Season Finale Concert this Weekend!

Fellows Quartet Concert Flyer Join us for a fabulously festive and vibrant program of chamber music at Trinity Church on May 24th at 3.30pm. The concert will be a celebration of the Newport String Project's inaugural year and will look ahead to what's in store for the project next year.

We are delighted to announce that this concert will bring together past and current fellows from Community MusicWorks (Providence) - young professional musicians who are at the leading edge of a field that explores the intersection between artistry, teaching and community.

PROGRAM Bacewicz Quartetto for Four Violins (1949) Ealain McMullin, EmmaLee Holmes-Hicks, Shawn le Sure (CMW Fellow '15), Rhiannon Banerdt (CMW Fellow '15), violins

Beethoven String Quartet op 59 no 1 in F Major EmmaLee Holmes-Hicks, Ealain McMullin, violins Annalisa Boerner (CMW Fellow '14), viola Lauren Latessa (CMW Fellow '14) cello

*Reception to follow*

Admission is free - Donations will be accepted at the door.

If you have attended our concerts this year, we look forward to seeing you again and hope you'll bring some new friends with you! If this will be your first Newport String Project concert, that is great news too!

Musical flights to the Norman Bird Sanctuary on March 29th

We are delighted to announce details of our next concert at the Norman Bird Sanctuary on March 29th at 7.30pm. (Did you catch the recent NY Times article on the farmhouse at the sanctuary?) Joined by superb guest harpsichordist Paul Cienniwa, EmmaLee and Ealaín will be performing sonatas by Corelli and Bach as well as a few contemporary pieces. It promises to be a delectable evening of chamber music and dessert in front of a roaring fire at Mabel's Studio.

Paul

Guest Artist Paul Cienniwa

Tickets are $15 for Norman Bird Sanctuary members and $20 for non-members. All proceeds will go to support the mission of the Newport String Project and the Norman Bird Sanctuay.

It is sure to fill up early so register early and spread the word!  Click here to register for tickets.

March Musician Spotlight - Aaron Jackson, piano

We are very much looking forward to this weekend's concert at Channing Memorial Church and delighted to be joined by Providence-based pianist composer, Aaron Jackson. aaron

Composer and pianist Aaron Jackson offers programs that combine his original compositions and improvisations with selections from the classical repertoire, with an emphasis on music from the 20th century.  His 2012-2013 season featured works by Beethoven, Brahms and Bacewicz; Liszt, Janacek and Dvorak; Babbitt, Lieberson, and Shifrin; Scriabin, Copland and Rautavaara; all in programs that also featured his own music, including the premiere of his Piano Sonata. Recent collaborations include Chroma for jazz trumpeter Ben Holmes; a Trio for  violin, cello, and piano, with musicians Chase Spruill and Adrienne Taylor from Providence’s Community Music Works; and a set of 24 preludes for piano created in conjunction with a corresponding series of paintings by his wife, artist Prachie Narain Jackson, called The Book of Wandering.

Aaron grew up in Princeton, New Jersey, where he discovered the music of local composer Milton Babbitt.  At age 15 he performed several Babbitt pieces at a solo recital of contemporary piano music, which was subsequently repeated at the Juilliard School in New York. Babbitt became a friend and mentor, encouraging Aaron to supplement his studies at Juilliard by working with pianist Robert Taub, who was then artist-in-residence at the Institute of Advanced Study; and to attend Princeton University, where he studied philosophy and music. He went on to study music theory and composition at Columbia University, where he met and became a student of pianist Marilyn Nonken.

More information is available at his website, AaronJacksonMusic.com

March Musician Spotlight - Megan Koch, cello

We are delighted to be joined for this Saturday's concert at Channing Memorial Church by cellist Megan Koch. Below is a lightning round interview with Megan and you can also read her complete bio over on our guest artist page. Megan headshot (496x640)

