Peter Schickele « Bath Daily Photo I remember hearing peter schickele (P. D. Q. Bach) tell a story about his college years on the radio. One of his friends was taking a shower in the communal http://bathdailyphoto.wordpress.com/category/peter-schickele/
Extractions: Persuasion Iâm posting some photos of friends but I donât feel Iâm violating their privacy because the bottom half on an individual is too abstract to extrapolate any identification. I remember hearing Peter Schickele ( P. D. Q. Bach ) tell a story about his college years on the radio. One of his friends was taking a shower in the communal (all-male) dormâs bathroom at the far end of the hall from his room. This friend realized after finishing his shower that he had forgot to bring a towel and only had a small washcloth. Apparently, this wasnât all that unusual for this person, except that it was parentâs visiting weekend, and there were moms and pops innocently roaming the halls! The friend took the washcloth, placed it over his face, and proceeded to walk back to his room down the adult-filled hall, which quickly cleared for him. He figured, if put in the situation, it was decent to let your privates be public so long as you kept your publicsâ private Truly, a lesson to live by.
Peter Schickele - Gemini Press Composer, musician, author, satiristpeter schickele is internationally recognized as one of the most versatile artists in the field of music. http://www.tritone-tenuto.com/schickele.htm
Extractions: ordering information Composer, musician, author, satirist PETER SCHICKELE is internationally recognized as one of the most versatile artists in the field of music. His works, well in excess of 100 for symphony orchestras, choral groups, chamber ensembles, voice, movies, and television, have given him a leading role in the ever-more-prominent school of American composers who unselfconsciously blend all levels of American music. (John Rockwell, The New York Times His commissions are numerous and varied, ranging from works for the National Symphony, Saint Louis Symphony, Minnesota Opera, Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Audubon and Lark String Quartets, Minnesota Orchestral Association, and many other such organizations, to compositions for distinguished instrumentalists and singers. Recent premieres include the Concerto for Cello and Orchestra In Memoriam F.D.R.;
MUSIC: PETER SCHICKELE IN AN ALTERNATE MODE - New York Times peter schickele s public persona is P.D.Q. Bach, the last and least of Bach s sons and the composer of such deathless (or dead) masterpieces as The Stoned http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE7DF113DF934A25756C0A96194826
Peter Schickele Sheet Music - Sheet Music Plus Browse 176 items by peter schickele at Sheet Music Plus, the world s largest retailer of sheet music, songbooks, songs, tabs, piano vocal chords, http://wwws.sheetmusicplus.com/sheetmusic/artist/S/Peter_Schickele.html
CCMS - Peter Schickele Concert Details Composer, musician, author, satirist and fourtime Grammy Award Winner peter schickele is internationally recognized as one of the most versatile artists in http://concordchambermusic.org/concerts/2008_perf_schickele.html
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WNYC - Survival Kit: PETER SCHICKELE (June 16, 2002) peter schickele has so many personae that Im almost afraid to ask which one composed his survival kit list. Theres the composer peter schickele, http://www.wnyc.org/shows/survivalkit/episodes/2002/06/16
Extractions: Support WNYC highlightSection(section); Peter Schickele has so many personae that Iâm almost afraid to ask which one composed his survival kit list. Thereâs the composer Peter Schickele, who has written serious classical music, folk music arrangements, and film scores; Professor Peter Schickele, head of the Department of Musical Pathology of the University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople, discoverer and champion of the work of PDQ Bach, âhistoryâs most justifiably neglected composer; and, of course, the host of public radioâs Schickele Mix, who has tried to to broaden our understanding of all types of music. Well, lets find out whatâs in his cultural survival kit, and maybe even figure out which Peter Schickele put it together.
Realty Reality: P.D.Q. Bach (a.k.a. Peter Schickele) Since 1965 the tireless Professor peter schickele has kept audiences in stitches with his presentation of P.D.Q. Bach (the heretofore unknown last and the http://realty-reality.blogspot.com/2005/07/pdq-bach-aka-peter-schickele.html
Extractions: @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?targetBlogID=8601536"); Commercial, investment and residential real estate compiled news, resources, market trends, plus: business and personal development, support, healthcare, safety, fun, relaxation, things to do and more. Since 1965 the tireless Professor Peter Schickele has kept audiences in stitches with his presentation of P.D.Q. Bach (the heretofore unknown "last and the least of the great Johann Sebastian Bachâs twenty-odd children, he was certainly the oddest") and his uniquely typical music. According to the Professor's 'research', P.D.Q. Bach's father ignored him completely, setting an example for the rest of the family (and indeed for posterity), with the result that P.D.Q. was virtually unknown during his own lifetime; in fact, the more he wrote, the more unknown he became. He finally attained total obscurity at the time of his death, and his musical output would probably have followed him into oblivion had it not been for the zealous efforts of Prof. Schickele. These efforts have even extended themselves to mastering some of the rather unusual instruments for which P.D.Q. liked to compose, such as the left-handed sewer flute, the windbreaker, and the bicycle. In addition to his annual concerts in New York City, Shickele has appeared with over fifty orchestras, ranging from the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Cleveland Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the London Symphony Orchestra and the Los Angeles Philharmonic to the New York Pick-Up Ensemble; and his self-contained show The Intimate P.D.Q. Bach (featuring the Semi-Pro Musica Antiqua) has played in cities and on campuses from Maine to California. He as also recorded numerous albums of supposedly discovered P.D.Q. Bach compositions.
