The Penguin Cafe Orchestras, and the plural is necessary because there were several of them, were responsible for a unique sonic experience, creating a blend of folk, jazz, classical and faux ethnic music that managed to pull off the difficult trick of sounding instantly familiar to the subconscious mind, as if it had already existed in the past but had been forgotten for ages and now was being retrieved from some pool of inspiration common to humanity.
They formed one of the background soundscapes to my student years. I recall the first time I heard a Penguin Cafe track. It was ‘Music for a Found Harmonium’ and it accompanied a short film featured on television called simply ‘Interlude’ that I have never been able to trace since. The melody and the visuals matched well, but it was years before I learned who was responsible for the music and I did so by pure chance. I went into a record store and bought the album Broadcasting from Home at random. That was a habit of mine back then.
Perhaps the cover image had intrigued me. Listening to the album at home I was delighted to recognise ‘Music for a Found Harmonium’ as the opening track. But I might be misremembering. There’s a suspicion in my mind that I actually bought the album Signs of Life on cassette first. It hardly matters. The title of that soul enhancing song, ‘Music for a Found Harmonium’, struck me as curiously enigmatic, so much so that I later entitled one of my books Stories from a Lost Anthology as a sort of tribute, an allusion noticed by no reviewers.
The real story behind the track is that Simon Jeffes (1949-1997), founder of the Orchestra, was on tour in Japan and wandering through the backstreets of Kyoto when he found an abandoned harmonium balanced on the apex of a pile of rubbish. He located the person who had discarded it and obtained permission to take the instrument away. The song was composed to celebrate this lucky find. I have never found a harmonium in a backstreet, or any other musical instrument for that matter, not even a harmonica. But Jeffes was special and attracted beauteous oddity by some form of magnetism he carried around within himself.
That magnetism is present in all the music he made. Born in 1949, Jeffes studied the classics in London before trying his hand at experimental music. He grew to be dissatisfied with the barren tonalities of contemporary avant-garde work. Similarly, his brief flirtation with rock came to nothing. African music alone seemed to contain elements he was seeking, powerful rhythms, freer harmonic approach, the mysterious qualities of its silences, an unmelodramatic emphasis on cadence, imaginative tuning systems and improvisational flair. Most of all, he was seeking pure musicality, pieces constructed of the vital essence of the art.
A Penguin Cafe composition rarely seems made up of separate parts, but is much more like an organic growth. Melody and harmony, rhythm and tone colour are fused together right from the very beginning, in an ambient seed. Then the piece grows into fruition with little fuss and perfect symmetry. In 1972, food poisoning confined Jeffes to bed where he dreamed of a Kafkaesque residential block full of people with empty lives. The following day a voice in his head said distinctly, “I am the proprietor of the Penguin Cafe. I will tell you things at random.” Jeffes tried to imagine what the house band of that cafe might sound like. When he recovered, he transformed his dream into truth and invented the PCO.
For the Orchestra, he recruited like-minded players Helen Leibmann, Steve Nye and Gavyn Wright. Calling themselves the “four musicians in green clothes”, they began recording and in 1976 released their first album, Music from the Penguin Cafe. Leibmann on cello, Nye on keyboards and Wright on violin remained with Jeffes for most of the subsequent recordings of this first phase of the Penguin Cafe adventure, but apart from Jeffes, Leibmann was the only member who has appeared on every one of the early albums. For this first release, they also recruited Neil Rennie on the ukulele and Emily Young to design the eye-catching album cover. Emily Young, who is now a high-regarded sculptor, was supposedly the same Emily that Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd sang about in ‘See Emily Play’.
Music from the Penguin Cafe is the most uncharacteristic and dissonant of the Orchestra’s productions. The multi-instrumentalism and big arrangements that were to become a trademark are largely absent. Though Jeffes plays bass, quatro, spinet, cheng, ring modulator and mouth percussion on some tracks, his primary duty is as an electric guitarist. The two earliest songs, ‘Penguin Cafe Single’ and ‘The Sound of Someone You Love Who’s Going Away and it Doesn’t Matter’, rely on just four basic instruments, with Nye’s electric piano and Leibmann’s cello largely displacing Jeffes, and they wrench the heart, sounding like reservoirs of poignancy, dammed to prevent sadness slipping over into the other tracks.
