College Town Grand Forks on grand display









Seventh UND Piano Fest shows city, University at their cultural best

Susan Tang, associate professor of piano at Northeastern Illinois University, talks about the composer Florence Price during the Seventh UND Piano Fest on Oct. 22. Photo by Tom Dennis/UND Today.

Recently, Grand Forks was named one of the Top 5 College Towns in America. And on Saturday, an event on the UND campus helped show why.

The event was the Seventh UND Piano Fest, and as it unfolded in the Hughes Fine Arts Center’s Josephine Campbell Recital Hall, it brought to the audience hours of exceptionally high-level piano performances. And more: Susan Tang, associate professor at Northeastern Illinois University, not only gave a master class in piano, but also lectured on – and played the music of – Florence Price, Margaret Bonds and Betty Jackson King, three especially inspiring Black female composers of the 20th Century.

And more: The event also saw the world premiere of an original work, UND faculty member and composer Christopher Gable’s 24-movement piece titled “Polyptych.”

And still more: Each movement in Gable’s piece was played by a UND piano student, thus giving those students the rare chance of performing a completely new piece of commissioned piano music that never before had been heard by the public.

“I am very excited to take part in this festival, along with my students, and share performances with the campus and local community,” said the Piano Fest’s host, UND Associate Professor of Music and Piano Nariaki Sugiura, in advance of the event. “Given the work we’re premiering, it’s not an exaggeration to say that this will be a historic event,” and one that would be long remembered by students, faculty and audience members alike.

Susan Tang, associate professor at Northeastern Illinois University, plays the piano during her presentation at the Seventh UND Piano Fest on Oct. 22. Photo by Tom Dennis/UND Today.

Expanding our cultural history

During her talk, Tang, who taught at UND from 2008 to 2011, introduced the audience to three remarkable composers – all of them, interestingly, from the Midwest. Tang told stories of Price, Bonds and Jackson King’s lives, noting not only how hard it was for Black female composers in the mid-1900s to break into the then-overwhelmingly white-and-male field of classical music, but also how the recent rediscovery on their work has opened up whole new horizons for scholars and music lovers.

For example: In 2009, as Tang related, an abandoned house near St. Anne, Ill., was found by its new owners to contain stacks of musical manuscripts and other documents, many of which bore the name of Florence Price. Price died in 1953, and the house had once been her summer home.

So the discovery – and the owners’ subsequent decision to turn the collection over to a university – saved dozens of Price scores and other compositions from destruction, Tang said. At the same time, the fact that the papers had wound up sitting for years in a dilapidated house testifies to classical music’s neglect of its own. As the New Yorker magazine put it in a story about the incident, “that run-down house in St. Anne is a potent symbol of how a country can forget its cultural history.”

Tang interspersed her anecdotes about the composers and analyses of their music with samples, playing excerpts from Price, Bonds and Jackson King’s pieces on the rehearsal hall’s grand piano. “My hope,” she said, “is that you’ll hear some music that maybe you haven’t heard before – great pieces that are so rooted in American history, in our country and in our music,  and are written by Black women composers who happen to be from the Midwest.”

It’s wonderful that the world now has access to this music, she said. And to the performers and music educators in the audience, she added, “I hope you can find one or two pieces here that you can use to expand your repertoire, bringing in a different audience and connecting with people maybe in a different way that we traditionally have done.”

UND faculty member and composer Christopher Gable talks about “Polyptych,” the 24-movement piece he composed that was premiered at the Seventh UND Piano Fest on Oct. 22. Photo by Tom Dennis/UND Today.

‘Composition is hard’

When Gable spoke, he first told a story of a composition student who had just learned about the surprising complexity of scoring percussion music. “You mean I have to decide all of the notes that I want them to play?” the student asked in amazement.

“Man,” the student concluded. “Composition is hard.”

Yes indeed, Gable told the audience. “Composition is primarily a lot of work. Coming up with the actual notes is of course a big part of it. But there are so many other things that must get done along the way before a composition is complete.”

For example, “the composer must take their half-formed messy scribblings; fragments of tunes, textures, or sounds that they hear inside their heads; fleeting piano improvisations that always seem to sound best when we first have them, then the rest of the time, we spend trying to capture that first magic. …

“The composer will take all of this raw material and try to fashion it into something that other people might actually want to listen to.”

In Gable’s case, that meant spending hours and days and weeks at the piano, supplementing jotted-down melodies from years ago – his own “half-formed messy scribblings” – with other inspirations to craft his 24 pieces.

“Polyptych” was the result. A polyptych, Gable explained, is a multipanel group of individual paintings, commonly created by Renaissance painters as altarpieces in churches. At the suggestion of his colleague Nariaki Sugiura, Gable had set out to write a musical variation on that form: one piece for each of the 24 major and minor keys of the chromatic scale, a familiar tradition in classical music.

“So, regarding this current piece, even the act of writing a set of pieces in all 24 keys is in itself a traditional thing to do,” Gable said.

“But I hope that the way I have approached this project is new, and that it brings something unique to the piano repertoire.”

UND student Laura Farder plays “Minuet,” one of the 24 movements in composer Christopher Gable’s piece titled “Polyptych.” The full piece was performed by Farder and other UND students at the Seventh UND Piano Fest on Oct. 22. Photo by Tom Dennis/UND Today.

Peerless on the prairie

Sugiura himself, the event’s host, was delighted with the result – not only Gable’s finished work (although especially that, Sugiura said), but also the way the Piano Fest as a whole brought students, the UND community and Grand Forks up-close-and-personal with the full richness of music.

