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5/04/2019 11:53 am  #1


Fifty Things

You may know or not, I am a native to Colorado. My ancestors settled here in 1859, so the roots go deep. 

A mission I am on is the Fifty Things project. With blessing of the Chamber of Commerce and numerous individuals, I am showcasing fifty out of the way, unique places in Colorado, but not the national parks or monuments, or parks like Red Rocks and Garden of the Gods, and Air Force Academy which need no publicity. 

I do the stills, videography, narration if there is such, and my real baby, the music. 

Music must capture the spirit or essence of a place. The Calhan Paint Mines for example is a location used by Native American cultures for 9,000 years. The first music is peaceful and both serene, stark, and fragile. The low alto flute that plays theme is decidedly Native American. It is suspended in a matrix of "distant voices" like echoes of a long forgotten past. A Celtic harp, hammered dulcimer, and psaltery provide rhythm, and acknowledges the European Americans who settled here.

A fabulous bird heard in the music is the western meadowlark. His little motif would be a melodic dictation test from hell in a music theory-ear training class. Very complex, and puts a great demand of virtuosity on the flutist - piccoloist who plays it. You walk into a place that simply looks sacred in every direction, in every imaginable way. Its like in the calm of the prairie, you can still see the Native cultures mining the colorful clays for paint. 

The second theme is fierce, and again, very Native American. That reflects the fact, sometimes the paints were used for war- skin adornment when Arickaree and Pawnee had a dispute. Or Cheyenne and Arapahoe. All those tribes and more mined paint from the clays of Calhan. 

Best time to visit the paint mines is on a cool, overcast day. The grey skies accentuate the richness of colors in the clay- yellow, orange, red, purple, white, brown, black, and grey. Not just the raw colors, but dozens of different shades of them, all capped beneath an overlying tombstone of pure white quartz sandstone. In summer you also see the prairie wildflowers, and when there is water in the stream, you hear the din of prairie frogs in the evening. 

People overlook the prairie. Pass across the plains in a hurry to reach the mountains. This is a reminder that the prairie has a great beauty all its own, starkly different from the mountains, and like nowhere else. If you slow down and stop long enough tor a look, you will be rewarded and blessed. 

One last thing about writing for the orchestra. This is the most colorful and rich ensemble in music. It is a time tested combination of instruments and sounds that span the range of human emotion and experience. I often use non traditional instruments in the ensemble, like the alto flute and native American drums heard here. The strings are transparent like water colors. The woodwinds are rich and thick like oils. The brass are vibrant and piercing like acrylics. I think of it less as orchestration, and more as painting. 




 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
 

5/04/2019 12:22 pm  #2


Re: Fifty Things

Always beautiful scenery and music !! 

 

5/04/2019 2:30 pm  #3


Re: Fifty Things

Medano Creek is inside Great Sand Dunes National Park. Fifty Things portrays it, not the Great Sand Dunes.
Why Medano Creek?

It is unique. Nothing else like it anywhere in the world. Medano Creek is hundreds of yards wide and only a few inches deep. It skirts the tallest sand dunes in the western hemisphere, at the base of the Sangre de Cristo mountains in Colorado's San Luis Valley. Directly to the south is Little Bear Peak and Sisnaagiinii (Mt. Blanca), and to the north are the Crestones, all more than 14,000 feet tall. The water creates miniature dune dams on the creek bed, which build up in height, creating rippling rapids that suddenly breach the sand dams, tearing everything apart and washing all the sand away in a few moments of "calm," before the cycle begins again.

A person standing in the creek slowly sinks in the sand. How far? Nobody ever tested it beyond their knees. But years ago someone in a jeep drove out onto the creek upstream from the picnic area, and the jeep sank up to its hood before the tow company arrived. The driver was ticketed, fined, and had to pay expense of the excavation and extraction.

The sand is from the bed of a huge alpine lake that once filled the San Luis Valley, during the Ice Age. This is a rift valley, constantly growing wider from geologic forces below. Warm artesian water springs exists all over the valley floor. 

I play the work you hear- titled "Medano Creek." It is a calm, mesmerizing piano work, and a five voice fugue with accompaniment. Theme is played by left and right thumbs, sometimes switching off to LH or RH when a very deep or very high voicing is required. It is constantly shifting, like the sand of the creek. It is very difficult to play because registry of voicing constantly shifts. There are lightning fast big leaps required in both LH and RH, never together, and sometimes at awkward times. Sometimes a trill is embedded in the theme, done by RH thumb and index, while pinkie taps out a displaced theme up to an octave higher. The overall effect is to sound like three hands are playing it- not two. 

