Thanks Justin that was great. And out of curiosity I looked around a =
little on that site and for anyone who has been told something =
resembling "...well, it could have been more 'musical'..." and wondered =
how the hell to process that I'd highly recommend:
http://www.zvonar.com/PamelaGoldsmith/articles/Playing_Musically.html
Though it has a focus on classical string playing a lot of it is =
generally applicable and it's so clearly articulated.=20
Karl Young
Center for Imaging of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCSF
VA Medical Center, MRS Unit (114M)
Phone: (415) 221-4810 x3114
FAX: (415) 668-2864
Email: karl young at ucsf edu
-----Original Message-----
From: Justin . [mailto:justinasia@yahoo.com]
Sent: Tue 11/6/2007 8:17 PM
To: Shakuhachi@communication.ucsd.edu
Subject: [Shaku] Pitch journeys
=20
Something funny I found on the web. A viola player
interacting with a composer. (Full story here
http://www.zvonar.com/PamelaGoldsmith/articles/The_Widening_Gap.html
)
Justin
--- A few weeks later, I received a call. "We cannot rehearse until the week of the performance because the shakuhachi player will be in Japan." "I need to see the music, anyway," I replied. Two weeks before the performance, I arranged that one of my viola students would pick up the music and bring it to me at his lesson. The student informed me the composer was nowhere to be found. I called. "Oh yes, I haven't written anything down but it's beginning to take shape in my mind. I will bring over the music as soon as it's ready." It never appeared. One week before the performance, we scheduled a rehearsal at the composer's home. I arrived to find the composer running out the door, wild-eyed. "I'm going to the Xerox place so you will have a score to read from". The sho player arrived, and I watched with interest as he plugged in a hot plate and proceeded to direct it at a bundle of pipes in a circle - the sho. "What are you doing?" "I am warming it up," he replied. "May I hear an A"? He played a G#. I said, "no, I need an A." He said, "that IS an A." (I thought, uh-oh.) "Are you going to transpose?" "No, "he said, "the sho plays certain notes and certain chords and that is what I am going to play." The shakuhachi player arrived, unpacking the bamboo vertical flute which is played so expressively. "May I have an A?" I inquired. He played a B flat. I said, "what was that?" He said, "that is A on this instrument. It's a little sharp." (uh-oh, I thought).=20 __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around=20 http://mail.yahoo.com=20 _____________________________________________ List un/subscription information is at: http://mail.communication.ucsd.edu:88/shaku/listsub.html _____________________________________________ List un/subscription information is at: http://mail.communication.ucsd.edu:88/shaku/listsub.htmlReceived on Wed Nov 7 11:47 PST 2007
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