Monday, May 28, 2007
What are my hours ?
When do I play on Ben Yehuda?
Occasionally someone will say they havn''t seen me playing for a while. I am almost always there Sunday - Thursday, weather and health permitting. Occasionally I agree to play a wedding but I do not go searching for them. Right now I feel my place is on Ben Yehuda at night.
I am usually on Ben Yehuda from 7:00 - 10 or 11 oclock. Sometimes I go earlier if the space is vacant of other musicans and sometimes I play later, till 12 or so. Currently I teach an 8:00 class Monday mornings so Sunday night is an early night
Saturday I've been playing recently, but sometimes I get fed up with all the wildness.
Occasionally someone will say they havn''t seen me playing for a while. I am almost always there Sunday - Thursday, weather and health permitting. Occasionally I agree to play a wedding but I do not go searching for them. Right now I feel my place is on Ben Yehuda at night.
I am usually on Ben Yehuda from 7:00 - 10 or 11 oclock. Sometimes I go earlier if the space is vacant of other musicans and sometimes I play later, till 12 or so. Currently I teach an 8:00 class Monday mornings so Sunday night is an early night
Saturday I've been playing recently, but sometimes I get fed up with all the wildness.
WELCOME BACK, beginnings of a harper
Many times people have told me that they look for me when they come to Ben Yehuda. Last night, Mark and his wife from Texas(?) said they saw me on their first trip to Israel in 2001 and have seen me on every trip since then. This is thier 7th trip. Mark insists that I was playing harp the first time they saw me. My first harp I didn't get until Dec. 2000. For the first few months I couldn't think about anything else. Not good when I still had 2 weeks of ulpan left. (Ulpan is intensive Hebrew class) Finally ulpan was over and I could really focus on my harp without guilt. But I was living in Tel Aviv and I wanted to move to Jerusalem so after a few months I forsed myself to put my harp in the closet (literally). So 2 months looking for a place, 2 months moving, and then a little more time settling in, almost a half year of not playing. You see, I couldn't play because once I started I couldn't do anything else. So now I'm in my apartment of one room, bathroom and kitchen outside, (with my 2 cats), but it was really hard getting back into the harp because everything I had worked on had disappeared but it was worse than starting all over ecause I had the feeling that I should b able to play something, but I couldn't. Well, slowly I kept at it I couldn't wait to take the harp to the street(I had been a street musician for a number of years now, first violin, then recorder) ,so much before I was ready, out we went, harp and I. It wasn't too bad untill somebody came up to me looking at me like they expected me to play something. Then my fingers just forgot all of the little bit they knew, and I felt like such a fool. And even more so when they asked what I could play, or better yet, for a specific song. So when Mark said they saw me in 2001 playing a harp, I really wonder just what they heard.
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
FOLK ALLEY RADIO
This is my favorite radio station. If you like folk music you must try it. 24 hours of really great music. It also has extras, concerts and interviews that you can listen to in addition to the radio stream. One of my favorites is Abigail Washburn and the Sparrow quartet. This one is a video. To get it, click on music, then clck on live from folk alley. The radio station is on my link list.
Wedding in Beit Shemish
I did not play on Ben Yehuda last night. I was playing at a wedding in Beit Shemish. I played during the kabalat panim (receiving the faces). What beauty can be created from white sheets and beads.Under the open sky, surrounded by white walls of cloth hanging from frames, strands of shiny white beads hanging all around. The Chuppa was very tall, also made from white cloth and strands of beads. Simplicity and beauty, very good friends. Also some torches on high poles. Later in the evening, after they were taking the magical room apart, ou could see the fields that surrounded the place. Hard to brlirvr that just an hour before it felt like a palace.
Joshua Bell plays at DC Metro station, no one notices
The Washington Post got Joshua Bell to play at a DC Metro station for 45 minutes on a Friday morning. 1097 people walked by him. Seven stopped and listened. 27 gave money (for a total of $32). 1 person recognized him.