Despite lengthy improvisational passages, highly unusual for the early Orchestra, they are among the most successful songs on the album. Other oddities are dubious and not wholly forgivable, including a drenching vocal lament and a squeaky piece called ‘Pigtail’. Only on one track does the Orchestra provide a foretaste of what was to follow in the coming magical years, ‘Giles Farnaby’s Dream’, spinet and ukulele in foot-tapping mode, the strength of the piece deriving from its frenetic repetition. The album is the least Penguiny of the Orchestra’s productions and it was released on the Obscure label of ambient maestro Brian Eno.
Avant-gardists believe it to be their best album and easy listeners regard it as their worst. But it is neither. It is simply a prelude to the next four albums, which are the quintessential recordings. Yet there was a five year wait for the first of these. Jeffes never seemed in a hurry. The eponymous Penguin Cafe Orchestra (1981) defined the Penguin Cafe sound once and for all with the opening track, ‘Air à Danser’, which can almost be regarded as the PCO’s anthem. The jumpy guitar and wistful strings sound instantly recognisable even to someone who has never heard the piece before. It is the most perfect example of Jeffe’s ability to tap into the Universal Subconscious, an effect that is both pleasing and slightly eerie.
Several other tracks became mainstays of live performance, ‘Cutting Branches for a Temporary Shelter’, ‘Numbers 1-4’, the two ‘Yodel’ songs and ‘Paul’s Dance’. Best of all, however, is the funky and hypnotic ‘Ecstasy of Dancing Fleas’, a hugely gleeful song with warm bass and joyous refrain. The method of working employed by the Orchestra almost guaranteed good albums. Over a number of years, recordings would be made and only the finest tracks released. Again, Jeffes was never in a rush to push his music out there. He preferred a measured approach. This doesn’t mean that all his music sounds polished. Sometimes rough-edged work is exactly what is required to provide ideal incarnations for musical ideas.
After Penguin Cafe Orchestra, it was difficult to believe that a more archetypal sound could be achieved, but in Broadcasting from Home (1984), Jeffes refined the spirit of the music even further. The PCO had grown to encompass thirteen members of varying abilities and Jeffes had taken to playing more and more instruments. With another whimsical but haunting Emily Young cover, this is a vital release and tracks such as ‘Music For A Found Harmonium’, ‘Prelude & Yodel’, ‘In the Back of a Taxi’ and ‘Heartwind’ are impossible to dislike. Strangely enough, the album contains a couple of sequels to tracks on the first release. ‘More Milk’ and ‘Another One from the Colonies’ are wry comments on their predecessors. Musicians include Geoffrey Richardson on viola, shaker and bass; Dave Defries on trumpet and flugel; Annie Whitehead on trombone; Nye, Leibmann and Rennie on piano, cello and ukulele; and Jeffes on drums, harmonium, omnichord, soloban, dulcitone, penny whistle, violin, milk bottles, triangle, bass, and much more. It is easy to forget how peculiarly exotic some of those instruments seemed to the British public in those days. Musically we were far more insular then than we are now.
