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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

New music book cowritten by former baseball player Bernie Williams

Hal Leonard has issued a new book "Rhythms of the Game: The Link Between Musical and Athletic Performance,” written by the former baseball player Bernie Williams and two musician friends, Dave Gluck and Bob Thompson. Below is an article that The New York Times recently published discussing this book.


Ballplayers Who Hit the Right Note


By DANIEL J. WAKIN
Published: June 24, 2011





The former Yankee Bernie Williams, above at a concert in Manhattan, is an author of a new book on the connection between music and sports.



MUSIC and baseball have been playing duets for a long time.
The Library of Congress holds a vast collection of sheet music for baseball songs. The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y., boasts nearly 1,000 recordings. Scientists have studied the percussive sounds of ball on bat. Musicologists could turn their attention to the tunes blasted in the stadium to represent particular players. (For Bronxologists the best-known would be Mariano Rivera and “Enter Sandman.”)

The Marx Brothers, in “A Night at the Opera,” produced perhaps the greatest intersection of baseball and music: the overture to Verdi’s “Trovatore” slides into “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” at measure 35, inspiring Chico and Harpo to leap up in the pit for a game of catch and Groucho to hawk peanuts down the aisle.

Now add this to the syllabus: “Rhythms of the Game: The Link Between Musical and Athletic Performance,” soon to be issued by Hal Leonard Books. Written by the former baseball player Bernie Williams and two musician friends, Dave Gluck and Bob Thompson, it is a grab bag of inspiration, self-help, history and anecdotes that focus on the kinship of baseball and music.
Mr. Williams, who gets lead billing, is certainly qualified to write it. During 16 seasons as a New York Yankee he played the guitar seriously and released an album in 2003. Since his baseball career ended in 2006, he has become an active jazz guitarist, performing regularly in clubs and releasing a second album, “Moving Forward,” that was nominated for a Latin Grammy.
Baseball (like other sports) has long had music makers. They go at least as far back as Eddie Basinski, nicknamed the Fiddler, a trained violinist who played for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1944 and 1945. The ill-tuned fans of the Brooklyn Dodgers Sym-Phony are part of its lore, along with a tradition of barbershop quartets.





Denny McLain, who pitched for the Detroit Tigers in the 1960s, played the organ, and Carmen Fanzone followed four years as a Chicago Cub in the 1970s with a jazz trumpet career. More recently, Bronson Arroyo of the Cincinnati Reds released an album as a vocalist.
Mr. Williams, in a recent telephone interview, spoke of “that relentless pursuit of perfection” of the professional ballplayer and the serious instrumentalist.
“You can see it as far as the way that you react to a low-and-away pitch, the way you have to wait for it and have a perfect swing and hit it on a line drive the other way,” he said. That swing is the result of detailed practice.

“It’s an art,” Mr. Williams added. “It’s poetry in motion.”
The two fields have common sensations. A perfectly hit ball, right in the sweet spot, is “very similar to when you improvise over a set of chords, and you’re in a zone, and you nail every note and hit every pattern,” Mr. Williams said. “It’s like you’re in a trance,” he added.
The chief commonality of music and baseball is rhythm, Mr. Williams said. “Everything in baseball for me was rhythm.” Hitting depended on perceiving the pitcher’s rhythm, which is also the starting point for playing the outfield, Mr. Williams said. “You’re playing off the pitcher and the movement of the bat” to get the best possible jump on the ball. (Even the sound of the ball hitting the bat is a musical cue to where to move.) Making a throw from the outfield, he added, depends on a “certain pattern of steps you have to take, and they’re all rhythmically involved.”
Stealing a base — which Mr. Williams acknowledged was not his strong point, despite his great speed — also depends on the pitcher’s rhythm. Would-be base stealers can be thrown off their rhythm by the “hold play,” when a pitcher holds the ball interminably. He likened the tension of the delay to the space between notes in a jazz solo.