( I appreciate what you did. Thank you!)



 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/04/2019 2:59 pm  #4


Re: Fifty Things

The Hanging Flume of Dolores Canyon 

The Hanging Flume was an open water chute (known as a flume) built over the Dolores River Canyon in Colorado. The Montrose Placer Mining Company built the flume in the 1880s to facilitate gold mining.

Some sections of the flume remain attached to the canyon wall, although much of the wood has vanished. Inaccessible sections of the flume remain, and offer visitors one of those "head scratching moments" in contemplation of the industry of man and lengths to which he will go for a "dollar." 

Many technical climbers would find getting to the flume from cliff base above the river, "very difficult if not impossible." Most of it is several hundred feet above the river. In some places a rappel is possible from up top- where the flume is within 50 meters (166 feet) of the top. And yet the crews who put it up there not only had to climb it, but work there, drilling holes in the sandstone for anchors, and a frame strong enough to carry a four foot deep, six foot wide trough of water to where that was needed. 

The Montrose Placer Mining Company was formed to mine gold from placer deposits along the Dolores River. Hydraulic mining, a popular method of exploiting placer deposits, required water to be efficiently transported, often using wooden flumes to maintain the necessary volume and pressure. The flume connected with a six mile long ditch, both designed to provide water for miners in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado. Construction of the Hanging Flume took three years, beginning in 1887.

Approximately 24 workers participated in the build, suspended from ropes onto the cliff face. A derrick may also have been used. The construction used 1.8 million board feet of lumber and ended up with a total cost over $100,000. The timber used was mostly Ponderosa pine, a local tree, and it was supported using iron rods. The completed flume was approximately 12 miles (19 km) long and up to 75 feet (23 m) above the river. It began on a dam on the San Miguel River above Uravan, Colorado. The flume's opening (the headgate) no longer exists, and the connecting ditch has been filled. The actual wooden flume was 6 feet wide and 4 feet deep. When in use, it conveyed 80,000,000 gallons of water each day. The flume was only used for three years before being abandoned. The reason was that the mine itself was closed after the discovery that most of the gold was unrecoverable, and the investors in the project only made $80,000 after investing over $1,000,000 into the mine and associated engineering works. After the closure of the mine, local residents reused the timber.

The music is a frolic (More "same sounding 1930s horror film music." ROFLMFAO!) Videography is by drone, rappel to the flume for a close up look, and from the water flume at Elitch's in Denver- riding a flume in an amusement park. It is fun music. Western and adventurous, always leading to a new and unexpected scene around the next bend. IMO it is exactly proper and fitting. "Jazz" or "Nashville" Country or any other style would be completely out of place, out of character. It would be noise to fill in. "It" doesn't get that music must fit its subject. You can't just write or make "pretty." You have to capture the spirit of the place, or thing. 

You'll notice the music suddenly stops without resolution too. Very deliberate. "And then what?" Well, go see for yourself! 



 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/04/2019 3:01 pm  #5


Re: Fifty Things

Again, very beautiful !!

You're quite welcome too.  :-)

 

 

5/04/2019 3:28 pm  #6


Re: Fifty Things

The Flattops Wilderness 

Flat Tops Wilderness Area is the third largest U.S. Wilderness Area in Colorado. 

Trappers Lake, located in the north of the area, was the lake that inspired Arthur Carhart, a United States Forest Service official, to plead for wilderness preservation. The Chief of the U.S. Forest Service designated 118,230 acres (47,850 ha) of the Routt and White River national forests as the Flat Tops Primitive Area on March 4, 1932, to be managed to protect the area’s wild values.

Congress passed the Wilderness Act in 1964, which, among other things, required the Secretary of Agriculture to review the suitability of all primitive areas for inclusion into the national wilderness system within ten years. Following this mandate, the U.S. Forest Service evaluated the Flat Tops primitive area and surrounding forest and in 1967 recommended 142,230 acres for wilderness designation.

Conflict arose over the inclusion in the wilderness proposal of lands adjacent to the South Fork of the White River, near the southwest boundary of the proposed wilderness. Several private and public entities proposed dams and water diversions on the South Fork to facilitate development of rich oil shale deposits to the west.

Timber interests also initially opposed designating wilderness outside the primitive area’s boundary. Conservation groups, led by the Colorado Open Space Coordination Council and including Sierra Club, The Wilderness Society, Defenders of Wildlife, and the National Audubon Society, supported protecting a much larger, 230,000-acre area that included lower elevation forest and lakes outside the primitive area.