The fourth album was released in 1987. Signs of Life has a ‘frontier-ceilidh’ feel to it, taking elements of American country music, bluegrass and mountain folk. There is also a classical touch, particularly in the moody ‘Oscar Tango’. Sadness was a rare emotion in the Orchestra’s output, apart from in some of the very early material. It is on Signs of Life that the description of the PCO as ‘a string quartet letting its hair down at some mysteriously-located barn dance of the future’ most holds true. The opening track, ‘Bean Fields’, is quirky and imprecise and one of my three favourite Penguin Cafe tracks ever. ‘Dirt’ is rhythmic and compelling, as is ‘Sketch’ and ‘Swing The Cat’. ‘Southern Jukebox Music’, on the other hand, belies its title and is a deeply melodic lament. ‘Perpetuum Mobile’ is a punning title that references the metronymic pulse of the piece but also the town of Mobile, Alabama, and further connects the album to its basic Americana source, although the music seems to belong to another galaxy and to the distant past of our preliterate ancestors just as much as it does to any existing tradition. The ten minute long meditation ‘Wildlife’ is an acquired taste, seeming at first to be a directionless filler, but is perfect background music for simple relaxation or mind wandering. Personally it is my daydreaming and falling asleep music of choice. It evokes a strange forest soundscape where very little happens but everything eventually is found to have changed. Of the two pieces played wholly by Jeffes, one deserves special mention: ‘The Snake and the Lotus (The Pond)’, a piece just for bass, primeval and rather mystical.
The next two albums were live recordings. When in Rome… (1988) is a wonderful retrospective of the previous work and thus the best introduction to the PCO’s career. Pieces from all four albums are included and many have been improved, especially ‘Giles Farnaby’s Dream’ and ‘Air à Danser’, which have both been spiced up. Others sound almost identical to the studio recordings. The deliciously smooth atmosphere of the performance is captured well and the musicians are in complete empathy with each other. Missing on this album is Gavyn Wright and the PCO is down to nine members, but Bob Loveday on fiddle more than makes up for the loss. This is the only album where a member, Geoffrey Richardson in fact, actually plays more instruments than Jeffes. Less convincing is Still Life (1990), a ballet arrangement of material for a conventional orchestra. Although a nice album in itself, some of the pieces, such as ‘Numbers 1-4’, have been overdone, and this sixth release is probably the least essential album of them all. Nonetheless, listeners who prefer the grander feel of a larger orchestra and the traditional accents associated with classical music could do much worse than to seek it out.
Unusually for a project associated with Jeffes, the cover isn’t by Emily Young, and this detracts from the finished result. Luckily she was back on hand for the seventh, most sprawling, ambitious and varied of the PCO’s albums to date. Union Cafe (1993) was one of my most cherished albums of the decade in which it appeared. I appreciated its abundance and it felt more like a voyage than their other albums. This is not to say that all here is smooth and accomplished. Some tracks are doldrums in the sound ocean. As for the bolts of its realisation, more musicians than the PCO had ever employed before were used, though sadly Steve Nye isn’t one of them. The other originals, Leibmann, Wright and Rennie, seem content to share duties with a host of other puffers, pluckers, scrapers or bangers. Even Jeffes has decided to wisp himself out a little, be less dogmatic and often takes a lesser role in the performance of his own compositions. On two tracks, ‘Thorn Tree Wind’ and ‘Discover America’ he plays nothing at all. The former is given over entirely to the warblings of an electric Aeolian harp and credited to the winds of the cardinal points. This is fair enough as the winds compose the piece while in the act of playing it. The latter track employs a large number of strings, including twelve violins (led by Gavyn Wright), four violas, four cellos and two double basses. The result is an ear wash that doesn’t necessarily leave the ears feeling cleaner. But the variety is impressive. There is a track played by a computer called ‘Pythagoras on the Line’ that seems similar to a song on an earlier album called ‘Telephone and Rubber Band’.
There is also the excellent ‘Vega’, one of the Orchestra’s longest tracks to date; the salty ‘Organum’ and ‘Another one from Porlock’ and ‘Lifeboat (Lover’s Rock)’. Jeffes had recently announced his awakened re-interest in the Western Classical tradition and this new enthusiasm, together with the experience gathered from exploring other cultures, resulted in this album, which might be a melange, a mess or a masterpiece. The opening track is the superlative ‘Scherzo And Trio’ and because it is superlative I guess this means I ought to say nothing more about it, as superlative things are quite beyond praise, so my dictionary informs me.