Mr. Williams, a thoughtful craftsman who speaks casually of Dorian modes and flatted seventh chords, plays in the genre of smooth or Latin jazz, and the book mostly invokes jazz and rock music. What about classical music? The authors compare fielders, who have to master the art of turning their concentration on and off with every pitch and may not have a crucial moment for a long stretch, to brass players in the opera pit, who may have a half-hour of waiting before an exposed solo. Mr. Basinski, 88, the former Dodger, spoke of the relationship between fiddling and fielding. Reached at his home in Milwaukie, Ore., he said: “I had great quickness because of the bowing and the fingering, which just has to be lightening quick. There is a great correlation. And how about timing and making the double play, your footwork and all that?”
Mr. Basinski, a shortstop, said he studied violin for 16 years, practicing three or four hours a day before making it to the Dodgers in 1944 out of the amateur circuit. Word got around about his violin-playing, and players ribbed him mercilessly.

“A lot of people think musicians are pantywaists,” he said. “That’s a bunch of” nonsense.
Mr. Basinski said he had to convince a dubious manager, Leo Durocher, that he could really play the violin. One day he put on his uniform and strolled into the Ebbets Field clubhouse playing Strauss waltzes. Durocher walked in. “He stopped and looked at me and said, ‘Well, I’ll be a son of a bitch,’ ” Mr. Basinski recounted. “While he was shaving, I was right next to him, giving it to him with my violin.” He recalled another recital, performing at home plate between games of a Pacific Coast League doubleheader. “I got a tremendous ovation, and had a good doubleheader too,” he said. Sports can have its hazards for musicians. The Pittsburgh Pirates’ Johnny Barrett once slammed into Mr. Basinski to break up a double play. Barrett drew blood with his spikes and broke a finger on Basinski’s bowing hand. His Dodgers teammate Eddie Stanky got revenge later in the inning by leaping onto Barrett’s chest on a steal attempt. “He was bleeding like a pig,” Mr. Basinski said.

Mr. Williams said he never worried about his hands, and he now feels lucky he suffered no serious injuries to them. He said he also never suffered abuse from other ballplayers for being a musician, because the guitar has a populist appeal and figures in the music of the clubhouse: heavy metal, blues and rock. Are there cosmic connections between the diamond and the concert stage? Well, given baseball’s role as national muse, it’s not hard to uncover them, especially among the many classical musicians who are also baseball nuts. David Lang, the composer, wrote an essay on NYTimes.com last month describing the reverence for the past that classical music lovers and baseball fans share. (He worried that in the case of music, it was interfering with an appreciation of the present.)

Baseball and classical music both claim an open-ended sense of time. Just as no clock rules a baseball game, “there are no definites to the length of a musical phrase,” said the conductor Dennis Russell Davies, whose father-in-law was a professional pitcher in Japan.
“No two performances are the same,” he added, “just like no two innings are the same.”
Similarities of form also exist. A team and an orchestra are both a “pack of individualists” who work together, Mr. Davies said. An individual can always play well and sound good on a mediocre night for the collective. An infield is like a chamber music group: in both cases, he said, “their instincts are predicated on what they know their teammates are going to do.”
James Ehnes, a Red Sox fanatic and violin soloist who moved to Bradenton, Fla., to be near spring training (along with his future wife), found common ground in the power of moments between pitches of both sorts. “In music it’s not the notes themselves, it’s the space between,” he said. “It’s what connects them.”

Of course music and sports are vastly different on many levels. Great baseball plays give an edge over an opponent. Great musical moments derive from the desire to communicate something. Baseball players, no matter how good, are slaves to the unexpected variable. Musicians can control much more of a performance. Mr. Williams pointed to another difference.
“I’ve had some bad days playing baseball,” he said. “I can’t say that I’ve ever had a bad day playing music.”

A version of this article appeared in print on June 26, 2011, on page AR16 of the New York edition with the headline: Ballplayers Who Hit the Right Note.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Cajon Drums

A Cajon (pronounced 'ka.HONE') is a box shaped drum played by slapping the front face with the hands. Modern Cajons are often used to accompany the acoustic guitar and are showing up on worldwide stages in contemporary music.

Cajon drums are drums presently crafted out of wood, but the Cajon drums of the past were in the form of simplistic boxes, tiny drawers from dressers or crates for fish. The actual term "Cajon" is derived from the Spanish language and when translated means "box." As time passed, the Cajon drum was reshaped and reconstructed to appear as it does today: a six sided wooden box with a whole on one side of it, usually the back side

When playing a cajon the player sits on the box tilting it an angle while striking the head between their Knees. Cajons have several screws at the top for adjusting percussive timbre and some Cajons sport rubber feet. Cajon players can also play the sides with the top of their palms and fingers for additional sounds.