Can you tell us a little bit about your earliest days playing the cello?
I started cello when I was 4 years old.  I don't remember too much from then... but I'm sure it involved a lot of Twinkles!  One of my favorite pictures that I have from back then is a picture of me holding my cello next to a Rubbermaid stool that served as my chair.
How did you know that you wanted to pursue cello professionally?
I didn't know until I was a junior in high school that I really wanted to pursue cello as a profession.  Cello was always a big part of my life, but I think the turning point was an opportunity that I had to play in a masterclass for Yo-Yo Ma.  It was a great experience to play for someone I idolized, and he was so inspiring, friendly and down to earth.  It made me want to continue to learn and share music in a meaningful way.
I know that you are an avid chamber musician - is there a piece of chamber music that you haven't played yet that would be on your dream list?
That's a tough question.  I've performed a lot of chamber music but there's still a lot to get to!  I think Mendelssohn Piano Trio No. 1 would be a top contender on my dream list.
Can you share any insights into the music on this weekend's concert? What can our audience look forward to?
I've really enjoyed working on these two pieces with Aaron, Ealain, and Emmy.  Beethoven's Piano Trio Op. 1 No. 1 is an early piece of his, and while at first it seemed pretty straight forward, it's been really interesting to delve further into it, and discover all the many nuances of the work.  The scherzo was a movement not common in piano trio repertoire at this time, and yet Beethoven added it here in his first published works.  The Bagatelles is a fun piece... listen for melodic material from the first movement to reappear throughout the composition.
What do you find is the biggest challenge in teaching music? The biggest reward?
My biggest challenge in teaching music is having kids see the big picture of hard work paying off.  The biggest reward is seeing kids get excited about music.
Is there anything that you weren't taught by your music teachers but that you try to pass along to your own students?
That's a hard one.  I've had amazing teachers and they've helped shape who I am as both a person and a musician.  One thing though that I've learned as I've gone along and would like to share with my students, is to find what makes you unique and special as a musician!

 

Beethoven and Dvorak at Channing Memorial Church

IMG_4346_2 This Saturday March 8th at 7pm, the Newport String Project presents a concert featuring music by Beethoven and Dvorak at Channing Memorial Church, 135 Pelham St, Newport RI 02840. We are delighted to be joined by two superb guest artists, Megan Koch, cello and Aaron Jackson, piano.

For composers, choosing the work that will be your opus 1 is a very significant decision. You will have the opportunity to hear Beethoven's remarkably forward thinking Piano Trio op 1 no 1.

Beethoven

We will also be taking a jaunt through the sunny Bohemian countryside courtesy of Antonin Dvorak. His Malickosti (Bagatelles) op. 47 were written in the first twelve days of May 1878 for two violins, cello and a little foot-pedalled reed organ called a harmonium. The first of the bagatelles features a Czech folksong called Hraly Dudy ("The Pipes are Playing") which returns throughout the piece - you can listen to the original Czech folksongIMG_4346_21.jpg here.

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All welcome - bring your friends!

Community Barn Dance comes to Emmanuel Church on March 2nd

Promenade and do-si-do, swing your partner, here we go.

Barn Dance Flyer

Community Barn Dance ~ Sunday, March 2, 2 pm 
Emmanuel Church

The Newport String Project and Common Fence Music are bringing an old-time barn dance to Newport and everyone is welcome. Learn what country folks did for fun back in the good old days, when families, friends and neighbors set their work aside and gathered to kick up their heels.  These simple old-time dances are fun for all ages.  No partner or experience necessary.

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Champion fiddler and co-director of the Newport String Project, EmmaLee Holmes-Hicks and guitarist Tom Perrotti will provide the toe-tappin’ music.  And master caller Jim Hicks is coming all the way from Illinois to teach the dances and make sure everyone has a good time.
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Announcing details of our February Concert Weekend

IMG_4302_2 The wintry weather makes it the perfect time to enjoy some live chamber music in a cosy room. Happily, the Newport String Project can offer just the thing next weekend (February 15th and 16th)!

We are delighted to be joined by wonderful guest artists, Annalisa Boerner, viola and Ariana Falk, cello. (You can read more about Annalisa and Ariana over on our guest artists page.) The program will feature Haydn's quirky String Quartet op 20 no 3 and Borodin's beloved String Quartet No 2.

On Saturday February 15th at 6.30pm, we'll be giving an informal performance at Empire Tea and Coffee on Broadway. One of the best cures for the February doldrums is sipping a hot mug of something delicious and being immersed in string quartets. Admission is free.