It was 7:51 a.m. on Friday, January 12, the middle of the morning rush hour. In the next 43 minutes, as the violinist performed six classical pieces, 1,097 people passed by.
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Joshua Bell in the Metro
Will all buskers please stand up and take a bow
Earlier this year, The Washington Post asked Joshua Bell to stand at a subway stop, play his instrument and see if anyone noticed.
Do I really know enough about art music to recognize genius out of context, on the street? Do you?
is willing to bring art music to the people and to bridge the gap between the formal concert hall and the scruffy street. |
Friday, May 11, 2007
CD - anticipation
There is a great CD I want to tell you about entitled anticipation by Charlene Wallace and Suzan Piltch. Charlene plays harp, Suzan plays piano and flute. The combination of harp and flute is often done and is unbeatable but flute and piano I think is a little more rare. Well I want to tell you that combination also works quite well.
I fell inlve with this CD the first time I heard it. Beautiful melodies that are at the same time full of life and energy giving , but also calming and relaxing.I feel there is alot of healing in this CD. I recently had a few months when I was not feeling well and I would put this CD on and go to sleep and it was very helpful. There is a track or two that has just a bit too much energy for sleeping. I want to make a compilation from this disc and others to make a sleeping disc and then my dreams
will be perfect.Just a note, the sence of hearing never shuts down, even under anethesia.
I beleive the CD can be ordered thru Amazon.com. I also googled their names and found their web site.
I fell inlve with this CD the first time I heard it. Beautiful melodies that are at the same time full of life and energy giving , but also calming and relaxing.I feel there is alot of healing in this CD. I recently had a few months when I was not feeling well and I would put this CD on and go to sleep and it was very helpful. There is a track or two that has just a bit too much energy for sleeping. I want to make a compilation from this disc and others to make a sleeping disc and then my dreams
will be perfect.Just a note, the sence of hearing never shuts down, even under anethesia.
I beleive the CD can be ordered thru Amazon.com. I also googled their names and found their web site.
Thursday, May 3, 2007
BABYCOUNT
Tuesdy night was slow, there was only one family with 3 small children who stopped to listen,2 in strollers. The oldest was standing and looked about 2 years old. Last night there were no babys but I managed to play Yonatan 4 times for todlers. I love watching the faces of the children listening to me, to see their eyes light up. For those that don't know, Yonathan Hakatan (Little Jonathan)is the most popular children's song in Israel. It is about a little boy going to gan(kindergarten) and he climbs a tree and gets a big hole in his pants. I have had more requests for that song than any other, and not by little kids but by kids of all ages. I usually don't play it right off but save it for the right time and watch the faces to see who recognizes it first, the parent or the child. It never fails to bring smiles to their faces.
Many of the babies I play for only get concerts of a few seconds as their parent is rushing past pushing their stroller, totally unaware of the hunger on their childs face to hear more music and the child straining to see me as he slowly passes by. But on the other hand I have other parents who often bring their child out just to see me. One little boy came almost nightly. I watched him grow from a little baby into a little boy. I'm sure he will be a musician. O, I don't mean as a profession. Maybe yes, maybe no. That's up to him. But everyone should have musical training and be a musician of sorts, if just for his own amusement. Musical training is one of the best ways to develop the brain. 100 years ago in Scotland 85% of the people were musicians. When families got together they played music. I want to encourage every one to listen to music and play music. It's never too late. My oldest violin student had her first lesson when she was 87 (her story later) and I just started a lady of 77 years on the harp.
