Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Reason Why Computer Turning To Run Slow - People Power Strategy

My computer is slow, an old question always ask by those poeple who dont have the knowledge on how to maintain the speed of thier personal computer. At the present there are many reason why our computer is beggining to slow. First reason because the hardware components wear out or old so we need to change some of the components. Next, maybe we need to change the software or the operating system that make the computer run slow. And the last, maybe the spyware or virus that affected the system of your computer. We can find several ways on how to deal with this reason taht keeping our computer rub slow and we can also find reviews at the present that will provide us help and guide on how to cure this slowing problem of our computer.

My computer is slow, an old question always ask by those people who don?t have the knowledge on how to maintain the speed of their personal computer. At the present there are many reason why our computer is beginning to slow. First reason because the hardware components wear out or old so we need to change some of the components. Next, maybe we need to change the software or the operating system that make the computer run slow. And the last, maybe the spyware or virus that affected the system of your computer. We can find several ways on how to deal with this reason that keeping our computer rub slow and we can also find reviews at the present that will provide us help and guide on how to cure this slowing problem of our computer.

Source: http://www.peoplepowerstrategy.org/reason-why-computer-turning-to-run-slow/

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Rainforest Adventures Plays Up Leadership Team Building with ...

Meeting and event planners use real jungle for business adventures. It?s a jungle out there!

Our Costa Rica parks have added treasure hunts to its team building experiences for meeting planners. The Costa Rica Atlantic attraction (near Braulio Carillo National Park, Gu?piles) and the Pacific park attraction near Jaco, Costa Rica now offer group incentive services for meeting planners and event coordinators in addition to the aerial tram and zip line experiences at each park.

Meeting planners and business event coordinators tell us that their clients are looking for exciting experiences for team building combined with leadership training tools. Our treasure hunts have been touted as great team building exercises, requiring groups to work together to solve puzzles and search out information while in the jungle and have even been nominated as a top meeting activity from meeting planners via the Prevue Visionary Awards!

Each team makes its way through the jungle looking for clues and solving riddles under their handmade banner. The treasure hunt is a terrific metaphor for real life business lessons. It really is a jungle out there and working together is the best way to win! Of course, our rainforest jungle classroom doesn?t have any office cubicles or excel spreadsheets, although the bird watching can be a distraction.


Both the Atlantic and Pacific parks are accessible as a day trip from San Jos?, Costa Rica; provide services in English and Spanish; and offer meal services for groups. Each park has a covered amphitheatre that can be used for presentations. The Atlantic park can accommodate overnight guests on site in eight rainforest bungalows. Eugenia Solano and her team work with meeting planners to integrate the natural setting and aerial tram and zip line experiences into leadership training curriculum.

For more information about Rainforest Adventures meeting experiences, download our Costa Rica team building games document:


Let the games begin!

About Rainforest Adventures

With adrenaline-inducing parks located in Costa Rica (both Pacific and Atlantic), Panama, Saint Lucia, and Jamaica, each Rainforest Adventures location serves as ecotourism attractions as well as wildlife and wilderness refuges. Since 1994, the company has been combining unique rainforest adventures (such as tram rides, bobsleds and zip lines), with exceptional, multi-lingual naturalist guides, giving each guest an educational, adventurous, sustainable and unforgettable rainforest experience. For more information, visit www.RainforestAdventure.com

Source: http://blog.rainforestadventure.com/2012/08/costa-rica-leadership-team-building.html

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Monday, August 20, 2012

92% Farewell, My Queen

If you are expecting a French film chronicling the last days of Marie Antoinette, then you may be in for a slight disappointment. Brilliantly directed by the Benoit Jacquot (who also co-wrote the much less impressive script) and starring Diane Kruger as Marie Antoinette and Lea Seydoux, who plays one of the Queen's readers named Sidonie Laborde, and is also the protagonist of this film (for some reason) "Farewell, My Queen" is advertised as the story of the last days of Marie Antoinette, but it's more like the somewhat muted story of the two months before the "last days" of Marie Antoinette. So, even though "Farewell, My Queen" is a better movie than Sofia Coppola's ill advised, indie rock inspired, "Marie Antoinette", due to the faux-final-days story structure, in conjunction with the fact that "Farewell, My Queen" uses Marie Antoinette as a side character, telling the story from the point of view of Sidonie Laborde (a nobody) this is a film which may have many audiences scratching their heads as to why the need to show this particular moment in the life of Marie Antoinette. As I alluded to above, "Farewell My Queen" chronicles a miniscule portion in time during the last months of Marie Antoinette's reign. However, audiences are not treated to "the good part", or the part they undoubtedly came to see. What I mean by this is there are almost no visuals of the actual Revolution, plus (and more importantly) we don't actually get to witness the final days of Marie Antoinette's life simply because "Farewell, My Queen" curiously plays out through the eyes of one of her ladies-in-waiting. Instead, audiences are forced to sit through a pseudo-love story that focuses not on the very interesting end of Marie Antoinette's reign, but on the minutiae right before it! This film is the equivalent of sitting through the love story of Jack and Rose, with the movie ending just before the Titanic strikes the iceberg. Yes, I am aware that this is a script which was adapted from a critically acclaimed novel by Chantal Thomas, BUT it still doesn't make the story's focus any less misguided. I mean, there are some scenes which do attempt to create a somewhat intriguing love story, an aspect which must be fully accredited to some fantastic mood setting by Jacquot, but in the same vein, this film never rises above said simplistic love story. Side Note: Another issue many audiences will likely come across is how frivolously "Farewell, My Queen" throws its viewers right into the deep end of this story, with little exposition. In fact, the greatest individual flaw which hinders "Farewell, My Queen" will be seen in the audiences immediate realization that neither Jacquot's visuals or the engaging performances (which I will speak about later) are going to give those not formally versed in the players of the French Revolution and the fall of Versailles, the background information they may desperately desire, as this film half-introduces more and more characters of seeming importance. So, do yourself a favor, if you are going to see "Farewell, My Queen" (at the very least) peruse the Marie Antoinette Wiki page before going to see this film. With that said, the visuals (the set design in conjunction with the director) are somewhat breathtaking at times, due to Jacquot making some very brave directorial choices, including tons of long takes which trail behind characters as they weave in and out of crowds, giving audiences an intimate feeling of the atmosphere of late 1700's France, and a few beautifully constructed shots of the landscapes. And I guess it doesn't hurt that the two female leads, Seydoux and Kruger, both give engaging performances. But even if Kruger's interpretation of Antoinette is one of the best I've ever seen and Seydoux is so captivating to watch as she effortlessly takes control of the movie every time she is on screen, there is simply not enough in the story or the writing to give reasoning to the eccentric behavior or motives behind the actions of Marie Antoinette or (more importantly) give a reason as to why Sidonie is so infatuated with her. So, even though, in the latter half of the film (more than an hour in) Jacquot does create an atmosphere which allows these characters to somewhat blossom, many will find it hard to care about a Marie Antoinette story that contains no beheadings. Final Thought: Based on a "last days" plot which attempts to imitate a much better film like "Downfall", even with some spectacular direction and two engaging female performances, "Farewell, My Queen" is nothing more than this year's "My Week With Marilyn", telling a story which focuses on characters nobody really cares about, rather than simply creating a storyline around the life/last days of (in this case) Marie Antoinette. So, even if you are a Marie Antoinette fan, with the overall structure the way it is, "Farewell, My Queen" is nothing more than DVD worthy at best. Follow me on Twitter @moviesmarkus Find more reviews at: movieswithmarkusonline.blogspot.com

