Hornists,

I know Alissa well. She is one of the nicest, kindest, most considerate
people I know. She's also a pretty good horn player if that counts for
anything. She would never intentionally spam anyone. An innocent mistake for
sure. If she hasn't already read this I will drop her a hint next time I see
her.

Dan Beeker
Least Principled Horn
BSO

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Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2007 1:00 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: Horn Digest, Vol 57, Issue 8


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Today's Topics:

   1. Re: Invite from Alissa Quick ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) (Ben Reidhead)
   2. RE: Clarification - What the heck? (Howard Sanner)
   3. Re: [horn] Re: NHR: RIP LUCIANO PAVAROTTI (justin ellis)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

message: 1
date: Thu, 6 Sep 2007 08:07:24 -0700 (PDT)
from: Ben Reidhead <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
subject: Re: [Hornlist] Invite from Alissa Quick ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

They way I saw this is that "Alissa Quick" joined the
Quechup social network.  As part of that, she clicked
an "invite all my contacts" box, sending out an invite
to all her email friends, one of which happened to be
the hornlist.  I'd like to view this as an oversight,
not a spam attempt.

Ben

> >>Please don't click on any of the links in the
> "Invite..." post. The
> >>sender is a subscriber to this list. That's why
> the initial post
> >>went through, but "Quechup" will not and cannot
> become a
> >>subscriber, or unsubscribe anyone from the horn
> list. If you click
> >>any of the  quechup links, you are just opening
> yourself up to
> >>receiving spam  directly from quechup.
> >>
> >>Dan



       
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message: 2
date: Thu, 06 Sep 2007 11:19:54 -0400
from: Howard Sanner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
subject: RE: [Hornlist] Clarification - What the heck?

Peter Hirsch says:
 >

> I may not have made myself clear.
> 
> I can verify that I certainly am a crabby old guy


        Oh, quit bragging already. <g>



> It seemed to me that I had been reading the same digest over and over 
> again. I mean, not just quoted and re-quoted, but the same digest with 
> the same messages and the same dates.


        Are the digest numbers the same? For example, I got this post in 
vol. 57, issue 7. If the numbers are the same, then you are 
seeing multiple copies of the same digest. Then you get to figure 
out why you're seeing it twice, though, since the listowner says 
you were sent only one copy, it appears the problem, if there is 
one, is on your end. Otherwise...


> Maybe I'm losing it in my dotage (the
> shock of turning 57 on the exact semi-centenary of Brain's demise may 
> have hastened this), but I just wanted confirmation or denial of this 
> from someone out there on the list.


        maybe you're right. <g> As a fellow librarian and friend, can I 
just call you Geeze for short? <VBG>



> Well, now that I have probably further confused and alienated those 
> that I have already offended and befuddled, I'll leave it at that. And 
> to the person that implied that I'd be better off starting a new 
> topic, I'll just assume that she is new on this list since I am sure 
> that the number and variety of my past postings speak for themselves. 
> You could look it up.


        Again, brag not!

        All seriousness aside, I hope this helps.

                                Howard Sanner
                                [EMAIL PROTECTED]





------------------------------

message: 3
date: Thu, 6 Sep 2007 09:16:10 -0700 (PDT)
from: justin ellis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
subject: [Hornlist] Re: [horn] Re: NHR: RIP LUCIANO PAVAROTTI