Take composition, Sugiura said to UND Today. “For me, it’s very important for students to interact with a composer. That’s because most of the time, classical musicians are playing a piece by a composer who already is dead.”

At Piano Fest, in contrast, the composer still is very much alive, and that offers a rare opportunity for students and audience members. “Not only are the students performing those pieces for the first time, but also they can talk to the composer, hear his ideas and add their own,” Sugiura said.

Likewise, members of the audience who heard Gable speak asked him a number of questions during his talk’s Q&A.

“And people probably don’t realize it, but composers also get inspired by this process,” Sugiura said. Professor Gable still is changing his work, and after the Piano Fest, he may revise a piece after thinking, “Oh, this might work better.”

In other words, the performers and speakers as well as the students and audience members came away enriched by the Piano Fest, Sugiura said.

Not bad for a town of 60,000 on the windswept Northern Plains.

UND Associate Professor of Music and Piano Nariaki Sugiura speaks to the audience during the Seventh UND Piano Fest on Oct. 22. Photo by Tom Dennis/UND Today.

 



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A Composer’s Diary: Wasteland


 This week it’s time for the world premiere of Wasteland with Norrlandsoperan Symphony Orchestra and Ville Matvejeff! This 20 minute orchestra piece in five movements is the craziest piece of music I have written so far, my own “Rite of Spring”. The rehearsals sounded fantastic and I can’t wait for the premiere on Thursday the 1st of September!

Wasteland is inspired by some very complex issues, and because complex issues can’t be explained with a few words, hence long program note below:

Every year an average Swede will buy 13 kilograms of clothes and throw away about 7.5 kilograms of clothes. About 60 percent of the clothes that are thrown away are whole and clean, but only 3.8 kilograms of textiles per person are annually collected by charity organisations. At least 0.13 kilograms of clothes per person are sold second hand. In Finland the numbers are even higher. As much as 19 kilograms of clothes are bought and 13 kilograms are thrown away annually per person.  For producing one kilogram of cotton you will need 7 000 – 29 000 litres of water and 0.3 –1 litre of oil.  To produce one kilogram of cloth generates about 10-15 kilograms of  greenhouse gases.

In recent years second hand clothes have become increasingly popular in Scandinavia, and bringing your clothes to a collection is considered a way to “have a clean conscience”. But according to a report by the Finnish Broadcasting Company Yle only around 20 percent of the collected clothes can be sold in shops in Scandinavia. Around 10 percent are burnt immediately and up to 70 percent are sent further to sorting units, usually situated in the Baltic countries or Germany. At this point a small part is used for upcycling, such as fillings for car seats. But most of the clothes are sent to some of the poorest countries in the world, like for instance Mozambique. The black market of cheap bad quality clothes disrupts these countries’ own textile industry. As a large part of the clothes are of too bad quality to wear anymore, they end up in landfills.

The first movement “Wear” is about how we use different clothes for different occasions, like for instance certain clothes for christmas parties, maybe other clothes for concerts and again something else when we are going out partying with friends. The clothes might be bought second hand and be used several times, but everything at an increasing tempo.

The second movement “Toss” is the journey the clothes make together with their owner to collection containers where they are tossed in, and from where they are collected by a lorry. The third movement “Sort” is a description of collection and sorting halls. The movement is like a slow “zoom out” during which you slowly begin to realise what a large amount of “Christmas- and party clothes” there are intended to be recycled: in Finland annually around 14 million kilograms and in Sweden around 38 million kilograms, an overwhelming amount.

The fourth movement “Burn” is about what happens to at least 80 percent of all textile waste: it is burned with mixed waste. In best case the waste burning can be used for generating new energy, but it is not a sustainable way to use resources.

The last movement “Flow” is about what we call “Greenwashing”, in other words marketing something as sustainable even though it actually isn’t. In an investigating article by Yle a factory plant of the Finnish firm Fortum is viewed in detail. The factory refines salts from environmentally hazardous APC ashes (APC = Air Pollution Control) from incineration waste. Then these salts are rinsed out together with the wastewater of the process, straight into the Baltic Sea, as there is “lack of proof that it would be harmful for the environment”. The regulations which state that ashes from incineration waste should not be used unrefined, due to environmental risks, are circumvented in this way. 

Wasteland is a shout out that recycling can’t be “one option of many”, as it has to be the only viable choice for our resources to be sufficient. The responsibility for recycling shouldn’t lie solely with consumers, but should also be mandatory for producers. With this piece, I want to make people understand that if we can “afford” to consume, we must also be able to afford to take care of the waste we are creating. This must be regulated by law so that the responsibility cannot be shifted to poorer and / or corrupt countries.



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CCC-C welcomes new instrumental music instructor


Central Community College-Columbus has a new instrumental music instructor and concert band director, Dr. Krista Vazquez Connelly, whose first concert will be held this weekend.

The concert will be 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 30, in the Fine Arts Building auditorium, 4500 63rd St. in Columbus. On Thursday, Nov. 3, a choir concert will be held at 7 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church in Columbus, 2710 14th St. The band and choir will have a combined concert on Sunday, Dec. 4, at 3 p.m. in the Fine Arts Building auditorium.

To welcome Vazquez Connelly to the community, The Columbus Telegram asked her some questions about her background and new role at the college.

Question: Where are you from?

Answer: I grew up in western Kansas. I’m from Nebraska, originally, but I spent most of my growing up in a tiny town in western Kansas. I have a lot of family in Nebraska, so this does feel like home at this point.

