What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Sound, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 8 of 8
1. The trick of the lock: Dorothy L. Sayers and the invention of the voice print

Pre-eminent among writers of mystery stories is, in my opinion, Dorothy L. Sayers. She is ingenious, witty, original - and scientific too, including themes like the fourth dimension, electroplating, and the acoustics of bells in some of her best stories. She is also the inventor of the voice-activated lock, which her hero Lord Wimsey deploys in the 1928 short story 'The Adventurous Exploit of the Cave of Ali Baba'.

The post The trick of the lock: Dorothy L. Sayers and the invention of the voice print appeared first on OUPblog.

0 Comments on The trick of the lock: Dorothy L. Sayers and the invention of the voice print as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
2. Hearing, but not understanding

Imagine that your hearing sensitivity for pure tones is exquisite: not affected by the kind of damage that occurs through frequent exposure to loud music or other noises. Now imagine that, despite this, you have great problems in understanding speech, even in a quiet environment. This is what occurs if you have a temporal processing disorder

The post Hearing, but not understanding appeared first on OUPblog.

0 Comments on Hearing, but not understanding as of 7/1/2015 6:52:00 AM
Add a Comment
3. ... or Something Like That


Son Marc and his good buddy Travis are working together on an awesome and gigantically ambitious project. And guess what? YOU CAN HELP! Watch this video and then click this magic link - http://tinyurl.com/q529x4g

0 Comments on ... or Something Like That as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
4. SOUND Group Read Week!



SOUND (Solid #3) hits the shelves in just one short month!

For everyone who's eager for a taste to what's to come, the previewers are sharing their thoughts on the ARC across the blogosphere this week; scroll down for all the bloggers who're weighing in!

And, if you haven't visited TheSolidSeries.com this month, you might not have seen the teaser pieces I've posted, so I've also pasted the inside-cover description and the book's opening segment below.

Finally, remember to check back on OCTOBER 25th, when I'll begin the main SOUND launch event, which is a week-long giveaway game!


 SOUND

 Clio Kaid's had one crazy summer.

After learning she was one of a hundred teens who
were genetically modified before birth, she and the
others departed for "camp" at a classified military site.

Besides discovering her own special ability, uncovering
a conspiracy, and capturing a killer, she's also forged
new friendships, found love, and managed to lose them both.

With no answers and the end of summer closing in,
Clio's terrified of going home more lost than when she arrived.

Will she finally find everything she's been looking for?

Find out in this exciting conclusion to the Solid trilogy.

*          *          *          *          *          *

SNEAK PEEK

“Never thought it’d be you,” I growled, pushing back against her with all my strength.

“I’m sorry; I can’t understand you with all that grunting,” Rae responded dismissively.

“I said,” I got out, then had to catch another breath before continuing, “I always knew they might try to kill me” – another pause, another breath – “but I never thought you would.”

“Aw, now you know what whining does,” she chided with a click of her tongue.

I mumbled the routine response in synch with her triumphant, “Makes it worse.”

*          *          *          *          *          *

And now to see what the early readers think!

0 Comments on SOUND Group Read Week! as of 10/1/2012 12:54:00 AM
Add a Comment
5. Sound bites: how sound can affect taste

The senses are a vital source of knowledge about the objects and events in the world, as well as for insights into our private sensations and feelings. Below is an excerpt from Art and the Senses, edited by Francesca Bacci and David Melcher, in which Charles Spence, Maya U. Shankar, and Heston Blumenthal look at the ways in which environmental sounds can affect the perceived flavour of food.

0 Comments on Sound bites: how sound can affect taste as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
6. Historical Thesaurus: On Sounds and Sense

early-bird-banner.JPG

In her final OUPblog post, Professor Christian Kay from the Historical Dictionary of the Oxford English Dictionary team talks about words concerning sound in the HTOED.

More posts about the Historical Thesaurus can be found here.

By far the largest category of words in HTOED denoting the traditional five senses is the one for Hearing, including the sounds that we hear. It has around 7350 headings and meanings compared with 4800 for Sight, 1100 each for Taste and Smell, and a mere 500 for Touch. Perhaps this reflects the importance of hearing to our ancestors: sight was useful mainly during the daylight hours, but sound could warn of danger at any time.

