but by reading the works of the Roman physician Galen (AD129-c. 216), considered a great authority at that time. The Greek philosopher Aristotle also studied anatomy closely, and, along with Leonardo da Vinci, was another forerunner of Vesalius.


Vesalius Challenges the Human Anatomy Dissection Process


One of the problems before Vesalius was the taboo on dissecting human bodies. A 14th century Bolognese doctor called Mondino DeLuzzi was one of the first to carry out a dissection. With his work, Vesalius broke two taboos.
  • First, Vesalius challenged the more than one thousand year old authority of Galen.
  • Second, Vesalius actually dissected human bodies, looking at anatomy closely, and encouraged his students to do the same.
The anatomical knowledge Vesalius gained was put into his great  book Fabrica, which laid the foundations of modern medicine.

Early Life of Andreas Vesalius


Andreas Vesalius (December 31, 1514 – October 15, 1564) was born into a Flemish family in Brussels, Belgium. His father was a court official in the service of the Holy Roman Emperor, and so was his grandfather. His ambition was to emulate them by serving his country.

As a teenager, he began medical studies at Louvain University in Brussels, and his desire to study anatomy was already evident. At the age of 16, he was stealing corpses for dissection in the middle of the night. In 1533, when he went to study in Paris, his pursuit was even gruesome. He scoured graveyards to find fresh bodies, and sometimes secretly dissected them in his room to avoid attention.

Despite what may appear to be an appalling pursuit, the anatomical knowledge he gained by dissecting cadavers paid off. In Paris, his skill came to the attention of university professors Jacob Sylvius and John Guinter, the two greatest anatomists in Europe at the time. Aged 23, Vesalius was made Head of the Department of Surgery and Anatomy of the University of Padua in Italy, which was then the most prestigious medical school in the world.

Vesalius Performs Dissection in Padua, Italy

Unlike Galen, Vesalius opted to perform the dissection himself while describing to his students exactly what he was uncovering and discovering.

In 1538, Vesalius got an artist, John Stephanus of Calcar, to draw versions of six of the charts he had sketched for his students. Published as Tabulae anatomicae sex (Six anatomical charts), three of these charts showed views of the human skeleton, while the other three showed:
  1. The portal vein near the heart
  2. The heart and all the body’s veins
  3. The heart and all the arteries.
The Tabulae was an instant hit, and Vesalius’s reputation as an anatomist grew. For four years, he embarked on a huge project to create a comprehensive and accurate guide to human anatomy based on dissections, and worked with a brilliant team of artists to that end. After everything was prepared, he sent the manuscript in Basel to John Oporinus, a distinguished professor and printer, with Vesalius’s orders to use the finest paper and best typography.
At age 29, Andreas Vesalius finished De humani corporis fabrica, libri septem (in seven volumes). Vesalius sent a magnificent purple silk-bound presentation copy to Emperor Charles V, complete with over 200 fabulous hand-coloured illustrations. The Emperor was so impressed that within a few months, he invited Vesalius to become the Emperor’s Personal Physician.

The Royal Physician Gives up Academic Career


Bronze Statue of Andreas Vesalius in Brussels, Belgium: Image by infomatique
In less than a year, Vesalius abandoned his academic career entirely. Having achieved his ambition to become a court official, he settled down to a distinguished but conservative career, marrying a Brussels girl, Anne van Hamme. The couple had a child, also named Anne.

Over the years, Andreas Vesalius became a highly distinguished physician respected across Europe. He was summoned by royalties to help court physicians, including Henry II of France, and Don Carlos, the Crown Prince of Spain.

Final Years of Andreas Vesalius


In 1564, Vesalius set out on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land for unknown reasons. The man who revolutionized the study of anatomy never returned, dying on the ship on his way home from Jerusalem.

His famous textbook, De humani corporis fabrica, or Fabrica in short, is still acclaimed for its highly detailed illustrations of human dissections, often represented in allegorical poses.


Resources: 

1. McGovern, Una. (ed). Chambers Biographical 
2. Chambers Dictionary. Chambers. (2002).
3. Farndon, J., et al. The Great Scientists. Capella / Arcturus. (2005).

Note: This article was originally published at Suite101.com, September 7, 2008.


(c)  September 2011. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. Inspired Pen Web.

Violinist Joshua Bell at D.C. Metro Station and the Chain Email

Famous Violinist Joshua Bell performs at the Washington D.C. Metro subway incognito.

A chain email on Joshua Bell's performance at L'Enfant's Plaza Metro station lives on after four years.

Since early 2007 to this day, 3rd of September 2011, a chain email has proliferated about American virtuoso violinist Joshua Bell performing incognito at Washington D.C. Metro station. The message is a lesson on our perception, taste, and attitude.