August 2, 2012

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/farewell_my_queen/

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Slacker Radio embraces Pussy Riot through 'Protest' station

DNPSlacker Radio embraces Pussy Riot through 'Protest Radio'

There's been plenty of talk about Russian feminist punk collective Pussy Riot in the global media over the past few weeks, but the neon-ski-mask-donning assemblage's music isn't particularly easy to come by here in the States. Streaming music service Slacker is throwing some weight behind the group by adding such government-riling gems as "Putin Wet Himself" and "Kill the Sexist" to its "Protest Radio" station. The station is free and will kick off with one of four PR tracks "for some time," according to the service. You can access the offering below, just make sure you've got some ear holes cut in your own ski mask before you do.

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John Tarnoff: 21st Century Career Reinvention for Boomers (Part 1)

On July 14th, I was asked to give a TEDX Talk for TEDxSoCal in Long Beach, CA (home of the big TED event) on the theme of "The Alchemy of Transformation ... Our Selves, Our Work Places, Our Living Spaces." In looking at this question, it occurred to me that while my professional work is focused on helping the next generation of media content professionals adapt to the amazing and pervasive paradigm shifts introduced by digital technology, here was an opportunity to discuss some of these same paradigm shifts for an audience that I had never really addressed: my own Baby Boomer generation.

While the students that I work with (and the schools they go to) are trying to figure out how to prepare for entering the media industry and developing new careers, the Baby Boomers are on the other side of equation, looking at how to wrap up their careers and transition into what we commonly refer to as "retirement."

The well-known problem for the Boomers (those born between 1946 and 1964), is that, as a generation, we have not prepared for this transition. There are many statistics available here, but the most striking number to me is this one: 80 percent of us have saved less than $100,000 for our retirement. Given the economics of the last five years, and the prospects ahead of us, what this means is that the Boomers are going to have to keep working -- and the problem there is that neither we nor the society at large are prepared for us to remain in the work force.

My point in the TEDx talk is propose some ideas on how to reinvent ourselves in order to maintain our relevance in and relevance to the workforce. We need to start reframing who we are and what we think we're capable of doing, and to reject the idea that old dogs can't learn new tricks.

After all, we have some pretty amazing life experience to draw from. If our kids are actually listening to all of our music (my daughter is currently negotiating vociferously for access to my 600 hundred-album stack of vinyl...), then we can't be all that out of touch. If we were able to piss off our parents and master the art of talking on the phone, doing homework and listening to the radio, we should be able to figure out how to multi-task between Text, Email, Voicemail and Skype while sitting at Starbucks in between meetings.

As I know from working with my graduate students, there's a lot that they know, and there's a lot that they don't know. They and we want and need guidance from one other. It's one big ecology: our wisdom and experience + their digital awareness and limitless passion.

In the midst of so many paradigm shifts that I'm observing in the digital age, one emerges out of this situation that I'd like to share. In the 20th century, we thought of life in three broad stages: Education, Career and Retirement. In the 21st century however, I believe that these three need to be replaced by Self Awareness, Creation, and Service. While this is guidance for young people starting out, it is also an important concept for those of us on the other side of the curve.

In Part 2 of this post, I'll explore that concept in more detail. For now, I invite you to view the TEDx Talk to hear some specific suggestions on how the Boomers can take back some control of our careers as we press on into unexpected and uncharted territory. Hint: The kids can be alright!

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Follow John Tarnoff on Twitter: www.twitter.com/johntarnoff

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-tarnoff/21st-century-career-reinvention_b_1792059.html

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Sunday, August 19, 2012

'Murder, She Wrote's' William Windom dead at 88

By Bruna Nessif, E! Online

Rest in peace, William Windom.

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The television actor, who received an Emmy Award for his work in "My World" and "Welcome to It" and is well-known for his roles on "Star Trek" and "Murder, She Wrote," died in his California home from congestive heart failure on Thursday, according to the New York Times.

Windom was 88.

Real World's Joey Kovar dies at 29

During his early years, Windom joined the army and served as a paratrooper in World War II. He later attended the University of Kentucky, among several other higher-education institutions, and decided to pursue acting.

Windom also appeared on episodes of "The Twilight Zone" and the '60s comedy series "The Farmer's Daughter," where he played a Minnesota congressman, a position served in real-life by his great-grandfather, whom he was named after.

The award-winning actor also landed film roles, including a part in "To Kill a Mockingbird," as the prosecuting attorney who faced off against Gregory Peck's Atticus Finch in court.

Windom is survived by his wife of 37 years, Patricia, and four children, Rachel, Heather, Hope and Rebel.

Remember these other fallen stars

More in TODAY Entertainment

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/08/19/13367497-murder-she-wrotes-william-windom-dead-at-88?lite

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Comments - Internet Marketing & Online Business

Aug 19 2012

When you own a company, you always have to think about new ways to help it grow and get your company name out there. It isn?t an easy task and things of the past like billboards and radio ads are becoming less popular. The internet is the wave for the future and can get your business on track, but first you need to find a company that can help your do that. Find a SEO firm in Utah that can not only help you get your website up and running, but get you at the top of the latest search engines.

The first process they will talk to you about is getting a corporation website. They will sit down with you and get to know what your business is about and how they can best represent that through your website. They will go step by step until it is up and running. A SEO firm in Utah knows the different tips that will help drive a boost in traffic to your website, like making sure that it has keywords throughout the site, and that each page title is a keyword. It makes it so that customers get exactly what they are looking for, and it is easier for Google to rank you higher.

