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The Accomplished Les Six Gives Seamless Performance

The Les Six Sextet of Louisville filled the evening air with saccharine wonder and excitement this past Sunday evening in Carrick Theatre. From what I experienced, I can convey to you that the performance given by the sextet showcased the level of expertise of every artist in the group. They made the performance of the songs seem easy. The only sign of struggle given being a small gasp occasionally taken by one of the members of the company.

The group performed five pieces in total, with two being composed by Transylvania University’s own professor of music, Larry Barnes. The pieces by Barnes showcased him as an essential member of the Transylvania staff. 

The first piece performed by the group was by Albert Roussel, who was a French composer. He was heavily influenced by the impressionist movement, and artists like Debussy and Ravel, but later turned to neoclassicism. The piece as performed by the Louisville group is unlike many of Roussel’s early works, as the impressionist influence is not evident. This piece, in fact, is much more daring in composition. Within the composition, each musician is allowed a moment to shine which makes it fitting to begin the concert.

You can view a variation of Divertissement, Op.6 as performed by The Berlin Counterpoint, another sextet. 


Barnes’s two pieces were the next to be performed, starting with Mixed Company, which was composed by Barnes specifically to be performed by Les Six. Preludes from Pangaea displays heavy influences from Barnes’s travels in the far eastern world. Consisting of four separate preludes, the piece showcases Barnes wide array of influences and experiences available to him. With interests lying so far around the world, Barnes proves that his ability to create is boundless. 

Next to be presented by the group was Op. 45 of Theodore Blumer’s Sextet: Theme and Variations. Consisting of 8 variations that each come together in the end to create a masterful performance that makes the talent of not only the composer, but the artists playing known. The first variation is a solo by the masterful pianist, Denine LeBlanc, of Les Six. The variation truly allowed the talent of the woodwinds and pianist of the group to shine through.

You can see the full variation performed below by another sextet. 

The concert was ended with a performance of a Sextet composed by recently-famous composer Marcelo Zarvos. His repertoire includes composing the scores of movies such as Wonder, Fences, Remember Me, and The Words. The piece was beautifully performed and was very obviously modern in composition. The zinging performance of the arrangement allowed the vitality of the audience to endure all the way to the end of the night.

All in all, it was a beautiful concert that gave a new life to the rainy day outside. 

Weekly Blog & Playlist: February 15

Hey Y’all!

This week was big for music releases and music videos after the Grammy Awards, so I decided to choose a mix of genres and artists for the playlist. Go check out YouTube’s trending list here for all the new videos! As always, feel free to email me music video suggestions for next week to tmahlinger20@transy.edu!

Katy Perry and Zedd released the music video for the single “365” that dropped yesterday at the same time. The video already has over six million views and is currently #10 on YouTube’s trending music. It’s been a hot minute since we’ve heard anything from either of these artists, so I’m sure people are excited for this new song and video. The video is definitely worth the watch if you wanna see Katy Perry as a robot who wears retro costumes and faces a tragic fate at the end of the video due to the “human” emotions she begins to feel with Zedd.

Want a good old throwback for your weekend? Weezer just released the music video for their cover of a-ha’s 1985  song “Take On Me.” Weezer has been on a cover band kick lately with their brand new album Teal Album, and in all honesty, I’m kinda loving it. The entire album is made up of cover songs from the good ole’ days and they rock.

After winning big at the Grammy’s last weekend, Kacey Musgraves released the music video for the song “Rainbow” off her latest album Golden Hour that later became a single. The video is heavy because it shows scenes of different struggles people face, like being a single mother and dealing with alcohol abuse. Every time Musgraves sings the line “It’ll Be Alright,” the people struggling in the video seem to calm down and feel a sense of peace. This video might be a more emotional one to watch, but definitely worth it.

Stay chill,

Taylor


Monday, February 18th-19th @MFA Morlan Gallery

“Daily Stress Inventory” by Laurie Frick
-Gabby Crooks

The current exhibit Data, Mine will be ending Tuesday, so this is your last chance to go see this amazing exhibit on campus. The Morlan Gallery is open weekdays from 12pm-5pm. You can read the gallery review by out Arts & Culture Editor, Grace Morrison, here!

Tuesday, February 19th @7:30pm, MFA Carrick Theater

Merrilee Elliott and Loren Tice will perform on flute and piano for a recital on campus! This event is free and open to the public.

Thursday, February 21st @7:30pm, Little Theater

Transylvania Theater will present their latest play, Silent Sky by Lauren Gunderson and directed by Ave Lawyer. This play is focused around women astronomers and their groundbreaking contributions to how we understand space. Silent Sky takes you on a journey from the beginning of Henrietta Swan Levitt’s education at Harvard Observatory all the way through to her death. Tickets are free but should be reserved here.

