HoodedHawk

Ana Vidovic

I went to a great concert by classical guitarist Ana Vidovic yesterday. The venue was Central Presbyterian church in Towson, MD. Arriving shortly before Ms. Vidovic was to start, I ended up in a rear pew; about as far from her as you could get. But the acoustics of the church are very good, and I could hear her guitar quite nicely.

I really enjoyed hearing Ms. Vidovic playing in person. I first heard her on the recommendation of a coworker; she is an extremely talented and accomplished guitarist!

Fortunately, I learned at a previous (acoustic) concert that my camera has a fairly loud shutter, so I waited until the very end of the concert to pop into the aisle for a picture of Ana – the one real benefit of the rear row was that this didn’t block anyone’s view. I also found the dedicated “quiet” mode of the camera (yes, this does dampen the mirror flip/ shutter release sound!). The above picture is a crop of a shot taken at ISO 3200 (!) with my lens zoomed to 200mm. Not too bad from ~100 feet away (back of the church).

The program:

  1. Four Pieces by Astor Piazzolla
    • Verano Porteno
    • Milonga del Angel
    • La Muerte del Angel
    • Primavera Portena
  2. From 12 Songs for Guitar, arranged by Toru Takemitsu
    • Secret Love
    • Over the Rainbow
    • Yesterday
  3. Recuerdos de la Alhambra by FranciscoTarrega
  4. Asturias by Isaac Albeniz
  5. INTERMISSION

  6. Suite Castellana by Federico Moreno Torroba
    • Fandanguillo
    • Arada
    • Danza
  7. Sonata in D major, op. 77 by Mario Castelnuovo Tedesco
    • Allegro con spririto
    • Andantino, quasi canzone
    • Tempo di Minuetto
    • Vivo ed energico
  8. La Catedral by Agustin Barrios Mangore
    • Preludio saudade
    • Andante religioso
    • Allegro solemne

The only real drawback to the afternoon’s performance was the lady directly behind me who would root around in her purse for 10 minutes hunting her elusive Tic-Tacs. Upon finding them, she would forego merely dissolving them and proceed to crunch them individually. However, she was almost in time with the guitar, so it just added a little percussive accompaniment.

And a good time was had by all.

One Response to “Ana Vidovic in Concert”

  1. tommy Says:

    You can listen to some of her plays on her website. (link in the post)

    She’s pretty good.

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Preston and Olivia
Every once in a while both Olivia and Preston are smiling at the same time. Nice to see!

But it doesn’t always last. Olivia tends to like to “poke the Tiger”. Sometimes the Tiger pokes back, other times he’s stoic.


Preston and Olivia
Preston and Olivia

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A couple of weekends ago Preston and I spent a nice Saturday (March 12) at the Natural History Museum, in Washington, DC. This was the first time I had been since the new “Hall of Human Origins” was opened, and we spent a good bit of time in there. Preston loved all the skeletons/skulls. And of course, he loved the dinosaur exhibits – which hadn’t changed much since last time we were there (~2 years ago). He kept going from exhibit to exhibit: “what is this one? And this one?…” until it felt like I had read every caption in the museum. But he was very happy. Naturally, we had to stop and watch every video/movie presented in the various exhibits.

Natural History Museum

I did like the Hall of Human Origins; they have a neat entrance tunnel that portrays in a repeating video-mural the evolution of Homo Sapiens from earlier hominids. And the models of the various species of hominids are very life-like. I especially liked seeing a model of Lucy (Australopithecus afarensis) as I had only previously seen (castings) of the (partial) skeleton. And I swear I’ve seen some specimens of Homo neanderthalensis walking among us; that model was particularly enlightening. Pictures of both are below.

This museum isn’t as hands-on as, say, the Baltimore Science Museum, but it still has enough to keep the interest of a 4-year old for most of a Saturday! Afterward we had a bite to eat at the restaurant out by the (temporary during winter) skating rink in the Sculpture gardens. Great way to end the day!

Click any of the images for a larger-size and slideshow. Enjoy!


Entrance to Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Lucy model in Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Homo neanderthalensis in Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Hall of Human Origins at Natural History Museum
Natural History Museum
Great way to relax after a Day at the Museum
Watching the ice skaters at the Sculpture Garden

2 Responses to “A Day at the Natural History Museum”

  1. Eric Boz Says:

    Hey where is the exhibit with the Hobbit in it! Really they found a hobbit! Awesome!

  2. boz Says:

    I didn’t see the exhibit with Flores hobbits “Homo floresiensis” but the Smithsonian does have a good bit of info online. Next time we go to the Museum we’ll look for a hobbit. :)

    http://humanorigins.si.edu/research/asian-research/hobbits

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Kirsten and I went to see Vienna Teng at Ram’s Head On Stage, Annapolis, MD
March 4, 2011
Vienna Teng

As usual (we have seen her a number of times) she put on a very pleasing show. Vienna had her “bandmate”/ “collaborator”, Alex Wong accompany her with his percussion. Opening act was Matt Duke. Alex’s showmanship was quite good, and he kept the audience involved (ringing car keys in a “wave” around the stage for one tune – nice effect). If you get a chance to see her live, I do recommend it. However, it might be a little more difficult now as she started graduate school this past fall (dual MS/MBA degrees). Enjoy!


Vienna Teng

Vienna Teng


Vienna Teng

Vienna Teng

With Alex Wong:

Alex Wong

Alex Wong


Also with: Matt Duke
Matt Duke

Matt Duke


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The Clockwork Universe Edward Dolnick was at Politics and Prose bookstore tonight giving a talk on his book, “The Clockwork Universe“. Engaging speaker and an interesting talk. My son Brandon also came along and he was surprised to find it interesting enough to come out of the cafe.

The author didn’t do a reading from the book; he spent about 20 minutes giving a very interesting overview of the historical period in which Newton and contemporaries lived. We sometimes forget that these geniuses were living in a very different world from ours today; one in which basic hygiene and knowledge of how the physical world worked was about non-existent. London of the time (around 1660) was a very dirty, disgusting place to live. It certainly didn’t help that the Plague hit London in 1666, and within a year 1/5 of the population were dead (100,000 people) Mr. Dolnick also touched on how the people of the time *really* thought of God as someone pulling all the strings all the time- nothing at all happened in the world that was not directly due to God’s intervention. Newton et al. very much were men of their times, and as such assumed that everything was due to God; they were merely trying to “read God’s mind” as it were.

Fascinating history of the start of the Royal Society, the oldest Scientific organization in the world. Ideas were being thrown around those meetings: one minute they would be discussing whether or not a spider placed inside a circle of “unicorn dust” could leave the circle and the next they would be discussing astronomy and the orbits of planets. Oh, to be a fly on the wall!

 

 

Edward Dolnick talking at Politics and Prose, 2/26/2011

Edward Dolnick talking at Politics and Prose, 2/26/2011


Edward Dolnick talking at Politics and Prose, 2/26/2011

Edward Dolnick talking at Politics and Prose, 2/26/2011



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