On June 5, 1975, the Senate passed a bill sponsored by U.S. Senator Floyd Haskell (D-Colo.) to designate 235,230 acres as the Flat Tops Wilderness Area. The bill passed the U.S. House of Representatives by a vote of 369-1 on December 1, 1975, and was signed into law by President Gerald R. Ford on December 12, 1975. The lands protected as wilderness included the contested lands along the South Fork of the White River, effectively prohibiting the contested dam construction there.

Spring Cave is a large, not completely explored cave in Colorado in the White River National Forest, in the South Fork Valley of the White River, that has been largely cut out by an underground river running through it. It contains a lake several hundred meters inside as well as several caverns only accessible through underwater diving. The cave is free to explore.

There are two entrances to the cave, both at the end of Spring Cave Trail. Most visitors prefer the nearest entrance, an over-two-meter-high passageway. From there one descends through several rooms leading to a permanent ladder, followed by more rooms leading to the river. It is the largest river inside a cave in Colorado. The level of the river rises and falls throughout the year, and can even rise to the level of the cave entrance on rare occasions.

There are several series of rooms above and past the river, a few of which lead to an underground lake. Past the lake lie several sumps which must be passed through diving. The full extent of the cavern and underground waterways in it is still not completely known.

Nearby Rifle Canyon is a world class location for free climbing, with some of the most difficult routes put up anywhere, largely because of the limestone and its terrific handhold and foothold characteristics. We watch two climbers put up world class routes. 

The infamous Devil's Causeway is a strip of land is located in the Flat Tops Wilderness, an area of flattened basaltic domes that rise up from the landscape as vast tabletops — anomalies in a part of Colorado more commonly known for its jagged, pyramidal peaks. The Devil’s Causeway itself is a narrow ridge of running between the drainage of the William Fork River and the White River. It is accessed only by hikers, usually via a trail that begins at Stillwater Reservoir, east of the small town of Yampa and south of Steamboat Springs. It is a six-mile round-trip venture to the causeway or 10 miles round-trip if you continue on a loop that returns back to the reservoir. Along the rigorous route are several spectacular sights, including the peaceful Little Causeway Lake and meadows sprinkled with bright splashes of wildflowers in the summer.

But nothing compares to the thrill of crossing Devil’s Causeway. At 11,800 feet and just four feet wide in places — with sheer drops of many hundreds feet on either side — this venture is not for those prone to vertigo. It is said that nearly everyone who attempts the crossing is quite literally brought to his or her knees, scrambling across the rocky path in a low squat. But for those who conquer Devil’s Causeway, victory is sweet — and rewarded with unparalleled views of the surrounding high mesas and the valleys below.

The music for all this is ABA symphonic form, and opens magical and wondrous, then transitions into a big, bold, heroic, stoic melody, vast and grand like its subject. If you enter the wilderness on horseback, it's like stepping back into the 1870s and 1880s- the "real" west. Just like it was. Romantic. Heroic, So big and spacious you almost can't believe it, and that is just how the music had to be. 

The B section is exploration of Spring Cave. That part is very complex, 20th and 21st Century styles reflecting an uneasiness from being inside somewhere human senses and rationality are constantly challenged by what you can't see, and can see- things for which NOTHING on the surface prepared you. It is at once, disturbing, beautiful, a Stygian gloom, breathtaking, terrifying, and wondrous. 

The A section returns for the Devil's Causeway episodes. 


 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/04/2019 3:38 pm  #7


Re: Fifty Things

La Caverna del Oro Located in Southern Colorado at about 12,000 feet.
---Around 1900 on Marble Mountain, Elisha Horn stumbled across a skeleton clad in Spanish armor. An arrow stuck out of its bony back. A red Maltese cross was painted above a nearby cave entrance (the red cross can still be seen).
---It was left alone until 1920. A 105 year old Mexican woman reported that her family explored it when she was a child. She said there is gold behind oak doors.
---Among finds, are an old hammer, and a rope-bucket-pulley system.
---The Spaniards used the cave in the 1600's. Why? Were the Spanish mining the cave for gold? Did they use it for some other purpose?

Shortly thereafter, the cave and its history fell into obscurity. In 1919, Paul Gilbert, later District Ranger in the Forest, heard wonderful tales from an old Mexican woman, Apollina Apodaca. As he recalled in The Bulletin of the Rocky Mountain Region of the U.S. Forest Service (Dec. 1936): ... She stated that the Spaniards used to get gold from it, and further stated that if one were to descend to a sufficient depth a set of oak doors would be found, and if they were forced open one would find a tunnel leading back into the bowels of the mountain -- and the source of the gold would be found. She further stated that when she was a child they used to take a blanket, wrap it around a heavy stone and throw it down the shaft. In the course of a short time the blanket would be blown back, minus the rock, by the strong winds that come continually from the shaft.

