1,489,491 research outputs found
Colin Humphris
"Colin Humphris 2 Sqdrn. RAAF. 1941 - 1942 Author of - 'Trapped on Timor' (as a result of bombing of Darwin Feb. 19, 1942)".Colin Humphris. 2 Squadron, Royal Australian Air Force 1941 - 1942. Author of - 'Trapped on Timor' (as a result of bombing of Darwin February 19, 1942)
Colin MacGill
"VX126354 W.O.II Colin MacGill Darwin Mobile Force 1940 - 42 - 92"VX126354 Warrant Officer II Colin MacGill. Darwin Mobile Force 1940 - 42 - 92
Colin Murray
"Colin Murray DX 84 Enlisted in Darwin Later sent o/seas 5th Battery 2/3 Field Reg. 6th Division Railway Tce Parap (2 1/2 Mile)"Colin Murray DX 84. Enlisted in Darwin. Later sent overseas. 5th Battery, 2/3 Field Regiment, 6th Division. Railway Terrace ,Parap (2 1/5 Mile)
Colin C. Hawe
"Colin C. Hawe Driver 122 AGT Coy Alice Springs & Darwin".Colin C. Hawe. Driver, 122 Australian General Transport Company. Alice Springs & Darwin
A.N. Hambly with Colin Sach & Ian Sach[?] on Chemistry steps.
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/256356Previous Control number : NN_2086157121
Item: [1985.0025.00140] "A.N. Hambly with Colin Sach & Ian Sach[?] on Chemistry steps.
BIOGRAPHY OF COLIN MCPHEE (PART I)
Introduction
The following paper is a brief biography of the Canadian composer and pianist, Colin McPhee, focusing mainly on his work as an ethnomusicologist. As a Balinese musician and composer, I am primarily interested in his works as they relate to Balinese culture. I will also introduce some of his western music compositions that were inspired by the gamelan music of Bali. I hope that by doing this project, I will gain a better understanding and insight into what Colin McPhee has done for my music as well as for the field of ethnomusicology in general.
When I was studying at ISI, the Institute of Arts in Bali, my teacher introduced me to a name of composer, Colin McPhee, who spent his time studying Balinese culture in Sayan, a small village outside of Ubud in central Bali. I wanted to study more about him and what he did to promote my culture among scholars in the world. As a Balinese person and on behalf of the Balinese community, I want to give my respect to Colin McPhee for all his works on behalf of Balinese culture, especially his masterpiece “Music in Bali”. In addition, I want to know more about his life as well as his research in other kinds of music or cultures in the world, and possibly to define the influence of Balinese music on his compositions.
Colin McPhee’s Life, Carrier, and Journey in Exploring Balinese Culture
Colin McPhee was a composer, pianist, and pioneer researcher on the gamelan music of Bali. He was born in Montreal on March 15, 1900 and raised in Toronto. His family and teachers recognized his talent in music when he was a child. Therefore, his family sent him to study at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, Maryland in 1918. Later, in 1924, he continued to study piano with Isidore Philip and studied composition with Paul Le Flem in Paris. While he studied in Baltimore and Paris, he became a well-known musician in western music and returned to New York to establish himself as an important member of the musical avant-garde. He worked as a composer under the direction of his teacher, Arthur Friedheim who was a pupil of Franz Liszt. During that time, he was also busy performing, touring with the singer Eva Gauthier, playing for contemporary music concerts as well as giving solo recitals. Arthur Friedheim (1859-1932), an eminent pianist, wrote in his autobiography:
And the day has dealt kindly with me too, for I have received from far-off Java a letter from a former Toronto pupil, Colin McPhee, perhaps the most gifted pupil I ever had. His innate musical sense, his sturdy application and a striking personality marked him out for a brilliant career on the concert platform. I felt a personal sense of loss when, after I left Canada, he gave up the piano altogether and applied himself entirely to composition. Now he is in Java and other distant lands seeking new inspiration in the relatively unfamiliar native music. Yet I must not criticize him because he has neglected my favorite instrument. Did I not do the same thing when I was his age? (Friedheim 1961: 256)
Around the late 1920s, while Colin McPhee exploring his talents as a member of the New York Polyhymnia symphony, he became interested in the study and performance of music from different cultures outside of European music. When he discovered newly released recordings of the exotic music of Bali, it ignited an instant desire to perceive what kinds of instruments made such beautiful and intricately textured sounds. The vibrant timbres and complex rhythms of Balinese gamelan completely changed his life. In his book House in Bali, he wrote:
I was a young composer, recently back in New York after student days in Paris, and the past two years had been filled with composing and the business of getting performances. It was quite by accident that I had heard the few gramophone records that were to change my life completely, bringing me out here in search of something quite indefinable - music or experience, I could not at this moment say. (McPhee 1946:9)