There will be another opportunity to hear the Haydn and Borodin on Sunday 16th at 2.00pm in the beautiful and historic Harrison Room of the Redwood Library and Athenaeum. Admission is free for library members and $5 for non-members. We look forward to seeing you there!

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Meet January's Guest Artists - Ben Nacar, piano

We are delighted to be joined by pianist and composer Ben Nacar for this weekend's performance of Brahms and Stravinsky. benatrisd

Ben Nacar (photo credit - Keith Jochim)

Can you tell us the story of how you began playing the piano? When I was four my father started schooling me. To see how I responded to sounds, he got a tiny electronic keyboard that played just one note at a time. He found that I could distinguish pitches and remember sequences of notes. To make my play and the experiments more complex we got a larger keyboard that could sound multiple notes at a time. This instrument had no piano "action" and no dynamic control so after some time we got an upright piano. Capturing the full range of the piano's tone colors eventually became crucial, so then we got a grand piano. The whole thing was an evolving discovery.

You are also a composer - can you tell us a little bit about your music and your inspirations?

"Reactionary" would be a reasonable assessment of my music. My primary influences are all the great classical composers from Bach to Rachmaninoff, plus a few Broadway and film composers, and some American folk and jazz. You can find score excerpts of my cello sonata and other things I've written at my website (http://www.bennacar.com/).

You will be performing both the Stravinsky and the Brahms at our concert next week -  the pieces are very different from each other but have you found any unexpected connections between the works?

On the contrary, the more I play them the more different they seem to get. In the Piano Trio I experience Brahms' complete fidelity to Romanticism; it is tinged throughout with melancholy, even in the Scherzo.  In the "Suite Italienne," by contrast, Stravinsky is carefree "playing around with" composers from an earlier era, and though he approaches being lyrical at times, he avoids any temptation to introspection and any seizing of self-moments.

We couldn't possibly interview you without asking about this - you perform practically everything from memory, how in the world do you do it??!

As a composer I'm always trying to figure out what other composers were (or are) up to in specific pieces, what compositional choices they had to make or problems they had to solve. And this is one of the first things I tend to think about any time I learn a new piece. Eventually the whole progression of notes from start to finish begins to seem logical and inevitable, so that I'm not so much remembering as recomposing my way through the piece.

You can find Ben's bio on the Guest Artist page.

Meet January's Guest Artists - Lauren Latessa, cello

In a new series of blog posts, we will be featuring lightening round interviews with our guest artists. If any readers are curious about the creative process, inspirations and background of our guest artists, feel free to send us questions! First in the hotseat, is cellist, Lauren Latessa, who will be joining us for a performance of Brahms' Piano Trio No 1 at Emmanuel Church on January 25th. Lauren headshot

Lauren Latessa, cello

Can you tell us something about how you started playing the cello?

I started playing when I was six years old.  I have a great aunt who is a cellist and my Mom took me to meet her.  I didn't know what a cello was, and when it was first described to me, I thought it was a violin!  I was completely surprised when I saw how big it was!!!

As a Fellow at Community MusicWorks, you have been immersed in ideas about the connections between music and community - can you tell us about any surprising discoveries on your journey?

I think all of us who have gone through the CMW fellowship are struck at one time or another by the remarkable way in which CMW's music creates so many different layers of community.  I think last year's ArtPlace concert, when Emmy and her parents band played, embodies this the best.  People of drastically different ages, ethnicity and socio-economic status came together to eat, dance and listen to the music!

You're playing a lot of Brahms' chamber music these days! (You can hear Lauren perform Brahms' G Major Sextet with Community MusicWorks Players at Roger Williams University! More details here...) What's your take on why people fall in love with his music?

Brahms' music is amazing! It's been great to work on the trio and sextet at the same time! I think he pushes people emotionally and I think people crave that kind of engagement in their lives.

If you had to use three words to describe Brahms' Piano Trio in B Major....

Expansive yet surprisingly human.

You can find Lauren's complete bio on our guest artist page.

Save the Date - Stravinsky and Brahms on January 25th!

