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Post by yellowstone2014 on Apr 26, 2019 0:10:28 GMT -5
www.facebook.com/groups/136196403169941/permalink/2048097841979778/Kevin Bradley Thank you Jackie for your gift to us. I must also say how impressed I am. Your new album DEBUT is your 7th number 1 Classical Album. It replaced Andre Bocelli's album, Si, which I read was his very first number 1 album in his 20 year career. You've had 7 in a row … Just Awesome … Thank You
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Post by Deleted on Apr 26, 2019 7:43:03 GMT -5
Kevin Bradley Thank you Jackie for your gift to us. I must also say how impressed I am. Your new album DEBUT is your 7th number 1 Classical Album. It replaced Andre Bocelli's album, Si, which I read was his very first number 1 album in his 20 year career. You've had 7 in a row … Just Awesome … Thank You Just for fun I went back see who Jackie knocked off to get to #1. PTAD - # 2 Beat out by Sting (that Classical god) OHN - Prev week top 10 included 5 different Various Artists and 2 Canadian Tenors DWM - Il Volo HC - Yo-Yo Ma SftSS - 50 Shades of Gray (another classic) A - Lindsey Stirling SAC - Piano Guys were #1 the week SAC released, then beat out Celtic Women to be #1 TH - Jethro Tull (truly a true classic) TD - Andrea Bocelli BB recognizes 8 JE albums/ep making BB200. (TD not yet) And 8 #1 on Classical in a row. (No PTAD) Si was AB first #1 on BB200. However, it is his 18th #1 and 32nd top 10 on Classical Chart. Some time ago a comparison of Jackie and Sarah was made about standing on a pedestal. When you compare Jackie with any legend - you cannot. She hasn't lived long enough, Yet.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 26, 2019 12:58:41 GMT -5
I know you are pounding away on how well she is doing on the CC chart, which is fine, but it would be even better if she found her way onto the BB200 chart.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 26, 2019 15:19:15 GMT -5
Capture by James Phang from the beginning of the Requiem video of her performance at Feinstein's/54 Below when Jackie said, congratulations to Dear Evan Hansen for it's one thousandth performance.
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Post by yellowstone2014 on Apr 26, 2019 15:48:04 GMT -5
Capture by James Phang from the beginning of the Requiem video of her performance at Feinstein's/54 Below when Jackie said, congratulations to Dear Evan Hansen for it's one thousandth performance. I guess, this should belong to the Feinstein's/54 Below thread.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 26, 2019 15:52:44 GMT -5
Yellowstone, it's just a photo relative to The Debut. The video from which this capture was taken is posted on the Feinstein's/54 Below thread. You may post the photo there if you wish. It's on "America's Sweetheart" FB.
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Post by msims on Apr 26, 2019 16:30:21 GMT -5
Kevin Bradley Thank you Jackie for your gift to us. I must also say how impressed I am. Your new album DEBUT is your 7th number 1 Classical Album. It replaced Andre Bocelli's album, Si, which I read was his very first number 1 album in his 20 year career. You've had 7 in a row … Just Awesome … Thank You Just for fun I went back see who Jackie knocked off to get to #1. PTAD - # 2 Beat out by Sting (that Classical god) OHN - Prev week top 10 included 5 different Various Artists and 2 Canadian Tenors DWM - Il Volo HC - Yo-Yo Ma SftSS - 50 Shades of Gray (another classic) A - Lindsey Stirling SAC - Piano Guys were #1 the week SAC released, then beat out Celtic Women to be #1 TH - Jethro Tull (truly a true classic) TD - Andrea Bocelli BB recognizes 8 JE albums/ep making BB200. (TD not yet) And 8 #1 on Classical in a row. (No PTAD) Si was AB first #1 on BB200. However, it is his 18th #1 and 32nd top 10 on Classical Chart. Some time ago a comparison of Jackie and Sarah was made about standing on a pedestal. When you compare Jackie with any legend - you cannot. She hasn't lived long enough, Yet. Sting's album was CC. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossover_music#Pop_performers_in_classical_and_mixed_genresKeep going with DWM as she was #1 for numerous weeks. The comparison to Sarah had to do with a previous Billboard article: www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/8486266/mariah-carey-elvis-presley-bing-crosby-christmas-albums-billboard-200-chart"On both charts, she becomes the female artist with the most No. 1s (stepping ahead of Jackie Evancho, with seven)." They now tie at 8 CC #1's.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 27, 2019 0:07:36 GMT -5
I bought two cds at Walmart for my younger cousins. The cd section is very small, being phased out. The attendant said cds will probably disappear from the shelves in a month or so. I asked if he meant this particular store or Walmart nationwide. He "thinks" that because cds are supplied by a third party, the stores having no control, Walmart in general will not have a cd section, though not knowing how long it will be until they are no longer available elsewhere.
