
Another photo of the beautiful Nora, the piano-playing cat. Submitted by AnalogKeys (originally from Femme Abstruse) via Twitter.
“♡ॢ₍⸍⸌̣ʷ̣̫⸍̣⸌₎”

Another photo of the beautiful Nora, the piano-playing cat. Submitted by AnalogKeys (originally from Femme Abstruse) via Twitter.
“♡ॢ₍⸍⸌̣ʷ̣̫⸍̣⸌₎”

Submitted by Reconnaissance Fly bandmate Polly Moller via Facebook. Let’s just consider this another one of those synths that is more analog than analog 😉
This also seems like a convenient time to shamelessly plug our new album Flower Futures.

Bon alors, mi ré ♪ ♫♪♫
Submitted by Polly Moller via Facebook. You can read more about our most recent collaboration here, and find out the latest on our band Reconnaissance Fly, including our upcoming show on October 8.

From the Facebook group Black Cats Are Good Luck. Not a synth per se, but keyboards and pianos are fair game here.
“The amazing Mojo =^.^=”
If you have a cat-and-music picture to share, you can do so via our Facebook page, tweet us @catsynth, or contact us.
This short film by Chris Marker is gorgeous and made me smile. So peaceful and elegant.
Submitted by PuffyStudioCat via our Twitter @catsynth.
We have mentioned Chris Marker before. It was his film Sans Soleil that helped me to discover shrine near Tokyo dedicated to cats.
Today we feature Truffle and Brulee of Sweet Purrfections, who happened to be posing last week with a digital piano. I am pretty sure the piano is a Yamaha YPP 200. First, we have Truffle:

And now Brulee:

In their own words:
We love the keyboard in Mom Paula’s office. The keys are softer than the piano keys in the living room and the bench is cushioned (not like the wooden one at the piano). Brulee is trying to show Mom Paula a few things about playing the piano.

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Sad news about a feline composer, from the New York Times:
Ketzel, who won a prize for piano composition in 1997 and went on to be featured in a book, “The World of Women in Classical Music,” died Wednesday in Manhattan. She was 19 and lived on the Upper West Side.
Ketzel was a black-and-white cat.
In the article you can see a picture of Ketzel (whose name means “cat” in Yiddish), and a recording of her one composition, Piece for Piano, Four Paws. It is descending pitch-wise, but has a good sense of timing with a “beginning, middle and end.” The work was transcribed by one of Ketzel’s humans, Morris Moshe Cotel, who retired as chairman of the composition department at the Peabody Conservatory in 2000 and became a rabbi. It would be interesting to see, and even perform the score of Ketzel’s piece at some point.
Her piece one an award in the Paris New Music Review’s One-Minute Competition, and led to exchange between Professor Cotel and Allan Forte, with this observation:
long the way, Professor Cotel said he realized that Ketzel’s “exquisite atonal miniature” used only 10 pitches of the chromatic scale. “The two missing pitches are G natural and B-flat” — the opening notes of Domenico Scarlatti’s famous Fugue in G minor, known as the “Cat’s Fugue.”
Our thoughts go out to Ketzel’s surving human, Aliya Cheskis-Cotel.