Sept. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Luciano Pavarotti, the Italian tenor whose clarion
lyric voice and performances from concert houses to outdoor stadiums made
him a pop icon and the most famous opera singer since Enrico Caruso, has
died. He was 71. 
  Pavarotti, who underwent surgery in New York for pancreatic cancer in
2006, died today at his home in Modena, Italy, according to his agent, Terri
Robson. He was hospitalized in Modena in August for a high fever. 
  ``In fitting with the approach that characterized his life and work, he
remained positive until finally succumbing to the last stages of his
illness,'' Robson said in a statement. 
  The bearded Pavarotti was the king of tenors from the late 1960s through
the 1990s. He popularized opera more than any other singer through
recordings that made him the best-selling classical artist ever and concerts
in parks and stadiums around the world that were televised to millions. 
  With his huge frame, at times 300 pounds or more, and trademark white
handkerchief that he used to wipe his brow, the charismatic Pavarotti became
what his former manager Herbert Breslin called ``a rock star for people over
30.'' 
  `God-Given Glory' 
  Pavarotti offered sunny, instinctive musicality rather than the scrupulous
musicianship of his career-long rival Placido Domingo. 
  ``I always admired the God-given glory of his voice -- that unmistakable
special timbre from the bottom up to the very top of the tenor range,''
Domingo said in a statement from Los Angeles. 
  Pavarotti took opera outside the concert hall: performances before 150,000
people, including the Prince and Princess of Wales, Charles and Diana, in
London's Hyde Park in 1991; 500,000 on the Great Lawn of New York's Central
Park in 1993; and 300,000 in 1994 at the Eiffel Tower in Paris. 
  Pavarotti shared the stage with rock and pop singers, including Elton
John, Eric Clapton, Bruce Springsteen, Sting and Bono of U2, to raise money
for charities. 
  ``Some can sing opera; Luciano Pavarotti was an opera,'' Bono said in a
statement on the band's Web site. ``His life and talent was large, but his
sense of service to the weak and vulnerable was larger.'' 
  President George W. Bush issued a statement from Sydney, where he was
traveling, praising the tenor's ``perfect pitch and charismatic
interpretations.'' 
  ``Pavarotti was also a great humanitarian, using his magnificent talent to
rally tremendous levels of support for victims of tragedies around the
globe,'' Bush said. 
  'Three Tenors' 
  Pavarotti toured the world alongside Domingo and Carreras for the ``Three
Tenors'' concerts, which began with the 1990 World Cup and were repeated
every four years through 2002. The CD from the first concert broke all
records for classical music, selling more than 11 million copies. 
  His career wasn't without problems. 
  As stardom ballooned, so sometimes did the singer's weight, causing
sciatica to affect his mobility and stamina. He frequently backed out of
performances because of colds, laryngitis and other health issues, including
knee, neck and back surgery. A 1989 dispute over cancellations ended his
association with Lyric Opera of Chicago. 
  His mainstreaming of opera to venues outside the traditional concert hall
and turning himself into a pop star led critics to accuse him of blatant
commercialism. 
  Tax Battle 
  In 2000, he ended a four-year tax battle with Italian authorities who
charged him with filing false returns from 1989 to 1995 for claiming that
his primary residence was in Monte Carlo. One year earlier, he paid an
undisclosed sum to settle a tax-evasion charge in Germany against him,
Domingo and Carreras. 
  He left his wife of 34 years, Adua Veroni, for his former secretary,
Nicoletta Mantovani, 35 years his junior; they had a daughter, Alice, before
they married in 2003. He had three daughters from his first marriage. 
  Pavarotti was born on Oct. 12, 1935, in Modena, northern Italy. His mother
worked in a cigar factory. His father was a baker and amateur singer and
chorister who sometimes sang small parts on his son's recordings. As a
youngster, soccer was more attractive to Pavarotti, but he joined his
father's chorus and was recognized for his vocal potential. 
  He was a slim, handsome 25-year-old when in April 1961 he made his
operatic debut in the city of Reggio Emilia as Puccini's romantic poet
Rodolfo in ``La Boheme.'' It served as a ``good luck'' debut role throughout
his career. 
  `Consigned to History' 