Yet the one track that really stands out, conceptually if not sonically, is the tribute to composer John Cage, who had died not long before the album was made. Entitled ‘Cage Dead’, these words are all the notes of the melody, played strictly in that order, C-A-G-E-D-E-A-D. This is an example of a musical version of OuLiPo[1] (itself useably explained and defined as a playful workshop to create literature-that-is-both-constrained-and-made-ingenious by mathematics) officially known as OuMuPo, or Ouvroir de musique potentielle. Essentially it is trickery of the highest whimsical order and John Cage himself perhaps would be very pleased by it. Having said that, he could be inexplicably stringent and uncompromising about his music. He was a composer who wrote a piece requiring a musician to wear a tuba like a hat and not play it. When it was first performed he berated the musician for not wearing it in the correct manner and therefore spoiling the sound.
Now I have drifted off the point. Partly and paradoxically defined as avant-garde easy listening, the Penguin Cafe Orchestra are whimsical and catchy, yet there’s an improbable seriousness too, and a deep sadness embedded in some of the melodies. Good, I have returned to the point, deftly, quite deftly. After Union Cafe there were dramatic changes. Jeffes died. In effect he was the PCO and it became a ghost after his leaving. Yet as ghosts sometimes do, it floated on, splitting like ectoplasm that turns out to be flimsy fabric in an eerie half glow.
Some of the musicians who had worked with Jeffes wanted to continue with the PCO, as is only to be expected. We might also say they had the right to do so. The moral right, perhaps, but not the copyright. The words ‘Penguin Cafe Orchestra’ are not in the public domain, unlike the sound waves they threw out into the atmosphere during their performances and recordings. Jeffes’ son, also called Jeffes inevitably, wanted the name for himself, or a variation of the name. There was plenty of toing and froing and confusion and struggling. Eventually the situation thankfully seemed to settle down somewhat and we were left with…
(a) A set of original musicians in a combo initially called The Anteaters and then renamed the Orchestra that Fell to Earth, who mainly play PCO songs at festivals, and (b) Jeffes Junior in an outfit called Penguin Cafe, no relation to the Penguin Cafe Orchestra yet at the same time every relation to it. Penguin Cafe are a group of many musicians, none of whom were in the PCO, and they have released three albums so far (I write this in the year 2018). These albums are good albums, nobody can accuse the younger Jeffes of trampling or otherwise violating the memory and legacy of his father. Very good albums in fact. But they have a different tone to the albums of the old PCO. They are lusher, they sound sometimes as if Philip Glass was involved in some way, there is a rotational melancholy and not a bean field, temporary shelter or harmonium on a trash heap in view. I know I sound disparaging and I don’t mean to. I will shut my mouth soon, so don’t worry.
A Matter of Life (2011) is a rich surge of sound and one especially succinct critic described it as a ‘love letter’ to the original PCO music. Certainly there is nothing to suggest a travesty of what has gone before. The proprietor of the Penguin Cafe, if he is listening, will have no inclination to expel his house band and secure the services of another. I could drink cappuccino to this music all morning. Yet the lush element is suggestive of an autumn after the heady spring and sultry summer. I long for off-key twangs, for an occasional wrong note. But if this was the first album I ever sampled that had the words ‘Penguin Cafe’ on them and I was unable to make judgments based on the emotional resonances of prior knowledge sharpened by nostalgia, I would be happy enough. The music has the quality of being perfectly ignorable if you wish to ignore it and yet it also rewards careful listening. When you choose to focus in close to the unfolding soundscapes, it is gratifying.
