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Скачать с ютуб Jettatura by John Psathas, arr. by Omar Carmenates (Percussion duet for 2 marimbas, 2 vibraphones) в хорошем качестве

Jettatura by John Psathas, arr. by Omar Carmenates (Percussion duet for 2 marimbas, 2 vibraphones) 3 года назад


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Jettatura by John Psathas, arr. by Omar Carmenates (Percussion duet for 2 marimbas, 2 vibraphones)

https://www.justinballrecording.com/ Performed by Justin Ball and Ryan Boehme. Recorded October 23, 2020 in the Florida State University Percussion Studio. Performance notes from John Psathas' website: "Carmenates’ intricate arrangement of Jettatura tests the capabilities of the percussion duo just as much as Psathas’ original version challenges the pianist. Here, the percussionists must keep precise time to navigate Jettatura’s rapid-fire waves of notes, which can find themselves fragmented and dovetailed between instruments. The rumble of the piano’s lower register is supplanted by the damp, woody resonance of the marimba’s lowest octave, while the vibraphone’s mellow timbre features in the work’s more subdued middle section. Standing out most, however, is the punchiness of the marimba’s middle-to-upper register, which dominates the animated outer sections of the work, maintaining the bold character of the piano version. For a country that is home to me in so many ways, Greece has not been so kind to this particular absent son. Practically every journey I have made there has left me with a permanent reminder of some unpleasant and often bizarre experience. From donkey bites to the groin, to motorbike accidents on the island of Santorini, to a protracted, salmonella-induced weight loss that would have made Jenny Craig’s eyes water, it is not surprising that members of my family there began to imagine I had fallen under the influence of someone’s evil eye. An expedition to Greece in 1998 brought an unprecedented onslaught of bad luck, this time involving my wife and son. My dear, concerned, sister went to the village-expert in such matters to discover if I was inflicted with the evil eye (also known as mal occhio, or jettatura). Jettatura is the ancient belief that the gaze of strangers casts unwanted magic into the lives of the innocent . The belief is that a person — otherwise not malefic in any way — can harm you, your children, your livestock, merely by looking at them with envy and praising them. The soothsayer, when checking my aura by long distance (these days such matters can of course, be conducted over the phone via free-call numbers), gasped, went silent, and declared I was so heavily and completely hexed that my halo was utterly opaque. In Greece there is a talisman one can wear, or place in a car, house, or shop, which protects against the evil eye (in some countries, one must protect oneself against false compliments by spitting on the person who proffers the compliment). This talisman is in the form of a glass blue eye, a ‘good eye’. Jettatura, written upon returning from Greece, is my talisman, my good eye." John Psathas Website: https://www.johnpsathas.com/ John Psathas Recording Project: https://www.navonarecords.com/catalog... Purchase the sheet music here: https://www.steveweissmusic.com/produ...

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