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Deneb feat. Ramesh Shotham - Jazzit Musik Club Salzburg - 22.02.2019, weiter Fotos unter:
www.jazzfoto.at/konzertfotos19/deneb/Index.htm
Besetzung:
Gudrun Plaichinger: voc, vln, fx
Georg Degenhardt: ney, fula, dombak, fx
Ramesh Shotham: tavil, ghatam, kanjira
Thomas Kleinschmitt: synth
Walter Schulz: keys, fx
Tobias Ott: perc
I will state for the record that I have no opinion or judgement about circumcision.
I have heard many things said in the defense of circumcision/ uncircumcision for boys. Here are a few:
"If I can't get my sons to clean their rooms, what makes you think I could get them to wash under their foreskins."
"I want him to be American"
"Why on earth would you do THAT?" - spoken by a couple from England who was appalled that I even asked them if they were interested in circumcision.
"I want him to look like his dad."
"I don't want him to get teased." -though this doesn't fly so much anymore b/c larger numbers of boys are not being circumcised.
I'm very glad I had my son 10 years ago, when I didn't work in OB. And I'm glad I never had another son, so I didn't have to make the choice twice. It is not barbaric- really, they do very well. I'm just not sure how I feel about it, now that I've working in the setting for 8 years. I'd likely do it again, but then I'd be thinking about it the whole time... ignorance really is sometimes bliss.
Thanks to Dennis Jarvis for the use of his pileated woodpecker photo. More precisely, it's a sculpture of a pileated woodpecker at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.
I guess everyone spotted the bird; did anyone notice that it is a sculpture rather than a real bird?
My photographer friend likes to use my minis in her first birthday photo shoots. She prefers chocolate cake because it gives a better contrast in her photos. I loved the way the birthday hat came out, but it was a major pain to make. Its so hard to get these little cakes iced smoothly.
I love precision instruments like this pair of surgical scissors - gold plated handles and a Noir finish make them an
interesting, if challenging macro subject. I thought the highlights along the handles had blown out, hence red colour, then I realised I was wearing a red shirt which is reflected in the handles.
A man demonstrates traditional Maori musical instruments, including a flute and a conch shell, in Mitai Maori Village in Fairy Springs, Rotorua, New Zealand. (Oct. 21, 2022)
Photo © 2022 Marcie Heacox, all rights reserved. For use by permission only. Contact mheacox87 [at] hotmail.com .
ODC-Tied Up
This is an instrument cable Stu got for his Double-Bass. He keeps his little amp inside it.
... Il n'est pire sourd que celui qui ne veut pas entendre... À méditer...
Musée d'Histoire de la Médecine à Paris (www.bium.univ-paris5.fr/musee)
Depuis 1971 le siège de l'université de Paris V René Descartes se situe 12 rue de l'école de Médecine, dans les locaux de l'ancienne Faculté de médecine, créée en 1803 et installée dans les bâtiments du collège et de l'Académie de chirurgie.
Au deuxième étage du bâtiment, dans une salle construite en 1905, se trouve le Musée d'Histoire de la Médecine.
Ses collections, les plus anciennes d'Europe, ont été réunies par le doyen Lafaye au XVIIIe siècle, puis s'y est ajouté un important ensemble de pièces qui couvre les différentes branches de l'art opératoire jusqu'à la fin du XIXe siècle. On peut aussi y découvrir quelques rares trousses de médecins et de chirurgiens ainsi que des instruments de physiologie.
Another of the shots taken in the art studio at Appleby College... These instruments are all past their functional life in making music, but their forms can combine to create a new kind of art.
What does it take to create self-aware robotic instruments out of a piece of paper? A workshop was only the start of a new type of avant-garde robotic origami music performances.
Oribotics, a combination of origami and robotics, offers fascinating possibilities – from tiny biomedical devices to the giant James Webb Space Telescope. Together with a team of researchers, key researcher and artist Matthew Gardiner has been developing Oribotics since 2010 at the Ars Electronica Futurelab. With oribotic instruments, the team found a playful way to give robotic origami a musical expression: In a workshop, participants were able to create the paper-based instruments themselves. The potential of the avant-garde instruments was showcased during the festivities for the Ars Electronica Futurelab’s 25th anniversary.
Credit: Ars Electronica Futurelab: Arno Deutschbauer, Matthew Gardiner, Anna Oelsch
Funded through the FWF Austrian Science Fund, PEEK Program
More about Oribotic Instruments:
ars.electronica.art/futurelab/en/projects-oribotic-instru...
Photo: Denise Hirtenfelder
I shot this for the Macro Mondays group theme of Musical Instruments: 23/05/2011.
This wonderful little electronic device is called a Stylophone! It was invented in the late sixties and produced until the mid seventies! The, err, synthesizer, was promoted by no other than Rolf Harris, who released a number of play along records, and appeared in commercials advocating its use.
I'm not sure the noise it produces can be called music, but as you can see below from the operating instructions, it claims to be the greatest little instrument of the century!
Who am I to disagree? :)
More info on Wiki...
If anyone is using 500px, I've setup an account here! :)
~FlickrIT~ | ~Lightbox~
I visited the Butcher & Larder today for the first (but defninitely not last) time. It is a new local butcher that is focussed on sustainability and locally sourced meat. Among other things I loved the fact that you watch them cut your meat right in front of you. My daughter was quite fascinated to see which part of the pig we were going to be eating for dinner.
Oh yeah, I also loved this set of knives hanging on the wall.
Lot's of details in this photo of a music-loving family or group of friends.
No photographer or location.