The following spring, Gilbert located the cave. A local newspaper report in 1919 publicized the rediscovery of the cave, complete with new and sensational details – like a skeleton clad in Spanish armor lay chained in a pit inside the cave, an arrow piercing its rib cage.

Many reliable observers, from Carhart and Gilbert onward, report finding, in the 1920s and '30s, old artifacts of unknown provenance in or near La Caverna del Oro. These include a winch, chains, whiskey bottle, jug, timber ladders, shovel, single-jack and a hammer. They have all disappeared or been reduced to fragments, but claims made for some of them purport to establish archeological evidence of Spanish presence. Arrowheads are still plentiful there.

Carl Biaurock, a member of the Colorado Mountain Club, ... explored this cave in 1925, again in 1931, and later in more detail in 1932. On the last date the exploration was the result of several articles ... in the Rocky Mountain News ... in which an old yam was mentioned to the effect that the cave had been investigated in the Spanish explorations in the eighteenth [sic] century; also that it is supposed to have yielded a large quantity of gold and other valuable minerals ... there are no signs of any mineral ... So far as Mr. Blaurock's party could tell

The cave is still there. Very deep, very dangerous. In no way fully explored or mapped. It is known to be 750 feet deep. A cold wind blows through it at all times. Temperature is 36F and humidity 95%. Ice and snow extend from the entrance all the way back to the first vertical drop. The walls are covered with moon milk, and there are speleothems.

The maltese cross outside the entrance has been vandalized. But it isn’t completely gone. Even in the 21st Century, La Caverna del Oro keeps its secrets very well. It is a Colorado legend.

The music is complex, deep, and tense. Somewhat "Spanish," It is gripping, disturbing, unsettling, constructed in large arches which is about the only thing remotely familiar. Deep pits plunge hundreds of feet suddenly, without warning. 



 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/04/2019 4:58 pm  #8


Re: Fifty Things

WOW... So much to watch now...  You've been WICKED busy !!

 

5/04/2019 9:22 pm  #9


Re: Fifty Things

Siagiah wrote:

WOW... So much to watch now...  You've been WICKED busy !!

You bet. I posted a few of the Fifty Things as you see. Each is its own creation. They are decidedly NOT all the same, and if they're 1930s horror movie music, then that decade isn't as bad as implied. A few major composers dabbled inb film score then. Shostakovich, Ravel, Berg.., Grofe, and let's not forget the fabulous Arlen and his fantasy music of the period, Wizard of Oz. 

I posted some samples in case a few curious lurkers want to scratch an itch. 

Fifty Things appear on closed circuit TV in hotels and airports

Here's a funny. Mount Sunflower. 

Technically this is the highest point in Kansas, just three miles from the Colorado border. It has been described as "a place you can watch your dog run away... for three days!" 

Its altitude is 4,039 feet. Its range or massif rises 16.9 feet, and Sunflower is separated by Unnamed 4,038' by 2.2 miles, and rises two feet from the "saddle." That two foot rise led to the "two note music." 








 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/04/2019 9:38 pm  #10


Re: Fifty Things

Yes, I remember that one.   Funny place...

Why are your snow plows on the BACK of the trucks ??

 

5/04/2019 9:44 pm  #11


Re: Fifty Things

Siagiah wrote:

Yes, I remember that one.   Funny place...

Why are your snow plows on the BACK of the trucks ??

That's Kansas... a REPUBLICAN state. In the small towns... no kidding, farmers use their tractors for snow plowin. They clear all the streets, dumping snow on the corners. Then the sidewalks. Then they load the snow onto dump trucks and take it out to the golf course, where there is no grass- just flat prairie plants, and sand greens. 
 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/04/2019 9:51 pm  #12


Re: Fifty Things

Ha Ha Ha…

 

5/05/2019 10:52 am  #13


Re: Fifty Things

The Hanging Lake

Music for this had to be ethereal, delicate, gentle, and breathtaking. The lake is unexpected, and unbelievably beautiful. Below the log, it reaches a depth of 70 feet, but the water is so clear, the bottom appears touchable. Dozens of waterfalls plunge into it, and the cliff is festooned with moss, ferns, and native orchids. Lake bottom is covered with large stalagmites, crystal encrusted with onyx popcorn. The largest native Trout I've ever seen anywhere swim there. 

