2,329 research outputs found
Steve Reich : a bio-bibliography
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Steve Reich was considered a fringe experimentalist. His work consisted largely of repeating, slowly changing patterns unlike either the serialism or the aleatory that predominated at that time. Today, however, Reich is one of the most prominent and celebrated contemporary composers, one about whom the scholarly and popular literature offers an assortment of critical, historical, and analytical perspectives. Author D.J. Hoek's bio-bibliography serves as an essential guide to this literature, comprehensively surveying Reich's life and work. Included are details of all of Reich's compositions: dates, instrumentation, premiere performances, and publishers; a discography listing all commercial recordings of the composer's oeuvre; and an annotated bibliography of publications in English, French, German, and Italian. The Reich scholar or aficionado could not find a more thorough encapsulation of his brilliant career
Haffner Sebastian, De Bismarck à Hitler. Une histoire du Reich allemand
Flonneau Jean-Marie. Haffner Sebastian, De Bismarck à Hitler. Une histoire du Reich allemand. In: Vingtième Siècle, revue d'histoire, n°34, avril-juin 1992. Histoires d'Allemagnes. p. 212
Wilhelm Reich versus the Flying Saucers
The convenient myth of Wilhelm Reich is that he “lost his mind” in the early 1950s, if not before, and that the last seven years of his life and work — the orgone and radiation experiments, the cloudbuster, and flying saucer intrigues — present an embarrassment. Even the counterculture that embraced Reich, not least William S. Burroughs, Norman Mailer, and filmmaker Dušan Makavejev, tended to distort his theory. The psychosis attached to Reich by his detractors was the culmination of decades of scapegoating by psychoanalysts, Nazis, communists, and conservatives. But Reich’s environmental and Cold War preoccupations and his slow-burning fascination with UFO phenomena were not signs of a madness incipient since his break with Sigmund Freud. They anticipated and reflected much in the American psyche. Defining the presence of a “cinematic self” in the misunderstood analyst once considered an heir to Freud, Wilhelm Reich versus the Flying Saucers rejects orthodox portrayals of Reich’s final years as merely pathological. Combining original analysis and evidence from the Wilhelm Reich Archive, James Reich uncovers the fatal moments in the psychologist’s uncanny identification with the “spaceman,” and the myth of a scientist lost to his own grandiosity and paranoia. Taking seriously the influence of The Day the Earth Stood Still, Bad Day at Black Rock, and other pop cultural narratives on Reich, this “psychoanalytic detective story” concerns existential traps, conscious and unconscious collaborations and betrayals by disciples, and unidentified flying object-relations. Reich’s is an atomic-age passion narrative. Vitally, Reich’s story could be ours. The author is not related to his subject
A Three-dimensional Study of Grand Strategy. An interview with Simon Reich
contribution à un site webCERI Associate researcher Simon Reich and his co-author Peter Dombrowski have recently published Across Type, Time and Space. American Grand Strategy in Comparative Perspective (Cambridge, 2021). According to the two authors’ claim, the goal of this book is to “offer a framework that scholars can use to compare grand strategies in three dimensions - across type, time and space” and “to reveal both the similarities and the differences between different national grand strategies, as well as their sources of continuity and change in a dynamic global environment.” Interview with Simon Reich by Miriam Périer
It worked yesterday: On (re-)performing electroacoustic music
Playing electroacoustic music raises a number of challenges for performers such as dealing with obsolete or malfunctioning technology and incomplete technical documentation. Together with the generally higher workload due to the additional technical requirements the time available for musical work is significantly reduced. Many of the issues have their roots in composers, publishers, performers and promoters considering how their work process could easily be adapted to the additional demands of electroacoustic music. It was also found that the employment of music technologists cannot sufficiently make up for incomplete documentation and inadequate archiving of compositions. Using case studies made up of single compositions and whole concerts, solutions are proposed, which the several parties could effortlessly employ to considerably ease the process of preparing and performing electroacoustic music. Finally hands-on methods on how performers can deal with the situation as it is today are proposed. It is being hoped that by implementing these strategies not only better performances of electroacoustic music will be facilitated but also that electroacoustic works in general will enjoy a longer life-span in the future, thus enabling the sustenance of a vivid electroacoustic repertoire
Percussion Ensemble
This is the concert program of the Boston University Percussion Ensemble performance on Tuesday, November 13, 2007 at 8:00 p.m., at the Concert Hall, 855 Commonwealth Avenue. Works performed were "Melody Competition" by Evan Ziporyn, "Canon alla Ottava from The Art of Fugue" by Johann Sebastian Bach, "Canon for Three Equal Voices: in Memoriam Igor Stravinsky" by Elliott Carter, "Canon Ball" by Donald Martino, and "Drumming," Part 1 by Steve Reich. Digitization for Boston University Concert Programs was supported by the Boston University Center for the Humanities Library Endowed Fund
Modified potential energy functions for constrained molecular dynamics
In molecular dynamics the highly oscillatory vibrations in the chemical bonds are often replaced by holonomic constraints that freeze the bond length/angle to its equilibrium value. In some cases this approach can be justified if the force constants of the bond vibrations are sufficiently large. However, for moderate values of the force constant, the constrained system might lead to a dynamical behavior that is too ``rigid'' compared to the flexible model. To compensate for this effect, the concept of soft constraints was introduced [Reich 1997, Reich 1995, Reich 1996]. However, its implementation is rather expensive. In this paper, we suggest an alternative approach that modifies the force field instead of the constraint functions. This leads to a more efficient method that avoids the resonance induced instabilities of multiple-time-stepping [Bishop 1996] and the above described effect of standard constrained dynamics
Chronica des gantzen teütschen Lands, aller teütschen Völcker Herkommen, Namen, Händeln, Guten und bösen Thaten, Reden, Rhäten, Kriegen, Sigen, Niderlagen, Stifftungen, Veränderungen der Sitze, Reich, Länder, Religion, Gesatze, Polocey, Spraach, Völcker und Sitten : vor und nach Christi Geburt, von Noe biss auff Carolum 5. ... : auch von der teütschen uralten, alten und newen Sitten, Bräuchen und Pollecy ...