A SEO firm in Utah could work for you because they have learned little tricks of the trade and have know exactly how the search engine process works. Because the internet is the fastest and easiest way to get your company name noticed, you should have a website that is a good representation of your company. By using the SEO (search engine optimizer) technique your company will continue to rise until over the rest of search engines. Search engines like Google and Bing use a ?bot? to scan through hundreds of millions of documents. The bot will then determine what websites to bring up through relevancy and accuracy on the keywords that were searched.

If you are just starting your business, or you have been around for many years, marketing your company online with a SEO firm in Utah is the most beneficial way to market your company because it can reach a great deal of people in just a short amount of time. It is reaching your potential customers 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and is used for just about everything.

Search engine marketing is an investment into you companies future. Still not swayed? Find a SEO firm in Utah that can tell you all about the detail of getting your firm to the top.

Source: http://www.aboutmoray.com/get-your-company-the-growth-you-dream-of-with-a-seo-firm-in-utah

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Saturday, August 18, 2012

Phelps' agent: Leaked pics not an IOC violation

FILE - In this file photo taken Aug. 5, 2012, United States swimmer Michael Phelps speaks during a news conference at the Summer Olympics in London. Phelps' longtime agent, Peter Carlisle, dismissed any suggestion Friday, Aug. 18, 2012, that the retired swimmer may have violated International Olympic Committee rules when provocative pictures for the Louis Vuitton campaign were leaked on the Internet during the London Games. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, file)

FILE - In this file photo taken Aug. 5, 2012, United States swimmer Michael Phelps speaks during a news conference at the Summer Olympics in London. Phelps' longtime agent, Peter Carlisle, dismissed any suggestion Friday, Aug. 18, 2012, that the retired swimmer may have violated International Olympic Committee rules when provocative pictures for the Louis Vuitton campaign were leaked on the Internet during the London Games. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, file)

FILE - In this Saturday, Aug. 4, 2012 file photo, United States' swimmer Michael Phelps holds up a silver trophy after being honored as the most decorated Olympian at the Aquatics Centre in the Olympic Park during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Phelps was honored with a special individual ceremony after concluding his record-breaking career as the most decorated Olympian. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 11, 2008 file photo, Michael Phelps celebrates the gold medal victory in the men's 4x100-metre final at the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Phelps retires with twice as many golds as any other Olympian, and his total of 22 medals is easily the best mark. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Paul Chiasson, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 17, 2008 file photo, United States' Michael Phelps celebrates after winning his 8th gold medal after the men's 4x100-meter medley relay final during the swimming competitions in the National Aquatics Center at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing. Phelps retires with twice as many golds as any other Olympian, and his total of 22 medals is easily the best mark. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)

United States' Michael Phelps swims in the men's 4 X 100-meter medley relay at the Aquatics Centre in the Olympic Park during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, Saturday, Aug. 4, 2012. Phelps retires with twice as many golds as any other Olympian, and his total of 22 medals is easily the best mark.(AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

Michael Phelps retired from swimming with more medals than any other Olympian. Don't expect him to lose any of them because of an ad campaign for Louis Vuitton.

Phelps' longtime agent, Peter Carlisle, dismissed any suggestion Friday that the retired swimmer may have violated International Olympic Committee rules when provocative pictures for the campaign were leaked on the Internet during the London Games.

The IOC, under a provision known as Rule 40, prohibits athletes from promoting non-official sponsors during a nearly monthlong period around the games. Among the possible sanctions: stripplng medals won by an offending athlete.

Carlisle told The Associated Press there's no issue with the IOC because Phelps did not authorize use of the pictures, which were leaked by a source that still isn't known and appeared on several Web sites. In fact, the agent added, there are dozens of similar, unapproved uses of most top athletes' names and images during any Olympics.

"He didn't violate Rule 40, it's as simple as that," Carlisle said in a telephone interview. "All that matters is whether the athlete permitted that use. That's all he can control. In this case, Michael did not authorize that use. The images hadn't even been reviewed, much less approved. It's as simple as that. An athlete can't control unauthorized uses any more than you can guarantee someone isn't going to break into your house."

The ad campaign, which revolves around pictures taken by famed photographer Annie Leibovitz, officially began on Thursday ? the day after the IOC ban ended. Among the pictures: one that shows Phelps in a bathtub, wearing only goggles and a skimpy brief, another that depicts him sitting on a sofa, wearing a three-piece suit and chatting with former Soviet gymnast Larisa Latynina, whose record for most overall medals he broke at the London Games.

"I can't count on every hand in this office the number of unauthorized uses that happen during the games period," Carlisle said. "We uncover them by the dozens. Some are by companies we don't even know. It happens constantly."

Phelps won four golds and two silvers at what he insisted was his final Olympics, raising his career totals to 18 golds, two silvers and two bronzes. The 27-year-old American retired as soon as he finished his final race in Britain.

Carlisle expects his client to still be a force in the world of marketing. Look no further, he said, that the Louis Vuitton campaign, in which Phelps is following other iconic figures such as Sean Connery, Bono and Mikhail Gorbachev.

"In many ways, this is one of the greatest illustrations of how Michael has transcended swimming, and arguably even sports," Carlisle said. "Only global icons are even included in that campaign. If you go through the list of celebrities who've been part of it, it's pretty remarkable."

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-08-17-SWM-Phelps-Ad%20Campaign/id-cadc3c394a4a4fdbb505882136268926

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Relationships Are Now The Backbone Of Internet Marketing ...

In the early years of online marketing, just the fact that you had more know-how than anyone else made it possible for you to generate money on the web. Because of limited competition, online marketers who took steps to benefit from autoresponders and the power of Google Adwords had the potential to generate lots of money. Through the years, web marketing has progressed to the point that it is now imperative to connect in a good way with existing and prospective buyers. Continue reading to discover how relationship marketing can grow your business in many different ways.

Though email marketing is no longer the sole method of keeping in touch with your clients, it remains a crucial aspect of internet business building. The manner in which list building has changed is that it isn?t just about getting as many subscribers as you possibly can. The truth is that anybody who joins your list will also be on many other lists and the aim for you is to ensure your emails are the ones that get read. At present, it can be difficult to get your emails opened, so you need to take steps to be the go to person for your subscribers so they?re going to always open your emails. It?s a fact in life that the more you give, the more you can actually expect to get back. You?ll see that your customers are more prepared to order things that you recommend if you have previously given them valuable information absolutely free.

