Category Archives: Cello

Orchestra Begins

I’m sitting third chair again, as our missing section member is back after a half-season off. I miss second chair a bit because I learned so much from sitting with the principal cellist, but I won’t miss the feeling of being on the spot every week.

What was waiting on my music stand: Handel’s Water Music suite (which we played remarkably well for sight-reading; it helped everyone ease back into the swing of things after a couple of weeks off); Haydn’s 99th symphony (E flat major, a frustrating key for me because for some reason I only remember to flatten half of the A notes when I play it); a double violin concerto from Vivaldi’s Estro Armonico (hurrah, Vivaldi!); and a symphony by William Boyce, whom I knew was an English Baroque composer but not much more than that.

It is a wry truth in my house that whenever I have a new Haydn symphony to play, I don’t own a recording to help me familiarise myself with it. He wrote over a hundred of them. I own thirty, with two recordings of the 94th. With our tendency to play the later symphonies and my personal preference for that era of Haydn’s symphony-writing career, one would expect that I would have a good chance of owning whatever symphony we’re to play. But no: every time we begin a new Haydn symphony I have to track a new recording down. This is by no means a hardship; I enjoy Haydn immensely. It’s simply become a sort of running joke. (If you’re a geek and wondering: 1 through 20, 82, 83, 85, 92, 94 (twice), 96, 100, 101, 103, and 104. 80, 81, and 99 will soon join them. I love Naxos.)

As usual, I was simultaneously impressed and frustrated by my sight-reading. Overall I’m not bad, but when I lose the music I’m jarred out of the zone and never quite get back on top of things. Also, it was cold, so no one’s fingers were in top form. For once, I remembered to put my glasses on at the beginning of the night. I hate the folding chairs we have to use in the auditorium; I did something to my hip at the beginning of last weekend and it started acting up again last night after finally healing. I might finally have to look into a wedge cushion for proper support. Folding chairs are evil for cellists because they slope backwards and we have to sit forwards, so there’s a lot of stress placed in the lower back. If you’ve ever taken a really good look at how I sit in concert (yeah, right) you’ve seen that I angle the chair so that I sit on a corner of the seat. It hurts less, because the corners are relatively flat.

Also: Last night we got the numbers for the monies collected at the Messiah for charity. Are you ready for this?

There were two charities. Each charity got over $1700.

Yes, I blinked a lot too. That means the performance brought in almost $3500. How incredible, and absolutely wonderful.

Note to Self: Orchestra

Orchestra begins again tonight.

Maybe typing it out will fix it in my mind, because I have been forgetting over and over. It’s been a moderately unreal day; I think it’s the light.

I wonder what we’ll be playing for the next concert this spring. Getting new music is always interesting.

In Other News

‘Other news’, of course, being news wherein I do not obliquely express an unhealthy desire for a majority of the planet’s population to vanish. After the last post, I didn’t want to leave you all wondering what had happened to me over the weekend, as I’m going away and won’t be journaling. I wish I could say it was on a mini vacation, but it isn’t. So I hereby provide you with a short recap of what I did while Liam napped:

Plugged the microphone into the minidisc player. Clipped the mic to my music stand. Recorded a chunk of my hour and a half of cello practice this afternoon. Put the headphones on to check for recording quality.

Cue jaw drop. Wow. Just — wow.

I can feed the minidisc signal into a regular stereo and listen to it via the stereo speakers, and also record it onto a cassette, which means it’s analog. Therefore there must exist a way to feed it into the computer and transfer it to a digital file, because I know people do this with cassettes and videotapes and such things. It will be a project of mine next week, the researching of this. It likely involves cables that I do not presently own.

In the meantime — wow, both for the quality of the little stereo microphone I ordered and for the minidisc recording ability. Also, my cello playing does not suck. The purchase of these items may well be paid back by repeated use of them to convince me of this alone.

Blah blah 2007 blah

New calendar day, except that we don’t have a new calendar yet because our old one had an extra page for January 2007, and we didn’t see anything we liked last week.

I slept dreadfully last night. I’d had a tiring day, as Liam was on the go every moment, and fully intended to go to sleep early. Had a bath. Read Maeve Binchy’s Whitethorn Woods from cover to cover. Was still wide awake around 1:30 AM, and unpleased about it. It made getting up with Liam this morning lots of no fun.

