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Making music: on playing the cello — 29 Comments

  1. If you can say that you ended up without a single regret, you are an idiot or a man.

  2. Neo, are you tempted at all to take cello lessons again, possibly with an upgrade in the instrument?
    Someone I know took up piano in retirement, not having played since her youth, and decided after a while to do a recitals in her home. I’ve attended two of these, with printout programs, sometimes with “work in progress” noted after a selection. What a delightful experience, with wine and tidbits after. Would this be your cup of tea?

  3. Neo, if there’s one regret I have in my life, it’s not learning to play a musical instrument. Learning the trumpet would have given me, in theory, the ability to play some of my favorites from Handel and Haydn. The likelihood I’d have been another Wynton Marsalis or Maurice Andre is small, but at least I could have played for my own enjoyment.

  4. I too was “chosen” for a stringed instrument; in my case it was the violin. I remember carrying it, the required music stand, along with school books, 2 miles to school and back, uphill both ways, of course. I did the best I could for two years with only the school’s band director for instruction. My parents were providing piano lessons for me so at least I could read music but I never mastered the touch, or the desire to develop it, and dropped it. I occasionally think about trying again, without the 2 mile walk, even downhill. Then I remember grumpy Mr. Griep and forget about it.

  5. Marvellous intrument, the ‘cello. Properly, it is the violoncello, thus the ‘.

  6. If I could play an instrument it would be the cello. Wonderful sound and great range. So long as we’re linking youtube videos, this is among my favorites. Janos Starker playing the third movement of Zoltan Kodaly’s fantastic cello sonata. (The first two movements are also available on you tube.) Enjoy!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZvOEwGlwgJo

  7. Jan of MN–that’s an interesting story about your friend and the piano. I took piano lessons for many years from second grade through high school, but never got very good. About 10 years ago I bought a digital piano to try to learn it again, but I have found it a frustrating experience as I realize how much I never mastered and how many mistakes I make. Perhaps I should try lessons again and see how it goes.

  8. I was shelving a new item at the bookstore I work at, and happened to open it to “Concert of Angels”, a panel from the Isenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Grunewald. Beside the fact that the angelic string section celebrating Christ’s birth seems to include Satan, check out the fingerwork of the central angel cellist. Left me wondering if M. Gruenwald ever saw anyone playing a cello.

    http://www.backtoclassics.com/gallery/matthiasgrunewald/concertofangels-detail/

  9. So odd that you posted this today. Night owl that I am, I just caught part of tonight’s rerun of Huckabee on Foxnumber and he always ends the show with musical guest(s) with whom he almost always plays his bass guitar. Tonite he had a fabulous act — he didn’t play with them. Two guys called “The Two Cellos” (sp?) They were phenomenal! Just the two young men with no other accompaniment furiously playing. Apparently they are a YouTube sensation when they adapted a Michael Jackson hit. (Neo, how on earth could you have missed them w/ your YouTube addiction?) Apparently, now major acts like Elton John have asked them to tour. Here’s just one video — it has over 5.6 MILLION views! Of course, it doesn’t hurt one bit that the two musicians are young, hot, hip and drop dead gorgeous! That is, on top of being two incredible cello players exquisitely in sync with one another. They are as fascinating to watch as to hear.

  10. I’m doing something wrong. Just Google 2Cellos + “Smooth Criminal” on youtube if you want a treat…

  11. Kurt — When you bought your piano I take it you didn’t take lessons? Why not find a good teacher who enjoys working with adults and give it a try again? My son, who never had had music lessons of any kind (other than 4th grade recorder), has been taking piano lessons for the past several year, purely for his own enjoyment. More and more music schools are reaching out to adults.

  12. effess:
    Thanks for the Starker link. The non-cellists out there need to know the Kodaly requires absolute technical mastery of the instrument, which few are ever able to accomplish. Note the use of the entire fingerboard, including almost to the bow, and the interweaving of bowing and pizzicato. The Kodaly absolutely requires memorization.

    I rarely use youtube and have never before seen this played, though I’ve heard it many times. Wow. Gracias!

  13. I played and still have by buffet clarinet… Avery Fischer hall.. cousin played Alice Tully hall as he went to Julliard as did his brother. the daughter of Maurice Seymour the photographer played violin, her sister piano and viola, Raul his grandson played cello, mom opera singer, dad photographer… arts family, as mine was arts/sciences… dad painted oils, i did drawings and instruments and went to Bronx science… etc etc.. but since that was moved to be destroyed, we never regained what we had in Europe before the wars…

  14. I knew exactly where you were going from the first sentence!

    I had a similar experience. I was in violin in grade school and high school. I say “was in violin” rather than “took lessons”, because I was in the school orchestra, but never had any private classes or tutoring. For those who have never tried, that is NOT the way to learn a bowed instrument. You need individual attention and tutoring in order to master the instrument. So I was always a mediocre player, near the back of the second violin section. I could get through the score, but mostly felt the frustration of being unable to play well. Like you, I didn’t have the tools. I quit after high school.