We are delighted to announce the details of our next concert which takes place at Emmanuel Church in Newport on January 25th at 4pm. This concert features Stravinsky's Suite Italienne and Brahms' Piano Trio No. 1 in B Major. We are thrilled to be joined by Lauren Latessa, cello and Ben Nacar, piano. Admission is by donation and all are welcome! Flyer Newport jan 25th

A Postcard from Newport, Co. Mayo, Ireland

While I was at home in Ireland visiting family for Christmas, I was fortunate enough to have the chance to visit a world-class bowmaker who happens to live in... Newport, Co. Mayo, Ireland! How's that for serendipity! Ealain in Newport Mayo

It even has an iconic bridge of its own - formerly a railway viaduct...

Town

Alas, the famed Irish drizzly weather did not quite cooperate long enough for us to capture how picturesque it is, but strengthened the resolve to visit again in the summertime!

Newport Shield

 

 

A seasonal wish

Today on Giving Tuesday , we hope that you will consider including the Newport String Project as part of your year-end giving. Your donation will support the Newport String Project's mission to make inspiring musical experiences accessible for all in Newport - that means you will be supporting our chamber music concert series, our educational programming and most importantly, you will be supporting a project that is committed to enriching cultural life and deepening community connectedness in Newport. Trinity Church Quartet 2

Concerts...

Autumn is psyched

Joyful learning...

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Community...

Happily, all donations are fully tax deductible. Please send donations to the Newport String Project

c/o Community MusicWorks,

1392 Westminster St, Providence, RI 02909

Don't forget - there are many ways to support the work of the Newport String Project! Check out the Support the Project section of our website for more ideas of how to help the project flourish...

Behind-the-Scenes in the Teaching Room

Some of you may be wondering how the paper violins are coming along. By the end of our inaugural Paper Violin Workshop, the violins had been assembled and painted - bright and cheerful, but without any of the details. colorful violins

As the students have been reaching new learning milestones, more details have been added - f-holes, buttons, purfling and fingerboards.

Paper violins

Of course the real fun happens when we use them in class!

Jayda and Emmy Paper violins this is my violin

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In fact, we have to be careful because sometimes...

too much fun

...it can be too much fun!

*Special thanks to Melanie Puckett for the photos - more can be seen on our flickr account. Additional photo cred to Emmy!

November Concert Round-up

A key feature of the vision for the Newport String Project is to establish a string quartet residency, enabling us to serve more students and offer an expanded concert season. As with our October performances, we were delighted to present another program of string quartets this month - Haydn's op 77 no 1 in G major and Shostakovich's String Quartet No 1. Big Papa

Haydn - the Big Papa of the String Quartet

Shostakovich with his cat

A very youthful Shostakovich with a cat

We were delighted to be joined by guest artists Lauren Nelson (viola) and Ariana Falk (cello). Not only did Lauren and Ariana bring their fabulous musicianship to rehearsals, we also had the company of Lauren's two beautiful cats, Jazz and Blue and Ariana's gorgeous black lab puppy, Tessa. And yes, at one point they were indeed all under the same roof! (Very nearly a Musicians-of-Brementown moment...)

Blue likes viola the best

Blue gazes adoringly at Lauren

Tessa and the band

Tessa with the band

On Saturday, we set out our music stands in the intimate, funky performance space of Empire Tea & Coffee. The swirling sounds of Haydn and Shostakovich quartets added to the sensory delights of wafting coffee and freshly baked goods. We were delighted to pique the curiosity of a few bemused coffee enthusiasts and look forward to coaxing a few more listeners into the room with us next time we visit Empire. Many thanks to the staff there for their warm welcome!

Quartet at Empire

Sunday brought us to the Edward King House - a senior center facility housed in the majestic building located just behind the Newport Public Library. The warm and welcoming audience listened attentively and afterwards shared their particular enthusiasm for the sound world of the Shostakovich. Many thanks to all those who attended this weekend's performances - we will soon be revealing details of our next concerts (*gleeful drumming of fingertips*), keep up-to-date on the latest by liking our Facebook page and joining the mailing list!