So if we believe the continued importance of email marketing, we should also accept that social media is transforming the face of relationship marketing. It is a fact that web sites such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn play a vital role in the lives of many people and discussions transpire that can enhance or damage a business online. As internet marketers it can be extremely beneficial to have a presence on these web sites as long as you have the intention to offer a positive experience for people you communicate with. If you interact with people in a manner that encourages their trust, they are more likely to join your email list or click through to your website. This is the aim since then you can convert visitors into buyers through your email correspondence or onsite marketing.

If you increase what you know about these social sites, your method of relationship building will certainly help you to create a devoted list of followers. A lot of internet marketers have done this with success and you can follow in their footsteps by observing the manner in which they make use of these sites. Just like any marketing online, if you learn from those who are already prosperous in an area, you can avoid a number of the mistakes that can be tough to repair.

Relationship marketing on the net is more vital than ever now and the qualities of honesty, trustworthiness and giving value can result in your success online.

There is much to gain by developing online relationships with social media. In this YouTube video I discuss how even traditional networking businesses need to leverage online relatioships.

Source: http://comaral-marketing.com/online-marketing/relationships-are-now-the-backbone-of-internet-marketing

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Irmo SC Real Estate - 1005 Ivy Green Irmo SC 29063 MLS# 317113







Source: http://www.huntllc.com/blog/1005-ivy-green-irmo-sc-29063-317113.html

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Friday, August 17, 2012

persecutionnews: #Christian Kachin refugees fled war in #Burma, now #China wants them to go back, but the #war is still on: http://t.co/vYzk0eCs ^rm

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Source: http://twitter.com/persecutionnews/statuses/236565576485593089

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ANNIVERSARIES: Claude Debussy Born 150 Years Ago | Dusty ...

Born August 22, 1862 in St.-Germaine-en-Laye, France, Claude-Achille Debussy was a child prodigy pianist who was admitted to the Paris Conservatory at age 10. Now generally considered to have been the greatest French composer, Debussy is proof that great art can come from terrible human beings. He was supremely self-centered and selfish. Two women -- one his wife -- attempted to kill themselves after he ended his relationships with them in cruelly casual fashion; his behavior was so beyond acceptable norms, even by bohemian French standards, that many of his friends turned their backs on him. In the midst of his greatest personal controversy, when he'd left his wife for a married woman and moved with the latter to England for awhile after to escape the constant recriminations, he wrote his biggest masterpiece, La Mer.

But, of course, there's nothing the French enjoy more than a controversy. Debussy's music was controversial as well. His ideas about harmony displeased his professors at the Conservatory, who were, by and large, the French musical establishment of the era. Harold Schoenberg writes, "In Guiraud's composition class he would sit at the piano making up outlandish chords and refusing to resolve them. He was asked by an exasperated teacher what rules he followed. 'Mon plaisir,' Debussy curtly answered." ["My pleasure."]

His talents could not be ignored. Soon he was hailed or reviled, depending on the speaker's perspective, as the inventor of Impressionism, a term from the art world that Debussy didn't like having attached to his music. His use of then-exotic whole-tone, pentatonic, and modal scales, his penchant for parallel fifths and fourths (long a harmony no-no), and his emancipation of dissonance were all revolutionary and influential. He was writing 20th century music by at least 1892, when he began composing his revolutionary orchestral tone poem Pr?lude ? l'apr?s-midi d'un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun). Extreme chromaticism was already familiar from Wagner's Tristan & Isolde, but that was still harmonically determined chromaticism, so Wagner merely strained the bonds of harmony; Debussy broke those bonds.As piano pundit David Dubal put it, "With Debussy, the chord became freed of its necessity to move; a chord became a sensuous experience in itself. With this concept, harmonic progression was no longer required in the traditional sense." Now, however, his works are so established in the mainstream that they're used as mood music.

One can, with just two purchases, get the majority of Debussy's music in superb performances.

Complete Orchestral Music of Debussy: French National Radio Orchestra; Jean Martinon (EMI Classics)

1. La Mer; Nocturnes; Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune; Marche ?cossaise; Berceuse h?ro?que; Musiques pour "Le Roi Lear"

2. Images for Orchestra; Jeux; Printemps (orchestration by Henri B?sser; with Michel Sendrez & Fabienne Boury, piano 4 hands)

3. Children's Corner Suite (orchestration by Andr? Caplet); La Bo?te ? joujoux; Danses sacr?e et profane (with Marie Claire Jamet, harp); Petite Suite (orchestration by B?sser)

4. Fantaisie for Piano & Orchestra (with Aldo Ciccolini); Clarinet Rhapsody (with Guy Dangain); Saxophone Rhapsody (with Jean?Marie Londeix); Khamma; La plus que lente; Danse (orchestration by Maurice Ravel)

This four-CD set, which includes (as annotated above) some additions to the Debussy canon achieved through orchestral arrangements of piano works (though not all that exist), was recorded in 1973-74 and ever since has set the standard in Debussy performance. (Parenthetically, consider how different the orchestrations by others sound from Debussy's own. By the way, not noted above are the orchestrators of pieces when they are the only version, such as the Saxophone Rhapsody [sketched by Debussy, completed by Jean Roger-Ducasse). The orchestra plays with French lightness and sports some of the distinctively tangy timbres of old-time French orchestras without overdoing it. At the helm, Martinon (an underrated conductor if there ever was) achieves magical results by combining clear and balanced textures -- no Impressionist mushiness here; the Impressionism comes from Debussy's astutely judged combinations of instrumental colors, not from fuzziness -- acutely precise rhythms and organically contoured flow, and keenly judged structural proportions. Though his degree of control is absolute, he deploys it in a natural, unforced manner, letting the music breath even as he keeps the lines taut. His interpretations of the famous works are so uniformly superb that you really could have just this set and have all the Debussy orchestral recordings you need -- though, since there are other ways of playing La Mer, etc., I will make further recommendations. Still, you can put Martinon's La Mer up against anyone's, no matter how famous, and it is not surpassed in beauty, drama, or integrity.

Debussy Piano Edition (Decca)

And for Debussy's complete piano music, there's now this six-CD box set that combines Jean-Yves Thibaudet's fine set of the solo piano works with the two-piano music played by Alfons & Aloys Kontarsky and Anne Shasby & Richard McMahon (some of it transcriptions of orchestral works), Zoltan Kocsis with the Budapest Festival Orchestra conducted by Ivan Fischer in the Fantasy for Piano & Orchestra, and various other contributions drawn from the Decca and Deutsche Grammophon catalogs. While not the standard-setter that the Martinon box is, it's quite satisfactory on all accounts.