Magic of this place is endangered. Too many ignorant people hike to see it, and they swim, bathe, and last summer, even spray painted graffiti on some of the rocks. I think anyone who would do that should be boiled alive. 

The family I filmed on the log were all Mexican and spoke no English. I told them repeatedly to get off the log, in Spanish and they ignored me. The woman stuck her tongue out at me. So I immortalized them in this video. 




 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/07/2019 11:13 pm  #14


Re: Fifty Things

Lovely !!  Too bad you couldn't shove 'em into the water, but the kids might have drowned, so bad idea, even though it'd serve 'em right to get soaked to the bone.

Sad that adults taught their children to defy clear rules and to be rude to those reminding them of the rules. 

If they ever see the video, they'll probably LOVE being in it. 

 

 

5/07/2019 11:26 pm  #15


Re: Fifty Things

Colorado Native Orchids. 

Colorado has about 35 species of native, wild orchids. They are all documented here in this work, that took three years of searching and filming to acquire them all. Some are relatively common, and others so rare, they're known in only a few remote locations. 

The music had to be elfin, fairytale music; delicate, richly colorful, a little mysterious, a little unexpected. If you've seen orchid flowers in sunlight, they sparkle. You hear the sparkle in the music, played by glock and celesta. 




 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/07/2019 11:42 pm  #16


Re: Fifty Things

Siagiah wrote:

Lovely !!  Too bad you couldn't shove 'em into the water, but the kids might have drowned, so bad idea, even though it'd serve 'em right to get soaked to the bone.

Sad that adults taught their children to defy clear rules and to be rude to those reminding them of the rules. 

If they ever see the video, they'll probably LOVE being in it. 

 

Yeah. That's why they should have been boiled. Nobody should go in that water. The ecology is that beautiful and that fragile. I am afraid due to popularity, the lake is doomed. Too many ignorant people, and it only takes a few. Colorado became like California, and people are swarming all over the wilderness, everywhere. Too many are careless. 

I saw drone footage of avalanche damage in the Conundrum Hot Springs valley. Unbelievable. Many avalanches merged in the valley bottom to produce a mile wide monster that went on down for many miles, taking out forest, cabins... everything. Access by road or trail is impossible due to all the downed timber. Only by drone can we see extent of this damage. Many trail heads are closed due to the same, and won't be open for a long time. Furthermore we have another major snow event setting up right now, expected to drop feet of new snow in the mountains. 

 


You can look away from a painting, but you can't listen away from a symphony
     Thread Starter
 

5/08/2019 12:20 am  #17


Re: Fifty Things

Pikes Peak 14115 wrote:

Siagiah wrote:

Lovely !!  Too bad you couldn't shove 'em into the water, but the kids might have drowned, so bad idea, even though it'd serve 'em right to get soaked to the bone.

Sad that adults taught their children to defy clear rules and to be rude to those reminding them of the rules. 

If they ever see the video, they'll probably LOVE being in it. 
 

Yeah. That's why they should have been boiled. Nobody should go in that water. The ecology is that beautiful and that fragile. I am afraid due to popularity, the lake is doomed. Too many ignorant people, and it only takes a few. Colorado became like California, and people are swarming all over the wilderness, everywhere. Too many are careless. 

I saw drone footage of avalanche damage in the Conundrum Hot Springs valley. Unbelievable. Many avalanches merged in the valley bottom to produce a mile wide monster that went on down for many miles, taking out forest, cabins... everything. Access by road or trail is impossible due to all the downed timber. Only by drone can we see extent of this damage. Many trail heads are closed due to the same, and won't be open for a long time. Furthermore we have another major snow event setting up right now, expected to drop feet of new snow in the mountains. 
 

====================================

A few feet of snow in MAY ??

 

5/08/2019 12:24 am  #18


Re: Fifty Things

Pikes Peak 14115 wrote:

Colorado Native Orchids. 

Colorado has about 35 species of native, wild orchids. They are all documented here in this work, that took three years of searching and filming to acquire them all. Some are relatively common, and others so rare, they're known in only a few remote locations. 

The music had to be elfin, fairytale music; delicate, richly colorful, a little mysterious, a little unexpected. If you've seen orchid flowers in sunlight, they sparkle. You hear the sparkle in the music, played by glock and celesta. 




 

=============================

Those are STUNNING !!! 
 

 

5/08/2019 12:27 am  #19


Re: Fifty Things

Hey, an idea.  You should rename your post to tell visitors that there are stunning scenery & music videos inside. Just "Fifty Things" doesn't tell them enough to know that it's AMAZING stuff !!

 

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