Quartet at ekh

 

Haydn and Shostakovich at Edward King House on November 17th

On Sunday November 17th at 2pm, the second concert of the Newport String Project season will be held at Edward King House in Newport. The program features Haydn String Quartet op 77, no 1 and Shostakovich Quartet no 1. Emmy and Ealaín are delighted to be joined by two wonderful guest artists, Lauren Nelson (viola) and Ariana Falk (cello). Read more about Lauren and Ariana below:

Lauren Nelson

Lauren headshot

Violist Lauren Nelson believes that music has the power to reach everyone. Growing up in rural New Hampshire, she was a regular participant at the Apple Hill Center for Chamber Music where she learned how classical music can bring people from all walks of life together, and how specifically chamber music has the power to build communities. Nowadays, she’s building a career that combines performing, teaching and social action to make an impact on her community. A recent graduate of Boston’s New England Conservatory (Graduate Diploma) she is making an impact teaching music to the children of the Haitian community of Hyde Park, MA. Lauren’s performance career takes her through many musical environments, from Boston’s Jordan Hall, to New York’s Whitney Museum with the Wordless Music Ensemble, from Carnegie Hall, and the Kennedy Center to Sculler’s Jazz Club in Cambridge, MA. Most recently she has performed with The Apple Hill String Quartet, Phillip Ying, David Ying, Mark Fewer and Susan Cahill. Lauren is also a regular sub with the New World Symphony Orchestra in Miami, FL. She is an active freelancer in and around the Boston area and is starting to get involved with local bands. Lauren’s early influences have manifested themselves in extensive work within the string quartet repertoire. While working on her Master’s Degree at the Music School of the University of Kentucky she was the violist in the Niles String Quartet. With this group she worked with the Juilliard String Quartet at their Intensive Quartet Seminar and studied at the Banff Centre for the Arts in Alberta Canada. Lauren is also a committed educator and arts advocate. She is fully behind the El Sistema movement, and is currently a dedicated teacher at the Youth and Family Enrichment Services after school program in Hyde Park. Here she focuses on musical and personal development through peer-teaching and rigorous lessons and rehearsals. Lauren studied viola with Roger Tapping at the New England Conservatory. She received her Master’s Degree from the University of Kentucky and her Bachelor’s Degree from the Eastman School of Music under the tutelage of Deborah Lander and John Graham, respectively.

Ariana Falk
Ariana Falk

Ariana Falk currently serves as Education Director for the Worcester Chamber Music Society and runs the Neighborhood Strings program, which provides free lessons in string instruments to youth from Worcester’s Main South community. She received a degrees from Boston University and the Yale School of Music, where she was recipient of the Aldo Parisot Prize. She also studied English at Yale College. She was a Fulbright Scholar to Germany and now serves as Music Director of the Massachusetts Fulbright Association. She has recently appeared as soloist with orchestras including the Stow Festival Orchestra, Portland’s Columbia Symphony, and the Olympia Symphony. As a chamber musician, she performs with the Burlington Ensemble, and has recently appeared as a guest artist on the Marlboro College and Longy Faculty Artist series and live on WGBH Boston and WVPR. She has performed as a string quartet player at the Juilliard, Great Lakes, and Deer Valley music festivals, performed at other summer festivals including the Norfolk Music Festival and Banff Centre, and served on the string faculty of the Boston University Tanglewood Institute and the Worcester Chamber Music Society Summer Festival. In addition, Ariana has toured with the Grammy Award- nominated Yale Cellos, including performances at Carnegie Hall and in France and England. Ariana’s first chamber music experience was her teenage string quartet, which included her twin brother as the violist (now a physicist). They sounded pretty good and even got on the pilot season of “From the Top,” but they fought like children until they reconciled a decade later. Ariana also enjoys tennis and marathon running and thinks sports and music go together surprisingly well.

The Great Paper Violin Adventure begins

There may have been a few raised eyebrows and some amused bewilderment when Emmy and I shared our plan to have Newport String Project students begin lessons with paper violins. “Sounds lovely… but how does it work if they don’t make any sound?”

“Won’t the kids get bored when they could be playing a real instrument?”

“Paper? How in the world…?”

The idea of teaching fundamental violin technique with a cardboard substitute has been around for quite a while. At the tender age of 4, Emmy began her fiddling career with a Crackerjack box – she fondly remembers the victory of getting to eat the (admittedly stale) Crackerjacks once she graduated to a real instrument. In recent years, an El Sistema nucleo in Venezuela called La Riconada developed the first Paper Orchestra. Faced with a shortage of instruments for their young beginners, teachers at La Riconada were inspired to think of a creative solution and so developed a curriculum which turned out to be immensely effective in instilling basic ensemble culture and giving students a grounding in technical basics before even reaching a real instrument. Wildly successful variations on the Paper Orchestra idea have been implemented by YOLA in LA, by Big Noise in Scotland and by JAMM in Alaska, led by the ever inspirational Lorrie Heagy.