Tim Meko Presentation

As part of the recent “Data, Mine” series, Tim Meko, the Deputy Graphics Director of The Washington Post, gave an entertaining presentation titled “Big Data, Small Details and the Power of the Unknown” on January 31. The “Data, Mine” series showcases different forums about various ways lives can be viewed through a technological perspective. This series was meant to showcase how the digital age has not only changed privacy, relationships, and identities but also maximized opportunities for society.

Tim Meko is a graduate of Transylvania University from the class of 2006. His innovative interests in both computer science and art created the current Arts and Media major which he said at his time at Transy was the “mullet of academic majors.” Once earning a position at The Post in 2016, Meko felt like he was running on a treadmill backward. Now at his current position, he is responsible for all breaking news with any subject matter that includes informative, and sometimes interactive, graphics.

Within the presentation, Meko introduces that, in order to make a good graphic, it must inform and delight the audience on the subject matter. Most importantly, though, a graphic has a shelf life. So as with any piece directed towards the public, the graphic must be worthwhile for the audience. As far as the future of graphics, Meko hopes to tap into drones, such as mapping a live event, and audio availability through podcasts.


In order to get visual access to Tim Meko’s contributions and presentation, visit this link bit.ly/meko-links.

Men’s Basketball Team Honors Seniors With Big Win 

Transy defeated the Defiance College Yellow Jackets 87-67 on Saturday at the Beck Center. This was the final home game of the year for the Pioneers, who currently are riding a five-game winning streak. This win puts the Pios at 15-8 overall and 12-4 in conference play.

Before the game, seniors Bo Schuh and Cooper Theobald were honored. Both Theobald and Schuh were key players the whole year, so it was nothing new for the accomplished seniors to be recognized. The seniors each contributed seven points in the rout of the Yellow Jackets.

I was able to talk to Coach Lane the day before the seniors were honored and asked him what Cooper and Bo have meant to the program: “Bo and Cooper have had a significant impact on our program. They arrived to Transylvania at a time where our on-the-court success had dipped a little, and they immediately began to rebuild how our program was perceived nationally. They were teammates in high school so they have a special bond that translates into wins. Cooper has started every game of his career at Transy except for one. His toughness was something we really needed, and he has given that to us for his entire four years. Bo was averaging over 13 points and six rebounds his freshman year when he suffered a season-ending injury. I am proud of how he was able to persevere through that injury and come out on the other side of surgery and be a major contributor for us. Their leadership, either vocally or by their actions on the court and in the locker room, is something that will be missed. They are leaving our Transylvania Basketball program in a much better position than when they arrived four short years ago.”

The basketball team honored the seniors with their play in the first half, exploding to a 34-13 start. A key contributor to the Pios hot start was sophomore forward Lucas Gentry. He had the best start to a basketball game that I have seen in years, making his first seven shots and ending up with 20 points.

After the game, Gentry said “I had a lot of confidence in myself because my teammates shared the ball and got it to me where I was comfortable. My jumper felt great all week and even in warmups, I noticed everything was going in. My teammates knew I was having a special game and their energy allowed me to keep playing at a high level.” Holding a 15-point-halftime lead, Michael Jefferson took control of the offense in the second half finishing with 14 points, 11 assists, and eight rebounds. Jefferson was two rebounds short of a triple-double while also adding two steals.

The only other double figure scorer for the Pioneers was junior sharpshooter Gabe Schmitt, adding 13 points and knocking down three three-pointers in the win. The Pios scorched the nets the entire game, shooting 62 percent from the field. They were also able to get a season high in team assists with 27.

The Pioneers have two games left before conference play starts in two weeks. This week they will look to lock in a two seed for the HCAC tournament.

Transylvania Women’s Basketball Wins 16th straight

The Pioneers women’s basketball team, currently ranked 21 in Division III rankings more than deserves an acknowledgement and rewind as we inch closer to tournament time.

If we backpedal to last season, Coach Fulks and the team finished with a 21-6 record but finished just six points short of an HCAC tournament championship, falling to Rose-Hulman. In the season before the Pios finished the season nearly identically, watching the fighting Engineers take the trophy in a contested game. However, this group has banded together and managed to achieve a dream season, having only two losses thus far, and a 15-1 record in conference play.

To begin the season, the ladies started off strong, but hit a huge roadblock early on when facing the much-anticipated Rose-Hulman basketball team on Dec. 8. It was clear from the beginning the team simply did not have enough to compete on the road against the Engineers and eventually would lose in a blowout 77-59. With it being well known that the HCAC tournament goes through Rose-Hulman, the loss certainly showed the team had not reached the heights they wished to climb….yet. Since then, Fulks and the team have flipped a switch.