auss glaubwirdigen angenommen Geschichtschreibern, zu ruck diss Blats verzeychenet, zusamen getragen, und die Teütschen den Teütschen zu Teutsch, sich selbs darinn, als in einem Spiegel zu ersehen, fürgestelt, durch Sebastian Francken, von WördImpressum dem Kolophon entnommenBogensignaturen: aa-cc, A-Z, a-z, Aa-Ee⁶, Ff⁴, Gg
A Free Energy Approach to the Torsion Dynamics of Macromolecules
Based on the concept of free energy, we give a Hamiltonian formulation for the torsion dynamics of macromolecules. The appropriate reaction coordinates for the free energy calculations are defined in terms of soft constraints as introduced in Brooks, B.R., Zhou, J., and Reich, S., Elastic molecular dynamics with flexible constraints, in preparation and Reich, S., Smoothed Dynamics of Highly Oscillatory Hamiltonian Systems, Physica D, to appear, 1995. We consider a few simplifications that allow one to calculate the free energy analytically and to write the corresponding equations of motion as a constrained Hamiltonian system. We also discuss a possible stochastic embedding of the reduced dynamics by means of a generalized Langevin approach
Safety and efficacy of erythropoietin for the treatment of patients with optic neuritis (TONE): a randomised, double-blind, multicentre, placebo-controlled study.
BACKGROUND
The human cytokine erythropoietin conveys neuroprotection in animal models but has shown ambiguous results in phase 2 clinical trials in patients with optic neuritis. We assessed the safety and efficacy of erythropoietin in patients with optic neuritis as a clinically isolated syndrome in a multicentre, prospective, randomised clinical trial.
METHODS
This randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind phase 3 trial, conducted at 12 tertiary referral centres in Germany, included participants aged 18-50 years, within 10 days of onset of unilateral optic neuritis, with visual acuity of 0·5 or less, and without a previous diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive either 33 000 IU erythropoietin or placebo intravenously for 3 days as an adjunct to high-dose intravenous methylprednisolone (1000 mg per day). Block randomisation was performed by the trial statistician using an SAS code that generated randomly varying block sizes, stratified by study site and distributed using sealed envelopes. All trial participants and all study staff were masked to treatment assignment, except the trial pharmacist. The first primary outcome was atrophy of the peripapillary retinal nerve fibre layer (pRNFL), measured by optic coherence tomography (OCT) as the difference in pRNFL thickness between the affected eye at week 26 and the unaffected eye at baseline. The second primary outcome was low contrast letter acuity at week 26, measured as the 2·5% Sloan chart score of the affected eye. Analysis was performed in the full analysis set of all randomised participants for whom treatment was started and at least one follow-up OCT measurement was available. Safety was analysed in all patients who received at least one dose of the trial medication. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01962571.
FINDINGS
108 participants were enrolled between Nov 25, 2014, and Oct 9, 2017, of whom 55 were assigned to erythropoietin and 53 to placebo. Five patients were excluded from the primary analysis due to not receiving the allocated medication, withdrawn consent, revised diagnosis, or loss to follow-up, yielding a full analysis set of 52 patients in the erythropoietin group and 51 in the placebo group. Mean pRNFL atrophy was 15·93 μm (SD 14·91) in the erythropoietin group and 14·65 μm (15·60) in the placebo group (adjusted mean treatment difference 1·02 μm; 95% CI -5·51 to 7·55; p=0·76). Mean low contrast letter acuity scores were 49·60 (21·31) in the erythropoietin group and 49·06 (21·93) in the placebo group (adjusted mean treatment difference -4·03; -13·06 to 5·01). Adverse events occurred in 43 (81%) participants in the erythropoietin group and in 42 (81%) in the placebo group. The most common adverse event was headache, occuring in 15 (28%) patients in the erythropoietin group and 13 (25%) patients in the placebo group. Serious adverse events occurred in eight (15%) participants in the erythropoietin and in four (8%) in the placebo group. One patient (2%) in the erythropoietin group developed a venous sinus thrombosis, which was treated with anticoagulants and resolved without sequelae.
INTERPRETATION
Erythropoietin as an adjunct to corticosteroids conveyed neither functional nor structural neuroprotection in the visual pathways after optic neuritis. Future research could focus on modified erythropoietin administration, assess its efficacy independent of corticosteroids, and investigate whether it affects the conversion of optic neuritis to multiple sclerosis.
FUNDING
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
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