Search Mami Mozart

AFFORDABLE INSTRUMENTS

November 23, 2010

Free Military Care Mail Kit: Support our Troops in Iraq

United States Postal ServiceImage via Wikipedia

Hello Everyone,


If you want to send a Military Care Kit to a loved one serving overseas, you can call a toll-Free number to get Priority Mail packing materials sent to your house. These are special mailing materials for military addresses, and have a flat Priority Mail rate, slightly lower than the regular rate.


Si usted quiere enviar tarjetas o regalos a US Army, usted puede llamar un número gratis para conseguir los materiales de embalaje del correo enviados a su casa.


You can find out more info here:

http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/nothing/militarykit.asp


And here is the official USPS site:

https://shop.usps.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?viewAll=N&catalogId=10001&categoryId=10000033&productId=10001233&sort=&WT.ac=10001233&currentPage=0&rn=CategoriesDisplay&langId=-1&top_category=10000002&top=&parent_category_rn=10000002&storeId=10052


With the holidays coming up, be sure to support our troops who are away from home and family.


Smiles and Hugs!

Mamí Mozart


Enhanced by Zemanta

November 22, 2010

Little Boxes and the American Dream

A cigarette butt, lying in dirty snow.Image via WikipediaLittle Boxes, Little Boxes, Little Boxes made of Ticky Tack. And they all look like each other and they all look just the same.

Apartment Living: The Reality

A baby boy cries at midnight, every midnight, for at least a half hour next door on the wall on the other side of our bedroom. Downstairs, my neighbor (and friend) pounds on my floor (her ceiling) because the Rock Band drum pedal apparently shakes her apartment. My baby girl has decided that high shrieks are the best way to communicate with mommy. A tenant smokes in the hall (not allowed, BTW), and Sunday my next door neighbor (the same with the crying baby), gives us a practically new sofa.

This is apartment living, just a step up from dorms. No roommates (except for family members), but paper-thin walls let your arguments, screaming children, intimate moments, and favorite music known to everyone in your complex (and in the parking lot, too).

There isn't enough parking for everyone, so one neighbor has started parking in the grass. The dryers never work (only one does), and everyone tries to get that dryer. We all know it doesn't work, and everyone takes their turns shoving quarter after quarter into the broken dryers, hoping that the one working dryer will finish before you run out of quarters.

My daughter can't run out in the grassy area behind the complex because on any given day there are several dozen cigarette butts in various stages of decay littering the grass. Instead, I pack her up and take her to the playground at the church five minutes away. Besides the creepy guy who thinks I don't see him watching us play from his darkened patio, it almost feels like we have our own backyard.

There isn't a drug problem, or even alcohol problem, in our area, but the apartment is stifling, small. Despite the hundreds paid to the utility company, the A/C doesn't cool the apartment, the heater doesn't heat it. (Supposedly, it's fine). Our maintenance guy is a friendly fellow, who is learning piano. He comes by and fixes and patches stuff up, talks up a storm about the economy and music, and does the best he can within his budget.

Apartment living isn't all bad. My daughter and the little girl downstairs are like virtual sisters, you can't beat the rent, and the complex owner is friendly. The air is clean (except for the smokers), and you can see the stars at night. And to be honest, I'd rather living in our budget in an apartment than be buried underwater with a soon-to-be foreclosed house.

It's a reality. It's the times. Several Murray State University professors and staff call these apartments their home. While there are lots of college kids living around here, there are professionals and hardworking adults trying to make ends meet, trying to pay rent, trying to save money. Just trying to support the tiny tykes playing in the parking lot.

I guess once upon a time the American Dream involved buying your own house, settling down in an area for fifty years, watching your kids and grandkids grow up next door. Not anymore. My family exploded. My sister is in Ohio, my brother is in Iraq, my parents are in Florida, my in-laws are in New York, and we are here, in the Heartland, which is in desperate need of resuscitation.

I'm not fooling myself. This is where we are now, and probably will be for a few more years. If not here, then somewhere else. My American Dream is to pay the bills, and maybe, just maybe, save enough so my baby girl can pay for her college applications and follow her own American Dream.



Enhanced by Zemanta

November 19, 2010

Call for Electronic Music!

Shana (last name unknown) and Jeff McNulty of ...Image via Wikipedia

Vox Novus is inviting composers/sound artists to submit recorded works 60 seconds or less in length to be included in its ninth annual 60x60 project. 60 compositions will be selected to be played continuously in a one-hour concert.


60x60 is a one-hour-long show made by sequencing 60 pre-recorded pieces by 60 different composers, each piece a minute in length or shorter. Highlighting the work of a great many composers, 60x60 testifies to the vibrancy of contemporary composition by present a diverse array of styles, aesthetics, and techniques being used today (http://www.voxnovus.com/60x60). 60x60 has received thousands of submissions from over 30 countries, produced radio shows, created multimedia and multidisciplinary events, and released several albums.