Cajons are beginning to gain popularity through musicians such as Fleetwood Mac, The Dixie Chicks, Nada Surf, Jennifer Lopez, Ben Harper and more.

LP Percussion has a great selection of Cajon Drums.

We are proud to offer a nice selection of Cajons in our store. For more information please visit:

http://www.musicalinstrumenthaven.com/Cajons.aspx









Thursday, May 12, 2011

The Melodica -A fascinating wind instrument, easy to learn and powerfully expressive

The Melodica, also known as the "blow-organ" or "key-flute", is a free-reed instrument similar to the melodeon and harmonica. It has a musical keyboard on top, and is played by blowing air through a mouthpiece that fits into a hole in the side of the instrument. Pressing a key opens a hole, allowing air to flow through a reed. The keyboard is usually two or three octaves long.
Melodicas are small, light, and portable. They are popular in music education.

The Melodica is a fascinating wind instrument, easy to learn and powerfully expressive. Played like a piano, it is so compact that you can take it with you anywhere. Producing single notes or chords, the Melodica is both a solo and orchestral instrument, blending beautifully with other instruments. Whatever the music you like-from classical to rock -the Melodica will add its own personality, a unique and captivating sound

We are excited to announce that we now carry a full lone of Hohner Melodicas at our store.

For more info please visit:
http://www.musicalinstrumenthaven.com/Melodicas.aspx







Friday, May 6, 2011

Barcus-Berry introduces the Passion Pink Violin

Barcus-Berry is proud to present the newest addition to the Vibrato-AE Series Acoustic-Electric Violins, the stunning Passion Pink!

This violin is a traditional-style violin with a not-so-traditional finish. The stunning Passion Pink (BAR-AEP) violin is certain to be an attention-grabber on stage, and is available in addition to the other five eye-catching colors of the Vibrato-AE™Series Acoustic-Electric Violins, including Natural Finish (V), Barcus-Berry Blue (B), Red-Berry Burst (R), Metallic Green Burst (G), and Piano Black (BK) (Retails for $799.00). “A pink violin has been a popular request from many of our highly-regarded Barcus-Berry customers, and we are extremely excited to unveil this new color option for the esteemed Barcus-Berry line, and grant their request” said Kimberly Hawthorne, Product Manager for Barcus-Berry.

All Barcus-Berry Vibrato Violins have a hand-rubbed lacquer finish and are crafted in Romania and installed with authentic Barcus-Berry electronics. Barcus-Berry Vibrato Acoustic-Electric violins are made from fully carved and graduated select seasoned Carpathian Maple and Spruce wood. Each is set up to MENC standards and includes Ebony fittings, Super Sensitive Red Label strings, four Wittner tuners and a color-matched Glasser bow. The violin comes in a Barcus-Berry embroidered soft-shape case with detachable shoulder strap and full cake dark rosin.

We are excited about carrying the all new Barcus Berry Pink Vibrato AE Series Acoustic Electric Violin in our store. For more information please visit:

http://www.musicalinstrumenthaven.com/barcus-berry-pink-vibrato-ae-series-acoustic-electric-violin.aspx

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Cinco De Mayo Musical Instruments

Happy Cinco De Mayo!!!

Why not spice up your life with some musical instruments that are commonly used to celebrate this occasion. Check out our Cinco De Mayo sale that will be going on all month to celebrate this holiday! Have a great day!

Cinco De Mayo Musicial Instrument Sale

Monday, April 11, 2011

TOP 10 GIGGING ESSENTIALS FOR MUSICIANS

As a musician you don’t want anything to hinder your performance. Being prepared with the following items can make the night far less stressful. As every musician knows setting up can sometimes take almost as long as your first set, so it's a good idea to explore ways you can cut the time down as well as prevent disasters by having helpful tools on hand during your performance. We highly recommend that all gigging bands include the following ten items to their equipment list.