People are also reading…

Q: When did you start at the college?

A: I just started at the very end of July.

Q: Do you live in Columbus?

A: My husband and I moved, right before I started, a few days before I started that position. We moved over from Lincoln.

Q: Are you based on the Columbus campus?

A: Yes. Both of our music instructors here teach online courses, so we do serve the other campuses and communities for Central but the actual music program where you have ensembles, that’s here.

A: I’m the concert band director, (the concert band) meets once a week in the evening. A large part of that’s actually community members, as well as students here and high school students. It’s a really fun generational mix that we enjoy. I also teach a couple of online classes, gen ed music, we have a history of rock. We have an intro to music which basically looks at mainly Western classical music, the history of it …. And I also teach some of our core music curriculum, like ear training.

Q: What is your background? 

A: I’m a trumpet player, that’s how it started. I do teach trumpet lessons and other instruments here too. I also did music education in my earlier degrees. My advanced degrees are in music composition. So my specialty now is actually as a composer, but I kind of do everything here. I pull from that entire background to work here, which is good.

Q: When did you start playing trumpet? 

A: Fifth grade, so probably 10-years-old. I’ve been playing for a long time.

Q: How has it been going at CCC-C?

A: Great. I really like the community here. I like the students. They clearly have a passion for what they’re doing. They are working hard for me and I’ve enjoyed everybody I’ve met that I’m working with as well. We’re still getting to know Columbus, of course.

Q: What do you hope to bring to the college?

A: We’re hoping to grow the program, of course, especially post-COVID. COVID shut down so many things, and music and entertainment was one of the big ones. I’m definitely hoping to grow the program hoping to eventually expand offerings perhaps that the community might benefit from.

Q: Tell me about your first concert coming up. 

A: On Oct. 30, Sunday afternoon, at 3 p.m., we have our first concert of the whole year. It will be just the concert band with the second half being the Columbus Jazz Orchestra, which is a partnership that used to happen many times, we’re bringing that back again. Our half is titled “Tribute.” That title refers to two things. The pieces on the program, most of them are written by an American composer who has either recently passed away and so we’re giving them a pretty fresh tribute, or they passed away many years ago but they had a really big impact on American music or music globally. There’s one composer who’s not American, and I chose that work because it has a memorial quality to it. It’s slow, meditative a little bit and so I chose it for a slightly different tribute purpose.

Q: Do people need to buy tickets?

A: It is free. We do take donations but it’s very much a free event. And anybody can come.

Q: What do you think people can gain from attending the concert? 

A: I hope that especially post-COVID, people will see a revitalization of the arts. And that’s something that’s happening everywhere, just to finally feel like we’re getting back to normal. I hope that they will see a growing program. Something they can tell their friends about if they have friends who play an instrument, or maybe they play. We have a lot of community members in the ensemble and I’m always looking for more people.

Q: Is there anything else you would like to add?

A: I’d love to add something about my husband (Oscar Vazquez Medrano). We met doing our doctorates at UNL. He is finishing his doctorate right now in piano performance, he’ll be done very soon. He teaches piano and is wanting to get into the community, more teaching and helping as well. We’re both thrilled to be here and hope to make an impact in Columbus and the surrounding area.

Hannah Schrodt can be reached via email at hannah.schrodt@lee.net.



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A Conversation with Composers Tamar-kali & Tanyaradzwa Tawengwa | News


This week, two BMI affiliates are participating in a special collaboration with Beth Morrison Projects and Harlem Stage. Tamar-kali, an accomplished, Brooklyn-born film composer who also writes, plays and sings in both her own hard-edged alternative rock band and as part of an experimental string-&-vocal ensemble, and Tanyaradzwa Tawengwa, a versatile Zimbabwean scholar, composer, and singer, are performing their own works as part of Song Cycles, a program designed to highlight a diversity of musical languages as practiced by women and non-binary composers. We caught up with these dynamic, multi-hyphenate music creators on the eve of their performances to find out more.

BMI: How did this concert come about?

Tamar-kali: We were each commissioned by Beth Morrison Projects to compose a song cycle that would debut in a live performance.

Tanyaradzwa: I admire the company’s work so I felt this would be a great professional collaboration to embark on.

BMI: Tamar-kali, your work ranges from the raw power and emotional catharsis of your rock music to the experimental work with Psychochamber Ensemble, to your symphonic compositions and film scores. As a busy and prolific composer, how do you manage to reconcile these extremes? Do they balance each other out, or do you find yourself compelled towards one versus the others?

Tamar-kali: My work is a continuum that channels the range of my influences.  I’m compelled to create first and foremost. I think being a primarily self-taught, independent artist who developed my practice starting at home and then in studios and stages is the key. My artistry is a natural progression borne out of my personal experiences. Music is music. As a listener and practitioner, I enjoy a range of sounds and expressions and my work reflects that.

BMI: Tanyaradzwa, your music is steeped in the culture and traditions of your Zimbabwean heritage. Tell us about this. What associations does this music conjure for you? What do you hope your listeners take away from the experience?

Tanyaradzwa: ChiVanhu (Indigenous Madzimbabwe aesthetics, knowledge systems and ways of being) is a part of my identity. I use our Indigenous modes of music-making as the springboard for my creative practice. This music is me, it is home, is my lineage, it is my voice.

Regarding what I hope listeners will take away, I hope that witnessing me move through my story with radical honesty will encourage them to embark on similar journeys for themselves.

BMI: For this event at the Harlem Stage, what can attendees expect from your song cycle performances?

