Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Flute (and guitar)

I was listening to Dvorak's 8th Symphony in G Major at work this morning--the first large scale symphonic work I played as a 14-year-old flutist way back in January of 1999. I have vivid memories of checking a recording out of our local public library and playing it almost non-stop for six weeks while I struggled to learn the second flute part to it.

It made me think that I really need to get back in some kind of large ensemble.

On the other end of the spectrum, I am absolutely in love with guitar.

Such a musician.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Facing the Music

Finally, a year after my degree recital, I gathered the courage to go back and listen to the one sonata I haven't been able to face since that performance: Prokoviev's D Major. It came up my iPod while I was at work last week, and having an entire half hour to devote to thie sonata, I decided I could finally brave this piece.

Prok's D Major should have been the crown jewel of my program, but it was nowhere near where I wanted it to be for my recital. Even immediately after the recital, as everyone was offering their congratulations, I couldn't help but feel disappointed in my performance. The tempo was sketchy at best, my runs were sloppy, etc.

Unsurprisingly, a year later, the edges of that memory have blurred even with the aid of a recording. I was not as bad as I remembered, although there were definitely some unpleasant surprises.

I laugh to hear how tired I sound after just an hour of playing when these days, my most common gigs are four hours and involve switching between three related-but-different instruments. By the last half hour, I'm about ready to pack it all in, but I'm still sounding pretty good.

Funny how perspective shifts like that.

I started thinking about how many times in this past year I've tried to close the door on classical music. (The number of times I've done it in my thirteen years as a flutist is staggering and quite possibly should have been taken into consideration before I chose to get a degree in it.) The memory, even if inaccurate, of the Prokoviev had something to do with it, I'm sure. But then, I landed a job as a studio teacher. When I tried to quit flute entirely, Ash and Rowan found me.

Every time I try to walk away from classical music, something comes up like Center Stage Opera or Creative Access or even a friend asking to play a duet. Sure, I could decline--but somehow I can't bring myself to say no. I don't want to say no to Falstaff or Villa Lobos or Beethoven, Dvorak or Hindemith. I don't even want to say no to concert black or late rehearsals or instability.

Well, I wouldn't mind saying no to instability.

What I do want to say no to is the stigma of snobbishness, condescension, angst, melancholy, seclusion. That's not what this music is about. That this music is frequently associated with suits and pearls doesn't mean that it doesn't belong just as much to the jeans-and-t-shirt crowd. It's not about all the ceremony and intrigue surrounding the music. It's about making sense out of the world around us. It's about celebrating and lamenting, laughing and crying. It's about the earthy and the heavenly.

And that is why we play it.

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Definitely worth discussing

I know I might be opening up a can of worms for some readers, but I have to say that I share many of the sentiments of Holy Whapping's post on the attitudes of many Trads. I can say that I've been in the "movement" for about ten years now in various stages, and the "time capsule" attitude I've run into in some communities has something that has always struck me as something at best not quite healthy and at worst, downright counterproductive.

I willingly admit that I know many Trads who do not feel this way, i.e. recognizing that this liturgy is an organic part of a living, breathing tradition rather than simply a fossilized presentation of an ancient ritual.

It is my firm belief that the future of the Church needs a hefty infusion of the theology of this historied liturgy mixed with a recognition that the Church is not a stagnant organization but rather the unfolding of God's Will in time.

I find myself in an awkward position with many of my Catholic peers, most especially in my mid-twenties age bracket. I have a firm attachment to and love for the Tridentine liturgy with its clarity of theology and decidedly vertical worship. At the same time, I believe that the survivalist, elistist mentality that this is the only "true" expression of Catholicism is dangerous. Either we accept that the Holy Ghost is guiding the Magesterium or we don't. Either the pope's ex cathedra is infallible or it isn't. Either Christ is faithful to His promise to never allow the gates of hell to prevail against the Church, or He isn't. There is a very real potential for the death of charity if Trads become convinced that they are the only gatekeepers of doctrine.

Something to wrestle with . . .

I'd be very interested to hear any thoughts on this.

Fifty Things I Love to Do

I stumbled across this writing prompt on the internet: list fifty things that you love to do. I thought that this could offer an insightful and amusing look at my life. Here's the result, in no particular order.

Fifty Things I Love to Do
1. Play flute
2. Play guitar
3. Perform at Maggie Moore's pub
4. Sing anything and everything
5. Dance
6. Look at the stars
7. Quilt
8. Knit
9. Cook with friends
10. Drive
11. Teach anything, particularly music
12. Have deep conversations
13. Have trivial conversations
14. Stay up until all hours
15. Go to Mass with friends (a rare treat)
16. Drink tea
17. Drink coffee
18. Drink beer
19. Catch up with old friends
20. Write
21. Edit
22. Take pictures
23. Discover new music
24. Organize my bedroom
25. Learn new things
26. Read
27. Visit the Perpetual Adoration chapel
28. Walk in the snow
29. Gaze at the ocean
30. Write letters
31. Laugh
32. Play with animals
33. Go for walks
34. Jog
35. Listen to music
36. Be outside
37. Smile
38. Find jeans that fit
39. Make things with my hands
40. Sit in the sun
41. Watch the rain
42. Sleep
43. Play music with other people
44. Observe other people
45. Daydream
46. Dress up
47. Play in the dirt (i.e., try to garden)
48. Sit around with friends
49. Tell stories
50. Attempt visual art

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Concerning love

No, no deep treatises here. For that, you'll have to visit Richard or perhaps read Linny Jane's thoughts on the Zales diamond commercial, both of which made me think. What is the best tribute to love?

My current vote, unsurprisingly, goes to a song. A particular song, Andy Stewart's "Queen of Argyll," which has one of the loveliest tributes to feminine beauty and grace ever written.

Gentlemen it is my duty to inform you of one beauty
Though I'd ask you of a favor, no to seek her for awhile
Though I own she is a creature of character and feature
No words can paint the picture of the Queen of all Argyll

And if you could have seen her there, boys if you had just been there
The swan was in her movement, and the morning in her smile
All the roses in the garden, they bow and ask her pardon
For not one could match the beauty of the queen of all Argyll

On that evening that I mention, I passed with light intention
Through a part of our dear country known for beauty and for style
Bein' a place of noble thinkers, of scholars and great drinkers
But above them all for splendour shone the Queen of all Argyll

And if you could have seen her there, boys if you had just been there
The swan was in her movement, and the morning in her smile
All the roses in the garden, they bow and ask her pardon
For not one could match the beauty of the queen of all Argyll

So my lads my needs must leave you, my intention no to grieve you
Nor indeed would I decieve you, oh I'll see you in awhile
I must find some way to gain her, to court her and to tame her I
fear my heart's in danger from the Queen of all Argyll

And if you could have seen her there, boys if you had just been there
The swan was in her movement, and the morning in her smile
All the roses in the garden, they bow and ask her pardon
For not one could match the beauty of the queen of all Argyll

High praise indeed. That is one song that no matter how many times I hear it, it just never gets old. (Good thing, considering it is one of Ash and Rowan's standards.)

A diamond might be forever, but the evanescence of a song makes it even more priceless.

Concerto excitement

I, as a lover of flute and of Tchaikovsky, am absolutely thrilled to read of the premiere of his long-lost and lately reconstructed flute concerto.

I need to get my hands on a copy of that performance if at all possible--along with a copy of the music.