1. Looking to cut down the number of trips back and forth from your vehicle to the stage? You should definitely take a look at the Rockenroller R6 Equipment Cart. This product has to be the fastest, easiest and cheapest way we have came across to move equipment. This product will save your back and avoid injury. It has been used by major TV networks, news crews, pro sports teams, Fortune 500 companies and thousands more.


2. Are you blowing out your ears? This is something that every musician should worry about. Being a musician or working alongside a musician can be seen as a glamorous job, but it has its downsides as well. Working with instruments for long periods of time and on a regular basis can have an effect on your hearing as you can be exposed to high audio levels and peaks. Protect your hearing with Aculife Noise Reducers Ear Plugs


3. Are you a guitarist that is having trouble hearing yourself? The Hamilton Unistand Guitar Amp Stand is a great product that allows you to tilt your amp towards your ear regardless of where you are or what’s around you. Unlike traditional amp stands this product is extremely portable, which makes it excellent for gigging. This is a must have for all guitarists.


4. Music Stands on Stage – Yes or No? Many musicians find it necessary to use a music stand on stage. If you are changing up the set list often and need the music or lyrics in front of you then a music stand is needed. Unfortunately stands can often be heavy and bulky which creates an obstruction on stage. The best way to deal with this is by using a Portable Wire Music Stand that is easy to transport will not take up valuable space on stage.


5. How often have you arrived at a gig and came to the discovery that the room was much darker than you anticipated? This scenario makes it very difficult to see the set list or music while on stage. A great product out there that can combat this issue is the Mighty Bright Music Stand Light. Because the Mighty Bright uses LEDs instead of traditional incandescent bulbs, you never need to change the light bulb, just the batteries. These lights are small, lightweight, and portable, and they're inexpensive enough that you can outfit your entire band with ease.


6. Are your loose wires on stage a disaster? Prevent injuries from people tripping over your cords & cords being pulled out of amps by taping down your wires. The best product for this purpose is MBT Gaffer Tape. Gaffer tape is not to be confused with duct tape. Gaffer tape is real stage tape made with a fine cloth weave that leaves little to no adhesive residue behind once it's removed. Duct tape, on the other hand, leaves that sticky, gummy, residue. MBT now offers musicians and stage hands real gaffer tape. This tape does not leave a film on your cords and best of all it is black so it does not stand out.


7. Backup equipment necessary? Ask this to most Guitar or Bass players and the answer is absolutely yes! As a professional musician you know that loosing an instrument in the middle of a show could be disastrous. If you break a string it is much easier to throw on that second guitar rather than have to replace the string in a middle of your performance. Having a second guitar on stage also looks cool, so rather than having the guitar packed away in a case why not have it set up on a portable guitar stand? The A-Frame Guitar Stand by Supernova music is a perfect solution.


8. Desperately looking for a way to contain all of those unruly cables? Hosa Cable Wraps provide an easy, neat way to secure your guitar, mic and power cords. Keep your individual cables at bay with these velcro fabric Cable Wraps! These wraps are 8" long and have a handy slot which allows you to feed the cable through and cinch it down so it stays permanently attached!


9. Is your stage lighting out out of date? Prevent tripped circuits by using a LED unit such as the MBT LEDGIGPRO Lighting System. This product is the perfect portable lighting package for bands, solos, duos, DJ’s and more! Complete system includes four slim-line LED wash lights: red, yellow, green and blue. Lights are pre-wired and mounted onto the T-bar which houses the built in chaser for quick set-up and tear-down. Includes a four-pedal foot controller for selecting preset color combinations, audio-active chase, freeze and blackout modes. This product is also extremely portable. The unit comes in a padded, form-fitted carry case for protection and easy portability! The case is 50” x 15” x 5”…about the same size as an electric bass guitar case! How’s that for easy loading and carrying!


10. Last but not least is your bands image! Get known!! As musicians we all want people to remember our name after they leave the show. Make your band stand out and impress your fans with an awesome banner on the stage, merch booth, or even outside the venue. L&B Printing is a great source for custom designed Band Banners for your gigs. For more info call Kristy Ball at L&B Printing (908)232-7770 x213 or email kristy@lbprintinginc.com


Thursday, April 7, 2011

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