I had a lovely time during our evening drop-in on the 30th; perhaps we will make it an annual thing. I had the opportunity to talk with people I hadn’t really spoken with in, erm, months (I swear it was June just a day ago, I swear), and Liam got to rampage about with Arthur and Devon. The pirate ship was a huge hit among adults and children alike. In speaking with sandman7, I realised that all the events in my life which are supposed to be enjoyable, supportive of the self, or social are work, except for orchestra. This was a huge breakthrough, and further firms my decisions to shed certain responsibilites and positions.

The temperature is stupid. HRH looked out the back door this morning and said, “All my lovely snow is going away. I worked hard for that snow, damn it.”

We went over to my in-laws’ place yesterday for a couple of hours, and they sent us home with a prime rib roast to cook for New Year’s Day dinner. So now you all know what I’m having tonight. And Yorkshire pudding, too.

I don’t make resolutions, but these are some wishes I have for 2007:

– Less self-inflicted head trauma for Liam. In the past three days, he has tripped and whacked three different parts of his head. He’s developing an impressive black eye as a result of not looking where he was going and falling into the heater in his room this morning.

– To regain some sort of interest in food. Food in general, really, but specifically the eating of it.

– The re-initialising of enjoying being with people. I’m trapped between wanting to be out of the house but not wanting to leave, because whenever I do I’m on my way out to do something that has become work and not fun. I’ve never been a people-person, and I’m becoming even less of one because of an aggregate of people-associated irritations (no, nothing specific, just people, argh, you know?).

– Spending more time with certain people. Over the past year I’ve discovered that talking with two particular people either stimulates my mind or makes me relax, and I want to spend more time with these individuals. One I’ve known forever, and the other is still a relatively recent discovery from the past couple of years. (One of them recently said, “So, how are you?” and actually meant it. I can’t remember the last time someone asked me that and meant it, instead of in a light conversational fashion or a general non-specific you-should-take-care-of-yourself address.)

– For the emotional burnout to stop. I’m a listener by nature. People share their fears and frustrations and challenges with me because it makes them feel better to get it off their chest, and this past year has seen it draining me beyond what I can handle. No matter how much I shield and purify, it wears me down. It’s not personal, and it’s not that I want the friends-aspect of it to stop; I just need to take a step back and rebuild my own energy so that I can deal with it properly.

– Rediscover the joy in music in general, and classical music in particular. I have an excellent CD collection, over half of which is classical. Over the past year I’ve been looking at it listlessly and feeling as if there’s nothing I want to listen to, which is ridiculous. I’m toying with the idea of systematically listening to at least one CD from my collection every day, starting with the first one in the top shelf and working my way through the collection. And this wish leads to:

– Rediscovering the joy in playing the cello. I would love to start playing in a classical quartet, with a real coach. I met a Canadian composer last week who asked if I played weddings, and I just laughed. But it made me think. Why not? I’d have to pull up my socks and knuckle down, but it would give me a reason to work on my music more. I am lazy when it comes to practicing, because I can get away with not doing a lot of it. But I always do wonder how much better I could be if I practised even more than the couple of hours a week that I do now. Also, sandman7 suggested that we get together and play just for fun, which is a lovely idea.

Look at that; no wishes about writing and/or career. Things are pretty okay there. Sure, I wish my fiction would take off the way my non-fic has, but there’s time aplenty for all that.

Argh!

The MD recorder I bought is not, after all, Hi-MD. I thought it was. I must have mixed up all the reviews I read at the same time. This means that I can’t transfer a recording to the computer to burn it to CD.

:headdesk:

This is not the end of the world; it just means I have to find an alternate way of recording a orchestra concert so that my grandmother can finally hear one. (Not that any of you talk to her, but this will eventually part of her birthday surprise, so no spoilers.) ADZO mentioned a method of doing this with equipment he owns a month ago, so I will look into that. In the meantime, sixty dollars for a used minidisc recorder that will help me work out musical lines for songs and practice is pretty darn good, and that was the primary purchase goal, so it’s all still fine; just not as ideal as it could have been.