During the concert each of the 60 pieces selected will begin precisely at the beginning of the minute, this will mark the end of one piece and the beginning of another. There will be no pause between the pieces. Works may be less than 60 seconds in length, but may not exceed 60 seconds. Works selected that are less than 60 seconds long will be “padded” with silence either before, after, or surrounding the composition. Please note that the total duration of the work including silence may NOT exceed sixty seconds.


The 60x60 project’s definition of a record work is as follows: any work created as a musical composition which is captured on recorded media, which does not require live performers for its production in broadcast at concert halls, radio, multi-media, etc. Its creation can include but not limited to acoustic instruments, voice, environmental sources, and computer (Sampling, MAX MSP, MIDI, C Sound, ProTools, etc.)


All works submitted should be with the understanding that it is their recording that is of prime importance and is what will be used to determine its selection.


60x60 is a project of “signature works” and short works created specifically for the 60x60 project. Excerpts of larger works are strongly discouraged. Works generated from procedures (i.e. mathematical matrices, organizational systems, or computer programs,) remixed works, or themes and motives recomposed from other of the composer's own work are acceptable.


In addition to the 60x60 International Mix, Vox Novus and the Athena Festival are joining forces to create the 60x60 Athena Mix. This special 60x60 Athena Mix will be comprised of 60 electronic compositions 60 seconds (or less) in length by 60 women composers and sound artists. All women composers will be considered for both the 60x60 International Mix and the 60x60 Athena Mix.


The call is open to composers of any nationality, age, or career stage.

Deadline for 60 second compositions for 60x60 is December 31, 2010.

There is no admission fee.

All submissions must be uploaded online at:

http://www.voxnovus.com/60x60/submission


Audio submissions must be in either AIFF or WAV file format.

Multiple submissions are accepted from a single composer/sound artist; however, only one submission will be allowed per email address submitted.

All submissions must be uploaded by December 31st, 2010 12:00 AM

Works selected for the 2011 60x60 project will be announced on February 15th, 2011.

Composer will be notified of the results by email or they can visit http://www.VoxNovus.com

Any questions regarding the call for works can be addressed to Support@VoxNovus.com

Robert Voisey



RobVoisey@VoxNovus.com
60x60 Director
Living Music Foundation Vice President
Founder of Vox Novus
http://www.VoxNovus.com

Enhanced by Zemanta

New Music Concert at Murray State University

150Image via Wikipedia

New Music Concert in America's Heartland Saturday


Murray State University will be presenting an exciting night ofacoustic andelectronicworks from emerging composers this Saturday at 6pm.

Where

Murray State University, Western Kentucky

Performing Arts Hall (PAH)

Time

Saturday, 6pm

Free Admission!

Share and Bring a Friend

Contemporary works by emerging classical composers Kyle Dixon and Alan Manning, new sound artists Daniel Apple and Corona Jiang, and additional student compositions from Cornelius Hocker, Ben Shelby, Barry S. Sharp, and Matt Grimsley.

Works will cover everything from pop to piano, from techno to trios. You don't want to miss it!

Bring a friend to the New Music Concert at Murray State!

Enhanced by Zemanta

November 6, 2010

Free Electronic Music Concert November 9 at Murray State


Murray State University will be hosting the "Acousmatic Evening" as an informal lecture/recital in FAH Room 623 Tuesday November 9th. Admission is free. Concert starts at 3:30. Limited seating available. Sabrina Peña Young will be hosting the lecture/recital. This is an ideal event for classes interested in electronic music, music history, feminism, and women's studies. We invite you to come out.

"An Acousmatic Evening" will provide the audience a selection of curated electronic music including fixed media sound diffusion and video projection.

The International Alliance for Women in Music is a global network of women and men working to increase and enhance musical activities and opportunities and to promote all aspects of the music of women.

The program of six electroacoustic compositions has been selected from 22 entries from seven countries for the IAWM 2010 Annual Concert. The official performance of these works takes place in the Musée des moulages de l'Université de Lyon II inLyon, France, on Friday, Oct. 22, in conjunction with the Music Season of GRAME, National Center for Music Creation. The concert will include pieces by the following composers: Magdalena Dlugosz, Poland; Ida Helene Heidel, Norway; Judith Ring, Ireland; Carrie Leigh Page, USA; Bernard Marie-Hélène, France; and Veronika Krausas, Canada (video by Quintan Ana Wikswo, USA).

An identical program of these winning pieces will also played in Maryland, Massachusetts, Kentucky, California and Taiwan, in addition to Lyon and Montana, as part of a global celebration of electro-acoustic music created by women.

More information about IAWM can be accessed at www.iawm.org.


Enhanced by Zemanta