After four years, the latest from this chain email I got was just the other day, Sept 2.  A friend meant well in sending it, to share I'm sure.

The email forward claims that violinist Joshua Bell performed incognito at a metro station in Washington D.C. playing on a violin worth millions of dollars but his performance received very little interest from passersby.


 

Tim Berners-Lee and the World Wide Web (WWW)

Science / Inventors Datebook

Inventor Tim Berners-Lee and the WWW


The internet has become an enormous network linking billions of computers worldwide. It came a long way when it began as a small operation the U.S. Department of Defense.

The Internet's Early Years


The Internet came about in the early 1960s. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was the birthplace of the Internet. That time, dial-up phone lines were used to form the basis of Internet connections. In the mid-60s, the first real wide-area connection came through when a computer at the famous Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) eventually connected with a California computer. With the inadequacy of the telephone's lines, the concept of packet switching was began, giving birth to the ARPANET in 1966.

10 Products that Define Apple's Steve Jobs



As Apple's co-founder Steve Jobs resigns, 10 products that define this technological visionary extraordinaire are easily identified.


Steve Jobs quits as Apple CEO. (The Sydney Morning Herald, August 25, 2011, 12:21om.) The technological visionary and industry legend takes a bow from Apple.  He has been on medical leave since January 17.  Tim Cook, Apple COO, has been slated as Jobs' successor. However, Jobs will remain at Apple as chairman of the company's board.

As early as the mid-1970s, Steve Jobs has been the icon of the personal computers, with the advent of the Apple I in 1976, and the enhanced Apple II-e.  Whilst Apple II is apparently ancient compared to the latest Apple innovations now and most likely lives in the memory of those familiar with II-e and the early Macintosh, the design was amazing by the standards of those past years. It was also during that time (1981), that IBM launched its personal computer (PC). But it was with the Apple Computers in 1976 that Steve Jobs, (along with another Steve, Steve Wozniak), created the "personal" computer.

Ebb Tide (Song)

Songs / Down Memory Lane


"Ebb Tide" is a song written in 1953 by the lyricist Carl Sigman and composer Robert Maxwell.  The song describes the ebb tides, the ocean waves coming in and out to and from the shores.


There is a movie of the same title produced in 1937, which is a composition by Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger. It's not related and should not be confused with the song itself.  




Video Credit:

Ebb Tide - Matt Monro.  Youtube, uploaded by 65Seasons.  Accessed August 5, 2011.  

(c) 2011-2017. Tel Asiado. Written for Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.

Mozart's Ave Verum Corpus

Claassical Music / Sacred Music: Mozart

 

Ave verum corpus (Hail, true body), (K. 618), is a motet in D major composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1791. It is a setting of the Latin hymn Ave verum corpus. Mozart wrote it for Anton Stoll, a friend who was the church musician of St. Stephan in Baden bei Wien. The motet was composed for the feast Corpus Christi; the autograph is dated 17 June 1791. It is scored for SATB choir, string instruments and organ.

Motet
Motet is one of the significant genres of sacred Renaissance music. It can be defined as an unaccompanied choral composition based on a sacred Latin text. In general, motets used religious texts not in the Mass, as the latter already had standardized music.

Melody:
 \relative c' {
\key d \major
\time 2/2
\tempo "Adagio"
a'2 ^\markup {sotto voce} d4 (fis,)  a (gis) g2 g4 (b) a (g) g4 (fis)fis2 e2. e4 fis4 fis g g g2 (fis4) fis e1} 
\addlyrics  {
      A -- ve __ a -- ve ve2 -- rum Cor -- pus na -- tum de Ma -- ri -- a Vir -- gi -- ne}

Listen to the beautiful rendition of  Mozart's Ave verum corpus by the King's College Choir, Cambridge.  Uploaded by drwestbury. Accessed August 5, 2007. Another performance Mozart's Ave verum corpus is conducted by Leonard Bernstein with Chor und Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks. Uploaded by Shostakk, accessed July 13, 2008. A third one I also love listening to is this performance by James O'Donnell, Westminster Cathedral Choir - here. uploaded by Snezhinka9, accessed July 13, 2011.)  


History: 

Mozart composed the motet in 1791 in the middle of writing his opera Die Zauberflöte. He wrote it while visiting his wife Constanze, who was pregnant with their sixth child and staying in the spa Baden bei Wien. Mozart set the 14th century Eucharistic hymn in Latin "Ave verum corpus". He wrote the motet for Anton Stoll, a friend of his and of Joseph Haydn. Stoll was the musical director of the parish St. Stephan, Baden. The setting was composed to celebrate the feast of Corpus Christi; the autograph is dated 17 June 1791. It is only forty-six bars long and is scored for SATB choir, string instruments, and organ. Mozart's manuscript contains minimal directions, with only a single sotto voce marking at the beginning.