Tamar-kali: I don’t even know what to expect! This work is completely brand new, and it’s been three years since I’ve performed on any stage—a passionate and heartfelt performance!

My hope is that that work inspires and provokes thoughts and emotions that are expansive and perhaps spark a journey to some new discovery.

Tanyaradzwa: My song cycle is called Marimuka. “Marimuka”means the Wilderness or foreign land in the ChiZezuru language of Madzimbabwe.

We believe that Marimuka is an existential place that manifests in each person’s life. It is a hallowed, mysterious, vast expanse whose depths hold both unspeakable terrors and divine miracles. Every human spirit must travel through Marimuka in order to arrive at a deeper understanding of self, but the journey should only be embarked on when the spirit is ready to do so. The journey is arduous, and the solitary traveler is stretched well beyond the limits of their comfort, and often, their life.

This song cycle is dedicated to the millions of Zimbabweans who have left our motherland to work in the global Diaspora to care for their families back at home while living as economic and spiritual exiles in Marimuka. Living in Marimuka is a sacrifice of Love because Marimuka is intended to be a place of transition, not of stay.

BMI: Can you tell us about the texts you used in your song cycle? How or why you chose them, and what they mean for you?

Tamar-kali: In researching text in the public domain, I was struck by the dark beauty of these poems by Lola Ridge, Gwendolyn Bennet and Jessie Redmon Fauset. I was invigorated and inspired to resurrect their work for those like myself who were unfamiliar.

This has been a practice I’ve engaged in for as long as I can remember; tracing my existence down from my foremothers, seeking out as many free-wheeling, rabble-rousing, trailblazing women whose silhouettes stood out in contrast to the gender roles and expectations of their day.

The African American tradition of alternative kinship structures define a space in the understanding of family that is not blood, but spirit based. In that regard, I’ve sought out my “Other Mother”’; women who have birthed movements and inspired new generations.

Tanyaradzwa: The text of Marimuka is my own, and tells the story of my personal journey to Marimuka – my ongoing rite of passage into womanhood which began when I emigrated to the United States fourteen years ago. In my journey, I have dealt with the excitement of new adventure, loneliness, longing, and the weight of institutional dehumanization (i.e. years of being called a “Resident Alien”). I have learned how to fight, use my voice and deploy my gifts to humanize myself on my own terms for the sake of my survival, empowerment, and joy.

BMI: What’s next for you both?

Tamar-kali: A limited release ten-inch recording of this song cycle, Melancholy Ghosts and Other Mothers, a digital opera short project with NYC-based Catapult Opera, and a three-act musical theater piece helmed by Bill T. Jones that will be part of the Perelman Arts Center’s inaugural season.

Tanyaradzwa: A commission for Carnegie Hall’s Link Up Orchestra program.

BMI: What role has BMI played in each your musical journeys thus far?

Tamar-kali: Through BMI I have come to understand the benefit of having a team in your corner to support your interests and endeavors as a songwriter and composer. It’s been great getting to know the team from Classical to Film/TV and Pop and Rock and engage with them on my various projects.

Tanyaradzwa: As a member of BMI, it is good to know that my work and music rights are protected.



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A Composer’s Diary: Viljo the Rabbit 2009-2022


 Viljo the Rabbit 2009-2022

Last Sunday my beloved rabbit and friend Viljo died at the animal hospital surrounded by me and my parents. For some reason people always asked me (while he still was alive) if rabbits “can do anything as pets” so here follows a story about Viljo and how special he was.

When I first got to know Viljo, it wasn’t “love at first sight”. My former flatmate Maija in Tampere had had him a few years earlier, given him away, and the new owner couldn’t anymore have him and said they would put Viljo down if not anyone would take him, so Maija, who loves animals, asked in the autumn of 2012 if we could take him. I was not super enthusiastic in the beginning to have a rabbit in addition to my flatmate’s dog Dexter, but neither did I want a dead rabbit on my conscience, so I agreed. The first dog Dexter and rabbit became good friends (as seen in the photo below).

Viljo and Dexter 2012. Photo © Cecilia Damström


After half a year Maija took a second dog to take care of. The new dog saw Viljo as a tasty meal all of the time, and once when I came home after a weekend away, the whole kitchen looked like a bomb had exploded. Maija told me her second dog had managed to open the unlocked kitchen door and the rabbit cage and apparently had chased the rabbit all through the kitchen. As through a miracle Viljo had not died of the shock and also survived by hiding behind the motor of the deep freezer until Maija came home. This was the first time I felt really sorry for Viljo, as I saw how afraid he was, he was shaking and looking very depressed. When Maija moved out and my new flatmate Jari moved in, I suggested to Maija she would leave the rabbit with me and Jari, because it might not survive with the new dog.

Jari and Viljo 2013. Photo © Cecilia Damström

Jari at once took to Viljo and suggested we should let him roam free in the kitchen to which I agreed and after a while he was allowed to roam free in the hallway. And what a change this territory expansion did to Viljo! He began lying in the hall waiting for me to come home, behaving just like the first dog Dexter. When I came home he would hop around my feet in circles and make a small grunting noise (those who know, they know), to show how happy he was.


Viljo in Jari’s guitar case 2013. Photo © Cecilia Damström

Viljo became a very sociable rabbit. He loved when people would have conversations in the kitchen or hallway (“his” territory) and would jump in eights around both peoples feet, to show his joy. He thought however that it would be best if no-one left the house ever, and clever as he was, he tried to sabotage all means of traveling that he had considered might work: he chewed the wheels of my suitcase, the straps of my backpack and once even the soles of my shoes. In later years he would take to more “passive aggressive” ways to express his annoyance of traveling: by sulking with the back to me (while in-between turning to check if I’m still looking at him).

