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This is now 2008.

So happy 2008 everyone. Yes! We, the Criers have started the preparations for this upcoming concert set and we're pumped! It's an awesome program of music and our guest artist, Alexander (Sasha) Korsantia is the BOMB. The cool thing about having your own orchestra is that you play music YOU want to play. Yeah we're just a chamber orchestra, but there is so much GREAT music written for this size a band. You just have to hear it, then you'll believe in it. The post right before this one, Jesse makes a heartfelt shout out about the pieces being performed...Come see these shows and stick around afterwards to find out what other bands we have on our iPod playlist. I found this article while reading something about this year's playoff football on ESPN.com. It's so unrelated, it's just hilarious. But it gives you a lot to think about and chew on. Written by Gregg Easterbrook for the column, Tuesday Morning Quarterback.

" Space: The Saudi Arabia of Electricity: According to a recent estimate by the Department of Energy, human society is using about 15 terawatts of artificially generated energy per year; a terawatt is a trillion watts. The sun generates about 12 quadrillion terawatts per year -- about 800,000,000,000,000 times as much energy as made on Earth.

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Solar Storm

AP Photo/NASA

The sun makes 800,000,000,000,000 times as much energy as humanity uses -- all we need to do is tap a little.

Why do I mention this? First, this is Tuesday Morning Quarterback: I don't have to have a reason. But if you're worried about how society can solve its power needs while simultaneously breaking the fossil fuel habit -- the World Bank estimates that, even assuming big improvement in efficiency, global energy production must triple by 2050 -- think skyward. Solar cells are getting cheaper, but may always be limited to applications such as rooftop converters in places like Arizona that rarely experience cloudy weather. The real promise of solar power is up in space, where the sun always shines and the energy value of photons is much greater than on Earth's surface. (Passing through the atmosphere uses up most of the energy in sunlight.) It seems likely, though not certain, that huge solar collectors in orbit could supply all the world's power needs by capturing the intense form of sunlight found in space, then beaming the energy down to Earth via lasers or microwaves. Physicists at a recent Washington meeting estimated that solar collectors in orbit, using lasers to transmit power to converters in the North African desert, could supply all of Europe's energy at a price competitive with current power generation and without carbon emissions. A world of space-based energy would not need coal-fired or nuclear power plants, and there would be sufficient electricity available so that hydrogen could be made from seawater to power our cars and airplanes. Homo sapiens could kiss the greenhouse gas issue goodbye.

Needless to say, building orbital solar power collectors would be hugely expensive -- although once the collectors were completed, operating costs would be relatively low because no fuel is required and no waste is made. Nations would need to cooperate on positioning the orbital systems and the ground receptors. There's some chance that zapping powerful lasers or microwave beams through the atmosphere would affect the weather. And extremely expensive power towers floating in space would, sadly, provide tempting military targets. Already, the Pentagon's National Security Space Office has quietly told lawmakers it would like to build a smallish orbiting proof-of-concept solar power station that would be used to beam energy down to deployed U.S. armed forces units. The Army and Marines have countless diesel-electric generators set up in Iraq and Afghanistan; if deployed forces could draw their electric power from a beam from space, this would be preferable. But if the first space solar generator is built to support the U.S. military, this could get the whole idea off on the wrong foot, making space solar power towers feel like valid military targets.

Anyway, TMQ finds it reassuring that there are potential energy solutions that involve vast amounts of power without any greenhouse gas emissions, fissile materials that might be stolen, or atomic byproducts that must be buried. Plus, return to those sun statistics. Our star generates 12 quadrillion terawatts of energy per year, radiating in all directions, so that an estimated 100,000 terawatts per year will fall on Earth -- warming our world, causing plant growth and making life possible. Some 100,000 terawatts end up here -- the rest streams off into the void. Thus 99.999999 percent of the energy generated by the sun is wasted, except perhaps for offering career opportunities for alien astronomers and their postdocs in other parts of the galaxy. You think man wastes energy -- think about the sun!"

Alrighty then. Come see our January concerts!

Remixed Classics

A Far Cry is in the midst of rehearsals for our next program, Remixed Classics, and I am so excited about this music, I had to post here to tell everyone about it!