A trawl through section 01.03.08 Hearing certainly reveals the care with which we describe the noises made both by our environment and by ourselves. Noises can be loud (fervent, perstreperous, clamant, strepitous, dinsome) or soft (murmurous, whistering, susurrant). They can be resonant or ringing (sonorous, tinging, clanging) or dull (thud, thrump, pob, whump). They represent sounds in nature such as the suffling of the wind, the buzzing of bees, the splashing, sloshing, and sploshing of water, and even what HTOED discreetly describes as ‘Sounds heard in body’. And that is by no means all. Sounds with specific meanings also pop up in other categories, such as Animals, Music, and Language.

HTOED-hi-resIf we check back to the etymologies of such words in OED, we find that many of them, such as clank, hiss, and clip-clop, are described as ‘echoic’ or ‘imitative’, that is they are an attempt to use human language to mimic natural sounds. Many of them are somewhat repetitive: starting around 1385, making a rolling sound was described as to rumble, jumble, thumble, humble, grumble, or strumble. The sound itself might be called grolling, hurling, blumbering, and, uniquely latinate, volutation. On the same model, humans who speak indistinctly have been said at various times to mamble, mumble, mutter, rumble, fumble, drumble, chunter, and, of course, mussitate. Such evidence suggests that echoic words build up patterns which are reinforced by usage.

Other patterns involve variation of vowel sounds, as in tick-tock, clickety-clack, pitter-patter, and flip-flop. In many languages there seems to be a correlation between the type of vowel and the strength of the sound or action it represents. People are likely to agree that a tock is stronger than a tick, a clank than a clink, a clop than a clip. More subtly, they might distinguish a clang from a clank, which is defined by OED as “A sharp, abrupt sound, as of heavy pieces of metal (e.g. links of a heavy chain) struck together; differing from clang in ending abruptly with the effect of a knock”.

Attention to echoic words has led to some strange and now largely discredited theories of the origins of language, 09 - 247 Prof Christian Kay 006 0 Comments on Historical Thesaurus: On Sounds and Sense as of 1/1/1900

Add a Comment
7. Terry Riley’s In C

Robert Carl is Professor of Composition and Theory and Chair of Composition, Department of Music, The Hartt School, University of Hartford. In the post below he reflects on writing his book Terry Riley’s In C, in which he explores how the work’s emerging performance practice has influenced our very ideas of what constitutes art music in the 21st century. After reading this article consider seeing In C performed at Carnegie Hall this Friday, April 24th.

A few days ago, my editor, Malcolm Gilles, sent me an email celebrating the impending issue of my book on In C. Malcolm, along with being a musicologist, is the President of City University London, and I notice his messages tend to come from all over the world…Dubai, Singapore, London. And he’s Australian, so he truly straddles the globe.

But I mention Malcolm because he noted that our first contact about my project dates back five years. That’s right; that was the point I sent him an email out of the blue, asking if a study of In C as a repertoire “monument” was something he might support. To his everlasting credit in my eyes, he immediately responded “yes”. And so I began the process, which has been a labor of love.

I don’t know how many readers have a sense of that process, but it’s lengthy, and not just because of the writing and research. OUP has very rigorous standards, and to even get accepted into the pool of authors, you have to write sample chapters (I did about two and half), then be vetted by three outside readers, and respond to any criticisms. After that you just may get a contract. And then the real fun begins.

Back in Fall 2006 I began research in earnest. I was on sabbatical from the Hartt School, University of Hartford. My training is as a composer, and that’s what I teach. I’m not “officially” a musicologist or theorist, but I also believe that composers, of all the musical disciplines, have to come closest to knowing everything in order to do their work, which is make a piece of music out of nothing other than their vision and technique. And I always felt that one of the most important things I could do was to talk to as many as possible of the participants in the preparation, premiere, and recording of In C. They’re almost all still around, a feisty group of septuagenarians, foremost being the amazing Terry Riley. For some scholars, oral history is suspect, and of course it’s never totally reliable…people forget, get mixed up. If you’re musician, could you remember how you rehearsed a particular piece forty years ago? Well, it depends on different factors, like how sharp your memory is to begin with, and how distinctive the experience was, how important it felt to you. The good news is that the group of Terry’s fellow creative musicians tends to pass these tests with flying colors. And one, the trombonist Stuart Dempster, kept a copious diary, notes, and programs from everything he did professionally. So the job was not as ambiguous or contradictory as one might think.