Vilje and Jari’s brother’s cat Lipsu. About 2015


Naturally through me and my guitar playing flatmate Jari, the rabbit Viljo became a true music enthusiast. He listened to everything from classical music to contemporary music (preferring Lutoslawski over Messiaen). Jari’s flamenco guitar playing got a special place in his heart. Jari even brought Viljo to my final recital in the Pyynikki hall, the full rabbit review of my concert can be read here: https://ceciliadamstrom.blogspot.com/2014/10/the-rabbit-review.html

Vilje and I in January 2013. Photo © Cecilia Damström


The summers from 2013 Viljo lived always with my parents at the summer house. We tried building him a big outdoor cage, but he was just very offended and wanted to stay rather inside and listen to Radio Classic, while eating kale and blueberries. The most elitist personality I’ve known. (Viljo must feel honoured that The Queen has joined him last night.)

Viljo looking at the sea 2013. Photo © Cecilia Damström

When I moved to Sweden, Viljo lived first for about 2 years with Jari after which he moved in 2017 to Helsinki, mainly living with my parents. His territory became the living room, with a corner for his toilet and rabbit food. But most of his time he spent under the living room dining table, among people’s feet, his favorite place. When he got older he started making a bit of a mess, but hugely appreciated when we cleaned up, and would show it by hopping around eagerly on his clean carpets. I bought a white robot vacuum cleaner for my parents to help, and Viljo also got acquainted with it, although always making sure to show the vacuum that he (Viljo) was the boss and was not going to move for the vacuum.


They say cats have 9 lives but it seems also Viljo had at least 6. According to Wikipedia, rabbits become between 7-9 years old (and insurance stops at 7 years), but Viljo became over 12 years old (12 years 8 month and 26 days). In addition to the already mentioned near escapes in 2012 and 2013, Viljo fell for the first time seriously ill in the late winter of 2018 and again in the autumn 2019 and in the spring 2021, but thanks to the superb vet Delphine (and quite huge investments on our part in the treatment) he managed all these times as well. I myself went through a very hard breakup in 2019, fell ill in depression after which I in addition fell ill with Covid-19 in early 2020 followed by serious long covid for more than 2 years. Much of this time I lived with my parents and Viljo was with me through all of it, sitting with me on the sofa while I watched TV and sitting at my feet while I composed. He was the first creature to hear my compositions besides me, while they were written. He was never happy when I dated someone, because I think he thought during the last five years that I was his partner. When I became single in 2014 and 2019 he was overjoyed both times. He was the happiest at the summerhouse, in the late evenings and when I didn’t leave the house (like on days when I composed all day).


Viljo by the sea 2013. Photo © Cecilia Damström

Last Saturday Viljo was getting more and more tired and on Sunday my parents brought him for the last time to the vet. Sadly Delphine wasn’t there this time. Viljo was diagnosed with an inflamed appendix. We paid for the extra treatment they had to offer, but it didn’t help, they said we have to come and say goodbye. He had been given relaxants and couldn’t move well anymore, but with his last energy he dragged himself on the table so that he lay with his head against my father for a while, against me for a while and against my mother. He wanted to show how he appreciated all of us. And then he sat up and cleaned himself.

Last hour of Viljo’s life 4th of September 2022


Viljo was such a special rabbit, I doubt I will ever meet such an exquisite rabbit ever again. I am forever thankful to him for being at my side during my most difficult times in life so far. Thank you Viljo for everything.

Viljo’s grave 5th of September 2022





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Music Composer Hidekazu Tanaka Arrested for Assault; Tanaka Is Known for His Work on Idolmaster Cinderella Girls


Music composer Hidekazu Tanaka was arrested on Monday for an attempted assault of a teenager, as various news media outlets in Japan reported.

According to the NHK’s report, in August of 2022 the 35 year-old man talked in obscene language to a teenage girl who was on her way home. He forcibly pulled her by the hand and attempted to assault in a dark place at a parking area near a train station in Meguro-ku, Tokyo. The victim defended herself, managed to run away, and reported it to a local police station. The police found that the train station’s camera showed him following her.

Yomiuri Shimbun also reports that the music composer got away from the location after he met with her resistance, and the camera record identified his figure, in addition to his statement to the police, in which he said that he saw the woman at a different station and followed her because she was his “type”. Hidekazu Tanaka was arrested on Monday and is currently under investigation in suspicion of attempted indecent offence.

Under Japanese criminal code, Article 176 defines the offender as a person who conducted an indecent act using violence or threat against a person aged 13 and over, and the sentence for the crime as imprisonment ranging from six months to 10 years. The same applies to an offender’s indecent act against a person aged below 13 likewise.

Hidekazu Tanaka is a well-known composer for anime and gaming music such as The Idolmaster franchise. In the anime industry, he was involved with Nyaruko: Crawling with Love series, Working series, Aikatsu! and more. His official playlist is available on Apple Music. In the 2022 Fall anime season, he composed and arranged “Ichigo Ichie Celebration” for singer Kano and anime character Hana Uzaki’s voice actress sing for the opening theme song of Uzaki-chan Wants to Hang Out! Season 2. The CD single is scheduled to be released on November 30, 2022. The music composer’s Twitter page was last updated on October 22 night.

