Friday 14 August 2015

Destacada actuación del ensamble Fractus - Sala El Aleph - auditorio de recoleta; renovada música electrónica, performances y una obra de cámara singular (la antidiaspora local)


 Conciertos de Música de Cámara que la DGEART programa en el CCRecoleta se presenta el Ensamble de Música Contemporánea y electrónica "Fractus", con dirección de Mariano García Berardi.
Intérpretes:
Gonzalo Ariel Juan: Flauta Dulce Sopranino ~ Soprano ~ Contralto ~Tenor ~ Bajo
David Coudenhove: Violín
Ignacio Larrañaga: Violoncello
Ana Kalaidjian Luza: Soprano
Maximiliano Illianes: Tenor
Augusto Nureña Santy: Bajo
Noelia Guaragna: Actriz
Sobre el Ensamble: Creado por el compositor y director Mariano García Berardi, es un grupo de creación, producción e interpretación artística nacional de la “nueva música”, con la utilización de medios electrónicos. La Agrupación investiga las diferentes corrientes y recopila obras originales, con el propósito de promover, difundir y actualizar el repertorio de la música contemporánea.

Monday 10 August 2015

Sonoridades Alternativas

México 1152, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires,Rca. Argentina Sábado 15 de Agosto a las 17.15 hs.
SONORIDADES ALTERNATIVAS
COMPOSITORES Y EXPERIMENTADORES SONOROS ARGENTINOS
Concierto 194-CICLO 2015(Homenaje a Enrique Gerardi)

PROGRAMA
ENRIQUE GERARDI Figura Fondo (1970)-Medios Mixtos-Grabación histórica.
PABLO LOUDET Estudio para cinta y guitarra Eléctrica.(1998)_guitarra Elèctrica
Pablo Loudet

LUIS MIHOVILCEVIC Encuentro Fortuito ( de dos actores, una actriz y un director
que molesta) teatro musical de riesgo(2015) estreno mundial.
Actriz: Florencia Rocca Actores: Angel Piccarreta, Ricardo
Schneider, Director: Luis Mihovilcevic,
Asistente de Dirección: Irene Rodriguez

GUSTAVO CHAB Performance Blue Music theatre
Estreno Mundial 2015
Performer Sebastian Sáenz Trompeta en Sib  - Jazz trumpet player
RODRIGUEZ, ROCCA, MIHOVILCEVIC In Progress (2015) Estreno parte 1
Composición colectiva. Irene Rodriguez, Florencia Rocca, Luis
Mihovilcevic, piano a seis manos
RAUL FIORINO La mesa de las transparencias (2015) (estreno mundial)
Para recitante y pines
Intérprete: Raúl Fiorino
Bono contribución $50


Friday 7 August 2015

Blue - Performance for Trumpet Bb (jazz trumpet player)




Performance Blue Music Theatre
World Premiere 2015
Performer Sebastian Sáenz Trumpet Bb - jazz trumpet player
Composition.  Gustavo Chab


creative and mysterious - action movement - ambient
dark smooth haunting sounds - bright distance

Saturday 1 August 2015

Summary writings 3


New Conceptualism is proprietary

Gemini - Geminis - acousmatic music - stereophonic / quadraphonic 2000 / 2001 Composition. Gustavo Chab 7.35"


Gemini - Geminis - acousmatic music - stereophonic / quadraphonic 2000 / 2001 
Composition: Gustavo Chab    7.35"



Adaptable and versatile
Air sign
Mutable
Communicative and witty
Intellectual and eloquent
Accelerates and simplifies
is ruled by Mercury



Stars


The constellation contains 85 stars visible to observation on Earth without a telescope.
The brightest star in Gemini is Pollux, and the second brightest is Castor. Castor's Bayer designation as "Alpha" is attributable to a mistake by Johann Bayer, who gave his eponymous designations in 1603.


Imaginary - sounds in space
α Gem (Castor): the second brightest in the constellation after Pollux. Castor is a sextuple star system 52 light-years from Earth, which appears as a magnitude 1.6 blue-white star to the unaided eye. Two spectroscopic binaries are visible at magnitudes 1.9 and 3.0 with a period of 470 years. A wide-set red dwarf star is also a part of the system; this star is an Algol-type eclipsing binary star with a period of 19.5 hours; its minimum magnitude is 9.8 and its maximum magnitude is 9.3.
β Gem (Pollux): the brightest star in Gemini, it is an orange-hued giant star of magnitude 1.2, 34 light-years from Earth. Pollux has an extrasolar planet revolving around it, as do two other stars in Gemini, HD 50554, and HD 59686.
γ Gem (Alhena): a blue-white hued star of magnitude 1.9, 105 light-years from earth.
δ Gem (Wasat): a long-period binary star 59 light-years from Earth. The primary is a white star of magnitude 3.5, and the secondary is an orange dwarf star of magnitude 8.2. The period is over 1000 years; it is divisible in medium amateur telescopes.
ε Gem (Mebsuta): a double star, the primary is a yellow supergiant of magnitude 3.1, 900 light-years from Earth. The optical companion, of magnitude 9.2, is visible in binoculars and small telescopes.[7]
ζ Gem (Mekbuda): a double star, the primary is a Cepheid variable star with a period of 10.2 days; its minimum magnitude is 4.2 and its maximum magnitude is 3.6. It is a yellow supergiant, 1200 light-years from Earth, with a radius that is 60 times solar, making it approximately 220,000 times the size of the Sun. The companion, a magnitude 7.6 star, is visible in binoculars and small amateur telescopes.
η Gem: a binary star with a variable component. 350 light-years away, it has a period of 500 years and is only divisible in large amateur telescopes. The primary is a semi-regular red giant with a period of 233 days; its minimum magnitude is 3.9 and its maximum magnitude is 3.1. The secondary is of magnitude 6.[7]
κ Gem: a binary star 143 light-years from Earth. The primary is a yellow giant of magnitude 3.6; the secondary is of magnitude 8. The two are only divisible in larger amateur instruments because of the discrepancy in brightness.
ν Gem: a double star divisible in binoculars and small amateur telescopes. The primary is a blue giant of magnitude 4.1, 500 light-years from Earth, and the secondary is of magnitude 8.
38 Gem: a binary star divisible in small amateur telescopes, 91 light-years from Earth. The primary is a white star of magnitude 4.8 and the secondary is a yellow star of magnitude 7.8.[7]
U Gem: a dwarf nova type cataclysmic variable discovered by J.R. Hind in 1855