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Die Bell Labs sind mit Abstand eines der, wenn nicht sogar das Forschungsinstitut des letzten Jahrhunderts. Erfindungen, die für unser digitales Zeitalter essentiell sind, schienen dort wie am Fließband gemacht worden zu sein. Aber eine solche Ideenfabrik braucht Räumlichkeiten und architektonische Konzepte, die Forschern und Wissenschaftlern kreative Entfaltungsmöglichkeiten bieten. Deshalb entwirft der finnisch amerikanische Architekt Eero Saarinen Ende der 50er Jahre ein Gebäudekomplex, der genau das bewirken soll. Eero Saarinen ist bekannt für seine dünnen Betonschalen, wie zum Beispiel die des Kresge Auditorium am MIT oder des TWA Flight Center am JFK Flughafen in New York. Welche Auswirkungen Architektur auf Innovation hat wird am Beispiel des Bell Labs Complex in Holmdel sehr deutlich. Hört rein und erfahrt mehr. Wenn euch gefällt was wir machen, dann hinterlasst doch einen Kommentar auf www.baustelle-bauwesen.de oder unserem instagram, oder unterstützt uns finanziell unter unserem Steady. Vielen Dank! Links zur Folge: Max Matthews
This week, on Music for Life, Music from DePauw...Seymour Bernsteinvoice professor Caroline Smith talks to Dean McCoy about a vocal competition DePauw just finished hosting...Burke Stanton chats with professor Barbara Paré about an intriguing recital of settings of Emily Dickinson's poetry that she and Tony Weinstein are presenting this week...we present some terrific performances recently given on the stages of Thompson Recital Hall and Kresge Auditorium...and Dean McCoy talks with professor Kristina Boerger about a special guest this week, beloved New York-based piano pedagogue Seymour Bernstein, with whom we have a special DePauw connection! SOURCES From their concert of October 14, 2015, the DePauw Chamber Players (May Phang, piano; Tarn Travers, violin; and Eric Edberg, cello) present Maurice Ravel's A Minor Piano Trio.From their recital of October 27, 2015, the DePauw Faculty Woodwind Ensemble (flutist Anne Reynolds, oboist Leonid Sirotkin, clarinetist Randy Salman, bassoonist Kara Stolle, and horn professor Robert Danforth) perform the three movements of Gunther Schuller's Suite: Prelude, Blues, and Toccata.
In this week's episode of Music for Life, Music from DePauw...Jayme Stone and the Lomax ProjectMatt Champagne chats with Eric Edberg about his and May Phang’s recent performance of Albert Schnittke’s second cello sonata... with our fall musical right around the corner, Hannah Gauthier has a special audience with His Royal Highness Arthur, King of the Britons and his assistant, Patsy... we share some performances from the stages of Thompson Recital Hall and Kresge Auditorium... and Burke Stanton talks to series director Professor Ron Dye about this week’s Performing Arts Series guests, Jayme Stone’s Lomax Project, a group which brings together terrific roots musicians to revive, recycle and re-imagine traditional American music! SOURCES From the 2015 CD “Jayme Stone’s Lomax Project,” “Hog Went Through the Fence Yoke,” "Lazy John," and "Sheep Sheep Don’tcha Know the Road.”From her Junior Recital on September 19th, 2015, soprano Kristin Daines and pianist Tony Weinstein perform “Willow Song” from Douglas Moore’s opera The Ballad of Baby Doe.From the original cast recording of Spamalot, we offer for your approval “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.”From their recital of Wednesday, September 16, 2015, cellist Eric Edberg and pianist May Phang perform Alfred Schnittke’s second sonata for cello and piano.
In this, our first episode of the 2015-16 academic year...Toni Robinsonwe hear from students Lisa Salazar and Maureen Bailey about their summer internships...Orchestra director Orcenith Smith stops in to tell us what the orchestra’s up to this semester...we present a few of the many wonderful performances from this year’s Greencastle Summer Music Festival...and our new Associate Director of Music Admission, Toni Robinson, and Director of the 21st Century Musician Initiative, Mark Rabideau, each come by to introduce themselves! SOURCES From the June 17th concert of the Greencastle Summer Music Festival, violinist Philip Palermo, violist Nicole Brockmann, cellist Eric Edberg, and pianist Claude Cymerman perform the Allegro molto movement from the Quartet in C Minor, op. 15 by Gabriel Fauré.From the July 22nd concert of the Greencastle Summer Music Festival,cellist Eric Edberg and pianist Fernando Otero perform Otero’s piece “From Now On.”From the August 19th concert of the Greencastle Summer Music Festival, pianist John Kamfona performs Aram Khatchaturian’s Toccata in E-Flat Minor.From the August 5th concert of the Greencastle Summer Music Festival, Tim Grimm and Friends perform Grimm’s song “Better Days.”From the Student Recital Hour of August 26, 2015, Julie Strauser, soprano; Yazid Pierce-Gray, baritone; and Amanda Hopson, piano perform “Dunque io son” from Rossini’s Barber of Seville.From the Project Trio performance in Kresge Auditorium of August 23, 2015, bassist Peter Seymour, flutist Greg Pattillo, and cellist Eric Stephenson play their piece “Sloeberry Jam.”
00:00 The Linear > 06:04 Day Nurse (7.7.12 - White River State Park, Indianapolis, Indiana) 12:37 Through the Cracks (7.3.12 - Kresge Auditorium, Interlochen, Michigan) 17:57 Liquid* (7.5.12 - CEFCU Center Stage, Peoria, Illinois) 30:48 Crucial Taunt (6.30.12 - Bank of America Pavilion, Boston, Massachusetts) 35:59 Miss You** (6.29.12 - Outside the Factory, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) 42:22 Robot World > 49:34 End of the Road 52:56 Partyin' Peeps (7.6.12 - Weekend at Harmony, Geneva, Minnesota) 59:03 Let's Dance^ (7.4.12 - Moonlite Gardens, Cincinnati, Ohio) 66:40 Rocker part II (6.30.12 - Bank of America Pavilion, Boston, Massachusetts) Total Broadcast Length 78:38 Notes: * with Stanley Jordan on guitar; Stanley performs Eleanor Rigby (The Beatles) solo ** debut (The Rolling Stones); with G. Love on harmonica ^ with Cincinnati Brass
Our next stop on the Meditation Now tour, 2002, takes us to the Kresge Auditorium in Boston, MA, where S.N. Goenka discusses Vipassana meditation. Meditation Now Talk with Q&A Kresge Auditorium Recorded July 31, 2002 79 minutes Listen to Audio Download Audio (29 MB) Meditation Now: Copyright, 2002 Vipassana Research Institute There is more information about vipassana meditation at Dhamma.org, and books and audio resources available for purchase in the Pariyatti bookstore. May all beings be happy!