Featured Image: © Hidekazu Tanaka © Manta Aisora, SB Creative / Meijoshigatai Seisakuiin-kai no Yo na Mono





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Posts – Arshak Andriasov


Posts.

Instead of saving my comments on social media, I will be writing and sharing my posts on my website. These posts will be written about modern/past history, philosophy, morality, and every other subject I am interested in at the moment. These posts will include emails sent to organizations who sold out, old posts that were written on social media, and other platforms.

*August 29, 2022:

Medium “have determined that your post is in violation of our Rules and has been suspended.” The two rules that they wrote: “*Promotion of controversial, suspect, or extreme content. * We do not allow the use of pseudoscience, disinformation, or other content that is contrary to public health or safety.” The article in question was: The Horrors of CBDC.

My response was: There is nothing more to say. Delete my account, you betrayer of humanity. Arshak Andriasov.

*August 30, 2022:

Medium responded: “Your Medium account has been deleted. All records and data will be deleted per our Privacy Policy. Thanks, John.”

My response: “Like all woke ideologies, medium has failed to fight the globalists and thus will fail the basic necessity of survival. Doom to medium for the betrayal of humanity. Arshak Andriasov.”

*August 24, 2022:

Don’t let the globalists affect your life. They are meaningless servants who will perish just as good people like us.

The problem with most people is that they think things began during covid, but didn’t see it 20, 30, 40 years ago. Nothing changes in this human world. Losers try to dominate. Simplest ideology throughout ages.

___

*August 21, 2022:

(About Restaurants That Did Not Allow Non-Poisoned People): They betrayed humanity by segregating people. Let them rot with the GMO, canola oil Monsanto trash “food.”

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*August 5, 2022:

Lies are quick, but truth takes time to unfold.

___

*August 4, 2022:

Agenda 2030 with the globalist’s BlackRock and Mark Zuckerberg licking Coinbase’ heiny? My advice to Coinbase customers is to transfer funds out of the exchange.

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*July 30, 2022:

(About Pfizer 10 Billion Dollars) Peasants allowed to be afraid of death. Globalists acted like the middlemen to an already common knowledge.

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*July 28, 2022:

(About a stat 9 out of 10 Trump supporters believe the election was stolen) I am the one who believes that this was used as a sporting event to get people hostile about something the wef wanted you all to be distracted from the actual implementation of their 4th industrial revolution, which Trump is a part of. He peddled the poison jab and even for that one fact, you all should have not wasted your time on this egomaniac. And NO I didn’t vote for biden. I do not vote in a Rothschild’s ‘good cop’ ‘bad cop’ system. They are all servants to whatever they are told. Qr code? Yes wef. Poison jab and no work for you if you don’t take that poison? Yes wef. You are all being screwed to choose sporting sides. That is why they indoctrinated sports for all of you. To think you are choosing the correct side.

___

 

*July 27, 2022:

(About Trump potentially suing CNN) Go after soros/gates/schwab. Cnn is useless. Can’t do it against your globalist buddies? Putin has, why can’t you? The poison jab peddling made you forget who you are or you always played any side that would give you the time of day.

Do you remember any word that Margaret thatcher ever blurted out? Do you think he will damage cnn? Cnn is useless. Go after the Rothschild’s and don’t peddle the gates’ poison agenda plan. Then, with actual action and more importantly results, I will take this seriously. Otherwise, just like Elon Musk I was telling that his so called bid was just to make money and expose twitter bots, not to actually buy twitter and change it for good. The same person that puts chips on monkeys and wants to do it to humans, ain’t a savior. So spare me with your usually tribe mentality and try to open your mind and not think about right or left. Look at results and actions. Cnn is useless. Nobody watches it. People DO watch gates buying farmland. Fight j&j. But Trump won’t. Globalists.

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*July 24, 2022:

I would like to stop filling their feeds with anger. You, , are pandering to the anger and evil of the globalists. You do not understand that the way we win as human beings is to eliminate anger and hatred and build through pure spirituality. Not the religious, human-created kind, but the morality and integrity that Klaus Schwab and the other servants of the Rothschild’s do not have any understanding of. Morality and integrity, filled with beauty and spirituality. That’s the only way you defeat these cretins. Bypass them and build beauty. Otherwise, you all are just part of a decaying “slave-master morality” system (coined by my father, Iosif Andriasov).

(Posted by @JasonMillerinDC, without tagging me, and yet liking my post): Guys I found Paul Ryan’s burner account!!! (under was my post. the gettr cesspool erupted).

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*July 25, 2022:

(My response to @JasonMillerinDC): It is nice to trigger the globalists and their servants when the owner of needs to put you down. I posted to beat the globalists through beauty. Well, they are the servants, just like the left and their twitter. Beauty will always prevails against them all.

___

 

*July 7, 2022:

(Upon deleting Canva account) After your horrific bowing to the Ukrainian Nazi efforts, peddled by the globalists, all your work went to zero in my eyes. Thus, I deleted this account.

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*June 29, 2022:

People wanted to betray humanity for their limited wants and attachments by taking the poison jab. I am not sorry for those who will experience misery due to the fact that they betrayed humanity. Those who administered this poison, those same very peasant slaves of the Rothschild’s, will suffer slowly, always looking around them as paranoid people do. Let them be in fear, for they will never know what is coming to them at any moment. I, for one, have enjoyed this farce and am amazed at those wearing condoms on their face outside and was quite disappointed in those who took the fake mrna poison.

