I. The Rest
I am having the hardest time, deciding where to put the rest in a measure. Should it come at the end of a measure as if you’ve just stopped and needed a few minutes to think where you’re going next? Or should it go at the beginning of the next measure, as if you somehow got distracted and forgot to continue? I smile as I try to figure this out.
II. Missing Max
I miss my little dog Max at the oddest times. Not when I look at his collar or his leash laid out next to my bed stand, but in the middle of the night when I absentmindedly reach up to pat the space where he used to sleep. Isabella carefully sleeps down at the bottom of the bed, out of the way of any movement.
Max slept close to me, well in harms way. I was never sure if he was the sweetest dog that ever lived, or just not the sharpest tool in the box.
III. Audiobook
I am reading my memoir, Let Your Heart Be Broken, aloud for the audiobook. This is not an easy thing to do. I have a new respect for the muscles of the lips, mouth and cheek, and where I put my tongue to articulate a word. I am constantly dropping plurals, fumbling over words, or seeing the end of the sentence at the same time I see the beginning, and reordering the words. My engineer often raises his head from my book as he follows along with a look, and even will repeat a fugitive word for me.
The experience of reading my own words into a microphone is strange. Sometimes, as I read aloud, I am possessed by deep memories, as if the words are plunging me back to that particular time. I almost smell the woods, and stumble on the rocks
IV. Choice
I am in a conference call with the Ulysses Quartet, planning how we will work together in the future. The first violinist speaks of an experience she had with the now extinct ensemble Shattered Glass, where the audience could select how they wanted to react to performance, either by listening, drawing or small movements. My mind spun with possibilities: a concert designed with three areas, one for seated listening, another equipped for drawing, and the final area devoid of chairs to allow for movement. An autonomy of response not dictated by convention.
V. Revenge
My neighbor, on the other side of the creek, cut down a slender adolescent oak I had been nurturing. In a confusion of where the property line was between our houses, the oak found itself outside of my jurisdiction. So he gleefully chopped it down, and dug up all the roots for good effect.
To get even, I have, over the last five years, planted lots of trees on my property. These trees are never too close to his line, but just close enough to obscure his brick house from view. A black willow, luxuriantly wide and fringy, is now over twenty-five foot tall, happily living by the creek’s edge. The pin oak, red bud, tulip tree and white oak are not far behind. I am quite happy with my revenge.
I sigh and drum my pencil on the blank score paper. All morning I have been procrastinating, unable to move forward in composing my next work. I am caught in the bardo of creation – between not knowing and, at the same time, sensing the direction of the piece.
My ear is always bending towards the sound strings produce when I compose. The instrument itself is an ingenuity of construction – as one plays, the open strings resound, building up a deepening of sound – like a piano’s sustaining pedal, but discrete and selective. The resonating strings respond like ghosts to a call, building up overtones and harmonics, even different tones.
sound to a bare shadow of itself by playing with the wood of the bow) gets closer to what I experience in a single note or tone – an outer shell-like-flesh with a soft inner core.
, religion, education, or just being at the wrong place at the wrong time), break in through the back door or window. No matter how you get in, you are in.
ars. When I got a commission from the Kronos Quartet, that and my savings allowed me to launch into being able to compose full time.
Share your joy.
Heave your heart into your mouth – often.
There, right there is the magic – that lift, as if you were about to fly. The upward motion pulls at gravity. I am a kayak, rushing downstream only to hit a rock. As I fly in the air, the suspension seems longer than possible; my heart stops beating for a endlessly long moment – time is distorted.