View allAll Photos Tagged octave
www.stvincent.edu | The Saint Vincent College March of the Bearcats Drumline was invited to perform with the Pittsburgh Steelers official drumline prior to the Steelers pre-season game with the Philadelphia Eagles. That same evening, Saint Vincent College assistant professor of music Thomas Octave sang the national anthem
Une famille malheureuse (An Unhappy Family, 1849) by Octave Tassaert, a haunting tableau of grief and despair. The images have successfully come through.
Painted in oil on canvas and now housed in the Musée d'Orsay, this work was originally commissioned by the French state and exhibited at the Salon of 1850–51. It illustrates a passage from Félicité de Lamennais’s Paroles d’un croyant, a radical religious text that denounced social injustice and clerical oppression.
The scene shows a family devastated by suicide: a man lies lifeless, while a woman and child mourn beside him. The composition is stark and theatrical, with chiaroscuro lighting that recalls Caravaggio, yet the emotional realism is unmistakably 19th-century French. Tassaert’s brushwork is restrained, his palette somber, and the message unflinching—this is not allegory, but indictment.
Tassaert, often overlooked, was a master of melodramatic genre painting, using domestic tragedy to critique the moral failures of society. This painting is one of his most powerful statements.
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Here you can clearly see the "spud" in the center of the cup onto which the snap in the underside of the octave vent pad was secured. The leather ring with stitching is the remains of the leather that covered the pad and held its parts together. The pad's metal snap protruded through the hole in the center of the ring.
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
The Contrabass Flute has a range of notes two octaves below that of the C flute. Therefore, the contrabass flute range is C2 to C5. This means that the lowest note a contrabass flute can play is the C2, while the highest note a contrabass flute can play is the C5. It's also a bit longer, at over six feet, and has a slightly larger diameter than the bass flute. Contrabass flutes require a lot of air to play, so blowing into a pop bottle will help to open up the air stream.
Contrabass Flute Range
The keys of the contrabass flute are not positioned directly under the thumb, so if you have small hands, you may find it easier to turn the foot joint inwards and line up the rod with the center of the D key. Similarly, the keys at the foot joint are oversized and elongated. While these keys are difficult to reach, they are easily manipulated with practice. Once you have perfected the technique of playing the contrabass flute, you'll be ready to play with ease.
The low register of the contrabass flute is similar to that of the bassoon. It is pitched a fifth below the subcontrabass flute and is suitable for performing in orchestras and ensembles. With an experienced player, it can be played in a wide range of music. If you'd like to learn the contrabass flute, you can start by reading this article. You'll find that this flute is a perfect match for many genres.
The first octave of the Contrabass Flute range is quite wide.
Mass for the Octave Day of Christmas, also known as the Feast of the Circumcision, and of Mary, Mother of God.
www.stvincent.edu | The Saint Vincent College March of the Bearcats Drumline was invited to perform with the Pittsburgh Steelers official drumline prior to the Steelers pre-season game with the Philadelphia Eagles. That same evening, Saint Vincent College assistant professor of music Thomas Octave sang the national anthem
The octave mechanism on the Aristocrat is only slightly different from that found on the New Aristocrat and later True Tone horns. It's Generally a secure and precise mechanism, so long as you keep it corked right.
It has one clever linkage device that might be more clever than it is a good idea. Look at the small pad over the body octave pip, with two key arms meeting over it, making "U" shape with the pad at the bottom. Above that note the small block with a forked arm, extending up from the octave key mechanism, holding the block on two sides. The block has a hole in it that slips over a thin metal rod rising up from the arm underneath it.
When you press the octave key for top register notes under A, the forked arm lifts up and also pivots, allowing the body octave pip pad to lift.
The small block / fork linkage is suppose to make that happen smoothly and keep a secure precise key linkage, which it does. But, note the slot in the block where the forked arm holds it. There is a very thin strip of cork in that slot on both sides. Cork compresses, so eventually the forked arm's contact with the linkage becomes loose and the mechanism loses precision.
A lot of techs seem to think that wrapping the small metal pin with a modern low-friction buffer material works as well as the block. The forked key arm makes a secure contact with it, the low friction allows the linkage to work smoothly, and many such modern materials won't wear and compress as easily as cork. Take a look at the set of pics of the 1940 Aristocrat tenor for such an arrangement.
www.stvincent.edu | The Saint Vincent College March of the Bearcats Drumline was invited to perform with the Pittsburgh Steelers official drumline prior to the Steelers pre-season game with the Philadelphia Eagles. That same evening, Saint Vincent College assistant professor of music Thomas Octave sang the national anthem
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
JESU MERCY
ANNE BROWN
WIFE OF
WILLIAM WHITBREAD
WHO DEPARTED
TO THE OTHER LIFE ON
SUNDAY IN THE OCTAVE
OF ALL SAINTS 1901
An octave is the 8th day after a feast, the feast of All Saints, as we all know, celebrated on 1st November. The Octave of All Saints was introduced by ‘gay’ Pope Sixtus IV in the 15th century. The 3rd of November 1901 was a…a…a…Sunday, the only Sabbath day falling within this octave, so this is the date that Anne died. None of this explains why she doesn’t share her husband’s surname.
Octave Chanute Air Museum Rantoul
Lockheed WV-2 Warning Star BuNo141311 Navy SH-14(Port side) TK-311(Starboard side)
Nick named “Willy Victor” by the USN crewmen
1956 to 1965 with U.S,Navy VW-13 (Atlantic Barrier )(BarLant - Atlantic Distant Early Warning) , Patuxent River NAS,
1962 Re-designated EC-121K
1965 Point Magu CA. PMTC-311, Pacific Missile Range (Missile Tracking Flights)
1979 Retired
1983 To Chanute AFB
1993 To Octave Chanute Air Museum
1017 To Yankees Air Museum, Ypsilant-Belleville, MI.
a cultural spectrum of North Easten States of India
18 - 22 March at Kala Academy Darya Sangham. Free Entry
stage setup
Rehearsals