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David Charles Haines (born on 4 February 1956) is an English composer and songwriter. He was trained at Bristol University, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and at the Banff School of Fine Arts in Canada. Haines mostly works with community music groups, amateur theatrical societies, schools, colleges and pre-schools. Haines created Singtastic to allow access to his songs which also includes downloadable teaching material. Three of his music theatre works have received professional productions and his concert songs have been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and performed at such venues as the Carnegie Hall in New York and London's Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room. In recent years he has written works explicitly aimed at creating enthusiasm and interest in science through song.
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Haines chooses to share his knowledge of science through song. Haines uses song to communicate his enthusiasm for the knowledge and discovery that science opens up.
Lifetime and Powers of Ten are just two expressions of that passion for science. Both are science oratorios which have been performed by choir groups made up of more than 400 multi-generational members in Devon UK and Massachusetts USA, the most recent performance having taken place on 4 April 2009 at the first San Diego Science Festival in California, USA.
The Lifetime Project
Haines is passionate about science and incorporates scientific themes into many of his works. He created the Lifetime Project to explore the science of life and evolution. The original project based in and around Teignmouth in Devon, England, involved over 500 children from 13 schools, and 50 members of a specially-formed community choir. The project included commissioning 17 songs and the collaboration of another 10 new songs. Concerts, public lectures, songwriting workshops, and artists’ workshops also made up portions of the project.
Powers of Ten
This project is a 101-minute choral work that explores the scales of the universe from sub-atomic to cosmic. It comprises 21 musical selections which are subtle and sophisticated while lyrical and engaging.
Commissioned in 1999 by Dawlish Academic Council, the Powers of Ten lead to three performances involving 9 schools and around 400 children to audiences of 1500 people.
Individual songs have been performed many times since, and in April 2008 the whole work was performed by North Cambridge Family Opera Group as part of the 2008 Cambridge (USA) Science Festival.
In December 2008 it was performed in Ivybridge in Devon, UK with two community choirs and around one hundred children and teenagers from three local schools.
A further performance is anticipated at the San Diego Science Festival 2010.
The Great Plant Hunt was in collaboration with Kew Botanical Gardens, a project funded by the Wellcome Trust. This has led to further work for Haines. He is currently negotiating an 'Artist in Residence' project for the autumn 2009. Funding has already been earmarked but the precise details of when and what are still being decided.
Camp Quest was founded in 1996 in the United States. In the summer of the 2009 Camp Quest made its first appearance in the UK. It is a summer camp specifically aimed at children from atheist families, sponsored by Richard Dawkins. Camp Quest involved children doing activities that summer camps offer, but they also had a seminar on Darwin and evolution. Haines taught campers the lyrics to several of his songs with topics related to Charles Darwin and discovery.
Tremendous Journey
Tremendous Journey is a new program of songs and readings about evolution. This set will be performed at the British Science Association Festival at Guildford and Milton Keynes Science Festival at the Stables Wavendon in 2009.
Haines has also written many musical theatre pieces for adults and children and has had many productions both here and in the USA. Many of his music theatre works - such as "Granny Galactica" and "The Chronovirus" have scientific themes similar to his other music.
Below is a list and brief description of his theatrical productions:
In early 2009 Haines launched Singtastic.com, an online music publisher offering a wide range of support materials and resources for each song featured. Singtastic.com is a unique style of online music publishing. It offers a whole portfolio of materials for each song: tutor and sing-along videos and audio tracks, video chats about the song, downloadable PDFs of the lyrics and sheet music in a wide range of formats.
The web resource is aimed at students, educators, children, and people wanting to learn more about science anywhere in the world. Singtastic is designed for educational institutions wishing to expand their cross-curricular work or for home educators seeking materials that will both inspire and inform. The site is designed to be affordable and for a low price one can access a vast amount of downloadable resources.
Darwin Jazz Suite is Haines’ first Jazz recording as well as his first CD commercially available on Amazon.com, iTunes, etc. Haines functioned as composer for the songs on this CD while Singtastic was the publisher. The Darwin Jazz Suite was performed by the Sue Kibbey Jazz Quartet. Jazz musicians Sue Kibbey (singer) and Lewis Riley (pianist) developed their jazz interpretations of some of Haines' Lifetime Songs (also known as his Darwin Songs) during the summer of 2008 and recorded the album with bassist Mike Thorn and drummer Dave Sheen in September 2008.