Remixed Classics concentrates on classical "cover pieces." Each of the pieces on this program represent the composer stepping out of the normal, the mainstream, the expected, and writing a piece in a totally unexpected new style - sort of like A Far Cry itself. Hmm...

Golijov's Last Round brings grinding, sultry, passionate Argentinian tango to the concert hall. The piece is basically just hot. Then the program moves to Shostakovich, who explores ragtime and jazz in his Piano Concerto #1, which A Far Cry will perform with the great Russian pianist Alexander Korsantia. (More info about Korsantia coming soon!) After intermission, Grieg looks well into the past, going for Baroque (oof) in the beloved cornerstone of the chamber orchestra repertoire, The Holberg Suite and finally Beethoven seems to look back to the archaic fugue and simultaneously forward hundreds of years to cutting-edge avant garde in the landmark Grosse Fuge, performed in A Far Cry's new adaptation for string orchestra.

Please join us and experience Remixed Classics! This concert is going to rock!

A Far Cry at Yellow Barn

A Far Cry has been invited by Yellow Barn Music Festival to work with their Young Artists Program this coming summer in a weekend residency to include both workshops and a concert. On Saturday, June 21st, 2008, we will present a full concert at Big Barn in Putney, Vermont, and for the better part of Sunday, A Far Cry will be working with the 30 talented, aspiring high-school instrumentalists and composers from across the country in workshops. Topics of exploration will likely include communication and collaboration, starting your own chamber ensemble, and how to rehearse a 16-piece, conductorless chamber orchestra without losing your mind! We hope also to have a chance to perform side-by-side with some of the musicians in the Program. Additionally, we will be exploring sketches of works by some of the young composers in residency. Around this same time (mid-to-late June) we are in the process of organizing a couple of other concerts in the Vermont area. Hopefully we will have the opportunity to return to our fabulously supportive Montpelier audience! Join our mailing list to stay informed!

Milton High School

Today A Far Cry visited Milton High School to give a performance and talk about communication. We played for about 100 students and had one of the most attentive audiences we've ever had. These were music students at the school, both band and orchestra, and we could really sense the seriousness and dedication of the audience - there's nothing like playing for musicians; especially music students - they really keep you on your toes! My favorite moment was when Sharon was leading unison claps from everyone, and showed by various types of cues and sniffs and eyebrow-raises, the variety of moods and affects that could be produced by a single clap, spontaneously together. It was a wonderful event, and we hope to return and work with such dedicated young people more extensively in the future.

Concert Feedback

Thanks to everyone - criers, guests, volunteers, venues, recording engineers, mentors, teachers, sox, and especially audience - for making our Cambridge and Brookline concerts of the last two days such wonderful events. We hope that our music uplifted the spirits and stirred the passions. If you were at the concerts, we would LOVE to hear from you - any thoughts at all about any aspect of the evenings! Simply click "leave a comment" below.

Go Sox! (too)

What can I say?? I'm glad it's over, and boy...these guys are true champions...Congratulations Red Sox Nation. And now, it's our turn. The inspiration runs sky high & we've prepared these concerts missing at least the first 3 innings of more than a handful of playoff games so we could rehearse for these two shows in Boston. Talk about the Sox rookies contributing, well A Far Cry is a rookie this year in the Boston's arts community & hope we can hit one out of the park. My complimentary ticket goes out to our captain, Jason Varitek (if you're back from Colorado for our Tuesday's concert that is). Tito (Francona), wanna come be president of our board before spring training starts? 2007 World Champs!!

Our Place in This Zeitgeist (part 3)

Wow... The Red Sox are going back to the World Series for the 2nd time in 4 years. My very first year here in Boston, the then "Idiots" beat the Yankees in the ALCS, coming from behind with a 0-3 deficit & starting from the 4th game of that series, they went on to win 8 in a row (sweeping the Cardinals in the WS afterwards) to give the city of Boston its first title since 1918. It was nuts... The entire city went crazy, as the Sox actually took the trophy in St. Louis, but I was among the thousands that poured onto the streets of Boston to chant and holler at Fenway Park that night right across from facing a couple of hundred riot police. My god it was exhilarating then, but I have to say, whenever it happens, it never gets old. Papelbon gettin' excited!!!My folks now live in Cleveland, and my father is a HUGE Indians fan (I'm sure he's having an ulcer today, as his beloved Tribe came so close, again). My mom used to hem Kenny Lofton's suits when he would bring them down to her store, which was located in the same building he was staying in, back in the olden days when Kenny used to play for the tribe. Those guys on the tribe though, played SO well right down to the last minute, and come on, seriously, when you're a young team like that and you get to the 7th game of the championship series, having led as much as 3 games to 1, then giving up the next 3 to lose the series, it's gotta be tough. However...this team will prevail again. I'm sure of it. Their core is made up of tough, young guys who play the game with a lot of class as we've all seen the last two weeks and they are the future of baseball.