My meetings were concentrated on the two coasts–the Bay Area and New York City in fall and early winter 2006. I spent a long afternoon at Terry’s home in Richmond, CA, overlooking Wildcat Canyon, me grilling him about all sorts of details over tea. Fortunately it wasn’t all minutiae; Terry also has lucid and penetrating thoughts about the very nature and role of music, and he presents them gently and firmly. I met Ramon Sender and Bill McGinnis (the recording engineer for the premiere) in a funky café in San Francisco; it felt like discovering two long-lost cool uncles. Bill pulled out his copy of the original manuscript, and we rushed to a copy shop to get an initial image for me. In his spacious trailer home in Sonoma, Warner Jepson revealed a stash of amazing photos he took of Terry, one of which is now the cover image of the book. Mel Weitsman (who played sopranino recorder in the premiere!) is now the abbot of the Berkeley Zen Center, and sweetly suggested he thought he still had the original score of Terry’s “lost” Autumn Leaves; a couple of weeks later it showed up (the original!) in my mail. [I had it performed later at Hartt, and it will get its professional premiere this September at the International Minimalist Studies conference in Kansas City]. Pauline Oliveros spoke to me in a pillow-filled living room of her house in Kingston, New York, festooned outside with prayer flags. Morton Subtonick was quick-witted (and quick-spirited) in his Village apartment studio. David Behrman and Jon Gibson both presented relaxed reminiscences in their Tribeca lofts. Anthony Martin in Williamsburg gave detailed descriptions and demonstrations of his light projections that adorned the premiere’s hall.

Later on there were phone interviews: with a generous, animated, and precise Steve Reich from Vermont; with David Rosenboom from his office at Cal Arts, helping recreate the atmosphere of the recording session; with the ever-young Anna Halprin, from her home in Kentfield (CA), musing on the serendipity of chance encounters in art, and of Terry and Lamonte Young creating so much racket at a dance concert of hers that the audience became genuinely frightened. And this doesn’t cover everyone, nor show all the treasures that were unearthed from a grand cast of characters. But at least I hope it starts to give you an idea of the pleasures of the chase I’ve experienced.

Some of you may wonder how I got into this. The short answer is: reviews and students. For the first: I write for Fanfare, one of the last remaining non-blogging publications for classical recordings (though it does have an online version), and over the years I’ve heard multiple recordings of In C. After a while it dawned on me that this piece was something of a miracle–every note and rhythm specified, and the general contours remain similar from one performance to the next. But so much else can be different! Different sized ensembles; totally different timbres; durations from a few minutes to hours; and different characters, from rock-jazzy, to world music, to precise classical, to joyous hippy-dippy, to dark and driven. It’s more inclusive than almost any other music, truly global, but benign, an invitation, not a conquest.

For the second: I’ve watched my composition students over the years become more open, fluent, and unintimidated by improvisation as part of their practice, even if they self-identify as “classical”. Maybe it’s because so many grew up playing in rock bands. Whatever the reason, they are willing to trust other musicians with their ideas, and they don’t see it as a copout. The key is to find really good, ingenious ways to convey the essential music that defines their own vision, and not be so vague as to sacrifice personal character to others. In C is one of the greatest and first models of how to do so, and they know it.

When I was their age, a sophomore or junior in college, I first heard the Columbia recording of In C. That was probably around 1974 or ‘75, so it was only about six years since its release. At the time I was puzzled by it. I guess it scared me, because on the surface it was so simple. I was just starting to compose, and it seemed so essential to be complex, to prove your stuff that way. I didn’t know what to do with it (except that my father came in one time as I was listening and said “What is that crap?” and that made me even more interested in it). Well, look how the wheel turns. In a couple of weeks there will be a sold-out 45th anniversary concert of the piece in Carnegie Hall. Terry, never one to pursue career at the expense of substance, has emerged as an elder sage for an entire generation. My music is still pretty complex, but I surely learned an enormous amount about space and pacing from minimalism, which is all for the best. So maybe there are happy endings after all, and if so, I’m glad to be part of the crowd scene at the end-credits, happily waving and cheering the passing parade.

0 Comments on Terry Riley’s In C as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
8. La Caja Sonora 09 (The sound box)

For the third festival/contest of music bands "La Caja Sonora" (the sound box) I had to illustrate and retouch the poster. I simulated some stickers that come alive and are deployed on the streets of the city at Canary Islands.

Texts will be added by the agency.

I hope you like it.

0 Comments on La Caja Sonora 09 (The sound box) as of 3/4/2009 4:29:00 PM
Add a Comment