The team has yet to lose since that Saturday in November, and has scratched off 16 wins in a row and counting. This is the longest winning streak in the last four years of the program, and has a chance to be the longest for Fulks if the team can win two more consecutive games. Amongst this streak, several impressive wins have occurred, the first being the Pat Deacon tournament championship. The girls dished the heavily favored  #11 Trine a loss and secured the trophy while putting the rest of Division III on notice that they had recovered from their defeat earlier in the season. The next was the rematch against the lingering mental hurdle Rose-Hulman on January 26. The Pioneers took arguably their biggest win of the season in a morale-boosting home win against the rival foe 61-47. This run has also had some close calls, the most memorable being an overtime win at Franklin on Jan. 16 where one important point kept the streak alive with a final score of 70-69.

Many have to wonder: what are the Pioneers doing to get on this streak? Analytically, the team is not doing anything much different than what the team has focused on since the Fulks era began. The team has high three-pointers taken per game, three-pointers made per game, free throw percentage, and steals.

With the direction basketball is moving, the team is playing offensively what currently is shown to be analytically the best strategy: shoot three-pointers if you can get them, and if not, force the ball into the paint to either draw a foul or achieve a close “high percentage” shot. The team has shown that, through listening to their coach and playing unselfishly, they are knocking on the door for an HCAC tournament championship and NCAA Division III tournament appearance.

Another key factor for this team is the amount of depth on the roster.  10 players are averaging at least eight minutes per game. While opposing teams have to deal with multiple rested bodies coming towards them, they also can not focus on just one scorer as there are three scorers this year, Shelby Boyle, Ashton Woodard, and Celia Kline all averaging about 14 points per game.

With just two more games in the regular season, all of division three is looking at our team. The Pios are currently favored in HCAC. However, in the past, that has been far from a guarantee. The ladies wrap up conference play this Wednesday in a rematch against Franklin at 7 pm in the Beck Center.  The winning streak is on the line and there are just two regular season games remaining. This is a team to watch. You can view the games live here.

Lit Reveiw: The Spoons in the Grass are There to Dig a Moat

Welcome to Lit Review, where columnist Dominiq Wilson will take apart a series of chapbooks to figure out what works and what doesn’t for the modern reader of poetry. 


The Spoons in the Grass Are There to Dig a Moat is a collection of prose poetry by Amelia Martens. The summary on the inside of the cover describes the 54-page collection as an “encounter with a world at once familiar and strange,” which I interpreted to have a theme surrounding the before, during, or aftermath of a disaster, natural or man-made. This theme was portrayed through multiple narrative perspectives.

My overall interpretation of the collection can be viewed by the book’s title alone. It has a child-like nature to it, but the action of digging a moat vaguely alludes to the trenches used in warfare. I found that many of the poems, especially those that included a recurring daughter character, switched back and forth between an innocent, childlike perspective and a more blunt and realistic, adult perspective. This can be observed in the poem “Postcard from the End”:

“The war was beautiful when it started. Men hung from streetlights, their bodies pressed to poles to catch a glimpse of paper rockets. For each device: a hundred thousand dollar bills were dipped in glue and wrapped around a blue balloon. Pop-pop. Then steady hands readied rockets filled to the brim with gunpowder. A short fuse fit just through the pinhole, and women drank beer when they’d finish their shiftwork building similar bombs across the street. Children danced on broken glass of classroom windows. They sang songs about flowers and plagues.”

I found the daughter character, who I assume to be Martens’s daughter, very interesting, and found myself rereading the poems that surrounded her train of thought the most. I don’t see being stumped by a poem as a bad thing, because interpretation comes in actively seeking to understand it. In understanding some of these poems, I find that the childlike perspective in them is more present, which leads me to assume that the meaning lies within innocent references. “Bedtime” and “Pink Pigs and Orange Horses” showcases this excellently. 

Jesus appeared as a character of sorts throughout the collection, and I enjoyed reading these particular poems—he’s portrayed doing very mundane things. My favorite poem of this type, “In God’s Country,” portrays this perfectly:

“The Messiah works the drive-thru. His fingers tap a touch screen to call up orders of fries, buckets of diet cola, and sides of cinnamon bites. Static voices fill his ears like an ocean. Each demand is translated as a typed command for the team standing over vats of oil boiling in the back.

By his first smoke break, even the hairnet hangs heavy. Out back at the dumpster, he thinks about how to help. How he might offer napkins, thin as onion skins, and sweep the path clear with his palms as he hands over a grease-stained bag.

His window only opens halfway. But it’s enough space for Jesus to look drivers in the eye. Enough time to tell them he knows, they know, we’re all heading uphill to die.”

I am biased in saying that this is my favorite poem because I’ve worked in a drive-thru before. But, I also think that it relates back to the heavenly power Jesus is viewed to have and how he attempts to use it to help us. However, the bleakness of the last sentence deviates from what I know Jesus’s character to be, which I think comes in part from the theme of disaster in this book, as well as the nonplussed attitude of drive-thru employees.