Extractions: Email: pao@loc.gov RSS Blog Podcasts ... Email Updates Press contact: Trish Taylor Shuman (202) 707-1940 WHO: Composer, musician, author and satirist Professor Peter Schickele WHAT: Schickele will deliver the Louis C. Elson Memorial Lecture. Illustrated with musical examples, Schickeleâs special lecture- presentation celebrates the 80th anniversary of the "Concerts from the Library of Congress" series and reflects the Libraryâs distinguished history as a champion of chamber music in America. He is internationally recognized as one of the most versatile figures in the field of contemporary music. His compositions, now numbering more than 100, include works for orchestra, choral groups, chamber ensembles and solo voice, as well as scores for movies and television. WHEN: This free public lecture will be held at 7 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 17
Extractions: Discography, Music, Lyrics, Album, CD, Career, Biography, Famous Works, and Awards Find Peter Schickele on Amazon.com Born July 17, 1935, in Ames, Iowa; raised in Ames, Washington, D.C., and Fargo, N.D.; son of Rainer Wolfgang (an agricultural economist) and Elizabeth (Wilcox) Schickele; married Susan Sindell (a children's dance teacher), October 27, 1962; children: Karla, Matthew. Education: Studied music theory with conductor Sigvald Thompson; studied with composer Roy Harris, 1954; Swarthmore College, B.A., 1957; studied at Aspen Music School, 1959; Juilliard School, M.S., 1960, studied composition with Vincent Persichetti and William Bergsma. Addresses: Office c/o William Crawford, 237 East 72nd St., New York, N.Y. 10021. In New York City in 1965 composer-musician Peter Schickele introduced the general public to his satiric creation, baroque composer P.D.Q. Bach. Billing himself as Professor Schickele, head of the department of Musical Pathology at the fictional University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople, the entertainer recounted his discovery of this "last but least" of Johann Sebastian Bach's twenty-odd children (earlier known only "from police records and tavern IOU's") while taking a tour of a castle in Bavaria. He opened the program with P.D.Q. Bach's "Concerto for Horn and Hardart," a fifteen-minute spoof of eighteenth-century musical style and form played on a homemade "hardart"an assemblage of toy instruments, household items, exploding balloons, and coin operated windows dispensing sandwiches and pastries. Following with other "long-lost" P.D.Q. Bach compositions, the professor vowed to continue the search for new pieces ("the lastest score can't possibly be as bad as the one before")a pledge served faithfully for the next twenty-five yearsmuch to the delight of his always sold-out audiences.
Extractions: Mary Poppins ... Read Reviews Offering the worldâs largest selection of premium seating to sold-out events, TicketsNow is the Internetâs best source for Peter Schickele Meets PDQ Bach tickets. Since 1999, we have provided consumers a safe and easy way to purchase the best sports, concert, and theater tickets at the best prices.
Ionarts: Peter Schickele At The Library Of Congress peter schickele, Louis C. Elson Memorial Lecture, Library of Congress, February 17 peter schickele is known for his own compositions, his hilarious and http://ionarts.blogspot.com/2006/02/peter-schickele-at-library-of-congress.html
Extractions: skip to main skip to sidebar SOMETHING OTHER THAN POLITICS ... Peter Schickele at the Library of Congress by Charles T. Downey Saturday, February 18, 2006 Peter Schickele is known for his own compositions, his hilarious and insightful radio show Schickele Mix , and for having created an ingenious satirical persona, P. D. Q. Bach . Out of admiration for all of those things, Ionarts felt compelled to attend the Louis C. Elson Memorial Lecture, given by Schickele last night at the Library of Congress , after he had cancelled on the original date of December 7. The title of Schickele's lecture, String Quartet: The Dark Horse of Contemporary Music , was not a precise description of what he actually said, but that was not really a problem. He did get around to making a statement about the elasticity of the string quartet, that it was the genre that has most successfully incorporated stylistic innovations in contemporary musical styles, but he did not defend that thesis in a systematic way. What he mostly spoke about was a topic that has been of interest to us here at Ionarts lately, how the future of classical music may or may not involve the incorporation of popular styles of music. On one hand, he said, so-called crossover music represents a dilution, to the point that it may not be worth calling it "classical music" at all. To this he added several arguments, for example, that many people think that the orchestra has always been with us, as if given by Moses on the mountain, but in fact it has been an entity only since the 18th century (I would add the 17th century, if we accept that groups not called "orchestras" had the same function). Just as composers did not write for orchestra before that period, it is possible that they could cease writing for it in the future. He also said that people who take in