    Then I didn’t pick up a violin for 20 years, until I discovered that our grade school had violin classes available starting in first grade. We signed our little girl up, and the teacher assured us that we parents were welcome to sit in on the classes, which were after school. So I started doing so, and working with our daughter every night, helping her practice and learn. I also started tutoring the two daughters of our friends and next door neighbors, who started at the same time, after I realized that without a tutor to help them daily, they were having the same frustrating experience of failure that I had so many years ago. So we all practiced every day together, three novice children and one adult keeping one lesson ahead of them.

    What a wonderful experience! Not only did it come back so fast, but with all that daily practice on very simple exercises, my skills quickly improved far beyond what I could do all those years ago. And theirs did as well!

    After a few years, we got to a point where they needed a better tutor, and by coincidence we had recently made a friend who was a graduate student in music, majoring in violin performance. She turned out to be an exceptional teacher, and has taken all three far beyond my teaching ability. Just last week our sixth grader was selected for first chair in our regional youth orchestra. One of the other two girls I tutored is second chair, and the other is a freshman at a magnet high school, and third chair viola out of 8 students.

    As for myself, besides the enormous satisfaction of seeing three girls spread their wings and fly musically, I reached the point where I can now fluently play all of the songs in the first Suzuki book. Since their daily practice was out of my hands, I never started learning the songs in the second book. I cannot play very well outside of first position, and I have no illusions that I will progress much further now that I’m cut off from formal study. I have a small repertoire, the ability to pick up and play melodies by ear, and wonderful memories of working with three children, and that gives me an amazing amount of satisfaction and joy.

    So by all means pick up that instrument, find a young person who needs help, and guide them through the early stages of learning. You will learn as well, and the boredom and frustration of working alone will melt away.

    Best wishes, John

  15. Jan of MN–well, I bought the digital piano partly to play it again, but also partly to use when I practice my singing. I sang when I was young, as well, and have taken lessons a few times as an adult. The last time I took voice lessons, though, I didn’t care much for my voice teacher’s approach, nor did I care much for the material he suggested that I sing. I suppose I should look for a decent voice teacher first.

  16. Unfortunately, my arm injury means that I can’t take up the cello again, even if I wanted to. For some reason (fortunately), keyboarding doesn’t seem to harm me, if I am very very careful about ergonomics.

  17. Don Carlos,
    Glad you liked the Starker Kodaly. I’ve been listening to lots of music on youtube lately — with headphones the sound is pretty good. If you like Shostakovich, I strongly recommend these links to his Babi Yar Symphony, in a terrific performance led by Gergiev. The advantage of youtube here — at least for me — is that you see the translation of the Russian as its being sung — harder to follow via a cd. It’s a moving work. Recommend it to everyone else reading this.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQccC7ATJbE

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jj4EMqrRkJI&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wah02wqEfDI&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arGtyiutW6M&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=81TX8VPud68&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=heCe2MS3Db8&feature=related

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBzUAcq3-ao&feature=related

    Notes on:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._13_(Shostakovich)

  18. Thanks very much for this post. My son chose the cello in 5th grade. He is now in the 6th grade. He doesn’t practice as much as he should (and I’m not one of those parents who makes their kid get up at 5:00 a.m to practice and who has to practice 3 hours a day) and so he will never be the new Yo Yo Ma. But I love the cello and I still enjoy his playing and orchestra concerts. His principal has now taken up at the cello at age 55 or so and has come in to watch my son play at his school. There are only a few cello students in the middle school so he was the only one playing that day; I told the principal that I thought it was wonderful he was learning the cello at his age.

    And it is a pain to carry it and his books my son tells me, which is why I often take him and pick him up from school, which fortunately, my work schedule usually allows me to do.

  19. I liked the stories about taking up instruments for both young and old. When I think of the cello, I think of Pablo Casals. I have a number of CDs of his performances.

    Which reminds me of another Pablo Casals encounter: Vaughn Meader: The First Family, Vol. 2, Part 2/5 #7. The Concert @ ~7:10, where JFK takes charge during a Pablo Casals concert.

  20. There’s a story about George Bernard Shaw receiving a letter from a woman asking which musical instrument her young son should learn to play. (Shaw was also a music critic at the time.) Shaw wrote back recommending that her son learn to play the French Horn, adding “you won’t hear a sound for the first six-months.”

  21. I had my own musical rebirth several years ago, on guitar. After a serious left hand injury in 1977 — at which time I was moving into fusion jazz after 10 years of playing — I was forced to set aside the instrument for many years. I tried playing left-handed a few times to little avail and much frustration, but several years ago gave it one last try in earnest — and am so happy I did. No few challenges to overcome, but that’s part of the joy of The Phoenix Gift.

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