‘Landau’ is perhaps my favourite track, bouncy and melancholic at the same time. ‘Sundog’ is also very nice indeed. ‘The Fox and the Leopard’ contradicts everything I have said in the prior paragraph, being as softly jolly and funky as the earlier ‘Ecstasy of Dancing Fleas’. Perhaps I don’t know what I mean anymore. The Red Book (2014) and The Imperfect Sea (2017) present more of the same thing, hypnotic and wistful songs with a strong driving core that seems to want to become pure trance music. I haven’t yet seen them perform live but I absolutely will when I get the chance. This statement also applies to The Anteaters (who fell to earth). I had the privilege of being present when suggestions for a name change were open to their listeners. I had nothing to offer, but later the words ‘The Great Aukestra’ popped into my mind, an example of l’esprit de l’escalier (or ‘staircase wit’) in which one thinks of a rejoinder or a proposal when it is too late to be of any use. The great auk was the northern version of the more familiar southern penguin. It became extinct in the middle of the 19th Century and Anatole France wrote a satirical fantasy about a society of them called Penguin Island, in which he explains that the word ‘penguin’ first referred to auks. The great auks were the original penguins.
I am about to go now, but I have just recalled that I forgot to mention a six track EP that the PCO released in 1983. The Penguin Cafe Orchestra Mini Album features four songs that can be found on other albums and two originals, one of which, ‘Piano Music’ (recorded live in Japan) is a gentle and dreamy piece that is also a little odd harmonically, reminiscent perhaps of Sorabji but not quite. It is nothing special really but it has a haunting quality despite its brevity. Yet the reason why this EP is worth hunting down is a track called ‘The Toy’, pure magic and too little-known compared with so many of their other songs. Right, I’m off.
[1] Ouvroir delittératurepotentielle; roughly translates to“workshop of potential literature”. It is a loose gathering of (mainly) French-speaking writers and mathematicianswho seek to create works usingconstrainedtechniques.
Rhys Hugheshas lived in many countries. He graduated as an engineer but currently works as a tutor of mathematics. Since his first book was published in 1995 he has had fiftyother books published and his work has been translated into ten languages.
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PLEASE NOTE:ARTICLES CAN ONLY BE REPRODUCED IN OTHER SITES WITH DUE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT TO BORDERLESS JOURNAL
After Jeffes’ death in 1997, the band’s members continued to meet occasionally, but there were no new recordings or public appearances for over ten years. The band briefly reformed in 2007, with the lineup as featured on Concert Program (minus Julio Segovia), with Jennifer Maidman now handling Simon’s guitar parts.
Is Penguin Cafe the same as Penguin Cafe Orchestra? ›
Following in the footsteps of his father, Simon Jeffes of the iconic Penguin Cafe Orchestra, Arthur formed Penguin Cafe with a brand new line-up in 2009, bringing together a talented array of musicians to create a new generation Penguin Collective, initially to keep the music from the Penguin Cafe alive.
What is the theme of Still Life at the Penguin Cafe? ›
A ballet by David Bintley. The theme: endangered species.
Is Club Penguin still running? › On January 30, 2017, it was announced that the game would be discontinued on March 29, 2017. Club Penguin later shut down its servers on March 30, 2017, at 12:01 AM PDT….
Club Penguin.
Final logo, used from 2012 to 2017 | |
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Developer | New Horizon Interactive RocketSnail Games Disney Interactive Studios |
Launch date | October 24, 2005 |
5 more rows Is Club Penguin still live? ›
This isn’t the first time that Disney has been litigious over this IP that it no longer uses. In 2020, Disney shut down “Club Penguin Online,” another copy of the game that acquired over a million new players during the pandemic, the BBC reported.
What genre is penguin diner? ›
Penguin Diner is a time management game where the player controls Penny, the Penguin, and must earn enough money to help her move back to her family.
Is Penguin Diner a flash game? ›
Penguin Diner used to be a flash game. However, it has now been converted to HTML so fans of Coolmath Games can play the version whenever they want.
What city is Penguin Classics in? ›
2002 design of Penguin Classics | |
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Parent company | Penguin Books |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Headquarters location | London, England |
Publication types | Books |
1 more row Why is Club Penguin so famous? ›
It’s a source of nostalgia for many but its legacy is a blueprint for online child safety. To explain Club Penguin is to end up more confused at its popularity. The jist is, you’re a penguin, you have an igloo, you can talk to other penguins, and play some mini-games. The kids loved the constant, chaotic content.
