Cited: Galloway, Steven. The Cellist of Sarajevo. Alfred A. Knoph Canada: Alfred A. Knoph, 2008…
Ann Petry’s short fiction “In Darkness and Confusion” is set in 1940s Harlem, New York. The United States is involved in World War II, which was the first war to initiate the Draft in the US. Although New York is in the Northern part of the country, racism is just as alive at is in the South, just not as brutal. Riots break erupt throughout the city as the result of racial incidents. Ann Petry incorporates historic events of this time into her fictional story “In Darkness and Confusion”.…
Antonin Dvorak began composing during a time when nationalists from many states were attempting to have music of their own. The world relied heavily on Germanic music for a long time, so composers were being tasked with trying to create new music for the non-germanic states. Dvorak was among these commissioned. His compositions were best known for being able to create a national style through the use of folk songs. The pieces he wrote, that incorporated the folk songs of the Slavic people, gave him much fame. This gave him the recognition he needed to be commissioned to try and create a national style for another nation, the United States. He was given a job in New York where he composed his 9th Symphony, the New World Symphony, his most popular work. This paper will discuss the events in Dvorak’s life got him the job and influenced the New World Symphony.…
Leroy Anderson started music at a very young age, with his mother Anna, a church organist, teaching him piano “as soon as his feet could reach the petals.” By the age of twelve, Leroy had composed his first piece. By age eleven, Leroy was taking music lessons at The New England Conservatory of Music. His first composition was A Minuet for String Quarter and received a year’s scholarship to study harmony with his piano instructor, Floyd Dean.…
George Gershwin was an American composer and song writer of the early 19th hundreds. He was born on sept 26 1898 in Brooklyn New York to parents of Russian descent and would eventually become a composer of jazz, opera, and popular songs for the stage and screen. Gershwin began playing piano professionally in several New York night clubs after he dropped out of school at the age of 15. He began his career as a “song plugger”. A “song plugger” was a vocalist or a piano player who was employed in the early 20th century to promote and help sell new sheet music. This is how “hits” were advertised before quality recording were available.…
pain throughout the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel. A young Jewish boy who suffered through concentration camps during the Holocaust. This caused Elie and his father's relationship to change. Their relationship changed from not so close, to close, then to Elie being relieved when his father passes away.…
World War II has given way to one of the most horrific events in the history of mankind: the holocaust. The holocaust was genocide of Jews, homosexuals, mentally handicapped, crippled, and gypsies. The holocaust killed more than six million Jews alone. Hitler, the leader of the German empire, and his army of Nazis and SS troops carried out the ruthless actions of the holocaust. Elie Wiesel is a Jew who went through the terror of the holocaust and its concentration camps. He tells his story in his book Night. Night reveals how Wiesel lost his family, faith, and innocence to the evil of mankind during the holocaust. Wiesel believes it is important for people today to read this book because they need to be shown how important it is not to keep silent and let something like the holocaust happen again. I agree with him.…
Night is a book by Elie Wiesel about his experience at the concentration camps and what he had to go through during; physically and emotionally. Elie is wracked with guilt at having survived the Holocaust, since his family did not. It also talks about his struggles to stay sane and how he questions his faith in God, since he is letting The Holocaust…
Bad things happen to good people. Tragedy takes an emotional toll on everyone involved. Situations like loss or being exculpated often leave a person feeling hopeless. Therefore, just because someone physically survives a tragedy doesn’t mean they aren’t scared emotionally.…
George Gershwin is still a prevalent composer who holds high acclaim in the music world and has shaped the way music is written…
This paper will briefly discuss some of the music of Miles Davis and Steve Reich. While both of these composers were instrumental in the development of the kinds of music they composed and played, they have very different sounds. Steve Reich created minimalist music, while Miles Davis created jazz.…
The prisoners of concentration camps faced and witnessed death daily, and so their primitive survival instincts became so strong over time that their own life mattered more than their family or anyone else's. They would do anything to survive. Night, by Elie Wiesel, is a memoir about his life in concentration camps during the time of the holocaust. Before going to the concentration camps, Eliezer is a normal boy with a loving family who would do anything for him, and he would do anything for them. Throughout his experience during the Holocaust, he witnesses prisoners sacrifice others, even family members to help ensure their survival. Elie too at times thinks of participating in these events with his own father. The harshness and horrendous environment of the Holocaust and its concentration camps led the prisoners to fight for survival. "In this place, it is every man for himself, and you can not think of others. Not even your father. In this place there is no such thing as father, brother, friend. Each of us lives and dies alone. (110) All of these moments of cruelty are provoked by the conditions the prisoners are forced to endure. In order to save themselves, these sons sacrifice their fathers, and their fathers sacrifice their sons. Thus throughout the story, the characters self-preservation is shown in many different ways.…
This is an amazing energetic piece by the presented of these instruments: piano, cowbell, timpani, maracas, voices (soprano, alto, tenor, and bass). The tempo throughout the piece are rallentando and fast tempos. The piece sounded strong, powerful, harmonizing in between the instrument, but also chilling at the sacred movement where it got slow and a bit softer. Overall, the dynamics where mezzo forte, forte, tenuto, crescendo, and sforzando. The word that have been repeated the most throughout the piece was “silliza” with a loud (forte) by the voices singing. I have enjoyed this piece and love it because it sounds really energetic, strong, happy, fun, and exciting. In my opinion, this is an good ending song where all the choirs get to sing together before the concert…
The Holocaust changed the lives of many people and survivors and had many adverse effects. Some began to question their faith in their beliefs and even questioned their god. They pondered upon the thought of how God could sit idly by and allow the atrocious actions committed within their own homeland be unjustified. Those that survived have many terrifying stories to tell. Many survivors are too frightened to tell their story because their experiences are too lurid to express in words or even comprehend. One of Wiesel's main objectives in writing Night is to remind readers that the Holocaust occurred, and hopes that it will never happen again. Night themes include the inhumanity of humans toward others and how death can cause potent harm to one’s psyche. In Night, Elie Wiesel uses many literary devices such as Tone, Imagery, and Repetition to portray the acts of death and inhumanity as well as their traumatizing effects.…
Goodbye to Berlin (1939) is a fictionalized memoir set in Weimar Germany and written by Christopher Ishwerwood. It is semi-autobiographical, following the authors travels through Berlin in the pre-nazi era and the people he meets along the way. During this time, the author was making a precarious living teaching English and becoming a firsthand witness to the Nazi's rise to power and the beginnings of the Third Reich. The book functions as a collection of short stories collected over the years of 1930 to 1933. It was also adapted into a play called “I am a Camera”, as well as the award-winning musical Cabaret. Isherwood himself takes on the role of the main character, and we see the novel's events and characters from his point of view. The characters focused on in this novel include the 19-year-old cabaret singer Sally Bowles, a struggling gay couple named Peter and Otto, a Jewish man named Bernard Landeur, and various other characters that the author encounters. Note that most, if not all, of these characters are of demographics that would have been especially vulnerable during Nazi Germany. He states that the four characters of Peter Wilkinson, Sally Bowles, Otto Newak, and Bernard Landeaur are…