John Adams

Music ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Cotter

American composer John Coolidge Adams (b. 1947, Worcester, MA) has created some of the most provocative artistic statements of our age. Adams’s controversial operas about real-life recent events contributed to a reinvigoration of contemporary opera in America. While the composer’s stage works have generated much scholarly and critical interest, the breadth of scholarship on Adams’s music expands beyond the operas. Early instrumental works have been the subject of scholarly discussion about the evolution of musical minimalism to postminimalism. Interviews and Adams’s autobiography offer insight into the many musical tributaries that have informed the composer’s life: big band jazz heard at the family’s dance hall in New Hampshire; musical theater sung by Adams’s mother in community productions; classical music as a clarinetist in youth symphonies; rock and roll; and the New England landscapes that would long inspire Adams. At Harvard University, Adams studied composition with Leon Kirchner, a former student of Arnold Schoenberg. Kirchner introduced Adams to the rigors of academic serialism and also to the problem, which would later plague Adams, of how to balance instinct with method. In 1971, after completing degrees (BA and MA) in music composition, Adams relocated to northern California. Adams joined the San Francisco experimental music scene and eventually established a voice as a distinctly American composer. Much scholarship has been devoted to the plurality of Adams’s stylistic impulses. Phrygian Gates (1977) and China Gates (1977) were the composer’s first works in the strict minimalist style. Soon thereafter, Adams began to integrate compositional techniques drawn from pre-Baroque to late-19th-century Romantic styles. Shaker Loops (1978), Harmonium (1981), and Harmonielehre (1984–1985) resulted. In 1985, Adams began composing the opera Nixon in China (1987) in collaboration with director Peter Sellars and librettist Alice Goodman, discovering a penchant for text setting. Their next opera, The Death of Klinghoffer (1991), proved to be a critical minefield, giving rise to a series of polemical debates about music, politics, and representation. After Klinghoffer, Adams composed primarily instrumental works using increasingly chromatic and modal idioms. In the early 2000s, Adams returned to grand opera with Doctor Atomic (2005) and continued to compose stage works, including A Flowering Tree (2006), The Gospel According to the Other Mary (2012), and Girls of the Golden West (2017), all in collaboration with Sellars. Adams’s focus on subjects of living memory in both the operas and instrumental works, such as On the Transmigration of Souls (2002), transformed the contemporary classical repertoire, making Adams a principal figure in late-20th and early-twenty-first-century American music.

Tempo ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 59 (231) ◽  
pp. 45-47
Author(s):  
Robert Stein

Like its predecessors Nixon in China and The Death of Klinghoffer, the third opera in John Adams's trilogy, Doctor Atomic, seems set fair to juxtapose modern political forces, personalities and moral debate. Here admiration for Robert Oppenheimer and his fellow geniuses who created the atomic bomb is contrasted with the enormity of destruction wreaked on Hiroshima. With over a year to go to the opera's world première by San Francisco Opera, the composer himself conducted Easter Eve 1945, the opening of Act 2, at the Albert Hall on 22 August with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Audra McDonald as soloist.


2003 ◽  
Vol 1856 (1) ◽  
pp. 118-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Skabardonis ◽  
Pravin Varaiya ◽  
Karl F. Petty

A methodology and its application to measure total, recurrent, and nonrecurrent (incident related) delay on urban freeways are described. The methodology used data from loop detectors and calculated the average and the probability distribution of delays. Application of the methodology to two real-life freeway corridors in Los Angeles, California, and one in the San Francisco, California, Bay Area, indicated that reliable measurement of congestion also should provide measures of uncertainty in congestion. In the three applications, incident-related delay was found to be 13% to 30% of the total congestion delay during peak periods. The methodology also quantified the congestion impacts on travel time and travel time variability.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 504-551

