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This is not a music blog. It is a blog about me, David Ocker. But most of me IS about music.

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Mixed Meters


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    Good Introductory Pieces

  • The Real Jejune Vasectomy
  • 20 Balls in My Fingers and I'm Not Done Yet
  • Bill Kraft's San Francisco Waltz Toon
  • The Boy Scout Copyright Police
  • Carpool

    Pieces For Courageous Listeners

  • In A Pissy Mood
  • The On and Off Topic Blues for Alex
  • Thinking With Other People's Words
  • The Best Thing About Led Zeppelin

    Pieces Based on Familiar Melodies

  • Not So Cuckoo Cuckoo
  • Jingle Bulls
  • Jungle Bells

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    30 Second Spots

  • In America Everyone Is A Great Artist
  • That's It, No More
  • The Manuscript Ends Abruptly
  • Macaca's Jewish Mama
  • The Gray Song
  • Jihadist Boogie
  • What Would Barbie Sing?
  • Fang Man's Blues
  • Model A Mazda
  • The Cross Is So Frickin' Cool
  • Oh, Was He Still Around?
  • Flakes (Desiccant)
  • The Laptop in Live Performance?
  • That's the Point of It - Extended
  • By Then She Would Have Slept With Him
  • Walking Room Rainbow
  • That's Not Your Baby Concerto - Long Version

  • That's Not Your Baby Concerto
  • Something I Need To Discuss With Arnold
  • Mozart and Microsoft - Early Death
  • Clock Time
  • Mean Burn

    My Clarinet Music From Long Ago

  • The Allegro Fourth Movement from the Symphony Number 3 in F Opus 90 by Johannes Brahms by David Ocker
  • At Sixes and Sevens (improvisation)
  • Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies by Tchaikovsky, arranged and performed by David Ocker, bass clarinet
  • Voluntary Solitude (clarinet & electronics)

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    Remember, I write this stuff at Starbucks so it can't be any good.

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    Click here for a lists of all previous Mixed Meters mentions of:

    "John Cage"

    "Death of"

    "Music Critic"

    "Leslie"

    "30 Second Spot"

    "3 Minute Climax"

    "Wagner and Schubert"

    "Second Coming"



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    My Photo
    Name: David Ocker
    Location: Pasadena, CA

    Slowly passing Middle Age. Long past Middleweight. Left of Middle of the Road.



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  • My Website (A Complete Waste of Time)

  • My wife Leslie's passion:

  • Read about 30 Second Spots

  • Long ago I worked for

  • My Mixed Meters post entitled Varese, Zappa, Slonimsky

  • My photos @ FLICKR

  • My videos on YouTube

  • My MP3s @ MOG

  • My post In Which David Is Caught In the Act (about my photos)

  • The Grumpy Mixed Meters Musical Manifesto (about my loss of faith in new music)

  • MIXED MESSAGES

  • Click here to see which blogs I've been reading @ Bloglines



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  • Planet Carleton
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    Mister Composer Head

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    Mixed Meters Topics

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    Monday, January 30, 2006

    In which Plants Look Weird

    Sunday Leslie and I took the very strange twisted spiral cactus (that has been sitting on our front porch for years) to the California Cactus Center for repotting. While Leslie shopped I wandered around with my pocket camera. Here's some of what I saw until the battery ran out. (Click on any picture for The Big Picture.)



















    Copyright © January 29, 2006 by David Ocker

    Pictures of Plants

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    Saturday, January 28, 2006

    The Docker Awards for Mozartean Commentary

    The Docker Award for the Most Intelligent Comment About Mozart (MICAM) goes to Alex Ross - Celebrate Mozart by Ignoring Mozart He said: "If you really want to celebrate Mozart's world, Mozart's culture, Mozart's life, you would ignore the man himself and listen to music by a living composer."

    However, the Docker Award for the Dumbest Comments About Mozart (DCAM) goes to physicist Mario Livio for his NPR interview. He said (at zero min. 37 sec.) "It goes up and then down and then up again in the same way and down again in the same way and then the same thing repeats itself twice. So this is the same type of symmetry you'd see in maybe wall paper design." Wallpaper Music, indeed.

    And at 3'49" - "And this is what happened with Mozart or it happened with a number of mathematicians like the French Evariste Galois, who, you know, Mozart died at 35, Evariste died at 20. You know, they both did all their best work, you know, when they were teenagers essentially." Mario - you should ask, you know, a clarinetist (or any musician) when Mozart did his best work before, you know, going on mike.

    Music Reviews

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    Friday, January 27, 2006

    In which David Remembers Mozart

    Yeah, today is Mozart's Quarter-Millennium. It's a really big media deal. So here's my big reverent obeisance to the master. Can't someone be honest about it and just start a Mozart Religion? Call it Mozartism.

    Or maybe someone could be REALLY honest about it. An LA Times editorial today said "More nonsense has been written about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart than almost any historical figure except Jesus Christ."

