Our hot tech gifts include the SHASHIBO shape shifting box, the Tap Drums - a silent fidget for everyone, and the Oloid stainless steel toy, the stainless steel spinning top, the Ferrite putty black over 500 weak magnetic stones, and many more.
The fidget toys. There are a lot of them. Take a look at what’s available at kaiko here. These are considered stress relievers. Fidgeting is commonly thought to relieve stress, but what do scientists really think. It gets complicated right away:
It has been found to be a sign of a chronic health disorder - ADHD, to be a common response to stress and anxiety, it may allow better concentration on a task for longer, it may reduce the risk of high blood pressure and it can improve blood vessel functioning. That’s a lot in the mix there.
Are fidget spinner toys a helpful tool? It doesn’t look like it, according to the experts. So it is interesting that there are so many available. But then whoever is fidgeting is buying them, so that’s who counts.
No silent drum fidgeting here - this is the Notre Dame Band known as the Band of the Fighting Irish. I saw them practicing in the Notre Dame parking lot when we stayed overnight at the hotel across the street. We were on our way to a railroad convention. There are 500 students in the bands - 3 concert bands, 3 jazz bands, section ensembles, varsity bands and the University’s marching band.
We're at Epiphany Eve, Twelfth Night. The three Magi visit the Nativity scene and reveal Jesus. The little drummer boy plays his instrument.
Does our "Little Drummer Boy" count as one of the drummers drumming on the twelfth day of Christmas? I don't think so as "Little Drummer Boy" was composed in 1941. It was first recorded by the Trapp Family Singers in 1951. The song relates to our Twelfth Night: he was summoned by the Magi to the Nativity of Jesus, so he's got the right day and place. Wikipedia gives the origin of this song. It is considered to be somewhat similar to a "12th-century legend retold by Anatole France as Our Lady's Juggler. In the French legend, a juggler juggles before the statue of the Virgin Mary, and the statue, according to which version of the legend one reads, either smiles at him or throws him a rose".
I thought about so many drummers drumming - in comparison today's orchestra which has one or two drummers. So how did the twelfth night get to having 12 drummers. And if this song started out in the 1400's there might have been one person on the fife (pipe) and drum. They could have saved the pipers piping fee - one person typically played the tabor drum and pipe simultaneously.
Since our earliest recorded information on the song is the 1780's, we might instead turn to the snare drum. It was used from the 16th century onward. It was a military instrument that allowed troops to communicate with one another. It was also used in ceremonial occasions. I guess today's marching band would have its origins in the military and ceremonial traditions.
I like to think that our many drummers drumming are announcing the arrival of the Twelfth Night.
Our pictures today are scenes taken at Brock University's School of Performing Arts.