There are, of course, other performances worth discussing. Orchestrally, I'll focus on Debussy's most important work, La Mer (The Sea), subtitled Three Symphonic Sketches. It is as close as he came to composing a symphony. Had he actually called it a symphony, it could have been justified. Like many French symphonies of the time, it is in three movements ("De l'aube ? midi sur la mer" [From Dawn to Mid-day on the Sea], "Jeux de vagues" [Play of the Waves], and "Dialogue du vent et de la mer" [Dialog of the Wind and the Sea]) and is cyclic in form (the first and last movements are thematically tied). While its use of sonata structure is eccentric at best and not really present in some views (as the first movement does not have a recapitulation of its themes), the three movements are emotionally unified and function like a symphony's, and there is definitely more structure than the whims of a tone poem would require. Its depiction of the moods of the ocean is masterful, but never stoops to clich?s. I consider alternatives to Martinon in chronological order.

French Orchestral Music: NBC Symphony Orchestra; Arturo Toscanini (RCA Red Seal)

Toscanini's advocacy of several of Debussy's works, especially La Mer, goes against several Toscanini stereotypes, but there's no denying the extremely high quality of the results. For Toscanini, Debussy (who was just five years older than the conductor) was a modernist, and he seems to revel in Debussy's new orchestral effects. Toscanini's frequent performances did not go unnoticed by the composer, who even granted the conductor permission to slightly alter the orchestration in one spot. There are three recordings of La Mer by the maestro, but the June 1, 1950 studio session in the French Orchestral Music two-CD set is definitely tops. The sense of mystery in the first movement is palpable, and the tautness of the final movement is outstanding. With equally fine recordings of Iberia, the middle work of Images (made the following day), with a lusciously sensual middle movement, "Les Parfums de la nuit" (Fragrances of the Night); a delicate "Nuages" (Clouds), the first of the Nocturnes (3/15/52 concert); and one of the sexiest takes on Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune that you'll ever hear (2/13-14/53 concert with rehearsal patches), this is a set every Debussy fan should own.

Philharmonia Orchestra; Guido Cantelli (EMI Classics)

Cantelli was Toscanini's greatest prot?g?, so it's no surprise that his Debussy is also great, which is not to say he's mimicking the older conductor's style. There's arguably a bit more emotional depth beyond just intensity, and a tad more tonal allure -- and definitely a little better recording quality, though still mono. Also here, also excellent: "Nuages" and "F?tes" from Nocturnes, Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune, and symphonic fragments from Le Martyre de Saint S?bastien. If you don't mind acquiring a ten-CD box to get it, there's a slightly better Cantelli La Mer from earlier that year in the New York Philharmonic's The Historic Broadcasts 1923 to 1987.

Boston Symphony Orchestra; Charles Munch (RCA Living Stereo)

This 1956 recording has a good reputation, and certainly Munch was generally a fine conductor of French music, but I find this performance sonically sludgy, lacking in atmosphere and flow, and quite un-French. It now comes with his Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune.

Chicago Symphony Orchestra; Fritz Reiner (RCA Living Stereo)

In 1960, RCA got a much better La Mer by calling upon the CSO and its autocratic director Fritz Reiner. It has all the drama, organic flow, clarity, and spectacular sonics that were missing from Munch's effort. (It's yoked to two colorful Respighi triptychs, Pines of Rome and Fountains of Rome.)

New Philharmonia Orchestra/Pierre Boulez (CBS Masterworks)

Boulez is another conductor who's supposed to be good in French music but seems to utterly misunderstand La Mer. And it's not what you'd guess coming from him -- an overly dry, intellectual performance lacking flow. Nope, the problem is that he hams it up, lays on the schmaltz, and tries to make it into a Romantic blockbuster. This is part of a two-CD set that also includes Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune, Nocturnes, Printemps, Clarinet Rhapsody, Jeux, Images for Orchestra, and Danses sacr?e et profane; few of them (the last two with the Cleveland Orchestra instead) fare much better. After suffering through this 1974 set, pardon me for not having investigated whether his re-recordings for Deutsche Grammophon improved matters.

London Symphony Orchestra; Rafael Fr?hbeck de Burgos (Regis)

The sensitive interpretations of La Mer, Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune, and Nocturnes recorded in 1988 by Spanish conductor Fr?hbeck de Burgos make me wonder (not for the first time) why he's not better known. I guess subtlety is an oft-overlooked virtue.

Pr?lude ? l'apr?s-midi d'un faune

This was, as mentioned already, the groundbreaking work that made Debussy famous/notorious. As conductors who are sufficiently aesthetically empathetic to Debussy's style to do a good job with La Mer are generally just as good in Pr?lude ? l'apr?s-midi d'un faune, and for that matter sometimes have it included on the same album, owning the above-recommended Toscanini, Cantelli, and Fr?hbeck de Burgos collections and/or the Martinon will have you covered on this piece. However, I am also quite fond of Jean Fournet's lascivious 1960 rendition with the Concertgebouw Orchestra, which can be found on a Belart/Philips CD that also includes pretty good 1969 performances of La Mer and Nocturnes by the same orchestra conducted by Eliahu Inbal.

Nocturnes

Written in 1897-99, this is another triptych, sort of a predecessor to La Mer, even ending with another evocation of the sea. "Nuages" (Clouds) is the delicately tinted first piece; "F?tes" (Festivals) is not the continuously raucous piece one might expect from its title, instead presenting a misty view of an evening celebration in which there is a temporary peak in excitement as a procession approaches, moves through, and fades away; the concluding "Sir?nes" (Sirens) adds women's chorus to portray the mythical temptresses who drag sailors to their deaths in the depths of the ocean. It's most unfortunate that Toscanini and Cantelli skipped the latter movement; it's been speculated that was because of the extra trouble (and expense) of adding the women's chorus.

Claudio Abbado led a classic performance with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, now collected on a bargain set in DG's Panorama series (see the String Quartet entry below for the rest of the program). It ranks among the best thanks to his attention to detail, with his light touch in "Sir?nes" especially welcome. (The wordless-vocal thing, a novelty at the time, has been overused since then, and it takes a sure hand to avoid troweling on the ooohs too thickly.)