My observation of characters and narrators is heavily reliant on the form of these poems. All of the poems are written in prose style, meaning that they’re formatted to resemble paragraphs and sentences instead of stanzas and lines. As a fan of fiction, it’s almost instinctual to read them as such, but the syntactical difference between standard prose pieces and prose poetry signals the difference in literature. These sentences don’t follow the typical noun-verb rule we were all taught and often reads in a more rhythmic way compared to the average sentence in an essay or young adult fiction novel.

The description of events is almost narrative as well. There are a few poems that address memorable events, such as “Newtown,” which references the Sandy Hook shooting; “Heartwood,” with it’s allusions to the end of the Mayan Calendar (Dec. 26, 2012); “Marathon,” with its semi-obvious references to the Boston Marathon Bombing; and “The Robin Pulls a Thread” which references the clothing factory fire of 2012 in Bangladesh, India.

This collection of poems really makes you think, especially with the difference in perspectives and the recount of notable events. This may not be everyone’s cup of tea, especially if you’re reading poetry at night like me, but I do strongly recommend this book. It’s prose form really helps unfamiliar readers read poetry in a familiar way. In addition to that, I believe that it’s thought-provoking, yet completely enjoyable.

If you’re lucky, you may get a little stumped, but don’t worry too much about it. The Spoons in the Grass are There to Dig a Moat is available in our campus’s library and is also available for purchase online and digitally for under $20. Both options give you plenty of time to work through it.

Lit Review: The History of Chapbooks

Welcome to Lit Review, where columnist Dominiq Wilson will take apart a series of chapbooks to figure out what works and what doesn’t for the modern reader of poetry. 


Before reviewing the medium of chapbooks, I think it’s important that it is understood what a chapbook is, and how they came to be.

Poetry chapbooks in the 21st century are recognized as a small collection of poetry. Though similar to an anthology, chapbooks are typically no longer than 40 pages and can have just as many poems. Often times, a page consists of one poem with all of the content being connected by a common theme of the author’s choice.

These small books originated as single sheets of print often posted to public forums between the 16th and 19th centuries, better known as broadsides. Though they had a civic function, the most popular broadsides were ballads, poetry, folk tales, and imaginative stories. They often reflected the oral history of the areas they originated and included woodcut illustrations due to the illiteracy rates of the time.

Broadsides transformed into chapbooks when the single sheet was folded into fourths, eighths, or sixteenths, then bound together by the purchaser. The woodcut illustrations remained now combined with a few memorable lines. The authors of chapbooks were often unknown, but their subject matter expanded to children’s stories, religious texts, and gossips. These pieces of literature acted as short-lived enjoyment and were often thrown out, reused, or deteriorated from frequent use.

Chapbooks get their name after the nomadic merchants who sold them: chapmen. These merchants, with a less than respectable reputation, were known for selling whatever they could and were important in spreading chapbooks to those without access to printed books.

As the production of chapbooks continued, their subject matter grew to include fiction and non-fiction that captured the politics, stories, and revolutionary ideas of the time. In England, chapbooks had been beaten out as the popularity of newspapers increased, but they continued thriving in Scotland and the United States.

Beginning in the 18th century, chapbooks began to take a political or religious nature; if any were fictitious at all, they were directed towards children. Through the 19th century and into the 20th century, chapbooks became published within toy companies and included ads.

The need for chapbooks declined throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, though they survived as small collections of poetry. They weren’t revived until the 1970s and ’80s in Britain. At this time, chapbooks, zines, and other non-mainstream publications circulated in an attempt to spread punk culture and other niche and sometimes counter-cultural groups. The structure of these chapbooks was sturdier: creators used the Xerox process at home, then bound the pages with staples in a saddle-stitch fashion.

In the 21st century, chapbooks are often used in literary groups. They are typically published by self-publishing writers with letterpress printers or home-printed and hand-bound by the writer themselves. The number of chapbooks printed is often limited, making the artistic quality more concentrated than the average book. However, because the small publication doesn’t qualify as a true publication, chapbooks can be used to showcase skill for possible publications in the future.

The use of chapbooks have drastically changed since their original appearance in the 15th century, but they have survived their transformation and the last seven centuries. Now, small collections of poetry can be found in our library or purchased in a publisher’s library. To find a list of chapbook publishers, please visit the website of the Poetry Society of America. This same site also offers a more extended history of chapbooks, as well as a guide to make your own chapbook. Happy reading!

Students make ‘Valentines for Vets’

The Valentines for Vets event was planned by a group of RAs in collaboration with Military Mission and Lady Veterans Connect. Transy students were invited to Rosenthal Commons to make valentines for active duty military members and local veterans Friday evening.

Aperture: 3.2
Camera: COOLPIX L840
Iso: 800
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