A meeting of the Executive Board of the American Academy of Pediatrics was held at the Palace Hotel, San Francisco, Calif., on Friday, Nov. 11, 1949. It was called to order at 10:00 a.m. by the President, Dr. Warren R. Sisson. There were present Drs. Sisson, Shaw, Barba, Beaven, Bost, London, Munns, McElhenney, Stringfield, Wishropp, Grulee, Martmer, Pease and Bakwin. The first order of business was the consideration of applicants: the following were approved. This gives me an opportunity to speak briefly of the Executive Board meetings. They offer the greatest opportunity for considered opinion and guidance of Academy affairs that exists in our organization. As your President, I have been greatly impressed by the good balance of the membership its great sense of responsibility to the Academy and its untiring efforts. I feel that the deliberations or minutes of the Executive Board should be distributed to the members as early as possible while interest still exists in current discussions. One cannot overemphasize the importance of putting the deliberations of the Board out in an attractive format to encourage greater publicity. In spite of my New England streak of economy, I would earnestly recommend quarterly meetings of the Board and placing more emphasis upon the policies of the Academy in planning our activities in the broad field of public health. I do not see how this can be done without frequent meetings and assignment of special subjects to special committees of the governing body. In this connection I recommend that the Executive Board be thoroughly conversant with the finances of the Academy and appoint the Budget Committee from its membership. The second subject which I would like to bring to your attention is that of public relations. Early in my term of office, you voted to appoint a committee to investigate this subject. It has seemed to your President one of the important activities of the Academy.


1998 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-47

Find out the latest updates from Canada, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Metro New York, National Capital, New England, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Southern Wisconsin, South Texas, and the Twin Cities.


1998 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 40-42

Find out updates from Canada, Chicago, Israel, National Capital, New England, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, South Texas, Southern Wisconsin, and the Twin Cities.


2021 ◽  
pp. 54-82
Author(s):  
Juan Diego Díaz

Chapter 3 presents the book’s first case study, Orkestra Rumpilezz, a big band mixing jazz with emblematic Afro-Bahian genres such as Candomblé, carnival music (ijexá and samba reggae), samba de roda, and capoeira. It opens with a discussion of composer-director Letieres Leite’s trajectory in Brazil and Europe and his views on Africa and the liminal status of jazz in Bahia, as an African diasporic genre and, simultaneously, US America’s classical music. This is followed by an analysis of how the orchestra spotlights percussion and percussionists in its performances and links them to the polemic notion of racial democracy in Brazil. A number of performance practices (layout of musicians on stage, colors and styles of costumes, visual symbols, instrumentation, physical movement, speech between pieces) are connected with the tropes of embodiment, spirituality, and spontaneity.


2020 ◽  
pp. 122-148
Author(s):  
Reva Marin

This chapter examines the life and writings of Don Asher, who studied with pianist Jaki Byard before embarking on a career as a New England society band and honkytonk pianist and later as a nightclub pianist in San Francisco, including a long stint at the famed hungry i. Asher was also a novelist, short-story writer, essayist, and collaborator, and analysis of selected works of his fiction and nonfiction uncovers his enduring and sometimes transgressive fascination with African American music and culture. While Asher’s work appears to illustrate “the problem with white hipness” (Ingrid Monson) or “love and theft” (Eric Lott), his ethnic satire was aimed not only at African Americans but also at other groups—Italians, Irish, Jews—as well as at himself and his fictional counterparts. This chapter considers the rich stew of literary and performance traditions in which Asher found models for his satirical, comedic impulses.


2019 ◽  
pp. 235-260
Author(s):  
Julian Voloj ◽  
Anthony Bak Buccitelli

This chapter talks about San Francisco-based company Linden Lab who launched Second Life (SL), which is described as an online digital world that is built, shaped, and owned by its participants. It discloses how SL was seen as the next big internet phenomenon and was the focus of attention by investors and media alike for a short period of time. It also explains SL's complex relationship with 'real life', which is defined both by the encoded parameters of the virtual space and by the social and cultural practices of the people who use the platform. The chapter discusses SL as a broad platform that encompassed many cultural constructions and developed a rich and diverse set of religious cultures. It recounts how dozens of Jewish sites across the grid emerged and were created both by individual users and by offline institutions that established SL presences.