Is there a Disney orchestra? ›
The Walt Disney Symphony Orchestra (WDSO) is a broadcast orchestra composed of members of cartoons and mysterious players either for the Sylvester Macaroni Symphony and Opera House radio and television shows, based in Toontown.
How old are penguin bars? ›
After seeing some biscuits from Antwerp he was inspired to create a chocolate covered biscuit with a chocolate cream sandwich in the centre. They were first produced in 1932, and became a McVitie’s product after MacDonald was taken over by United Biscuits in 1965.
After escaping from prison again, Penguin had a hard time finding henchmen due to the many times he was apprehended by Batman. Upon becoming inspired by a newspaper article, Penguin committed a series of crimes involving a white feather until he was apprehended by Batman and Robin.
What is the main idea of Tacky the Penguin? ›
Helen Lester, Lynn Munsinger (Illustrator)
From beloved children’s book author Helen Lester, and cherished illustrator Lynn Munsinger, Tacky the Penguin is a delightful tale about being true to yourself–even when it means being a little different from everybody else.
What is the message of Tacky the Penguin? ›
Parents need to know that Tacky the Penguin is a digital version of the children’s book by Helen Lester that teaches the value of being an individual and not always following the pack. Tacky is an “odd bird” and doesn’t fit in with his graceful penguin companions.
Why did Disney delete Club Penguin? ›
After Club Penguin failed to meet performance targets, the game’s original creators resigned from Disney to pursue other opportunities. With over 200 moderators and developers to pay in the face of declining revenue, the game no longer made financial sense for Disney. It was shut down on March 30, 2017.
Will Disney shut down Club Penguin rewritten? › The site was shut down on April 13, 2022, by the City of London Police in compliance with a copyright investigation request from Disney, where three suspects were arrested. Prior to its shutdown, the game had accumulated over 11 million registered users….
Club Penguin Rewritten | |
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Mode(s) | Multiplayer |
5 more rows Why can’t i play new Club Penguin? ›
Since New Club Penguin is not affiliated with the original game or Disney, players will need to create a new account to play.
When was Club Penguin banned? ›
Disney purchased Club Penguin in 2007 and officially shut the game down in January 2017 after it had seen a dramatic drop-off in users over the years, according to TechCrunch.
When did Club Penguin get deleted? ›
Unfortunately, the heightened public attention wasn’t able to prevent the inevitable: Disney, in January 2017, announced that it would shut down Club Penguin on March 30, 2017, in favor of a new app-based game called Club Penguin Island.
Is Club Penguin rewritten coming back? ›
2022 Closure
On April 13, 2022, the staff of Club Penguin Rewritten shut down the site effective immediately due to a full request by Disney. The team has voluntarily given control over the website to the police for them to continue their copyright investigation. The site has not been relaunched since then.
What kind of music is the Penguins? ›
The Penguins were an American doo-wop group of the 1950s and early 1960s, best remembered for their only Top 40 hit, “Earth Angel”, which was one of the first rhythm and blues hits to cross over to the pop charts.
What level does penguin diner end? ›
Once the clock hits 9, there will be no more new customers.
Penguin Bloom tells the true story of Sam Bloom, a mother-of-three who was gravely injured during an accident in Thailand. Stars Naomi Watts and Andrew Lincoln worked with the real-life couple for the film. In fact, it was filmed in their house.
Can you still play old Flash games? ›
The Flash Game Archive offers you the opportunity to continue to play Flash games without Flash player by simply downloading its client. The Flash Game Archive software allows you to download Flash games on demand and play them offline.
What is the old penguin game called? ›
Club Penguin was a massively multiplayer online game (MMO) that ran from 2005 to 2017, created by New Horizon Interactive (later known as Disney Canada Inc. after the game’s acquisition by Disney).
The #1 ORIGINAL SMASH HIT web game – Penguin Diner is finally here – on MOBILE and it’s 100% FREE!
