Saturday, December 23, 2006

Dan Sindel - “Symphonic Guitars” Podcast #3 - Vivaldi Four Seasons - The Spring





Podcast #3 - Vivaldi Four Seasons - The Spring
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Welcome to “Symphonic Guitars” podcast#3
This is the complete works of Antonio Vivaldi’s Four Seasons - “The Spring”; also known as “Concerto For Violin, Strings & Continuo In E Major”.

For your listening pleasure I have emulated a string quintet on this most famous classical selection using my 68′ Gibson SG and recording direct with a Line6 Flextone3 amp.
A minimum of 250 tracks of electric guitars were used to complete this sonic tapestry and all 3 movements (Allegro, Largo and Allegro) are incorporated into this musical epic..!

About the project::
This project was a quantum leap in my progress of understanding how to record myriad guitar tracks; the process was fairly straightforward whereas the majority of the task for this piece was the actual learning of the written parts. The instrumentation of this Baroque period classic is comprised of Violin 1, Violin 2, Viola and Bass.

The intertwined melodies between first and second chair Violins is especially interesting in the first section where all instruments play off each other in a succession of trills..!
I chose to make this a “mix” while tying all three parts together with a little “digital signal processing” fun

About Antonio Vivaldi ::
Born in Venice on March 4th, 1678, Vivaldi was employed for most of his working life by the Ospedale della Pietà. Often termed an “orphanage”, this Ospedale was in fact a home for the female offspring of noblemen and their numerous dalliances with their mistresses. The Ospedale was thus well endowed by the “anonymous” fathers; its furnishings bordered on the opulent, the young ladies were well looked-after, and the musical standards among the highest in Venice. Most of Vivaldi’s concerti were intended for performance with his many talented pupils. He was also deeply involved with opera, both in composition and staging, mainly at Venice’s Teatro Sant’ Angelo.

At the end of 1717 Vivaldi moved to Mantua for two years in order to take up his post as Chamber Capellmeister at the court of Landgrave Philips van Hessen-Darmstadt. His task there was to provide operas, cantatas, and perhaps concert music, too. Here he made the acquaintance of the singer Anna Giraud (or Giro), who moved in to live with him, and they stayed together until Vivaldi’s death.

Vivaldi also wrote works on commission from foreign rulers, such as the French king, Louis XV - the serenade La Sena festeggiante (Festival on the Seine), for example. This work cannot be dated precisely, but it was certainly written after 1720. In Rome Vivaldi found a patron in the person of Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, a great music lover, who earlier had been the patron of Arcangelo Corelli. And if we can believe Vivaldi himself, the Pope asked him to come and play the violin for him at a private audience.

Despite his stay in Rome and other cities, Vivaldi remained in the service of the Ospedale della Pietà, which nominated him “Maestro di concerti.” He was required only to send two concertos per month to Venice (transport costs were to the account of the client) for which he received a ducat per concerto. His presence was never required. He also remained director of the Teatro Sant’ Angelo.

In 1725 the publication Il Cimento dell’ Armenia e dell’invenzione (The trial of harmony and invention), opus 8, appeared in Amsterdam. This consisted of twelve concertos, seven of which were descriptive: The Four Seasons, Storm at Sea, Pleasure and The Hunt. Vivaldi transformed the tradition of descriptive music into a typically Italian musical style with its unmistakable timbre in which the strings play a major role.

These concertos were enormously successful, particularly in France. In the second half of the 18th century there even appeared some remarkable adaptations of the Spring concerto: Michel Corrette (1709-1795) based his motet Laudate Dominum de coelis of 1765 on this concerto and, in 1775, Jean-Jacques Rousseau reworked it into a version for solo flute. “Spring” was also a firm favorite of King Louis XV, who would order it to be performed at the most unexpected moments, and Vivaldi received various commissions for further compositions from the court at Versailles.

In 1738 Vivaldi was in Amsterdam where he conducted a festive opening concert for the 100th Anniversary of the Schouwburg Theater. Returning to Venice, which was at that time suffering a severe economic downturn, he resigned from the Ospedale in 1740, planning to move to Vienna under the patronage of his admirer Charles VI. His stay in Vienna was to be shortlived however, for he died on July 28th 1741 “of internal fire” (probably the asthmatic bronchitis from which he suffered all his life) and, like Mozart fifty years later, received a modest burial. Anna Giraud returned to Venice, where she died in 1750.