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*June 26, 2022:

The problem is that people, for the most part, are a disappointing breed. They will take this poison jab to “travel”, instead of not traveling for the greater good of the world. How can one jab themselves for their own gain, knowing that somebody will not travel based on this segregation and lawlessness? I do not care about human created things, so relinquishing the attachments was easy, when you are doing something for the greater good of humanity, which is preserving your integrity.

*I, for one, have not had Starbucks since 1997. When I was in college, I made a research about their practices with farmers from other countries. There was definitely no fair trade. Once I found out about this, never will I go to such a disgraceful place. Lately, I have seen so many companied betray us and thus have not gone to whole foods or ordered from Amazon, not gone to Walmart, Target, and Home Depot for their betrayal of humanity.

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*June 25, 2022:

Most people who did not get the poison jab had many reasons. One of them was not to allow segregation.

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*June 6, 2022:

Complaints will do nothing but build a negative personality, simp behavior, or worse. One has to either stop driving, if they cannot afford it, or pay and save somewhere else. The WEF has chosen to go all out. Your battle is by not paying them for their products. Our family is not poisoned with the jab, do not shop at Amazon (or Whole Foods), Walmart, and all other organizations who are servants to the soy WEF clan. We live in a capitalistic society, but when you bring morals and ethics together with banning them and their services, they will quickly beg to comeback, which we won’t.

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*June 2, 2022:

What a waste. People stressed and fooled by elections. Good cop didn’t fire gnome and peddled poison. Bad cop can’t read from the teleprompter. You all are being played sooo easily. Sad how humans have eaten too much gmo, soy, and lack a basic knowledge of history and how the Rothschild’s play with it to bring servant behavior, arrogant pride, and all other shameful qualities.

*(Post to Dinesh D’Souza) Don’t get caught into believing Trump is good. He is the one who peddled Gates’ depopulation efforts with the poison, and he didn’t fire the gnome. Trump is in with the Rothschild scum. Biden is just a poor teleprompter farce reader. He can’t even walk properly. Basically a Weekend at Bernie’s kind of joe. Don’t waste your valuable time on this. Go after Gates/Schwab/Soros. Only through them, will you achieve getting the Rothschild’s. Otherwise, you’re just a disillusioned puppet, who wants everyone to actually care about a voting farce.

*When Gates’ lackeys cover the sun, all the solar purchases by the common person will be useless.

*Don’t drive. If you drive, don’t complain about this. All of this is a scheme to see how strong you are. Can you imagine complaining about gas prices, when the wef are sending printed money to destroy every country who doesn’t want to be with them?

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*June 1, 2022:

The problem is all of the lies will not be shown fast enough. The wef puppets are giving nazis long range weapons. It will take even more strength for Putin not to blast the u.s. (correctly), even though it’s not the United States, but the “group of criminals” (a phrase coined by my father, Iosif Andriasov) that partly reside in the United states.

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*May 30, 2022:

The problem with everything is this: the west servants will accept cbdc. Russia will not. After enough attacks by the west, Russia will react. Sadly, the wef cretins will be in their bunkers, while poor peasant folk, from both sides, will fight each other, instead of the wef scum. We will all destroy ourselves with THEIR wars. Russia will be correct in retaliating these cretins, who give a huge sum of money for weapons to the small little cretin servant Zelensky. Again, the regular Joe and Vasya will fight one another instead of joining a union and fighting the ills of schwab and gates. That’s how slavery begins again. The “election” is the wef hocus pocus distraction on cbdc and slavery. 

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*May 11, 2022:

Fear is the peasant method of getting everything that they are servants to. Don’t let them take anything that is not theirs, which includes your freedom.

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*August 21, 2021:

(About WEF Virus Names) All predetermined by globalists to instill fear and constant jabbing for the vaccinated and to instill fear of losing a chance to waste money on GMO restaurants and waste money on time-spending useless sports.

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*August 14, 2021:

(Response to Andrew Cuomo Poison Jab Stats) You will not cause division between the vaccinated and the unvaccinated. It is a choice. The same way one chooses to not be a racist or chooses to not be political.

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*August 13, 2021:

The globalists with their great reset agenda are really desperate. Their fake numbers of covid deaths, those that have been vaccinated, and other things just show they are weak-willed and immoral.

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*August 12, 2021:

(Twitter) @WHO blocked my account @AndriasovArshak for a week lol. Losers. No worries. Censorship is done when you are afraid of a second opinion.

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*August 10, 2021:

If we fear death, we do not know how to live.

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*July 28, 2021:

(About New York City To Pay Residents US$100 For Getting Covid-19 Vaccine) How about give it to the homeless. Anything given for free from any government that allows food shortages, homelessness, and other inequalities is an obvious poison.

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*October 11, 2012:

Obama & Romney are puppets. Could they be in love? Maybe not with Romney, but the globalists like to cover things up.

Such lies these puppets are spewing. CIA sponsored Taliban and Al Qaeda.

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*October 8, 2012:

I would like to enlighten people with the happenings of our world and help your health, mind, and spirit through eating healthy foods, not being brainwashed, and helping your fellow human beings the best way you can.

___

If you would like me to write a blog post, please contact me through email:
arshakandriasov@aol.com



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A Composer’s Diary: Wasteland Reviews


Two weeks since the premiere of Wasteland with the fantastic Norrlandsoperan and superb Ville Matvejeff!

