Happy day, Jon!
Buffista Music III: The Search for Bach
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
Conga line! Happy birthday, dear friend Jon!
Feliz Cumpleaños, Snr. Jon.
Woooeewoowooeeoo, Woooeewoowooeeoo, WoooeewoowooEEOOOHOOOH!!, Woooeewoowooeeoo!
My singing is only slightly better than my theremin playing (and that only by default), so in case it wasn't recognizable that was Happy Birthday.
Happy Birthday jon!
Happy Birthday, Jon!!!
Happy Birthday, Jon!!!
Huh. I always thought that you can't trust those classical musicians....
The recordings of a British concert pianist who found fame in the last years of her life have been exposed as hoaxes - by Apple's iTunes music player.
Joyce Hatto died in June 2006, having become a cause célèbre with fans of classical piano in the last years of her life. A series of recordings showed her masterful command of a wide range of composers including Liszt, Schubert, Rachmaninov, Dukas and more.
Last week, a critic at the Gramophone magazine got surprise when he put a Hatto recording of Lizt's 12 Transcendental Studies into his computer. The iTunes player identified the disc as being recorded by another pianist, Lászlo Simon. He dug out the Simon album and found it sounded exactly the same as the Hatto one.
iTunes had stumbled on a hoax. To identify albums it calculates a 'discid' from the duration of the tracks and then connects to the Compact Disc Database online. The Gramophone critic tried another disc - Hatto playing Rachmaninov - and again iTunes identified it as belonging to someone else. Again, the named recording - by Yefim Bronfman - sounded no different.
Gramophone decided to go to expert audio company Pristine Audio. Their detailed webpage on the Hatto case shows what they found, and lets you listen to the evidence. Examinations of the waveforms of Hatto recordings confirmed what iTunes had suggested. Many are direct copies of other pianist's work - some are tweaked versions where a recording has simply been slowed down.
Analysis, with extra added bonus Science: [link] Also, with stuff to listen to so you can see hear for yourself....
This sort of makes Hatto the Milli Vanilli of classical music, doesn't it?
This sort of makes Hatto the Milli Vanilli of classical music, doesn't it?
Yeah. Except at least the session musicians/singers for Milli Vanilli got some payment. This is outright theft.