As the Red Sox are headed back to the World Series, and will be hosting the Colorado Rockies (who have won a ridiculous 21 of their 22 games to get there) for the first game on Wednesday the 24th, I'll be watching the game out in Colorado. With a busy last week having played 4 consecutive concerts with the Boston Philharmonic, and as AFC's rehearsals have resumed, I got to watch only last night's game in its entirety. And as Boston and Colorado are playing for the final glory, I go back to my former neighborhood to see old friends and also to make some music. Just ironic though, that these 2 teams are in the autumnal classic, because all my friends in Boulder, watched me scream in agony in 2003, when the Red Sox were losers in the very same American League Championship Series against the New York Yankees, losing in the final decisive game 7. I probably will never forget what it felt like to see Aaron Boone's home run that last game, but in retrospect, it was all just the beginning of (perhaps...knock on wood) a dynasty not too dissimilar from when Boston celebrated its 3 titles in the 1915-1918 stretch.

One of the news anchors last night talked about how their kids won't know the pain in waiting for their team to get to the World Series, as it is now the 2nd time in the last 4 years, that they think, this happens all the time. A thwarted generation gap. My friend Jake's grandfather never got to see his Boston team participate in the final dance before he passed away, and that was the norm around here for a long while. Something is in the air in Boston these few years. Not that sports define the era of a city (though so many of the times, it would seem that way), but there is an energy here I've not quite felt in the other places I've had the fortune of making a home. And I am grateful for being Here in the Now, and it is so very exciting. We can officially now say that A Far Cry was founded on the year that the Boston Red Sox made its second trip to the World Series in 89 years.

Baseball is a team sport, and playing in an orchestra of 16, I always see the comparisons of the team work, as one can in both fields. Though my baseball career never quite took off like my violin chops, but never the less, it is all the more important to achieve something greater as a team than the individual glory, allowing that unified voice to become a visceral force. And we all work so hard at it...My team or Manny's. If I had to give a shout out to anyone though, in this year's trip to the World Series run for the Red Sox, it would have to be the manager, Terry Francona. Tito, as everyone around here calls him, never quit believing in his players, in the time when they were slumping, dropping balls, giving up runs, he stuck with those guys to quietly give them their confidence back, and to display the kind of loyalty that is rarely seen in such a high profile business like baseball. That trust is where the real love comes through to enliven our days, and these sweet victories get Jonathan Papelbon dancing without a care in the world at 2am in the morning.

Our Place in This Zeitgeist (part 2)

With part 1 of this installment just written yesterday, I wake up this morning and find out that Radiohead (the flagship artists of our generation) has just officially changed the recorded music industry forever. Not that other great artists big and small have not been doing this for a few years, but it is by the token of their sheer fan base that reaches into the millions easily, and by the pure artistic output that these musicians have proven their worth in a place in modern music history. I will be forever thrilled for today, that this band whom I've now seen twice give performances that have radiohead1generated goose bumps from the beginning to end of their set, has done the equivalent of what the character, Tyler  Durden in the 1999 movie "Fight Club" did in the last minutes looking over the demolition of the credit card industry. I've been saying it over and over again. It is not about the money. Money is a commodity that will always change hands, and with such examples of today, the door will now wide open for artists who have more to say ON STAGE being musicians, and to become the voice of reason for the audience of the now and the future. Found a really insightful blog about the events of today, and without a doubt feeling that bigger things are just around the corner. A Far Cry salutes you, Thom York & Company. Who says an outfit like A Far Cry can't be the opening act for a band like Radiohead?