Podcast #3 - Vivaldi Four Seasons - The Spring
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Thank you for listening and be sure to visit http://www.dansindel.us for Guitar Driven Classics - Mp3’s, Videos and More…

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Dan Sindel - William Tell Overture (aka The Lone Ranger)

Yes one of these days we will post properly 'produced' video footage but in the meanwhile (LOL) here is yet another ultra-low budget jamming Guitar web cam video recorded with my Line6 Flextone3 and a real cheesy 50 cent PC microphone. Here we interpret Rossini's William Tell Overture (aka The Lone Ranger)!

Some parts were worked out and others based on improv. Enjoy!



Here are a couple links for feed readers that do not embed video:
* Google Video
* YouTube

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

“Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah” added to “The Classical Archives”

“Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah” added to “The Classical Archives” December 11th, 2006








Once again, we are very pleased to announce that Dan Sindel’s ”Symphonic Guitar” interpretation of “Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah” has been added to The Classical Archives along side many well respected classical artists honoring the immortalized works of George Frideric Handel (1685 - 1759)








Click here to visit The Classical Archives
The Classical Archives is the largest classical music site on the web:(40,055 full length classical music files by 2,093 composers. )




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“Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah” by Dan Sindel:
* Apple’s iTunes Enhanced Podcast or Mp3 Podcast
* Click here to Download Mp3
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Dan Sindel releases Handel’s “HALLELUJAH CHORUS” as a single!

Dan Sindel releases Handel’s “HALLELUJAH CHORUS” December 10th, 2006




George Frideric Handel (1685 - 1759)

I present to you gifts of gold, frankincense, myrrh and Handel’s “HALLELUJAH CHORUS” as a single!…
This is truly an “Excerpt” of “Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah”!


Download mp3 of Dan Sindel’s version of Handel’s ”HALLELUJAH CHORUS”



As one part of the 3 songs (”Overture/Sinfonia“, “He Shall Feed His Flock Like a Shepard” and lastly the world famous “HALLELUJAH CHORUS“) that comprise my 2006 demo “Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah” I would like to share with you, the listener my interpretation of George Frideric Handel’s most loved ”HALLELUJAH CHORUS”.



The “HALLELUJAH CHORUS” was a challenge to track and mix to say the least… This song has at least 156 individual guitar tracks as I went about emulating a complete orchestral choir with a sonic wall of “Symphonic Guitar“ sound…



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Handel’s Messiah (The Hallelujah Chorus)
Lyrics (Written by George Friedrich Händel)



Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!Hallelujah! Hallelujah! (repeat)
For the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth.
[Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!] (repeat)
For the Lord God omnipotent reigneth.
[Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!] (repeat)

The kingdom of this world
Is become the kingdom of our Lord,
And of His Christ, and of His Christ;

And He shall reign for ever and ever,
For ever and ever, forever and ever,
King of kings, and Lord of lords,
[King of kings, and Lord of lords,] (repeat)
And Lord of lords,And He shall reign,

And He shall reign forever and ever,
King of kings, forever and ever,
And Lord of lords,Hallelujah! Hallelujah!

And He shall reign forever and ever,
[King of kings! and Lord of lords!] (repeat)
And He shall reign forever and ever,
King of kings! and Lord of lords!
Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!Hallelujah!

Download mp3 of Dan Sindel’s version of Handel’s ”HALLELUJAH CHORUS”

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The Holidays are almost here…
Never a better time to listen to“Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah” in it’s complete entirety..!
Podcast #1 -”Excerpts From Handel’s Messiah”


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Dan Sindel collaborates with “Aeterno Flamma”

Dan Sindel collaborates with “Aeterno Flamma” December 9th, 2006

THE COLLABORATION SERIES - (pt.1)

Dan Sindel collaborates with “Aeterno Flamma” on “Struggling to Survive“..!
DMusic (”The Independent Digital Music Community”) is a hotbed for musical collaborations and networking for musicians!

I have met and worked with many a fine artist on DMusic and this is the first of a series that will spotlight the work I have contributed on other musician’s music.

