The other uses for structure indicators are to group elements that do not share a base style into one unit or to separate paragraphs that do use the same base style. There may also be cases in which a body chapter begins with an element like an epigraph or a figure that the Digital Hub does not count as an obvious “chapter start.” In these cases, you should insert structure indicators to delineate the beginning and end of those chapters. By adding structure indicators that follow Scribe's standard query format, you can indicate the beginning and end of half-title, title, series, copyright, dedication, epigraph, and other pages that appear before the table of contents begins. However, in the front matter sections, there are no chapter numbers or chapter titles to indicate the start of a new section or subsection. Structure indicators can be added in Word and maintained through the typesetting process in InDesign in order to best control text groupings.įor example, the Digital Hub will begin a new chapter on a cn or ct paragraph automatically when constructing an e-book. We can't afford to let a single one go." (Read the full Village Voice review here ).In e-books and XML, structure indicators are used to group paragraphs or sections that cannot be determined automatically through a set of defaults. One quote from the Village Voice sums it up pretty good: "Trygve Seim is an original, a species in scarce supply everywhere. Seim’s ECM release Sangam was released on the North American market last year to great critical acclaim. For all its sensitive arrangements, the music is strong, not fragile, as European audiences enthusiastically confirm. An interest in Buddhism, too, has left its imprint on his music – the idea of breath is central to his compositions. Seim also acquired a passion for the music of the Far East, especially the flute traditions of Asia (the duduk, the shakuhachi) and Eastern vocal music generally. The free jazz of Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler had a major liberating impact while he was studying in Trondheim. If the now-characteristic "Nordic" cry is part of his sound, many other elements have been assimilated. Seim was just 13 when he experienced a musical awakening upon hearing Nordic sax legend Jan Garbarek: "I couldn't believe a saxophone could sound like that!" He immediately began playing sax – taking up (like Garbarek) both the tenor and the curved soprano – but was soon quickly moving beyond his initial inspiration. One of the new leaders of contemporary European jazz, Trygve Seim describes his orchestral work as Sangam, which means "coming together", "confluence of a learned gathering," or literally "the meeting point of three rivers" in Sanskrit. And based on the audience’s response to music that, for many of them, was a new experience, it’s a direction that, with its strong resonance and layered disclosures of new musical meanings, holds great appeal." But as much as artists like Seim challenge reductionist definitions of jazz, it’s clear that he is setting a new and distinct path from which jazz is but one of a number of base elements. Why was it that we don’t get to hear this ilk of music more often out here in the wild west?”Ī chimes in: "No doubt, if one is forced to apply a single label to Seim’s music, jazz is the best possible choice. To hear the ten-piece group in the embracing, appropriate space of Portland’s First Congregational Church (built in 1892), made for what this scribe can only call a religious experience.(.) In Portland, the crowd went justifiably wild and weak at the knees and heart. Writes the Santa Barbara Independent: "Seim’s group is a thing of wonder, at once visceral and ambient, rootsy and out-of-this-world. Trygve Seim recently debuted on the US live scene with an applauded performance with his Ensemble at the key Portland Jazz Festival.
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