Images for Orchestra

Yet another triptych, and its middle work, Ib?ria, is even a triptych itself. This time, though, the pieces are more separate works than related (even if just by mood) movements; Debussy wrote them over a long period of time, finishing the last of them, "Gigues" (Jigs) -- which is played first, and supposed to bring Scotland to mind -- in 1912. The very loose concept that binds the three works is that each conveys an impression of a country, sort of (weirdly, Debussy quotes a French song and a Northumbrian tune -- barely Scottish -- in "Gigues"). The most successful at conveying national flavor is Ib?ria, with its pungent Spanish rhythms. Its sections are "Par les rues et par les chemins" (In the streets and by-ways), "Les parfums de la nuit" (The fragrance of the night), and "Le matin d'un jour de f?te" (The morning of the festival day). "Roundes de printemps" (Round dances of Spring) uses two French songs. Many conductors perform Ib?riaby itself; I've already mentioned Toscanini's wonderful recording (see La Mer, above), and Reiner also excelled in it (on a different album than his La Mer).

Espana: Orchestre de la Suisse Romande; Ataulfo Argenta (Decca)

Argenta died tragically young, but left some dazzling recordings, including this 1957 Images that, of course, figures on this compilation for its middle work but is delicately tinted throughout, with fine control of the orchestra's timbres and phrasing.

String Quartet in G minor

This 1893 work, one of the first Debussy pieces to gain public performance, is transitional. His debt to Franck is clear in his cyclic thematic structure, but the influence of gamelan in the Scherzo points ahead to Debussy's mature style.

Melos Quartet (Deutsche Grammophon)

My favorite available version is the classic Melos Quartet recording from 1979. (Were they not out of print, I would also recommend the warmly Romantic interpretations of the Borodin Quartet [on Chandos, undated but from relatively early in their career] and the Galimir Quartet (on Vanguard].) The Melos recording is best acquired on the Debussy two-disc compilation in DG's Panorama series, where there's plenty of other recommendable Debussy as well (I've already mentioned Abbado's Nocturnes). True, not all the performances are well chosen. The textures in Karajan's 1965 La Mer are thick and clotted; Tilson Thomas's Pr?lude ? l'apr?s?midi d'un faune with the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1971 is slightly bland. (I appear to be in the minority regarding those opinions, however.) However, all the non-orchestral tracks are excellent, in particular helping us cover a few more high spots in Debussy's chamber music. BSO principal flutist Doriot Anthony Dwyer?delivers (from 1970) a ravishing "Syrinx," one of the few solo flute masterpieces; this and the String Quartet are enough to justify the low cost even before the rest of the two-CD set is taken into account. The strange yet wonderful Cello Sonata as rendered in 1962 by Mstislav Rostropovich, with Benjamin Britten on piano, is a compelling performance at the highest level of musicianship. And (looking ahead to the piano works) that Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli's much-admired limpid tones in the first 12 Preludes (1978) and Sviatoslav Richter's sensitively nuanced Estampes (1963) are included makes it even more of a bargain and a convenience.

Sonata No. 1 in D minor, for cello & piano

Sonata No. 2, for flute, viola & harp

Sonata No. 3 in G minor, for violin & piano

?

In 1915, Debussy embarked on a plan to write six sonatas for various combinations of instruments. Travelling place to place during World War I in a search for peace and quiet, he finished these three before cancer slowed his productivity and then took his life. They are surprisingly tonal works, and surprisingly structured, yet still quite distinctive in their use of tonality and sonata form. A famous critic wrote, "?it is the music of a Debussy I no longer know. It is terribly melancholy and I don't know whether one should laugh or cry -- perhaps both?" The critic was the composer himself, well aware that he was creating works drastically different from his usual style. With the benefit of hindsight, we see that in these sonatas he anticipated the neo-classical movement.

Anne Queff?lec & Dominique de Williencourt (Classical.com)

I said there are more French renditions of the Cello Sonata; here's an excellent one that kicks off a nicely programmed set of French works. In the second movement, where the cello part imitates guitar, mandolin, flute, and tambourine, Williencourt does so less eruptively than Rostropovich, less dazzlingly perhaps, but more within the fabric of the piece, disrupting its flow less. Both are valid interpretations.

Kyung Wha Chung/Radu Lupu/Melos Ensemble (Decca)

One of the convenient aspects of the CD era's repackaging of things into CD-length programs is that collections such as this came together, combining performances separated by 15 years with no performers in common. From 1962 comes an emotive rendition of the strikingly dark Sonata for Flute, Viola & Harp by members of the Melos Ensemble (unrelated to the Melos Quartet). The edition I have only mentions harpist Osian Ellis by name; his slightly sec tone keeps his instrument from sounding clich?d. The uncredited members are flutist Richard Adeney and violist Cecil Aronowitz. (The Melos Ensemble is also heard here in perhaps the finest recording of Ravel's Introduction and Allegro.) In 1977, violinistKyung Wha Chung and pianist Radu Lupu joined forces for the Sonata for Violin & Piano and Franck's Sonata for the same instruments, an apt choice since Franck's cyclical deployment of thematic material influenced Debussy in these sonatas.

I am also -- no surprise here -- a fan of flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal's charmingly impulsive 1951 recording of No. 2 with harpist Odette Le Dentu and violist Pierre Pasquier, which seems to be absent from download/streaming platforms but can be found in the four-CD Rampal collection La Fl?te Enchant?e (EMI Classics)

Preludes

Debussy's two sets of 12 Preludes for solo piano (totaling 24, a number that reverberates with Chopinesque significance) were written in 1910 and 1913. By far his greatest gift to the piano literature, they present his evocative music with complete clarity, distilling his style into its purest form. The qualities that led to the Impressionism tag are nowhere more evident. Two perfect examples are "Voiles" (Veils; Book I, No. 2), with its extreme use of the whole-tone scale and then the pentatonic scale, and "Des pas sur la neige" (Footprints in the Snow), which perfectly evokes a quiet winter night. Yet this doesn't mean that these pieces are mushy new-age-type prettiness. One of the most Impressionistic of all, "La Cath?dral engloutie" (The Sunken Cathedral; Book I, No. 10) is quite loud -- even bombastic -- in the middle. And his playful side shines through on "La Danse de Puck" (Book I, No. 11) and the Dickensian "Hommage ? S. Pickwick Esq. P.P.M.P.C." (Book II, No. 9).

Paul Jacobs (Nonesuch)

There have been many superb Debussy pianists, from Walter Gieseking, Claudio Arrau, and Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli to Pascal Rog?, Jean-Yves Thibaudet, and Krystian Zimmerman, for anyone who truly loves the sound of the piano glories in the many subtle effects Debussy created. The late Paul Jacobs (1930-83) ranks high among this company, and this 1978 set is one of the most sensitively shaded recordings of the cycle. He has apt vigor in the lively pieces, but it's in the slower pieces where Jacobs produces the greatest effect. Though he uses especially deliberate tempos in these tracks, his focus is so tight that the music never drags; rather, he uses subtle tonal shadings and exquisite pedal control while giving the notes ample space in which to resound, thus creating a sort of haloed luminescence. The recording quality is an important ally in this, of course; the perspective is close but not dry. With this two-disc set at low mid-price, it is recommendable without the slightest reservation.

