About Me

My photo
composer, ambidexter, and 20-something human... all at the same time.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

You are missing here.

As I write this I am in the midst of cleaning up the score for a recently completed work for solo cello, titled You are missing here. Of all the instruments for which I have an affinity, the cello is the one dearest to me, as it has been my primary instrument since the age of 11. Had I not broken my arm in high school, which lead to the suggestion of my orchestra director that I should pursue composition, I would have probably continued on my path toward becoming a professional orchestral player. But, having broken my arm in two places, playing the cello was never quite the same. Though I managed to continue to perform after my arm healed I never regained the level of comfortability I once had on the instrument. A prospect that at the time was heartbreaking.
Like most pieces I write, You are missing here. is not simply drawn from a single impetus, but is a confluence of strands as the piece was conceived during a long period of time in which the person most dear to me, my fiancĂ©e, was absent for long stretches of time due to her own exciting artistic pursuits. In her absence, I found myself dusting off my cello and re-familiarizing myself with the instrument.  After brushing up on solo works that I had once played, works by Hindemith, Rachmaninov, and, of course, Bach, I began to view my time playing on the instrument from a creative guise. I started to communicate not just a feeling of solitary melancholy in her absence, but also capturing moments of joy and exhilaration that I wished to capture and share after the fact, like my trip to St. Petersburg that she unfortunately couldn’t join.
In effect, the piece became a deeply personal journal in which I was conveying a myriad of emotional states through the more visceral vantage of performer, rather than my more typically cerebral role of composer. In the absence of one partner, I became reacquainted with another and wrote a piece about— what else?... the absence of my other.

4 comments:

  1. Nice post. I'm looking forward to hearing the piece. Any plans for it being performed soon?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Glad you like it! The cellist has informed me of a tentative performance in August in Georgia and then hopefully a Boston performance shortly thereafter. I'll be sure to post an mp3 to my site as soon as I have one.

    Thanks for reading!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Agreed - love the post. I also can't wait to hear the piece! I personally love the cello too, and begged my mom to let me learn when I was 10. Instead, she told me it was too big for me, and convinced me to learn the violin instead. Finally, when I was 16, I had the chance to take cello lessons for about a year. It's such a beautiful instrument . . . .

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks Jen! I came to the cello by a similar route, I wanted to play the bass, but I also was too small. So cello it was. :-)

    ReplyDelete