What is the difference between Barnes and Noble Classics and Penguin Classics? ›
Penguin Clothbound Classics are perfect for those who prefer a less garish, more shabby chic collection for display. They are smaller than Barnes & Noble Leatherbound Classics and run about the same or slightly higher in price. These editions also have introductions, which is a nice feature.
Who are the best publishers of classics? ›
For more than seventy-five years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With nearly 2,000 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines.
What is the difference between Penguin Classics and penguin popular classics? ›
Penguin Popular Classics began in 1994, launched after Wordworth Editions first began producing £1 classics in 1992. They were published in A-format—as opposed to regular Penguin Classics, in B-format—and originally printed with individual covers, before taking on a uniform bright green colour in 2007.
How long did Club Penguin last? ›
If you are reading this through pince-nez because you are an Old™️, Club Penguin was a massive multiplayer online game that ran from 2005 to 2017, in which young players could build customizable penguin avatars, party, play games, decorate their own igloos, and make friends in a virtual world.
What was the most expensive thing in Club Penguin? ›
The Doom Drone was a rare body item in Club Penguin. It cost 3000 coins in the Marvel Catalog, and only members could buy it.
How much was a Club Penguin membership? ›
Club Penguin Membership Card, Club Penguin, 1 Month, $7.95.
Does it pay to be in an orchestra? ›
Major orchestra salaries range by the orchestra from a little over $100,000 to a little over $150,000. Principals, the ranking member of each orchestra section, can make a great deal more, in some instances more than $400,000. And most major orchestras play for a season lasting only about nine- months a year.
Are orchestra musicians happy? ›
Most observers of the orchestra industry have great difficulty in coming to grips with what industry insiders have known for a long time: orchestra musicians tend not to be very happy when they are at work.
How much do orchestra performers make? ›
As of Mar 6, 2023, the average annual pay for an Orchestra Musician in the United States is $47,467 a year.
How old is the oldest penguin? ›
Help us wish ET, one of our female African penguins, a very happy birthday. She turned 43 years old on January 28. According to our best available data, ET is the oldest currently living African penguin in the world and the oldest African penguin to have ever lived.
Why is it called a penguin bar? ›
It’s possible that the biscuits got their name because, when they were first made by Glasgow baker William Mcdonald in 1932, the dark chocolate and cream filling resembled the black and white of a penguin. Mcvities took over the brand in 1946, and now produce 40,000 Penguins a minute at their Manchester factory.
Is a penguin just a bourbon? ›
Hi there, thanks for your message. The biscuits within the penguin is the same as a bourbon but the chocolate and filling is different. 🙂 Thanks! Either way, we’re obsessed with both, and would be happy to find either in our lunch box!
What made the Penguin a villain? ›
Origin. Born Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot, the Penguin was teased very much in his childhood due to his short stature, obesity, and bird-like nose. These traits made him an outcast in his rich, debutante family. Their rejection drove him to become evil.
Why is the Penguin obsessed with umbrellas? ›
Apparently, Penguin’s father died of pneumonia in a rain storm and his “overprotective mother” made him carry around an umbrella with him everywhere. That, after becoming a criminal, grew into Penguin’s main weapon.
How did penguin lose his eye? ›
In the ensuing firefight, Cobblepot loses his right eye when a grenade explodes in front of him, which he covers with a glass eye and a monocle. He and Nygma help save the city, but lose the money and power they had amassed, so they resolve to work together to once again take control of Gotham.
What is are the major threats to the penguin? ›
Overfishing, invasive species and climate change pose major threats to penguins around the world.
What’s a penguin to think when he wakes up pink? ›
Pink! is a brilliant book about a penguin who is worried about being judged by his classmates after he turns pink as boys can’t be pink in his opinion.
Why is the narrator’s spirit animal a penguin? ›
The penguin as his ‘power animal’ is symbolic of his life, as a penguin is trapped in the sense that it is unable to fly away from its problems. He sees himself as a penguin and the cave he pictures whilst meditating is cold and made of ice, depicting the isolation and lack of warmth in his life.