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Post by yellowstone2014 on Apr 27, 2019 14:41:29 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Apr 27, 2019 16:32:43 GMT -5
In case you missed the instrumentation assignments on the left of the score, piano, vocals, violin 1, etc. For those unfamiliar with score, the song is written in the key of E flat (b) with 3 bs. It is in 3/4 time, that of a waltz -one, two, three, one, two, three...with emphasis on the 1. There are 3 beats to a measure (between the vertical bars). Jackie's vocal part begins with a 2-beat note held, followed by a 1-beat note (black) in the first measure. The same for the following three measures. As the song progresses, you'll see 3-beat notes (with a dot), notes with tails and with dots, and rests (the squiggly things). Each group of notes or one note (a measure) adds up to 3 beats. As Jackie interprets a song she will at times extend a note beyond it's designation, ignoring a rest, but resume in time with the orchestration to continue together, near the end of this song for example.
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Post by bastet on Apr 27, 2019 20:36:55 GMT -5
In case you missed the instrumentation assignments on the left of the score, piano, vocals, violin 1, etc. For those unfamiliar with score, the song is written in the key of E flat (b) with 3 bs. It is in 3/4 time, that of a waltz -one, two, three, one, two, three...with emphasis on the 1. There are 3 beats to a measure (between the vertical bars). Jackie's vocal part begins with a 2-beat note held, followed by a 1-beat note (black) in the first measure. The same for the following three measures. As the song progresses, you'll see 3-beat notes (with a dot), notes with tails and with dots, and rests (the squiggly things). Each group of notes or one note (a measure) adds up to 3 beats. As Jackie interprets a song she will at times extend a note beyond it's designation, ignoring a rest, but resume in time with the orchestration to continue together, near the end of this song for example.
Would be interesting to know if she can read the vocal line (the music, not the lyrics) on the fly.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 28, 2019 7:18:24 GMT -5
Would be interesting to know if she can read the vocal line (the music, not the lyrics) on the fly. I know this isn't exactly the same, but. When I was in college, on a band scholarship, I visited the practice rooms often. One day I walked upstairs and heard this guy beating the hell on a piano. I listened for a while then went in. I asked him his name and if he was a music student. He said no. I asked how he learned to play. He said his mother would sing and she would show him the piano notes. (Remember that is what Lisa did with Jackie to learn a song.) That's it. I asked what he could play, anything I hear. He played several more songs with the worse finger technique ever. He was breaking every little lips on the keys with his rings. Straight fingers. Well, after a while I asked if he could play Jazz. I guess so. So I carried him to the band/jazz director and had him play for him. Long story... He joined the band in the drum section and pianist in the Jazz Band. I haven't said yet, he couldn't read a note of music. I sat behind him and told him what key to play in. But he learned quickly. That year he was voted national jazz pianist of the year. I played piano/organ for fifty years and cannot ad lib or play anything by memory. It's a brain thing.
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Post by bastet on Apr 28, 2019 10:45:16 GMT -5
Would be interesting to know if she can read the vocal line (the music, not the lyrics) on the fly. I know this isn't exactly the same, but. When I was in college, on a band scholarship, I visited the practice rooms often. One day I walked upstairs and heard this guy beating the hell on a piano. I listened for a while then went in. I asked him his name and if he was a music student. He said no. I asked how he learned to play. He said his mother would sing and she would show him the piano notes. (Remember that is what Lisa did with Jackie to learn a song.) That's it. I asked what he could play, anything I hear. He played several more songs with the worse finger technique ever. He was breaking every little lips on the keys with his rings. Straight fingers. Well, after a while I asked if he could play Jazz. I guess so. So I carried him to the band/jazz director and had him play for him. Long story... He joined the band in the drum section and pianist in the Jazz Band. I haven't said yet, he couldn't read a note of music. I sat behind him and told him what key to play in. But he learned quickly. That year he was voted national jazz pianist of the year. I played piano/organ for fifty years and cannot ad lib or play anything by memory. It's a brain thing. Chopin and Liszt might disagree....
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Post by Deleted on Apr 28, 2019 10:58:05 GMT -5
Chopin and Liszt might disagree....
I do not follow. What does finding an unknown talent have to do with a dude that can write in 5#'s. Any first year theory student can write music in any key that hardly any one can play. I am more of a 3 flats guy.
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Post by geb on Apr 28, 2019 11:54:20 GMT -5
Chopin and Liszt might disagree....
I do not follow. What does finding an unknown talent have to do with a dude that can write in 5#'s. Any first year theory student can write music in any key that hardly any one can play. I am more of a 3 flats guy. Of course you have genius prodigies like George Harliono, born in January 2001 in Hackney, London, performing Liszt's La Campanella at St. John's College in Cambridge when 12 years old! Or just for his jollies playing the same piano piece on a street piano. Truly amazing.
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