Entries from October 2005
October 5th, 2005 · Comments Off on 2005 Nobel/IgNobel linkage
Even more full-circle 2005 Nobel strangeness: 2005 Physics Nobel laureate Roy Glauber is a longtime star of the IgNobel Prize ceremonies.
Frank and I will be watching via this year’s Ig Nobel webcast (October 6) from a mountaintop in Bavaria (with good wifi.) And yet, despite our distance in physical space, Frank will have his own connection to the IgNobels this year for the very first time. Not a talking head, not a walk-on part, but (as the seasick Frenchman replied when the steward asked if he had dined) “Au contraire.”
All fans of funny ha-ha and funny peculiar should watch the IgNobels!
Tags: Science
October 5th, 2005 · Comments Off on Nobel full circle: October 5, 2005
One year ago, Frank got the Nobel phone call at 5:30 a.m. This year, one of those phone calls went to Roy Glauber, a Cambridge neighbor.
It’s full circle time–and, what a wonderful, funny (peculiar and ha-ha) year this has been.
Frank’s been invited to far more places than he could possibly go–and we’ve gone to far more of them than we probably should have. But how could we regret, despite battered suitcases now, and sometimes sore feet, all the places we’ve seen, the new things we’ve discovered, and wonderful people we’ve met?
Thank you, Nobel Foundation, for making this possible. And thank you, dear blogreaders all, for sharing this journey.
Tags: Nobel
October 5th, 2005 · Comments Off on Butch from Midland Seed ‘n’ Feed…
…our next Secretary of Agriculture, maybe?
Warning: swallow your coffee and put down that can of cola before clicking to see more of Mr. Sun’s US Cabinet predictions (“Veterans Affairs: Don’t really know any, ask McCain”) based on recent news reports.
Bonus link: Somebody funny is blogging as Harriet Miers.
Tags: Editorial
October 5th, 2005 · Comments Off on Vienna was sweet…

Very, very, very, very, VERY (!!!!) sweet…
Tags: Wide wonderful world
October 4th, 2005 · Comments Off on Deciphering the technology of Mozart
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“It is the technology that makes the music. So the search for the music begins with the technology.”
Univ.Doz. Mag. Alfons Huber Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
An arc of glue on a soundboard.
Three different but similar harpsichords, all with their damping boards mysteriously vanished.
Metal-working tools of the sixteenth century.
Early music by Haydn that uses chords your fingers can’t span on a modern keyboard.
These are the kinds of clues Alfons Huber deciphers to repair and recreate ancient musical instruments for the Vienna Kunsthistorisches Museum’s historic collection. |
A world-class expert on the 600-year history of the Austrian harpsichord, Professor Huber also creates lovely replica instruments so that museum-goers can feel their “action”–and hear the sounds that Haydn and others imagined as they composed. The differences can be subtle or striking. Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata sounds amazing on a period instrument! Later, Frank got to try out Mozart’s Sonata in C Major on the Mozart-replica keyboard in this picture.
Many thanks to Professor Huber, and to harpsichordist Susanne von Laun, who led us through Hamburg’s lovely historical keyboards, for making this adventure possible! (Note to the learned: please ascribe any errors in my description to bad memory; I was much too enthralled to take any detailed notes.)
Related webpages:
If you go: The display of ancient musical instruments is not in the Kunsthistorisches Museum itself but in the Neue Burg nearby (in the same building as the Nationalbibliothek.)
Tags: Wide wonderful world
October 2nd, 2005 · Comments Off on “Hey, Frank, where is your meteorite documentation?”
“In my pocket,” said Frank.
For more on the state of our Vienna adventure, its Flickr album now includes rocks from Mars, a lady poisoner, an Olympic discus-thrower, and a keyboard Mozart might have played.
Tags: Wide wonderful world