Many of the babies I play for only get concerts of a few seconds as their parent is rushing past pushing their stroller, totally unaware of the hunger on their childs face to hear more music and the child straining to see me as he slowly passes by. But on the other hand I have other parents who often bring their child out just to see me. One little boy came almost nightly. I watched him grow from a little baby into a little boy. I'm sure he will be a musician. O, I don't mean as a profession. Maybe yes, maybe no. That's up to him. But everyone should have musical training and be a musician of sorts, if just for his own amusement. Musical training is one of the best ways to develop the brain. 100 years ago in Scotland 85% of the people were musicians. When families got together they played music. I want to encourage every one to listen to music and play music. It's never too late. My oldest violin student had her first lesson when she was 87 (her story later) and I just started a lady of 77 years on the harp.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
guest harpist, fire on Ben Yehuda ?
Last I night was a beautiful night on Ben Yehuda. It wasn't cold at all when I went out and got just a bit chilly later. I play much better when my hands are not cold, or freezing, which happens sometimes.
I had a guest harpist last night, Inge from South Africa, where she plays professionally on a concert pedal harp. She played very beautifully on my harp, I like to let other harpo\ists play on my harp. It adds a ittle variety to rom my repertoir and it gives me a chnce to hear how my harp sounds. Thankyou Inge for your nice music.
I was sitting there last night and all of a sudden I saw smoke billowing from the front of Bank Discount. It seemed to be comming from one of the money machines. I watched people walking by for quite a few minutes(at least 5) and nobod seemed aware that anything was happening. I don't dare go even a few feet from my harp because many people would not hesitate to come over and start messing with it. They actually try it when I'm sitting there playing.
I started thinking of calling it a night when I started smelling a very bad odor . It reminded me of the night in Tel Aviv(I used to live there). I was plating in my regular spot on the corner of Dizengoff and King George violin or recorder(pre harp days). I saw a stream of smoke coming from a window in the bank. I think I'll leave that story for another day. Anyway, back on Ben Yehuda, I was distracted, and then when I looked again the smoke had stopped. A friend went to check it out and it seems it had something to do with the lighting decoration put up for Independance Day celebration. A whole section of the lights were out.
Afterwards, sittingout there I started thinking about my blog and making notes and I think I have some good ideas which is good because this writing thing does not come easy to me. I'm a music person, not a word person.
well one idea I had was to have a baby count. My favorite audiences are the children. I love playing for them, and especially the babies. I'm going to report on the babies I play for, the ones that stop and lister, not the ones who just stroll on by.
there were about 3 earlier in the evening but not since I had hte idea. Music is so important and it is VERY important for babies to listen to music. More on that subject later.
I had a guest harpist last night, Inge from South Africa, where she plays professionally on a concert pedal harp. She played very beautifully on my harp, I like to let other harpo\ists play on my harp. It adds a ittle variety to rom my repertoir and it gives me a chnce to hear how my harp sounds. Thankyou Inge for your nice music.
I was sitting there last night and all of a sudden I saw smoke billowing from the front of Bank Discount. It seemed to be comming from one of the money machines. I watched people walking by for quite a few minutes(at least 5) and nobod seemed aware that anything was happening. I don't dare go even a few feet from my harp because many people would not hesitate to come over and start messing with it. They actually try it when I'm sitting there playing.
I started thinking of calling it a night when I started smelling a very bad odor . It reminded me of the night in Tel Aviv(I used to live there). I was plating in my regular spot on the corner of Dizengoff and King George violin or recorder(pre harp days). I saw a stream of smoke coming from a window in the bank. I think I'll leave that story for another day. Anyway, back on Ben Yehuda, I was distracted, and then when I looked again the smoke had stopped. A friend went to check it out and it seems it had something to do with the lighting decoration put up for Independance Day celebration. A whole section of the lights were out.
Afterwards, sittingout there I started thinking about my blog and making notes and I think I have some good ideas which is good because this writing thing does not come easy to me. I'm a music person, not a word person.
well one idea I had was to have a baby count. My favorite audiences are the children. I love playing for them, and especially the babies. I'm going to report on the babies I play for, the ones that stop and lister, not the ones who just stroll on by.
there were about 3 earlier in the evening but not since I had hte idea. Music is so important and it is VERY important for babies to listen to music. More on that subject later.
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