As a composer, McPhee saw the instruments of the Balinese gamelan as a new resource for creating music, a “crystal, vibrant sound” (Oja 1984: 3) he had looked for since he was a child, but was ultimately unable to find in the world of western music. To understand this music became an obsession for him. McPhee described clearly the complex sound of gamelan in his letter to Dr. William Mayer after his Bali years (Oja 1984 : 3). In that letter McPhee explained that when he was 12 years old, he composed a piece for a children’s percussion band which he had various ideas for sound effects, but the effects were not satisfying his expectations. However, ten years later, he tried again incorporating glass wind chimes into a piano concerto, but it was not able to produce the exact sound he wanted. Surprisingly, at the moment he heard Balinese and Javanese music, the sounds that those instruments produced instantly achieved for him that elusive sonority he had looked for. Like others who sought to explore the island, such as the critic and novelist Carl Van Vechten, the Mexican artist Miguel Covarrubias, the painter George Biddle, and Jane Bello (who later become his wife), he sailed to Bali for the first time in 1930.
After staying in a special hotel for foreign guests for a time, Colin McPhee ventured out away from the other visitors and stayed in village of Kedaton, south of Denpasar (capital city of Bali). Balinese musical activity there was unbelievable to him, and people seemed to be very creatively free in their cultural life. In that era, there was a shifting of tradition or artistic centers from the palaces to the village banjar (Tenzer 1998 : 16). It was changing the way that Balinese people develop their traditions from the community’s perspective, though they still paid respect to the courts. Colin McPhee become fascinated with the unique culture of Bali as he started to explore the music had dreamed about. Because the Balinese are mostly a friendly people, he quickly found master Balinese musicians to study and transcribe the music, met friends in a Balinese friendship style and gathered information from everyone he met. One of them was I Nyoman Kaler, a Balinese musician deeply knowledgeable about the more ancient traditions. Kaler said that 20 years earlier, each palace would have had two orchestras. Outside of the palace would stand one gamelan with great gongs, which was used for ceremonies and to welcome the guest and inside the palace, and there was a little gongs and keyed instruments of delicate tone to play more romantic music. This Gamelan was called gamelan Semara Pegulingan, the gamelan of Semara, God of Love, (Young 1984 :15).
The music of Bali totally changed McPhee’s life. In 1931, he returned to Paris to continue his study of western music, but found himself bored with it and decided to go back to Bali for a longer stay. He stayed in Sayan, a mountain village where German artist Walter Spies had settled and built a traditional house. This house became a second home for McPhee as he would live there, on and off, for the next seven years. He made many transcriptions of Balinese music, which helped him to understand the complexity of its construction. He worked to transcribe many of these recordings, and had in his house a piano that he always used to help in his transcriptions. In 1935, he met one of his more important teachers, Wayan Lotring, a brilliant Balinese composer who helped McPhee reorganize a gamelan club in the coastal village of Kuta (McPhee 1946 : 164-165). With Lotring, who made a series of recordings for Odeon in 1928 (McPhee 1966 : 152), he tried to study in depth one type of ensemble in Bali called gamelan pelegongan, particularly in Kuta. McPhee also learned many other things about Lotring’s life as a composer as well as studied his music for gamelan pelegongan that was quite unlike anything that McPhee had heard in the island.
At the end of December 1935, Colin McPhee went back to America (Oja 1984 : 7). He brought with him idea of new music that was influenced by the music of Bali, which he had by then studied and engaged in for four years. He was spending some of his time in Mexico, where he came up with an idea to compose a piece for orchestra using ideas of Balinese music in combination with western music and other styles as well. The result of this was a composition called Tabuh-Tabuhan (Toccata for Orchestra and Two Pianos), composed in 1936 and first performed by Carlos Chave and the National Orchestra of Mexico City.This piece was largely inspired by the various methods of Balinese gamelan technique. The title was derived from the Balinese word tabuh, which means the mallet used for striking the Balinese instruments, but also refers to different drum rhythms, metric forms and gong punctuations.