Walter Gieseking: Plays Debussy: Historic Recordings 1927-1939 (VAI)

Gieseking's 1953 Debussy Preludes, and EMI's box set of his '50s Debussy, get the most raves, apparently because they're A) on an English label, so English critics worship them; B) are in better sound; and C) are easier to find thanks to being on EMI. And if they were the only Gieseking Debussy we had, I'd be in that chorus. But they aren't: his 1936-39 Preludes are the ones to get. Gieseking's art consisted of a finely honed balance of myriad subtleties: his "touch" on the keyboard, his exquisitely nuanced pedaling, digital (fingers, not 1s and 0s) precision, quantum gradations of dynamics, some of the most luscious legato on record. When he made his EMI recordings, it seems as though age had slightly eroded his touch, so it didn't all come together as magically as on his '30s recordings. Debussy has never sounded more luminous than here, or better lived up to the "Impressionist" label. There's background hiss, of course, but while these recordings aren't as sonically clean as the '50s ones (which aren't exactly flawless themselves), listeners can soon become acclimated to their sound (with the exception of a scratchy "Valse, la plus que lente" from 1927, by far the oldest item here), and it is quite easy to listen past their dimness to hear dazzlingly three-dimensional pianism. Besides both books of the Preludes and that 1927 78, this two-disc set also includes equally stellar renditions of Estampes, Suite Bergamasque, Children's Corner, two pieces each from Images Sets I and II, "R?verie," Two Arabesques, and "L'Isle Joyeuse."

Etudes

Far more austere than the Preludes, and more technically challenging as well, the Etudes (1915) are dedicated to the memory of Chopin, and like the Polish pianist-composer's Etudes, they present technical hurdles in the context of great music, sufficiently varied in mood and elevated in creativity that they are no mere exercises.

Maurizio Pollini (Deutsche Grammophon)

The 1992 recording of this great Italian pianist/modernist projects magisterial coolness even as every difficulty is overcome with elegant ease. (You also get the finest performance of Berg's Piano Sonata.)

Mitsuko Uchida (Philips)

Uchida's 1989 recording, equally adept technically, imbues the music with more passion and poetry.

Paul Jacobs (Nonesuch)

Jacobs's 1976 album of the Etudes is warm and witty, less concerned with awing the listener, with a more flexible rhythmic pulse. Some tracks he draws out much further than Uchida or, especially, Pollini, bringing those pieces closer to the magical world of the Preludes. It now comes with a 1987 concert recording with Gilbert Kalish of the two-piano triptych En blanc et noir (In Black and White).

Suite bergamasque

Written in 1890, this four-movement suite is Debussy's tribute to the 17th- and 18th-century French clavecinistes. I mention it because the third movement is the famous "Clair de Lune." Thibaud and Gieseking have got you covered on the suite, and as an extract, Moravec makes "Clair de Lune" sound positively heavenly. Some others, such as Pascal Roge, rather overplay it, which in the context of the suite distorts the overall proportions as well.

Pour le piano

This 1901 triptych, long in gestation, was Debussy's coming-out party as a composer for piano. It looks backward (to the Classical era) and forward (to his further development of his personal style, hinted at here with some deployment of whole-tone scales), and most of all it aims to dazzle the listener. The opening Prelude is brilliantly flashy; the middle Sarabande is affectingly archaic; the closing Toccata even more brilliant than the opening.

Ivan Moravec (Philips)

The Moravec volume in Philips' Great Pianists of the 20th Century series includes his 1969 recording of Pour le piano, with the most luscious and brooding Sarabande you'll ever heard. Nor does he stint on the virtuoso fireworks of the outer movements. (More on Moravec below.)

Images & Estampes

Not the same as the Images for Orchestra, these are three earlier triptychs for solo piano. Two-thirds of Images (1894) went unpublished in Debussy's lifetime (its second piece was published in a magazine, then revised and used in Pour le piano (1901)). For decades residing in the private collection of pianist Alfred Cortot, it was not published until 1978, and has rarely been recorded even since then. It is a bit of a transitional work, its gestures less revolutionary than in his later works. Book I (1905) and Book II (1907) are fully in Debussy's mature style. Coming between them, the triptych Estampes (as in ink stamps), published in 1903, is believed to contain some earlier works. It is especially notable for its first piece, "Pagodes," which directly imitates the sound of gamelan, complete with use of the pentatonic scale. There is Orientalism as well in some of the Images, most clearly No. 3 of Book II, "Poissons d'or" (Goldfish), inspired by the Japanese lacquer plaque that is on the cover of Jacobs's album.

Paul Jacobs (Nonesuch)

Jacobs's 1979 LP featured the first American recording of the 1894 Images. He presents it, Estampes, and Images, Books I & II in their publication order. In all four sets, he plays with grace and poetic feeling.

Ivan Moravec (Vox)

The superb Czech pianist Ivan Moravec recorded Images, Books I & II and Estampes in 1982, also including a Prelude, Book I No. 6, "Des pas sur la neige" (Footsteps in the snow). His touch is exquisite, and his presentation even more beautiful and poetic than Jacobs's, or anyone's since Gieseking. His subtle technique is perfectly suited to Debussy, and his 1960s recordings of Debussy for Connoisseur Society (the Pour le piano recommended above was originally on that label), briefly reissued on CD by VAI, are delightful. It's easier to find the LPs than the CD; there has been no download release yet, alas.

By the way, there is one set of Debussy piano works I feel obliged to warn you against, especially if you go into this thinking that a French pianist will have an edge in this music. There was a two-disc set on Sony Classicalin France of 1950s recordings of the complete Preludes, ?Estampes, ImagesBooks I & II,"L'isle joyeuse,""Masques," Children's Corner, and TwoArabesquesby Robert Casadesus. His tone is ugly,he favors fast tempos with no expressiveness, andthere's distortion at higher volumes. It's the worst Debussy playing I've ever heard (not counting my own, alas).

