If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
The answer for me has to be, alas, 'no', although a clarinet, purchased some 25 years ago and refurbished only 2-3 years ago, sits beneath the stairs awaiting my return to it.....
A propos, I thought contributors to this thread might find inspiration in this interesting article by Alan Rusbridger (editor of the Guardian) on getting serious about playing in mid-life.
Well done Alan Rusbridger. My problem was that work often entailed hearing great pianists and I worked with a couple of men who could sight read a new manuscript, not necessarily written for piano, straight on tothe keyboard.
Well done Alan Rusbridger. My problem was that work often entailed hearing great pianists and I worked with a couple of men who could sight read a new manuscript, not necessarily written for piano, straight on tothe keyboard.
I gave up
Which reminds me of the story told by Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, about the time when Sandy Goehr introduced him and Harrison Birtwistle to the score of Boulez's Second Piano Sonata. Whereupon in strides John Ogden with words to the effect of "Ah - what have we here then?" and proceeds to sight read the score through with no apparent difficulty!
Personally I have found having poor technique no barrier to just sitting down at the piano and improvising. It doesn't even have to be a tune, well-known or made up on the spot; the act of discovery suffices and is never ending. Competent church organists think nothing of improvising an outro to a service, or backing the taking of the communion. Yet leading jazz musicians, who also teach, often inform me that their classically-trained players find it tremendously difficult to play anything which is not on a written score in front of them - which I find rather sad.
... and do you still do so - in an orchestra or ensemble?
It would be interesting to know whether there are enough message boarders on this forum to form a small orchestra or ensemble.
Apart from that, it would save us all embarrasment from "trying to teach grandma to suck eggs".
Come on now. Don't be shy. Anonymity will be preserved, but it would be nice to have an idea of to whom one is talking, before putting one's foot right in it!.
Slightly off topic, but I heared a lovely story today that is worth sharing.
Last Summer at a residential course, one of the country's leading flute players was giving a masterclass. His pupil of the moment was a rather distinguished looking middle aged gentleman - and not a bad player by all accounts. He was having difficulty mastering a particular technique and my college said in a friendly manner.
" this needs is a bit of concentration and practice, that's all. You'll find it easy after a while - it's not brain surgery!"
His pupil looked askance.
"I am a brain surgeon. This is far more difficult!"
Slightly off topic, but I heared a lovely story today that is worth sharing.
Last Summer at a residential course, one of the country's leading flute players was giving a masterclass. His pupil of the moment was a rather distinguished looking middle aged gentleman - and not a bad player by all accounts. He was having difficulty mastering a particular technique and my college said in a friendly manner.
" this needs is a bit of concentration and practice, that's all. You'll find it easy after a while - it's not brain surgery!"
His pupil looked askance.
"I am a brain surgeon. This is far more difficult!"
Comment