6A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 2017 Orchestra: It includes the mandola, mandocello and mandobass Continued from Page 1A Conducted by Brian Ober- lin, the musical director and founder, the performance will feature guest soloist Evan Mar- shall, a renowned virtuoso. Played with a pick, the man- dolin is best known for the dis- tinctive tremolo sound, a high- speed plucking that sustains a note and serves the same pur- pose as bow strokes on a violin. “Where the bowed instru- ments have that nice 18-inch bow that they can draw a note or series of notes with, we have to hit those strings a lot,” said Michael Tognetti, a mando- linist and board member of the orchestra and the Classical Mandolin Society of America. That tremolo sound has been described as “musical rain.” “I think of it more as just my favorite musical sound in the whole universe,” Marshall said. Marshall — who for 12 years performed at Disneyland playing the William Tell Over- ture at an absurdly fast pace — slips chords into his trem- olos, his famous “duo” style. “It sounds as if two people are playing at once,” Bella said. were mandolin orchestras in every city, every school, every church, mostly because the mandolin manufacturers pushed it,” Bella, a retired Ore- gonian reporter, said. Even as its popularity faded, the instrument crept into songs by Led Zeppelin, Rod Stewart and R.E.M. (think of the 1991 track “Losing My Religion”). Casual music listeners know what the mandolin sounds like, even if they don’t know it as mandolin music . Bella, who played violin in his youth, acquired a mando- lin from a roommate who owed him money. He took the instru- ment instead. It had no strings, ‘You can play anything’ During the mandolin’s period of prominence, “there no break, no tailpiece and a busted tuner, and had been liv- ing in a cardboard box. Bella fi xed it up, and taught himself to play. Its versatility appealed to him. “You can play folk. You can play classical. You can play jazz. You can play rock,” he said. “You can play anything.” Bella played into the 1970s, then took a roughly 35-year break while he focused on his journalism career. But, as the mandolin laid low in the popu- lar awareness, so did it lie dor- mant in Bella’s heart for 35 years. In the early 2000s, he heard the Seattle Mandolin Orches- orchestra — your violins, your violas, etc. We bring a different color,” Tognetti said. Marshall and Oberlin — who are steeped in the classi- cal, Italian serenade, Western swing and bluegrass traditions — have a separate collabora- tion called the Twin Mando- lin Slingers and released a duo album in 2015. “Without his permission,” Marshall said, “we collabo- rated with Johann Strauss,” turning a waltz by the 19th cen- tury Austrian composer it into a Western s wing song with origi- nal lyrics written by Oberlin — a piece they plan to perform in Astoria. tra perform in Edmonds, Wash- ington. It reawakened some- thing in him. And when, shortly thereafter, he started singing with a friend, “I got the itch,” he said. Soon he was playing reg- ularly. He wrote a story about the Oregon Mandolin Orches- tra the year after its founding, and joined in 2013. ‘A different color’ The Oregon Mandolin Orchestra includes other mem- bers of the mandolin family: the mandola, mandocello and man- dobass are represented. “You have a certain color when you go to see a string Owls: Barred owls are from the East Coast and gradually moved west Northern spotted owl study areas * example, has a much higher density of barred owls, he said. Even if it does work, land managers might be required to revisit areas and shoot more barred owls to keep them at bay. Lingering in the back- ground is whether wildlife biol- ogists should be killing barred owls at all. “It is gut-wrenching,” said Wiens . “It is for all of us.” He said barred owls are an apex predator that has “com- pletely taken over” spotted owl habitat. “This experiment is a way to get a handle on that.” Diller, who died in March, once called it a “Sophie’s Choice” dilemma. “Shooting a beautiful rap- tor that is remarkably adapt- able and fi t for its new envi- ronment seems unpalatable and ethically wrong,” he wrote in Wildlife Professional magazine in 2013. “But the choice to do nothing is also unpalatable, and I believe also ethically wrong.” If human action such as logging caused major alter- ations to spotted owl habitat, and development paved the way for barred owls to move west, “Don’t we have a socie- tal responsibility to at least give them a fi ghting chance to sur- vive?” Diller asked. ‘Sophie’s Choice’ “It’s way too early to say,” said David Wiens, a raptor ecologist with the U.S. Geolog- ical Survey. Diller’s work was “defi nitive evidence” that spot- ted owls’ decline was reversed on Green Diamond Resource land, but conditions elsewhere are much different, Wiens said. The Oregon Coast Range, for CANADA VANCOUVER ISLAND Bellingham 20 (Results for March 2015-Dec. 2016.) Study area and treatment type Area (acres) 1. Cle Elum Treatment Control 149,250 165,560 5 Spotted Barred owl sites owl sites 46 31 2 Wenatchee 113 110 101 1 Olympia 2. Coast Ranges Treatment Control 149,990 268,105 45 58 106 176 3. Klamath/Union/Myrtle Treatment Control 193,480 172,475 84 78 144 124 90 Yakima 5 Ocean Species Act and wildlife resto- ration projects undertaken by government agencies. They often referred to the poten- tial rangeland restrictions that might accompany an ESA list- ing for greater sage grouse as “the spotted owl on steroids.” They’ve also dealt with wolves spreading into the four states and attacking livestock. Northern spotted owls were listed as threatened under the act in 1990, which greatly reduced logging in the Pacifi c Northwest, especially on fed- eral land. Their continued decline could result in it getting listed as endangered, which might bring even more restric- tions on human activities in the woods. So far, nothing has worked. The Northwest Forest Plan set aside 18.5 million acres of the older forests that spotted owls prefer. “But then the barred owl emerged as a threat capable of sweeping through the entire range of the northern spotted owl,” researcher Diller wrote in a 2013 magazine article. Barred owls are from the East Coast and appear to have moved west over the decades, following development. They are 15 to 20 percent larger than spotted owls, which Diller called “the human equivalent of a heavyweight going up against a middleweight.” Working on forest land owned by Green Diamond Resource Co., and with federal permission, Diller and fellow researchers killed dozens of barred owls over fi ve years and documented the return of spot- ted owls. The work had star- tling results. Spotted owls “rap- idly re-occupied” areas where barred owls were removed, Diller wrote. In one case, a female spotted owl returned to a nesting site seven years after she’d been last seen. Overall, Diller’s work showed “removal of barred owls in combination with hab- itat conservation could slow or even reverse population declines at a local scale.” Researchers don’t know if that success will be repeated. *A fourth study area is in Northern California where barred owls are being removed from Hoopa Valley tribal land. The spotted owl was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species act in 1990. The two main threats to this owl are habitat loss and competition from the barred owl, a non-native species. WASHINGTON 82 umbia River C ol Vancouver 84 Portland Pacific Continued from Page 1A 101 97 26 22 2 26 20 126 Eugene Bend OREGON 20 5 3 Study area type 42 101 Treatment (barred owls removed) N Sources: U.S. Geological Survey; U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Control (no barred owls removed) 25 miles Medford Alan Kenaga/Capital Press / EO Media Group CALIF. MS 170 CHAIN SAW SAVE $20! 159 $ 95 16” BAR † WAS $179.95 SNW-SRP Offer valid through 7/2/17 at participating dealers while supplies last. MULTIPLE SOLUTIONS NEW! FSA 45 BATTERY-POWERED TRIMMER FS 38 TRIMMER 129 95 $ 129 95 $ Includes built-in battery and charger. Lighweight trimmer – just 5.1 lbs. – ideal for trimming smaller residential yards “Works reliably. Starts easy enough. Easy to change cutting string. Good value for money.“ – user Gladiator HAPPENING NOW! SAVE $ 30! 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