    When I was a college student I was part of a group who made Mozart's birthday a private holiday. Usually it was celebrated by smoking something we should not have possessed in a location where we should not have been. Like in a concert hall.

    After college I decorated my first apartment with a large lithograph of Mozart that I had rescued from a scrap heap. It had a heavy wooden frame in very bad condition. Later my mother spent a lot of money on fixing the frame - refinishing the wood and adding new glass and matting. She hung it in her home proudly. Now Mozart hangs in my office, watching my every move from beyond.

    Years ago I attended an LA Philharmonic concert which included a Mozart piano concerto. I sat through it, the critical professional musician cataloging problems: too fast, too slow, out of tune - whatever. I was not happy. When it finished, a woman sitting next to me, a complete stranger, turned and said: "Isn't that the most beautiful thing you've ever heard?" I learned an awful lot about music from her, mostly about not thinking too much about music.

    Stories
    Artifacts

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    Thursday, January 26, 2006

    30 Second Spots - Crashing Into Each Other

    click here to hear Crashing Into Each Other - in the Elegant Buoyant Metal style which is typically very quiet.

    Copyright © January 19, 2006 by David Ocker - Exactly 30 seconds!!

    click here for an Explanation of 30 second spots

    30 Second Spots

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    Wednesday, January 25, 2006

    In which Business Is Strange

    The corporate-owned media does okay reporting on corporate executives accused of crimes. Here's a list of few boardroom big bilkers.

    More unusual is reporting about the stupid but still legal maneuvers that businesses pull. Here's a list of 101 business stunts - just from 2005.

    You can read about farting shoes, eyewear for funerals and Jessica Simpson's plus-size clothing line. And many more.

    (My first link to CNN, for which I apologize.)

    Business

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    Tuesday, January 24, 2006

    In which Musical Dots Get Double-Clicked

    Here's a bit of fun. It's an interactive musical mixer at the San Francisco Exploritorium web site.. You move colored dots around on a musical field. Once you grasp concepts like "left/right" or "up/down" you can click on the dots, changing their color and their musical style. Clever. Combining and changing the styles fascinates me. (Thanks to Janet Davis for the link.)

    Music Reviews

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    Monday, January 23, 2006

    In which David Links Back

    Art Jarvinen (the "west coast totalist") added a link back to Mixed Meters in my own bio at Leisure Planet Music. He also made some nice comments - and singled out my cat pictures for particular praise. Leslie and I have had lots of child-substitute felines and I take many pictures of them. Here is my favorite cat picture of all. (This is the late mackerel tabby Big Boy, the cross-eyed cat.)

    Scott Fessler also created a link to Mixed Meters in his blog Notation Software Survey. Don't be fooled - it isn't a real blog, just a clever online vehicle for distributing results from his survey on music notation software used in higher education. Boils down to the question "Finale or Sibelius?". He wore out a lot of shoe leather knocking on doors collecting data displayed in cool colored graphs, perfect for compulsive comparison.

    Cat Pictures

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    Sunday, January 22, 2006

    Four 30 Second Spots in the form of a Horoscope

    I'm writing new 30 Second Spots faster than I'm posting them. Probably that's not important since the demand is underwhelming.

    I've created a Horoscope to help you decide which new spot is appropriate for you.. The traditional horoscope has 12 settings, kind of a celestial tone-row. I've combined the 12 into 4 groups; select the one with your sign. Or you can use the day of the week on which you were born. Or just pick the ice cream which looks most appetizing.

    If you are a Cancer, Leo or Virgo (or were born on a Friday or Tuesday) click here to hear Alright Baby - you like things to proceed logically from the start but are never satisfied with the result. The ice cream is Martian Topography. The music is in the Angular Hocketed Contrapuntalist style (Yes, in proper English the title should be "All right Baby")

    Copyright © January 14, 2006 by David Ocker - 35 seconds


    If you are a Libra, Scorpio or Sagittarius (or were born on a Saturday or Wednesday) click here to hear Dayold - you are a student of occult musical practices and must work hard to avoid your natural bad attitudes. The ice cream is Crunchy Cherry Scab. The music is Systemic Alternative Tonicism.

    Copyright © January 11, 2006 by David Ocker - 36 seconds



    If you are a Capricorn, Aquarius or Pisces (or were born on a Sunday) click here to hear So Have You Kicked It - you have achieved an inner peace that is ruined by bad intonation. The ice cream is Butter Mud Twirl. The music is Perforated Parodistic Pointalism.

    Copyright © January 18, 2006 by David Ocker - 34 seconds




    If you are an Aries, Taurus or Gemini (or were born on Thursday or Monday) click here to hear Professional Potatoes - you are a workaholic without good ideas so things tend to go bad in the end. The ice cream is Banana Eyeliner. The music is Unprincipled Faux Minimalisticism.

    Copyright © January 17, 2006 by David Ocker - 35 seconds



    click here for an Explanation of 30 second spots

    30 Second Spots






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