Introduction

Welcome to the IMS Virtual Studio

Copyright Announcement- The Copyright of all material posted in this blog, is owned by Image of the Mind Studios and it is posted here for your review only. Text or images may not be copied or reprinted without permission in writing. This is the case for all creative materials, including what has been posted on this and other blogs managed by IMS and myself. Arthur Greisiger.

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Introduction, Updated 10/12

 
Welcome to the
IMS Virtual Studio

 Thank you for visiting the IMS Virtual Studio. As you can see this blog has been created using Blogspot and is hosted by Google.  If you are familiar with the way this blog works, please bear with me as I post a few guidelines here.

I have created an Index of Subjects which addresses a few subjects.  Some of them are not up to date or even linked yet, but eventually I will manage to get it all updated. 

The Blog Archive contains a listing of posts that have been made to this blog and you may care to review them for  subjects of interest. 

 I have have not had much time to label these postings, but there is a listing of  Blog Subject Labels.

These items are all located in the column to the left. 

 If you click on the title Image of the Mind Studios it will take you to the front page which contains the most recent postings or the subject of primary interest.

Various pages, including this one, are updated periodically, but are not posted according to the date and will need to be located by way of either a link I send you, or one in my email signature, or in the headings listed in the subject or archive. 

The search function will also assist in locating a particular subject or posting.

I do try to post here on a regular basis, but it is difficult to keep everything up to date. Gradually, the subjects will be addressed and the links will be installed. 

If an subject has not been discussed, or addressed in awhile and you would like to do so, please send me an email.

I use this site as the primary posting location on the web and I have chosen to use this site essentially as a newsletter.  I do not invite comments on this blog, because I am using it as a forum to provide information and not discussion. 

If you need to discuss an item I am happy to do so in a private conversation, which may in fact spur a posting herein if it is appropriate. I also use Facebook and you are welcome to friend me there is you want to.

You will find that some of the dialogue is rather lengthy and tiresome to read in one sitting. I tend to be rather verbose, but this is unavoidable, since the information provided is two-fold. 

These postings are intended to clarify & refine production development and implementation, while providing a comprehensive overview of the essential facts in both a general sense and, in some instances, a quite specific way for both the projects and the operation of IMS. 

It is my intention to review and edit the material as production moves forward, but also to create an archive of a projects progression. So even though the material will change over time, I hope to also maintain an archive as a log book. My objective is to educate the people who may someday associate themselves with one or more of the IMS Projects that are here presented.

For those of you who are in a position to review the proposals and make decisions regarding involvement at the various levels, I provide this information for the purpose of supporting the projects we are discussing. By being specific of the facts I am striving to provide you with an overview of Image of the Mind Studios, my background and other projects that are part of the IMS repertoire.
 
I will include links for partners in our projects only on request or if it is appropriately relative to what we are doing. I also do not use this blog for advertising anything other than IMS Projects.

I do invite your comments & discussion, but I ask that you do so via e-mail, so that we can have private conversations. 

Please be specific in your Subject heading or the email may be discarded without being read.  As I said, I do attempt to keep this site somewhat up to date, but as you can see from the volume of postings and the inferences within, that this is no small task . I do have to sleep and eat, occasionally.
 
So I hope you enjoy reading the information I have posted here and, even more, I hope you may like to become involved in one or more of our projects. Because after all, as you will see, everything seems to be a humongous task requiring a lot of people and significant resources to succeed.

And in case you wonder about the magnitude & practicality of some of the projects posted here, remember that:
 
I am a Conceptual Artist and my medium is the canvas of the Mind.  
AG

Thursday, January 01, 2009

Further dialogue to the Musicians

a link to Home page for
"The Gnomes of New Hope"


NOTE: selections from email communications are posted below under Archive in descending order of date.