The motet was composed less than six months before Mozart's death. It foreshadows "aspects of the Requiem such as declamatory gesture, textures, and integration of forward- and backward-looking stylistic elements". While the Requiem is a dramatic composition, the motet expresses the Eucharistic thoughts with simple means, suited for the church choir in a small town.

Franz Liszt quotes Mozart's motet in the piano piece Evocation à la Chapelle Sixtine. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky incorporates an orchestration of Liszt's transcription in his fourth orchestral suite, Mozartiana, Op. 61.

Trivia: 

Along with Mozart's Requiem, film composer Hans Zimmer also used Wolfgang Mozart's Ave verum corpus motet in the movie, The Lion King. (Accessed from Youtube, August 8, 2011).

Interesting article: Inside the Mind (and Studio) of Hollywood's Music Maestro. Buzzfeed. Accessed August 5, 2014.  "There are loads of art books and a small library of classical composers. There's a framed copy of Mozart's "Ave Verum Corpus," which Zimmer calls "the perfect piece of music." The room is basically engineered for creativity." 


 
Resource:

Ave verum corpus by Wolfgang A Mozart. en.wikipedia.org.  Accessed August 5, 2007.


(c) July 2007. Updated August 5, 2011. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.

Carl Jung


Swiss psychologist and psychiatrist, founder of the modern  analytic and depth psychology.


Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961),  was born today on July 26, 1875. He was born in Kesswil, Switzerland, and died in Zürich, 1961, from a short illness.

Jung noticed that the myths and fairy tales from different cultures contained certain similarities he called "archetypes", and believed that these archetypes came from a collective unconscious shared by all human beings, and that if people could get in touch with these archetypes in their lives, they will be more happy and healthy.

Carl Jung Philosophy

In his now known "Jungian" philosophy, he emphasized the importance of balance and harmony and cautioned that modern people rely too heavily on science and logic; that they would benefit from integrating spirituality and appreciation of unconscious realms.

First IVF Baby, Louise Joy Brown

Birth of the first IVF baby, Louise Joy Brown

Louise Joy Brown, the world's first in vitro fertilization (IVF), was born July 25, 1978. She was normal, except for the fact that she had been conceived outside her mother's body.

The physicians, Dr. Patrick Steptoe and Dr. Robert Edwards, took an egg from Lesley, Louise's mother, and fertilized it in a laboratory vessel, with sperm from John, the baby's father. Two days later, the embryo was implanted in Lesley Brown's womb. By the time Louise was 21, thousands of women had conceived with the help of IVF techniques.

Resource:
Dateline. Sydney Millenium House P/L, 2006

Alfred Binet: Pioneer in Intelligence Testing


French psychologist who influenced the measurement of abilities.


Alfred Binet was a French psychologist who established the first French psychology laboratory in 1889, and the first French psychology journal with Theodore Simon. He co-authored with Simon the Binet-Simon the Test of Intelligence.


Alfred Binet was born in Nice, France on July 8, 1857. In 1883, he studied hypnosis with the pioneering neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot at the Salpetrière Hospital in Paris. A year later, he married Laure Balbiani and the couple had two daughters. Six years later, he left Salpetrière Hospital to concentrate on studying his two daughters.

Francis Galton and Galtonian Approach
 
In the late 19th century, English scientist Sir Francis Galton made pioneering studies of individual differences in intelligence. He believed that people with good senses would be highly intelligent and that these individual differences in intelligence were also inherited. In his book Hereditary Genius, Galton argued that eminent fathers would raise eminent sons.

Stephen Foster

American Songwriters / Composers Datebook: July 4


Although Foster’s melodies are very familiar, it is amazing that little is known about the composer.

Stephen Collins Foster (July 4, 1826 – January 13, 1864), known as "the father of American music", was born in Lawrenceville, Pennsylvania. He was an American songwriter known mainly for his minstrel and parlor music. He wrote most of his well known songs between 1850 and 1860. Despite the popularity of his music, Foster lived in poverty. Since his songs were not protected by copyright, Foster realized only scanty income from them. He died in New York City in 1864.

Foster’s songs are characterized by moving melodies and simple harmonies. He composed more than 200 songs, hymns, arrangements and instrumental works and wrote the lyrics for most of them as well. Among his best-known are "Beautiful Dreamer", "Oh! Susanna", "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair", "Hard Times Come Again No More", "Camptown Races", "Old Folks at Home" ("Swanee River"), "My Old Kentucky Home", and "Old Black Joe".