What was the secret of penguin and reindeer? ›
Ans: The penguin and the reindeer told the fox that they have found a lake full of fish. This information wasn’t true. When the fox gave this news to everyone in the village, the animals rushed to the lake but found nothing. This annoyed the animals and they gave the fox a good beating.
What does the Orange penguin mean on books? ›
But what do the different Penguin Specials colours mean? We’re glad you asked. Here’s a guide to the special colours that differentiate these special titles. Orange: Fiction. Dark Blue: Memoir.
What reading level is Tacky the Penguin? ›
Kindergarten-Grade 2 Tacky the Penguin is a total nonconformist who lives with a group of formal, proper penguins.
Sadly, Lala has already passed away but the memory of him is still alive today.
What happened to the Penguin ride at Seaworld? › The ride has been closed indefinitely since March 2020. The Antarctica-themed area is spread across 4 acres (1.6 ha) inside SeaWorld Orlando….
Antarctica: Empire of the Penguin | |
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Closing date | March 16, 2020 |
Replaced | Penguin Encounter, Friends of the Wild, and Antarctic Market Restaurant |
Ride statistics |
20 more rows What happened to the Penguin ride Seaworld? ›
I got curious about why the attraction was closed and asked a team member who worked for the Education team near the penguins about the closure. Her response was that it has been closed since Covid closed the theme park, that it is quite expensive to operate, and she wasn’t sure when it would open again to park guests.
Where is Pierre the Penguin? ›
Pierre hatched at the Maryland Zoo in Maryland in 1983 and was transferred in June to the Steinhart Aquarium facilities at the CAS.
How old was Lala the penguin when he died? ›
An elderly penguin that shot to fame in Japan after falling in love with a cardboard cut-out of a cartoon character has died, at the ripe old age of 21.
Is La La the penguin still alive? ›
Lala lived happily with the Nishimoto family for years, before dying of natural causes as an older penguin.
How old was Lala the penguin? ›
They built him a refrigerated room under their house. he accompanied Nishimoto to the fish market daily and eventually began making the trip on his own. He is a king penguin, and as best as anyone can guess, is about 14 at the time of this video (1996).
Can you touch a penguin at SeaWorld? ›
Get Even Closer. Learn even more about the Penguins that make their home at Antarctica: Empire of the Penguin. Participate in an Up-Close Tour with a member of our knowledgeable SeaWorld animal care team and get the opportunity to interact and touch a penguin.
What happened to the girl in SeaWorld? ›
She worked with orcas at SeaWorld Orlando for fifteen years, including a leading role in revamping the Shamu show, and was SeaWorld’s poster girl. She was killed by an orca, Tilikum. Tilikum was also involved in the deaths of two other people: Keltie Byrne and Daniel P. Dukes.
Is SeaWorld still getting whales? ›
Yes, despite years of controversy, SeaWorld still has its orcas.
Are the animals at SeaWorld rescued? ›
SeaWorld has come to the aid over 40,000 ill, injured and orphaned animals in need. Available 24/7/365, the dedicated team of animal care, veterinary and animal rescue experts will always answer the call to help an animal. SeaWorld’s legacy of animal rescue spans more than 50 years.
Are penguins at SeaWorld happy? ›
SeaWorld uses penguins as props.
They’re sensitive animals capable of experiencing fear, pain, happiness, and anxiety, just like us. And they can easily become stressed, frightened, and agitated when forced into close contact with humans.
Does SeaWorld still have penguins? ›
Our penguin population includes Emperor and King penguins, and smaller Adelie, Gentoo, Chinstrap and Macaroni penguins.
Is the oldest penguin still alive? ›
RICHMOND, Va. — The world’s oldest African penguin, ET, turned 43 on Saturday, Jan. 28! The Metro Richmond Zoo says according to their best available data, ET is the oldest currently living African penguin in the world and the oldest to have ever lived.
Pierre the Alpaca is a light blue Hug Mees Squishmallow.
The individual baby penguins are called chicks or nestlings.
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