Current Status:
  1. we have decided to move the performance to February and take more time to prepare
  2. 15 musicians have taken parts and signed on to be kept informed.
  3. efforts are under way to gather budget funds to assist with this aspect of the production

Here's the letter presented to the musicians of the Bryn Athyn Orchestra and a brief explanation of the parts:

Hello all,

We appreciate having the opportunity to attend your last rehearsal and to get a sense of your group dynamics. Shawn expressed to me his delight in having been there and I had the feeling that our months and months of work at composing became more real with the prospect of having our music performed by people instead of a machine.

We do hope that enough of you will decide to give this song a try and help us to perform it before the community. I know that quite a few people in Bryn Athyn and other communities are anxious to hear what we have been working on and even though this song is only about four minutes long (134 measures) it is a wonderfully intriguing song. When looked at in parts- it is very simple, but when it is assembled, it collectively it is intricate and quite amazing.

As you may have seen from the booklet/playbill (request one if you did not get one), we have taken the approach that it is being performed, even though it will not be able to happen if there are not enough musicians to make it happen. All of the parts in this song are critical and there is not one that it can do without. So we need to fill out the parts.

Here is a list of the required instruments; Piccolo (has what started out to be the primary solo expression in the piece and still stands out to that effect), 1st & 2nd Second Flutes (I prefer Soprano and Alto,which is the way it started out, but we altered it to be two sopranos. There were originally two piccolos, but we also switched it around to fit into a three flute scenario), Oboe (has some very nice riffs and is very important in setting the tone of the piece as an excellent counterpoint to the flute and a bridge to the clarinet/bassoon parts), Bassoon (also used for the melody line & vocal support and has a major role in the piece), Clarinet (also has some very interesting lines of expression and provides an essential bonding element),
Trumpet (provides the piece with it's clarion highlights and redirects some of the support phrases back to the melody line), French Horn (had a very smoothing effect and we discovered a few excellent expressions and tonal qualities when it was used in combination, so it is very expressionistic) Trombone (we didn't install pitch bends because it was not all that easy to do, but we wanted to in a few spots which might be appropriate to experiment with), Tuba (became very important and we gave the part a very significant presence at a few points especially when it dances with the Contrabass) Violin (we tried not to lean too heavily on the violin because the piece is really based on the woodwinds more than any other part, but we really did discover how important the strings were to support the message we were trying to convey and the pizzicato & tremolo moments are essential) Viola (we added the viola after seeing the role it played in this orchestra and thus discovered how well it works in combination) Cello (the cello plays a major part in representing the string voice, mainly because of it's tonal range) Contra-bass (was initially the sole bass line until the tuba and the percussion joined in, so there are some very intriguing expressions in the part) Percussion (gradually came into play with an array of smaller percussive parts which are very significant highlights, but the primary instrument is the tympani with a few others coming from a symphony set) Marimba (came into play early and has a very significant and important role, providing a number of trills & flourishes and a sparkle that no other instrument could provide)

Collectively, the piece is amazing. Individually the piece is surprisingly simple. The prospect of performing this live is very exciting.

Our goal is to present this piece in a concert environment. I do intend on marketing this piece to other orchestras as an instrumental as time goes on. We both feel that it is of sufficient quality to succeed at gaining an audience in this regard. Certainly whichever Orchestra is the organization to play this, then that Orchestra will be the beneficiary of that marketing effort.

The reason for attempting to perform this piece now, is to initiate higher levels of the production process based on the nature of this piece and on the expectation that the other numbers in the show (although different than this piece) will be of a similar orchestral caliber, not in terms of complexity or structure, but in terms of balance, uniqueness, and playability. We will proceed one number at a time to produce and present the music from this show.

Of course, another aspect of asking the Bryn Athyn Orchestra to perform this piece is that we want to access & support the talents that lie in our own backyard.

So this would be my appeal to you to join in our effort and I am certain that Shawn is in agreement with what I have said. If we are to present this in the upcoming fall performance, we will need a full complement of musicians who are willing to perform this number. The sooner we present it, the sooner we can make good things happen for everyone involved.