  The slimness didn't last, though Pavarotti's brilliant high C, golden
sound and clear Italianate line held him in good stead for Rodolfo debuts at
London's Covent Garden, Milan's La Scala and New York's Metropolitan Opera
House, where Caruso, also a tenor, performed through 1920. 
  ``With the passing of Luciano Pavarotti, La Scala and the world of opera
lose one of the finest and most moving voices of all time,'' said Stephane
Lissner, general manager of La Scala, in an e-mail statement. ``With him, a
splendid era of opera is consigned to history.'' 
  Next year, La Scala and Teatro di Modena in the tenor's hometown will
launch the ``Concorso Luciano Pavarotti,'' an international singing
competition whose winner will be given the chance to perform at La Scala.
The award was announced Sept. 4, just two days before his death. 
  `Unique Ability' 
  Antonio Pappano, music director of the Royal Opera House in London, said
Pavarotti had ``a unique ability to touch people with the emotional and
brilliant quality of his voice.'' 
  ``We count ourselves lucky at the Royal Opera House to have had wonderful
farewell performances from him in January 2002 when he sang in 'Tosca,'
despite the death of his own mother in the final stages of rehearsals,''
Pappano said in an e-mail statement. 
  Pavarotti's recording career began in 1964 with Australian soprano Joan
Sutherland and her conductor husband Richard Bonynge in Bellini's ``Beatrice
di Tenda.'' 
  After the three toured Australia triumphantly in 1965, the artistic bonds
took hold, with subsequent recordings of Bellini's ``I Puritani,''
Donizetti's ``Fille du Regiment,'' ``L'Elisir d'Amore,'' and ``Lucia di
Lammermoor,'' and Verdi's ``Rigoletto.'' 
  Pavarotti first performed in the U.S. in Miami at the Miami- Dade County
Auditorium in February 1965 with Sutherland. He made his debut at the Met as
a relative unknown on Nov. 23, 1968, opposite soprano Mirella Freni, a
childhood friend from Modena. 
  He achieved stardom in the U.S. when in a 1972 performance at the Met in a
production of ``Fille'' opposite Sutherland, he hit nine successive and
impeccable high C's. 
  His recording company, London/Decca, followed that triumph with many solo
recitals and complete operas. The Met staged a succession of 11 new
productions around him, including ``Puritani'' with Sutherland (1976), ``Un
ballo in maschera'' (1980) and ``Idomeneo'' (a rare Mozartean venture) in
1982. 
  Later Years 
  Pavarotti starred in the first ``Live from the Met'' telecast in March
1977 as Rodolfo in ``Boheme'' with Renata Scotto. His Met performances
included 60 of ``Tosca'' and 49 of ``Elisir.'' 
  For more than two decades after his triumphant ``Fille'' performance at
the Met, Pavarotti appeared in almost every major European and American
concert house. He sang in Beijing before an audience of 10,000 at the Great
Hall of the People in 1986. 
  In 1982, Pavarotti appeared in the Hollywood extravaganza ``Yes,
Giorgio,'' which fared poorly with critics and audiences. 
  As with Caruso, Pavarotti's sound darkened in later years, prompting him
to take on heavier repertory, sometimes successfully, sometimes
questionably. The stadium and televised outdoor concerts took precedence in
his schedule. 
  With age and heavy exposure, some tonal wear and tear became evident by
the mid 1990s. Pavarotti's last performance at the Met was in ``Tosca'' on
March 13, 2004, where he received an 11- minute standing ovation. He began
an extensive farewell tour in 2005 after announcing his retirement, but it
was frequently interrupted by illness and injuries. 
  In a 2006 interview with Italy's La Stampa newspaper, Pavarotti said, ``I
have every intention of returning to singing. I'll have to discuss it with
the doctors, but I think I'll start again next year.'' 
  To contact the writer of this column: David Shengold at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
. 
Last Updated: September 6, 2007 11:28 EDT 

nancymomkids <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:          A great
Musician! And a delight to work with. More people have heard 
wonderful music thanks to this gentle man.

They have to be excited in heaven to have a guest performance from 
this musician!

Nancy

--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], "Kerry Thompson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Luciano Pavarotti
> 1935-September 5, 2007
> 
> Rest in Peace
>



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