Pell?as et M?lisande

In his youth, Debussy had been greatly impressed by Wagner's operas and more than once made the summer trek to Bayreuth. Later he broke from Wagner worship, determined to find his own way. Nonetheless, there is still something of Wagner in Debussy's operatic style, specifically the focus on moving the drama forward. If anything, Debussy did so even more insistently. In his operatic setting of Maurice Maeterlinck's play Pell?as et M?lisande, written and rewritten over the course of almost a decade (1893-1901), there are no arias; everything is a sort of speech-song that somewhat anticipated Schoenberg's Sprechstimme. In a way, it looks back to the very first pre-1600 Italian operas' attempt to revive that era's idea of what ancient Greek theater had been like. As a result, despite the shimmering orchestral accompaniment, most opera fans consider it too dry, too subdued, too unmelodic -- but it has a cult following, and its very esotericism practically guarantees that anyone who makes the effort to record it believes deeply in its merits, which means that though there are relatively few recordings available, most of them are excellent in their various ways.

Ir?ne Joachim, Paul Cabanel, Jacques Jansen,? Germaine Cernay, Henri-Bertrand Etcheverry; Yvonne Gouvern? Chorus, Paris Symphony Orchestra; Roger Desormi?re (EMI Classics)

There can be endless debate over which P&M is the top choice, but it has long been clear that the one indispensible set is this one from 1941, the first complete recording. True, the sound is rather confined mono, with the orchestra at times a bit buried behind the voices, but all the singers understand the demands of the style well and, with Desormi?re, create a most atmospheric performance. The most recent edition adds some historically significant material. Primary in the context of P&M is Mary Garden -- who sang the role of M?lisande in the world premiere -- singing "Mes longs cheveux descendent" from Act 3, with the piano accompanist being Debussy himself. Garden and Debussy are also heard performing three songs from his cycle?Ariettes oubli?es. Granted, the sound is primitive and the surface noise and swish of the 78s sometimes intrude, but isn't that a small price to pay for unimpeachable authenticity? Filling out the album nicely are 1936 recordings of 14 Debussy songs by sung by Maggie Teyte, accompanied by pianist Alfred Cortot.

Other especially recommendable recordings, all in more modern sound, are led by Herbert von Karajan, Claudio Abbado,?Ernest Ansermet, and Bernard Haitink.

Songs

Dawn Upshaw/James Levine: Vasnier Songbook, Ariettes Oubli?es, Baudelaire Poems (Sony Classical)

The Forgotten Songs title that adorns this album is a translation of the well-known "Ariettes Oubli?es," but in fact some of the first dozen pieces here do qualify as "forgotten." Until this release, the 12 songs Debussy wrote for soprano Marie-Blanche Vasnier while he was still a student had never been recorded as a group in Debussy's order and in the original versions (the collection, which also contains a vocal duet not included here, was not published during Debussy's lifetime, but he later revised some of the songs), so on that basis alone this is an interesting as well as generous program. Upshaw handles the coloratura writing well -- it requires some impressive vocal nimbleness in the upper register. Her cool, understated style (always so attentive to the words she's singing) is also well-suited to two later song sets, which are much less florid but also more profound. This album offers a good cross-section of the French composer's song output -- the early works, then the six Verlaine settings from the next period of his life (though their later revisions, from when they were first published as a set 15 years after their first appearance, are used here), and then the fully mature Baudelaire songs, still from the same decade (the 1880s) as the other two sets yet with much richer harmonies. Levine proves an extremely sympathetic and sensitive piano partner throughout this delicious album.?-?Steve?Holtje

steve-holtjeMr.?Holtje?is a Brooklyn-based editor, poet, and composer. His song cycle setting five of James?Joyce's?Pomes?Penyeach?can be heard?here.

Source: http://culturecatch.com/music/claude-debussy-guide

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Octopuses inspire flexible, crawling, color-changing robots

Scientists at Harvard have recently begun developing flexible robots from elastic plastics and silicone rubbers that crawl along using compressed air forced in and out of many tiny channels running through its limbs.

By Charles Q. Choi,?InnovationNewsDaily Contributor / August 16, 2012

A soft robot glowing in the dark using chemiluminescence. It is now easier to locate.

S. Morin, Harvard University

Enlarge

A newly developed rubbery, octopuslike robot can change colors to hide or stand out in its environment.

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Scientists at Harvard have recently begun developing?flexible robots?from elastic plastics and silicone rubbers that crawl along using compressed air forced in and out of many tiny channels running through its limbs. These soft robots, inspired by creatures such as starfish, worms and squid, can, in principle, squirm through obstacle courses that might prove challenging or impossible for rigid metallic robots.

As researcher Steve Morin, a materials scientist at Harvard University, investigated squid and their properties to help advance soft robots, "I came across a wonderful video of a squid changing colors on the Web," he said. "They are truly fascinating, inspiring animals. We asked if we could replicate some of the functions of the squid, or simpler animals with simpler strategies for camouflage, with these robotic systems."

To make the new four-limbed robot change color, instead of pumping air in and out of its body, they used a separate layer of channels in which they can stream a variety of liquid dyes in and out. With the right combination of colors, the robot can therefore camouflage itself like an octopus does, or signal its presence like a firefly.

[Color-Changing Artificial Muscles Do Camouflage]

"I think it is very surprising that simple micro-channels can be so effective at camouflage," Morin told InnovationNewsDaily. "One does not have to mimic the background to effectively disguise the robot ... simple colors, patterns and shapes can be very?effective at camouflage, without mimicking the almost-unbelievable sophistication of some living organisms."

The researchers can also adjust the temperature of the dyes, which can also help the robot blend into or show off its background in the infrared spectrum. This feature was also inspired by nature, given how some snakes can sense infrared light using specialized organs.

Developing the color-changing robot took a year. "This quality is one of the advantages of soft machines ? there is very little time between idea and prototype," Morin said.

Although robots that can sneak around like chameleons have a number of obvious devious applications, "we are not just interested in camouflage ? we are just as interested, if not more interested, in display," Morin said. "There are many situations where we want soft robots to be very noticeable ? search and rescue, for example."

In addition, such robots can help scientists test ideas for how animal disguises and displays work.

"What strategies are effective, what strategies are not?" Morin said.

A current limitation of?soft robots?is that they run on external air supplies. In the future, the researchers imagine flexible droids that carry their own compressed air and pumps to enable autonomous operations.

In addition, "we would like to move toward more complex microfluidic systems, ones with valves, for example," Morin said. "This direction will allow soft machines to perform more advanced fluid handling procedures, like those that are important for sampling the environment, hazardous sites, places where people do not want to work or it is dangerous for them to work."

Morin, with George Whitesides and their colleagues, detailed their findings in the Aug. 17 issue of the journal Science.

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/o6ERRdNJW_g/Octopuses-inspire-flexible-crawling-color-changing-robots

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