Arthur Greisiger
Archive;

Edited excepts from communications regarding this performance:

... the number of parts depends largely on the volume attainable by the instruments. I don't think one contra-bass would make much of a presence in the piece and therefore two seems more appropriate. We could get away with one if we were in a chamber setting, but on the stage in the Mitchell I think one would get lost. That is the primary factor in determining how many of each instrument, how it reads in the space. Maybe the final word in terms of number of instruments should be determined after we manage to get the piece going in a rehearsal setting. I think if we locate at least one of each instrument for each part to play it thru, then we can assess the number from there and develop how to present it in a concert.

I think if we stop in before your rehearsal, just to make a silent presence, then your folks will see we are serious and are making ourselves available to them. We could say hello and invite dialogue with you or I via the internet, offer the parts again, and ask anyone who did take a part to sign up, just so we know who has the parts. We can determine how we will proceed, when we actually have enough performers and until then keep everything on hold. I think it is enough that some of the musicians have the parts and work on learning them on their own. But we can assure them that we will be performing the piece and their work on it will not be in vain.

------------------------------------------

My thinking on the first piece is mostly to introduce ourselves and the project, and to initiate a process.

We do know that we need to finish the show before we really get moving on producing the music and such, even though we are very far ahead and no production effort could possibly catch up. We have over a dozen songs that are, for the most part, done.

We also seem to be refining our abilities to the point where we really are engaged in intricate refinement on the material, which is making it rather time consuming and slow.

Basically, I feel that if we present some of the material in an orchestral environment without initiating a production, then we can comfortably finish the work and the project as a whole will benefit from that.


Shawn & I have discussed getting a pit orchestra together for this, but that brings a whole new dimension to the project, which ultimately does need to happen. I was just hoping to have some of the material performed by an orchestra that is already assembled, as a means of testing it and feeling it out. If we do put a pit orchestra together we would need to have a performance objective clearly defined and basically that should only happen after the show is in production (which could happen if I get some funding together), unless we just do an instrumental concert presentation. So there are a few different scenarios to consider.


I think the most I want to achieve from performing the first piece, beyond the hearing of it and the publicity value, it to locate the musicians who could potentially be involved in the production when it does go up. We could conceivably just bring in hired musicians and expect then to step up to the plate, but I'd rather take it from a more personal level and gather a team of people who have a heart-felt interest in the project.

---------------------------------------

... I would like to extend the invitation to the members of the orchestra that they consider becoming our partners in this endeavor by helping us to perform this music.

We have proposed producing a record album which would feature whichever Orchestra chooses to become the principle performing organization and is willing to take that task on.


Because we have been working on this show for so long, we have decided to market a few of the songs to assist us with resources, publicity and advancing the production activities. It is also very good to train the audience to recognize the music before the show is offered, because recognition sells tickets.


... there are quite a few numbers that could be considered for performance...
... marketing the show successfully depends on presentation materials which need to be refined and include: not only support materials derived from succeeding at the smaller goals, but also locating and securing the personnel who want to be involved in the production.

Certainly my goal is to create an endeavor which will flourish and provide the economic support we all require and I want to assure you that I intend to keep this goal in the forefront of my mind. I am striving to gather people around me who can help this to be a reality.
Home page for
"The Gnomes of New Hope"

be sure to check out the current status

The future of Cinema Under the Stars

Visit: Cinema Under the Stars for discussion about this program. All activities in the Meadow Amphitheatre are on hiatus. This and other programs will center around a new portable stage which we are building and will be presented at various locations.

The Meadow Amphitheatre

The Meadow Amphitheatre has been dismantled due (in large part) to vandalism.

We expect to rebuild a portable version of the stage, which will be available on a rental basis. Look for further information to appear on the web pages linked below or send an email to imagemindag@verizon.net

A tour of The Meadow Amphitheatre has been moved to it's own site and there is a page on Facebook titled "The Shakespeareans of Tamanend Park".

Please refer to The Shakespearean Journal for the commentary & discussion regarding efforts to rebuild the stage."

Any information or photographs regarding this stage activity may be found at these three locations and postings will depend somewhat on the interest shown by other people.




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