In other news, HRH and I made an informal list of Liam’s words today and the lexicon is currently clocking in at around fifty, with three to five new ones being added daily (today we thought he said “Liam” but he didn’t repeat it before zooming off to the next event on his to-do list, so we’ll be listening for that one). HRH also made him a playhouse out of boxes today, and the boy dashes in and out of it with much enthusiasm. He closes the door very firmly behind him once he’s in too, in a very “I want to be alone!” sort of way, effect of which is rather ruined by the incessant giggling that comes from inside. This follows the tent we built in his room a couple of days ago by draping a length of fabric (the sea turtle print Ceri picked up over a year ago) over his quilt rack, the bureau, and tied to the doorknob. He sat inside it and giggled, used his keys to “open” the “door”, crawled out, dashed around to the quilt rack and climbed in the “window” over and over. I fit inside that one, but I don’t fit inside the one HRH made today. So after Liam went to bed, HRH built an extension for the box playhouse. It’s really wonderful, and I can’t wait to see Liam’s reaction to it tomorrow.




My parents arrive in town tomorrow, too. Liam will be over the moon, I’m sure.

(I posted the Solstice sunrise photo to the appropriate entry, too.)

It Is Love

Rather than reading and eating chocolate in the company of cats, I decided to bake bread yesterday afternoon. And this morning when the boy asked for Shreddies and bananas and refused to eat either, I gave him a homemade roll and cheese instead. “Do you like the bread?” I asked him, and he nodded emphatically. “That’s because Mama made it,” I said. And he proceeded to ignore the cheese (this is big is you know how in love with cheese this kid is) and demolished the whole bun after he had dashed into every room in the house with half a roll in each hand, lifting them up into the air and declaring, “Mama!” before turning to head for another room to repeat the performance. I think I nearly broke HRH when I narrated the action: “Spirits of the kitchen, I present to you this roll, newly baked by Mama! Spirits of the bedroom, I present unto you…”.

My right shoulder is badly inflamed, and I have no clue why. I can only assume it’s from the amount of intense cello-playing there was over Friday and Saturday, but then it ought to have hurt on Sunday or Monday at the latest, not as of Tuesday night. I’ll have to pick up some Advil while we’re out for lunch.

Can everyone please think colder? This warmth and the rain they’re calling for over the weekend just won’t do.

Round-Up, Part The Third: The Messiah Concert

Dress rehearsal on the Friday night went well enough that I left in a relatively positive mood, looking forward to the actual concert on Saturday. There was a minor kerfuffle over transportation as we realised that I’d indeed have to leave before Liam went to bed and the neighbours couldn’t put him down, as they were hosting a party (nor had they ever done it before, and Liam was overtired by dinner, having been at the aforementioned party during the afternoon), which meant I might have to take the car alone and leave HRH at home, a solution no one wanted to employ. My in-laws came to the rescue, picking me up and dropping me off on their way to a dinner engagement nearby. As a result I got there very early, and was able to set up and relax by wandering around the dim church for a while. I used to sing in this particular church a decade or so ago, and the decorations and lighting brought back a lot of memories of processional hymns and Christmas concerts past.

Being there early meant I also had the opportunity to chat with some other members of the orchestra with whom I don’t usually converse, being on a tight schedule most of the time. Also, I am painfully shy, and talking to people I don’t know is hard. I’m especially unsocial before a performance of any kind, because I’m getting into the headspace the performance requires. Saturday night was lovely, though. And while I was chatting with them I came face to face with a dear friend from high school whom I hadn’t seen in about fifteen years, who has moved back from Kingston and now lives and works nearby again. We caught up as much as we could in the five minutes or so before he had to see to his duties, being property manager of the church, and I had to pick my way through the forest of music stands and prepare for the warm-up.

