Monday, March 19, 2012

Isotone Concert comes back to Oak Ridge on April Fool's Day

The Isotone Concert for ORCMA's current season will probably be held at three p.m. Sunday, April 1, in the AMSE auditorium. "Isotone" is both a physics and musical term, and the Isotone Concert always features an original work that's a tribute to a world-famous physicist or chemist.
In the past beats pro, the Isotone Concert has honored Marie Curie, Albert Einstein dr dre headphones, Glenn Seaborg and Stephen Hawking. The upcoming concert will honor Belgian physicist Georges-Henri Lema?tre, the very first individual to propose the theory from the expansion of the universe beats by dre studio, erroneously attributed to Edwin Hubble.
Lema?tre also proposed what became recognized as the Large Bang theory from the origin from the universe, which he known as his "hypothesis of the primeval atom."
The guest artist and composer in the concert will be Don Bowyer monster beats, trombonist and professor of music and Division of Music chair in the University of Alabama in Huntsville.
The world premiere of his composition entitled "Primeval Atom," that is a tribute to Lema?tre monster headphones, will probably be performed by Bowyer on trombone; Scott Eddlemon, percussion, and his wife Susan Eddlemon, violin.
Scott is principal timpanist of ORSO and Sue is the former concertmaster of ORSO. Each are graduates of the Juilliard School in New York City. She is the first woman to earn a Ph.D. degree in violin from the prestigious music school.
She will carry out Sonata for Solo Violin, Op. 27, No. two "Jacques Thibaud" by Belgian composer Eugene Ysaye.
The Isotone Concert will open with William Kraft's "Encounters IV: Duel for Trombone & Percussion." Bowyer and Scott Eddlemon will be the dueling instrumentalists.
Percussion instruments will include mixing bowls purchased at local department stores. The two men will also explain the physics of the trombone.
Eddlemon will carry out his original composition "Ricercar del Roboti" using small robots, a few of which he bought at AMSE's gift shop.
Tickets to the Isotone Concert, which cost $18 apiece, will be available at the door. Chamber Concert subscribers can attend the concert for free. For more information on the Isotone Concert program and performers, visit the ORCMA website at www.orcma.org or www.oakridgesymphony.com.

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