In this piece, McPhee mimicked the instrumentation of a Balinese ensemble by using two pianos, celesta, xylophone, marimba, and glockenspiel, to form the core of the orchestra. He called this the “nuclear gamelan”. He also considered that this piece was a purely personal work, in that he used Balinese composed motifs, melodies, and rhythms fused with his own western sensibilities to create a new kind of symphony. Douglas Young in his article “Colin McPhee’s Music: (II) ‘Tabuh-Tabuhan”, said that even though it is composed for a large orchestra, it is not a symphony. Though Tabuh-Tabuhan has a definite close relationship with Copland’s symphonic dance works, he said that “the superb rhythmic sweep of the first movement culminates in a wonderful series of overlapping entries of an upward-surging motif, brilliantly orchestrated at different speeds and in a great variety of metrical displacements”. The significance of Tabuh-Tabuhan is that it was an early example of a composer treating non-Western music seriously in combination with the art music of Europe (Young 1986 : 19)
La mort de Valentin / A. Colin
LA MORT DE VALENTIN / A. COLIN
La mort de Valentin / A. Colin (1)
La mort de Valentin (1
How to use oral history interviews, by Colin Hyde
A 3 minute audio recording of Colin Hyde (East Midlands Oral History Archive
Researcher and Outreach Officer) on how to use oral history recordings. The strengths of using such materials, what they may or may not tell you, and what other things to consider
Larry Colin
Larry Colin, a longtime Palo Alto resident, died on Nov. 3, at his home in Palo Alto, surrounded by family. He was born on Jan. 19, 1931, to Maurice and Celia Colin in Brooklyn, New York, and he grew up in Queens with his sister, Rhoda. He studied at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, from where he graduated in 1952 with a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering. Soon after, he married Roberta Miles in June 1953 in the Bronx, New York. He then took his engineering studies to Syracuse University, where he received his master's degree in 1960, and after that to Stanford University, where he earned his Ph.D. in 1964. In 1986, he also received a master's degree in management from Stanford. He began his career at the Rome Air Development Center in New York, which gave him a scholarship to attend Stanford. The bulk of his career was spent working for the NASA Ames Research Center. His work included serving as chief space scientist for the Pioneer Venus Project and managing the scientific activities for the Galileo Probe Mission to Jupiter. He received medals for both contributions in 1980 and 1996, respectively, and he was given a 35-year service award in 1987. He and his wife, Roberta, lived most of their married life in Palo Alto, where they raised their two children. Larry coached Little League and Bobby Sox teams in Palo Alto, and he was active in the Greenmeadow Community Association for many years, serving as president and chairman of the pool committee. In addition to enjoying Starbucks lattes, he was a lifelong learner, reading copiously and taking advantage of many educational opportunities a passionate Stanford sports fan, going often to football, basketball and baseball games a techie, researching and using the latest technology and a family man, providing unconditional love and support, his family said. He is survived by his wife, Roberta Colin of Palo Alto his two children, Lee (Shakti) Colin of the Philippines Lisa Colin-Fowler, and husband, Michael Fowler, of Redwood Shore
Colin Clark (1905-89) Economist and Agricultural Economist
In 1986 the Oxford University Institute of Agricultural Economics was amalgamated into Queen Elizabeth House. The Institute, which came into being in 1913, achieved considerable distinction for its work on the problems of British agriculture under the Directorships of C.S.Orwin and A.W. Ashby. The third Director (1953-69) was of a somewhat different stamp. Colin Clark (1905-89), though without formal training in economics, had established himself as a pioneer of national accounting techniques in the Cambridge of the 1930s (he was mentioned in Keynes' General Theory) and progressed to write one of the classic studies of growth (Conditions of Economic Progress). His name appeared prominently in the Meier and Seers book on 'Pioneers of Development' and there have been many other testaments to his international reputation. The Oxford period witnessed famous controversies on population and food supply, the publication (with Margaret Haswell) of 'The Economics of Subsistence Agriculture', and much other work on a wide range of subjects by no means confined to agricultural issues. The essay which is reprinted below originally appeared in the Italian journal Rivista di Economia Agraria (June 1995) as part of a series on major figures in agricultural economics, and was presented at an Agricultural Economics Society conference (Edinburgh, 1998). It is also the basis for a shorter entry in the Dictionary of National Biography, 1981-90 Supplement. The writer spent a considerable part of his early career as one of Colin Clark's research assistants. A number of people have been kind enough to suggest that the essay should have greater accessibility.
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