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Optional Live Piano Music: "Piano Massages" Enjoy music by the concert
pianist, Karl Logue.
Music
(from mp3.com) Click here and go to Price List. Just
$15.99 Here you'll find a mix of Baroque, Jazz, Easy-listening, New Age, orchestral works, and old favorites. Being fond of the sound of ensemble piano works, most of the works here are 2-piano or orchestral in nature. Image for Piano One morning, still groggy from sleep, I wandered over to the piano to wake-up. I sauntered through a bit of Rachmaninoff, and in my early-morning stupor, made the same mistake over and over. It was in that moment that the opening three-notes of Image for Piano sprang to life. If I hadn't been playing Rachmaninoff that morning, this piece might never have come into existence. Mediterranean MoodImagine a stroll on the beach in Italy or southern France. A lazy, warm day… in the distance, church bells. This piece begins quietly, interrupted by a majestic hymn sung quietly in the vocal register of the piano. The piece ends as quietly as it began, the last phrase recalling the first in a major key, and fading into a distant sunset. Chronicles A day in the life of … This piece gives the listener a kind of musical glimpse into my psyche. This piece sort of composed itself all at once. I sat down at the keyboard one day, started playing with the recorder turned on, and this is what happened. I thought it a fitting title, "Chronicles", as it chronicled the events in my life that day. SummertimeGershwin didn't write it this way, but I sure like playing it this way! An easy jazz feel, but without taking too many liberties with the melody, this piece is comfortable, like an old shoe. Just for FunRemember Leroy Anderson? His pieces are bright, airy, and generally a lot of fun. I thought, "What if I were to score a Leroy Anderson-like tune, and take it to the nth degree?" This is what came of that-light, airy, bouncy-The Happiest Piece in the World (tongue firmly planted in cheek). Sketches for Pedal Piano, #2, #3, and #4Robert Schumann wrote a series of pieces that are known mostly to organists today, but have been almost completely forgotten by the pianists of our day. Why? Probably because these can't be played by a single pianist on modern instruments. The Pedalier was a piano with a set of pedal notes for the feet to play-like an organ. The only way modern pianists can play these pieces as written is as a duet. I've taken this wonderful collection of pieces, and transcribed them for duo piano. New MoonQuiet, pensive, gentle… Like a sailboat on a calm sea with a full moon overhead. The orchestration is ethereal, using choirs and strings to provide a kind of aural surface for the ear to rest upon. Definitely music for a lazy Sunday afternoon. For a Relaxing Music and
Scene
Experience
check out the
AMTA
Massage Room. This
program works best with Netscape or IE Explorer. It may not work with some
older browsers and you may have to download
Macromedia
Flash Player to make this work on your browser. |
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