1. http://davidhaines.co.uk/index.html
2. http://www.singtastic.typepad.com/
3. http://singtastic.com/
4. http://familyopera.org/prod/csf2008/index.html
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Name | Haines, David |
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Date of birth | 4 February 1956 |
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David (Hebrew: דָּוִד, דָּוִיד, Modern David Tiberian Dāwîḏ; ISO 259-3 Dawid; Strong's Daveed; beloved; Arabic: داوود or داود Dāwūd) was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the second king of the United Kingdom of Israel and, according to the Gospel of Matthew and the Gospel of Luke, an ancestor of Jesus. David is seen as a major Prophet in Islamic traditions. His life is conventionally dated to c. 1040–970 BC, his reign over Judah c. 1010–1003 BC,[citation needed] and his reign over the United Kingdom of Israel c. 1003–970 BC.[citation needed] The Books of Samuel, 1 Kings, and 1 Chronicles are the only sources of information on David, although the Tel Dan stele records "House of David", which some take as confirmation of the existence in the mid-9th century BC of a Judean royal dynasty called the "House of David".
David is very important to Jewish, Christian and Islamic doctrine and culture. In Judaism, David, or David HaMelekh, is the King of Israel, and the Jewish people. Jewish tradition maintains that a direct descendant of David will be the Messiah. In Islam, he is known as Dawud, considered to be a prophet and the king of a nation. He is depicted as a righteous king, though not without faults, as well as an acclaimed warrior, musician, and poet, traditionally credited for composing many of the psalms contained in the Book of Psalms.
David Charles Haines (born on 4 February 1956) is an English composer and songwriter. He was trained at Bristol University, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and at the Banff School of Fine Arts in Canada. Haines mostly works with community music groups, amateur theatrical societies, schools, colleges and pre-schools. Haines created Singtastic to allow access to his songs which also includes downloadable teaching material. Three of his music theatre works have received professional productions and his concert songs have been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and performed at such venues as the Carnegie Hall in New York and London's Wigmore Hall and Purcell Room. In recent years he has written works explicitly aimed at creating enthusiasm and interest in science through song.
Haines chooses to share his knowledge of science through song. Haines uses song to communicate his enthusiasm for the knowledge and discovery that science opens up.
Lifetime and Powers of Ten are just two expressions of that passion for science. Both are science oratorios which have been performed by choir groups made up of more than 400 multi-generational members in Devon UK and Massachusetts USA, the most recent performance having taken place on 4 April 2009 at the first San Diego Science Festival in California, USA.
Wolfgang Ketterle (born 21 October 1957) is a German physicist and professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). His research has focused on experiments that trap and cool atoms to temperatures close to absolute zero, and he led one of the first groups to realize Bose-Einstein condensation in these systems in 1995.[1] For this achievement, as well as early fundamental studies of condensates, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001, together with Eric Allin Cornell and Carl Wieman.
Ketterle was born in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, and attended school in Eppelheim and Heidelberg. In 1976 he entered the University of Heidelberg, before transferring to the Technical University of Munich two years later, where he gained his master's diploma in 1982. In 1986 he earned a Ph.D in experimental molecular spectroscopy under the supervision of Herbert Walther and Hartmut Figger at the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching, before conducting postdoctoral research at Garching and the University of Heidelberg. In 1990 he joined the group of David E. Pritchard at the MIT Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE). He was appointed to the MIT physics faculty in 1993. Since 1998 he has been John D. MacArthur Professor of Physics. In 2006, he was appointed Associate Director of RLE, and began serving as director of MIT's Center for Ultracold Atoms.
John Keats ( /ˈkiːts/; 31 October 1795 – 23 February 1821) was an English Romantic poet. He was one of the main figures of the second generation of romantic poets along with Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley, despite his work only having been in publication for four years before his death.
Although his poems were not generally well received by critics during his life, his reputation grew after his death, so that by the end of the 19th century he had become one of the most beloved of all English poets. He had a significant influence on a diverse range of later poets and writers. Jorge Luis Borges stated that his first encounter with Keats was the most significant literary experience of his life.
The poetry of Keats is characterized by sensual imagery, most notably in the series of odes. Today his poems and letters are some of the most popular and most analyzed in English literature.
John Keats was born on 31 October 1795 to Thomas and Frances Jennings Keats. Keats and his family seemed to have marked his birthday on 29 October, however baptism records give the birth date as the 31st. He was the eldest of four surviving children; George (1797–1841), Thomas (1799–1818) and Frances Mary "Fanny" (1803–1889). Another son was lost in infancy. John was born in central London although there is no clear evidence of the exact location. His father first worked as a hostler at the stables attached to the Swan and Hoop inn, an establishment he later managed and where the growing family lived for some years. Keats believed that he was born at the inn, a birthplace of humble origins, but there is no evidence to support this. The Keats at the Globe pub now occupies the site, a few yards from modern day Moorgate station. He was baptised at St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate and sent to a local dame school as a child.