His compositions are thought to be autobiographical, and many of them have remained popular through time.  He has been identified as "the most famous songwriter of the nineteenth century" and may be the most recognizable American composer in other countries. His compositions are sometimes referred to as "childhood songs" because they have been included in the music curriculum of early education. Most of his handwritten music manuscripts are lost, but copies printed by publishers of his day can be found in various collections.
 
Mezzo-soprano, Mary Beth Nelson, exquisitely sings Foster's Beautiful Dreamer, accompanied by Lachlan Glen.  Youtube, accessed February 14, 2023.   


Youngest and Oldest Nobel Prize Winner

Nobel laureates are our most influential thinkers, best minds that ever lived. We are blest to have benefited from their works and their persevering dedications. Their works have helped immense

Australian-born British Nobel laureate William Lawrence Bragg (31 March 1890 – 1 July 1971) is the youngest Nobel Laureate. He was physicist and crystallographer. He was awarded Nobel Prize in Physics in 1915. His age at the time of awarding: 25years-8months-10days old.  He shared the award with his father, Sir William Henry Bragg, "for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of X-rays." Sir William Bragg (the older) was born on July 2, 1862, a pioneer scientist in solid-state physics.

The oldest Nobel Laureate is Russian-born American Leonid Hurwicz, a prominent economist and mathematician. He was awarded Nobel Prize for Economics in 2007. He was 90years-3months-28days old.

Nobel Prizes are awarded on Alfred Nobel's birthday, December 10.  The laureate's age is his or her age at the date of the award ceremony.  Read the full article:  Top 10 - Youngest and Oldest Nobel Prize Winners.

History of Modern Forensics


When was Modern Forensics Born?


"Forensic" (adjective), according to my compact Oxford English Dictionary, relates to or denotes the application of scientific methods to the investigation of crime. Nowadays, with the sad and scary proliferation of crimes anywhere in our world, forensic science (or forensics, in short), is as active as ever - calling for the application of broad spectrum of sciences to answer questions of interest to a legal system.

History tells us that during the Roman times, a criminal charge meant presenting the case before a group of public individuals in the forum. Basing on both sides of the story, both the person accused of the crime and the accuser would give speeches. And of course, the individual with the best argument and delivery would determine the outcome of the case. That was then.

Richard Strauss

Classical Music Dateline:  June 11

Richard Strauss, German composer and conductor
Born in Munich on June 11, 1865.


He has no relation to the "Waltz" Strauss family of Vienna. A composer and conductor of the Romantic era, Richard Strauss is best known for his symphonic poems, eg., Also Sprach Zarathustra.

Also sprach zarathustra, Op.30 (Thus Spoke Zarathustra or Thus Spake Zarathustra), a tone poem by Richard Strauss, was composed in 1896, inspired by the philosophical novel of Friedrich Nietzsche.  It was first performed in Frankfurt on November 27, 1896, conducted by the composer himself. 
 

Edison, Nobel, and Leonardo da Vinci

3 Great Inventors: Thomas Alva Edison, Alfred Nobel, and Leonardo Da Vinci


Through time, inventors and innovators have seized opportunities at the expense of their personal lives to create what the world is benefiting now. Often, these men and women are so capable of innovative thoughts that they don’t make just one contribution to the world but many.

Thomas A. Edison (1847-1931)


American inventor who invented the light bulb and motion pictures among many of his patents. He is considered the most productive inventor in his day, receiving over 1,000 patents for practical applications pertaining to scientific principles. Aside from all his numerous inventions, Edison discovered the Edison Effect in 1883, which later formed the basis of the electron tube. Six years later, in 1889, he formed the Edison Electric Light Company, which through mergers General electric (GE), in 1892.

Alfred Bernhard Nobel (1833-1896)


Swedisth chemist, industrialist and engineer. He is famous for his invention of the explosive or dynamite, a more powerful form of blasting gelatin, and Nobel Prize awards. Nobel also produced ballistite, one of the first nitroglycerin smokeless powders. His immense fortune acquired from the manufacture of explosives and other interests he bequeathed to establish the prestigious Nobel Prizes, first awarded in 1901.

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)


Florentine painter, sculptor, architect, scientist, and engineer. He is regarded the "Renaissance Man" himself, most famous for Mona Lisa, The Last Supper, and St. Anne with the Madonna and Child painting, among others. And of course his sketches and priceless ideas in his notebook. He founder the Classic style of painting of the High Renaissance, and among the first to use the chiaroscuro technique. In 1482, Leonardo da Vinci moved to Milan to become civil and military engineer to Duke Lodovico Sforza, where he painted "Madonna of the rocks," and numerous other works, including the "Last Supper."