My newst musical outing is with “Aeterno Flamma”Aeterno Flamma is the everlasting fire that burns within lighting a path that ignites a range of emotions from hope to hopelessness. It is music that inspires one to look beyond the horizon to see the depths of our soul.

Aeterno Flamma is the solo artist Frank Tucker who fuses music styles to define his own. You will find a dynamic range with a fusion of jazz and ambience to drum and bass with ambience. He started as the artist formerly known as BlueNevus. As his music matured, so did his direction into a focus that is now known as this everlasting flame. It is this illumination from which he found that inspires the direction of Aeterno Flamma.

As I normally do on DMusic is listen to other artist’s music and leave a review/comment on their work and Frank’s song called “Struggling to Survive“ completely grabbed my attention as an instrumental, spy thriller soundtrack type of an arrangement and I asked if I may play some guitar tracks on top of this stellar song and to my delight Frank agreed and sent me an uncompressed 16bit/44.1 Wave file via http://www.yousendit.com/ to work with…

Needless to say, I grabbed my trusty Agile AS-820 (Gibson 335 clone) and ‘got busy’…

I ended up laying down 6 unique (stereo pairs) tracks, ranging from clean to ultra distorted tones from my Line6 Flextone III amp as I recorded direct into Digidesign’s ProTools LE.
I always feel like I am walking on eggshells whilst playing over other peoples music albeit I am very happy with the results on this track and here is the direct link to the DMusic page of Aeterno Flamma where you the listener can stream the mp3 in ‘lo-fi’ or ‘hi-fi’ or even download it if you so desire, hey you can even “sign up for free” and interact with one of the best music communities out there..!
Enjoy!!!

direct link:http://aeternoflamma.dmusic.com/music/comments/338977
Aeterno Flamma - main music page:http://aeternoflamma.dmusic.com/music/

Monday, December 4, 2006

Guitar Lessons - In Memory of Ted Greene “The Chord Chemist” part1






In Memory of Ted Greene(The Chord Chemist) -
Legendary Jazz GuitaristSept. 26, 1946 - July 26, 2005

He was my teacher and “friend”…



For over 20 years (on and off) I had studied with Ted and he was such an outstanding and amazingly intellectual person and we would talk for hours after my lesson was over about many non-musical related topics and his passion and convictions always prevailed!I will miss Ted greatly!


This will be the first in a series of “Guitar Lessons”..!
My very first lesson with Ted was on January 13, 1983 and respectively my second lesson was on January 31, 1983. I have been quite fortunate to still have these sheets archived for safe keeping after all these years, yes the pages have yellowed over time but their condition is surprisingly excellent.


**I had been playing rock, metal and classical for about 7 years and Ted thought my technique and comprehension was advanced enough to grasp the harmonic and chordal concepts presented to me! (although I did not have a clue… LOL)


I equate the experience of being privileged enough to study with Mr. Ted Greene as epic as it might have been to study physics with Albert Einstein, Art with Picasso or Rembrandt or even sharing the piano bench with Mozart, Beethoven or Bach..!


My “first guitar lesson with Ted Greene” on January 13, 1983…

This is one of the very first lesson sheets that I have been graced with on my first day with Ted.
Learning the Basic Chord Forms:Root in Bass Voicings - Ted Greene
To see the full lesson sheet either click the thumbnail or
click here to go directly to my site




The concept is very straight forward and simple (playing all the different shapes is not so easy but the practical knowledge is rudimentary)…

What always amazed me about being in Ted’s presence was that not only did he have the ‘head knowledge’ down to a science, he could literally play any chord shape and invert it’s voicing frontward, backwards , sideways and upside down without even blinking!!! All the while, the way he played the chords Ted would just emit the most wonderful tones anyone could ever coax out of a guitar..!


Ted would start out with one “nucleus” shape and then show all the different permutations of the shape and it was my job as the “student” to pencil in the ‘degree of scale’ be it the Root of the chord, major/minor 3rd, 5th, Maj 7/Dom7 etc… And name the chord appropriately.

It was quite the challenge to complete the excercise and if you the ‘practicing musician’ choose to go to my site and print the lesson sheet and study the concept it would be well worth the time and effort.



Enjoy!