Here the heart warming reviews:

“The premiere of the Finnish-Swedish composer Cecilia Damström’s work Wasteland in five short movements was probably the work I was really looking forward to the most. The music was characterized by strong dynamics, shifting richness of colour and, not least, sharp contrasts. Here, the orchestral outfit is really used for a striking rhythm. With its themes around the clothing industry and greenwashing, the work also conveyed something as unusual as a sharp post in the ongoing climate debate. Norrlandsoper’s symphony orchestra really played at its peak and the conductor Ville Matvejeff’s way of leading the orchestra really celebrated triumphs. It also reminds me what a spectacular “instrument” the symphony orchestra is in capable hands.”

by Bengt Hultman, Västerbottens-Kuriren, 2nd of September 2022

“Now we got to enjoy a piece of very entertaining orchestral music, where Damström enhances as much sound effects as she can, supported in an exemplary manner by the conductor Ville Matvejeff. It becomes a patchwork of colorful contrasts where Damström weaves in quotes from “Den blomstertid nu kommer”, a snippet from “Carmen”, a couple of teasingly familiar schlager refrains, resounding trombone glissandos, clinks, thumps and plink-plonks from the percussionists, well, anything you can wish for. “

by Gunnar Wiklund, Folkbladet, 2nd of September 2022

Big thank you to Norrlandsoperan and Ville Matvejeff for the fantastic premiere and to Erik Mikael Karlsson, Dan Turdén, Stefan Holmström and Gene Kindell for having me and for a great week in Umeå!

Have good start into the new week everyone!
Cecilia

Composer Cecilia Damström. Photo by Ville Juurikkala

Photo: Ville Juurikkala 
Makeup: Maria Boucht Makeup
Jacket: MIAM Clothing
Music Publisher: Gehrmans Musikförlag



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ISU to host music festival Wednesday through Friday | Local News


The Indiana State University School of Music will host the 56th Annual Contemporary Music Festival from Wednesday to Friday.

Featured festival guests include award-winning composer Stacy Garrop; guest artists Joe Lulloff, saxophone, and Yu-Lien The, piano; and the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra as orchestra-in-residence. Guests will also include Kyle Rivera, winner of the Orchestra Composition Contest, and winners of the Music Now Chamber Music Contest. In addition, the festival will feature students and faculty of the School of Music in both chamber music and large ensemble settings.

The festival includes six concerts and seven discussion sessions. Showcase concerts begin at 7:30 p.m. each evening, beginning with the opening festival concert Wednesday evening in Tilson Auditorium, then continuing with the Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra on Thursday in Tilson Auditorium and a full recital by Lulloff and The on Friday evening in the Boyce Recital Hall of the Landini Center for Performing and Fine Arts.

All festival events are free and open to the public. For a full schedule of events, visit https://www.indstate.edu/cas/cmf.





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Akon Announces He is Composing Music for FIFA World Cup 2022


FIFA World Cup 2022 is just around the corner, and the excitement for the event is building up with each passing day. To add to the thrill, FIFA has been launching a number of songs as a part of their official World Cup Soundtrack this year. 

The soundtrack, which features songs by Trinidad Cardona, Davido, Lil Baby and Balqees, now has added another star singer to its list. Akon has revealed that he is creating music for the upcoming world cup, leaving fans excited.

Akon is Creating Music for FIFA World Cup 2022 Soundtrack

The singer made the revelation with an Instagram post. He posted a video of his interview from the Big Boy Neighborhood show, where he was heard saying, “I am composing the music for the world cup right now.” The host, surprised by the news, says, “No….Are you too?” and then jokingly says, “Same here!”

Akon then, laughs, and Big Boy states, “Because we have talking about the world cup and just some of the things that are going on over there…you know…you can’t take your shirt off, you can’t do this, but it’s a whole different thing.”

To which Akon replies, “You remember RedOne? That producer, the one we did the Hayya Hayya with, he’s actually producing the anthem for the world cup, the theme song.” Fans seemed ready for the track, with one commenting, “Can’t wait to hear the masterpiece this man has ready for the WC,” and another writing, “It’s gox to be best King ”

The Singer Previously Worked on FIFA World Cup Album in 2010

For the world cup in South Africa in 2010, FIFA launched an album, Listen Up! The Official 2010 FIFA World Cup Album, which featured collaborations between different international artists. At the time, Akon performed one of the songs titled Oh Africa, featuring Keri Hilson.

The track was a charity single and helped raise funds for Akon’s charity ‘Konfidence’ which is aimed at supporting underprivileged children in Africa. The music video featured several footballers, including Thierry Henry, Didier Drogba, Kaká, Fernando Torres, Lionel Messi, Frank Lampard, Michael Ballack and Andrei Arshavin.

FIFA is Releasing a Multi-Song Collection as Soundtrack this year

FIFA world Cup theme songs and anthems have always been the talk of the town. From the 2010 smash hit Waka Waka by Shakira to the 2014 edition’s La La La, the tracks have become a part of playlists across the globe.

This year, FIFA has thought of a new creative approach to launch the World Cup anthem. For the tournament set to take place in November in Qatar, the federation is releasing a multi-song collection as a soundtrack featuring international artists.

Talking about the new strategy, Kay Madati, Commercial Officer at FIFA said, “As part of FIFA’s revamped music strategy, the multi-song soundtrack will bring passionate fans closer to the spirit of the FIFA World Cup like never before.”

The tracks from the soundtrack that have already been released include Hayya Hayya (Better Together) by Trinidad Cardona, Davido and Aisha; The World Is Yours To Take by Lil Baby and Light the Sky by Nora Fatehi, Balqees, Rahma Riad and Manal.

Are you excited to listen to Akon’s track from the FIFA World Cup soundtrack? Tell us in the comments section.



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