1996 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 339-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Zaums ◽  
Donald Fucci ◽  
Molly Banks ◽  
Linda Petrosino ◽  
Corry Wilcox

The purpose of the present study was to assess the effect of preference for three different types of music on magnitude estimation-scaling behavior in young adults. Three groups of college students, 10 who liked rock music, 10 who liked big band music, and 10 who liked classical music were tested. Subjects were instructed to assign numerical values to a random series of nine suprathreshold intensity levels of 10-sec. samples of rock music, big band music, and classical music. Analysis indicated that subjects who liked rock music scaled that stimulus differently from those subjects who liked big band and classical music. Subjects who liked big band music scaled that stimulus differently from those subjects who liked rock music and classical music. All subjects scaled classical music similarly regardless of their musical preferences. Results are discussed in reference to the literature concerned with personality and preference as well as spectrographic analyses of the three different types of music used in this study.


2008 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 215
Author(s):  
R. West ◽  
C. Valentin ◽  
C. Herr

Generally, PCR reaction mixes are made fresh on the day of use. This is impractical for field sexing. Mistakes occur due to the required measuring precision and to contamination from environmental DNA. Therefore, we developed a complete reaction mix (YCD). Storage and transport of YCD required liquid N2. No study has determined storage life of PCR reaction mixes in standard freezers. Our study compared 14-year-old bovine YCD (AB Technology, Pullman, WA, USA) stored in a standard freezer to a freshly prepared mix. The working concentration of bovineYCD was: buffer (50 mm Tris, 1% dextran T-500, 50 mm KCl, 2.5 mm MgCl2, and 0.035% 2-mercaptoethanol), deoxyribonucleotides (5µm) (Boehringer Mannheim, Basel, Switzerland), two sets of primers (sexing primers, 5´-GAACTTTCAAGCAGCTGAGGC-3´ and 5´-GATTGTTGATCCCACAGAAGG-3´ (2.5µm), and control primers, 5´-TTGAGGCATGGAACTCCGCT-3´ and 5´-GGTGGTTCCACATTCCGTAGG-3´ (0.25µm) (custom synthesis, IDT Inc, Coralville IA, USA)), and Taq polymerase (Taq p) (2 IU) (AmpliTaq DNA Polymerase, Stoeffel Fragment, Perkin Elmer, Branchburg, NJ, USA). The concentrations in the complete reaction mix were twice the working concentration. The freshly prepared mix was the same as YCD except: deoxyribonucleotides (C01581, GenScript Corp., Piscataway, NJ, USA) and Taq p (M0273L, New England BioLabs, Ipswich, MA, USA). Male and female bovine lymphocytes (100 cells/2 µL) were used as the DNA source. The DNA replication occurred in a Corbett Rapid Thermocycler (Model FTS-IS, Corbett Research, Montlake, Australia) in 20-µL volumes. All assays were run with positive and negative DNA controls. The PCR products were separated using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). A 6% gel with Tris as the buffer was formed in an agarose gel chamber (M12 Electrophoresis Unit, Edvotek, Bethesda, MD, USA) under argon gas. The gel was run at 200 volts (PS500ST, Hoefer Scientific Instruments, San Francisco, CA, USA) for 30 min, and then stained with 5 µL ethidium bromide in 100 mL of Tris buffer for 30 min. The gel was destained for 30 min in H2O. The gel was viewed using a transilluminator (3–300, Fotodyne, Hartland, WI, USA) and photographed. The 14-year-old stored YCD and freshly prepared reaction mix both produced strong signals. We further investigated effects of stability of two reagents: 8-year-old AmpliTaq and 8-year-old deoxyribonucleotides (Boehringer Mannheim, Basel, Switzerland). Nucleotides and Taq p have a labeled shelf life of two years. Sexing bands were observed in gels from the reaction mix with 8-year-old deoxyribonucleotides, but no signals were observed with the use of 8-year-old AmpliTaq. These results suggest that Taq p is the most likely candidate to cause failure in stored PCR reaction mixes. As supplied, Taq p is liquid even when stored in the freezer. Our hypothesis is that because the Taq p was frozen solid in YCD instead of being kept in a liquid form, the denaturing of Taq p was prevented. We conclude that storage and transport of PCR reaction mix could become more convenient: ship on dry ice and transport to the field in a mobile freezer.


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