There were forty choir members, and thirty-one musicians in the orchestra. The choir was tidily seated in their regular stalls behind the sanctuary, but the musicians were set up like sardines with instruments in the sactuary itself. It was a challenge, but also interesting in that we all got to hear different sections playing because our regular seating was completely rearranged. For example, the second violins sat opposite the first violins where the celli usually sit, and the violas were seated in the second violins’ usual place, and the celli occupied the violas’ regular seats. The flutes and clarinets sat off to one side, and the trumpet and horn sat behind me. (It now belatedly occurs to me that a very loopy joke could be made about playing musical chairs.) As I mentioned before I ended up sitting at the back of the space but directly in front of the conductor, which meant I was facing the audience, a very odd position to be in when one is used to having the audience on one’s left. We were all very cosy, which is a polite way of saying that bows knocked into other instruments or musicians now and again. Fortunately everyone took it in good spirits.

We’d been warned that our warm-up would begin and finish early in order to open the doors for the audience, and while a number of us secretly thought this a bit optimistic we went along with it. When our conductor declared the warm-up over at 6:45 the doors were indeed opened, and the church was half-filled before all the musicians were off the stage. By 7:10 the church was filled to capacity and those doors were closed, later arrivals being directed to the church hall where chairs had been set up facing a monitor on which the concert would be broadcast. Most of us didn’t know this, as we were wandering around trying to find ways to occupy the forty-five minutes before the concert would begin. (Any performer will tell you that the time before going on is interminable to begin with, resulting in what many of my circle call the “Will it never be day?” effect [see Henry V, act iii sc vi], but forty-five minutes is positively torturous.) It gave me the opportunity to catch up with a couple of people in the choir with whom I’d sung on stage or in choirs before, which occupied my mind nicely.

When we finally went out and settled ourselves on the stage we were amazed to see that the church wasn’t only full, it was packed and there were people standing in the back. We’re used to playing to audiences less than half that size. I didn’t know about the overflow in the hall until later, or that people had to be turned away because there was simply no more room. HRH ended up shoehorned into the overflow hall himself, while the poor Preston-Leblancs had to turn around and go out for ice cream instead because a monitor and speakers just can’t substitute for the live experience when you’re almost five years old (and yes, I completely understand, I probably would have done the same).

I don’t remember much about the music itself. As usual, I played some tricky bits better in performance than I ever had in rehearsal, and muffed perfectly easy things that I’ve never tripped over before. It was loud, very loud, and long too, because we didn’t have an intermission. The sheer volume hindered me a bit because I couldn’t hear what I was playing, so I have no idea what my intonation was like, although I remember being happy with my precision and fingering in certain places as well as hearing my bow stick buzz against my strings at one point due to too much pressure (oops). By the time the carols rolled around we’d pretty much lost any finesse we’d demonstated earlier in rehearsal, and everything had devolved to simply loud due to being tired and losing the ability to hear subtlety. I was in the middle of the orchestra, and the choir was right behind me. That, plus the natural tendency of everyone to play louder and more passionately when swept away by the larger-then-life energy produced by eighty-ish people performing together and hundreds of people in the audience, made for a headache that established itself very early on. I managed to ignore it most of the time, although by halfway through the carols it became a matter of gritting my teeth to do so. I swallowed an extra-strength Advil before I even put my cello down after we had taken our bows.

The audience was wonderful. They loved us even before we started playing, which is a delightful way to begin any concert, and they gave us a standing ovation as soon as Douglas lowered his hands. I am told that the hundred and fifty-ish people in the overflow hall also gave a standing ovation, despite not being able to do so in the presence of the choir and orchestra. I would be very interested to know how much money was collected for the charities for whom the benefit was staged.

It was an incredible experience. I wish I could have been more in the moment to fully appreciate it while it was happening, but much of the time I was in the cello zone (a good thing) and riding the music. I think someone made a recording, but it would never be the same as sitting right in the midst of all of that music and energy. It was a very joyful experience, and a very spiritual one as well. Excellent music celebrating love and joy like that should be played more often. (It’s a good thing that the first part of the Messiah is my favourite bit, because I played and listened to it an awful lot for three weeks.) It was also demanding, because Baroque music requires different technique than the chamber music I usually play (or Leonard Cohen, Metallica, and Loreena McKennitt, for that matter, being band-related), and because one must simultaneously ignore the singers and listen to them in order to provide the right sort of balance between voice and accompaniment.

It was a remarkable evening, and I hope the orchestra will do other events like this with vocal groups.