So how did this globe-trotting idea work out in Newport you may be wondering?

After many weeks of behind the scenes planning and preparation (which featured a slightly obsessive hunt for suitable cardboard), we hosted a Paper Violin Workshop for all our students and their parents. For several weeks, we had explained to our students that building violins together would be a very special occasion and finally the day arrived! Here we all were - teachers, parents and students! It was clear that the students were thrilled to share the moment with their friends and with their families.

Emmy welcomes the crowd

There were many remarkable displays of collaboration and moral support between students and grown-ups and between friends and families that evening.

Linda and Melody Eilian keeps an eye on things

Details

There were also notable examples of very young students showing great patience and perseverance, lost in states of deep concentration.

getting the sides ready Simi concentrating hard Isabella

The room was a hive of activity as families went through the different stages. Cries of "more tape!", "what did I do with that skinny piece of cardboard?",  "I need help over here!" and "what's next?" rang out around the room.

As the flat pieces of cardboard came to life and gradually began to take the shape of a real violin, the real excitement began.

NandN Autumn is psyched The girls are ready

Of course, most of the students were keeping a watchful eye on the ultimate destination - the Painting Room!

The paint room

"Would you like to paint your violins different colors or brown like a real violin?" I asked two of our Kindergarteners. Without skipping a beat, they declared with pride,

"I'm making a rainbow violin! With all the colors!"

"And mine will be BLUE!"

As the parents filed out of the MLK Community Center that evening, many assured us that they would be returning to finish details and some even admitted that they might have had more fun than their kids.

Diego with his parents Autumn and her mom

All we can say for sure is that the Paper Violin workshop was the perfect opening chapter of a wonderful adventure for the students of the Newport String Project.

* Special thanks to Julie Davis, director of the El Sistema program at the Bridge Boston Charter School in Dorcester, for her invaluable advice and guidance. Very special thanks also to Melanie Puckett for her beautiful photography - more of Melanie's pictures can be seen on our Flickr account.

Porter, Haydn and Beethoven at Trinity

One of the aims of the Newport String Project is to make inspiring musical experiences available for all. One step in that direction is to offer free concerts and last Sunday, we were delighted to perform the first in a series of free chamber music concerts being offered by the Newport String Project this year.Trinity Church Quartet 2 Ideally suited to chamber music, the Hawes Room of Trinity Church has a beautiful acoustic and a welcoming and intimate atmosphere. As we launched into the Cole Porter, surrounded by an enthusiastic and welcoming audience, it was clear this was going to be a very special concert indeed. Once the room had filled to capacity, people began gathering outside at the open windows to check out the concert...

The room abuzz

It was especially fitting that this first concert featured music written for string quartet... Currently, the Newport String Project is served by two resident musicians, however, the vision is that the project will soon sustain a full-time string quartet residency. This flagship ensemble would be able to offer an expanded concert season and educational programming.

The concert at Trinity was the culmination of a wonderful week of intensive rehearsing with Jesse and Heath at Avaloch Farm (see earlier post) but also celebrated a new beginning. Both the performance and educational strands of the Newport String Project are now underway, thanks to funders including the Prince Charitable Trusts, the Rhode Island Foundation and NewportFed, as well as all the individual supporters who have made generous contributions to this project.

Our hope is that the Newport String Project will ignite the imagination and enthusiasm of audiences across the island. These are the sparks that can enable the project to flourish.

Now though, it's time for us to start planning our next concert...

trinity e and e

A blissful rehearsal week at Avaloch...

In today's hectic and fast-paced world, musicians all too often find themselves faced with needing to craft a performance on very little rehearsal time and with lots of other demands competing for attention. There is, of course, much to be learned from an efficient, snappy, rehearsal and it's always exciting to have a full plate of performance opportunities. Yet, in the midst of hectic rehearsals, there is inevitably a wistful moment of thinking, "If only there was a little more time..." In planning the first concert of our season, we were thrilled when two wonderful members of the Community MusicWorks family - Jesse and Heath - offered to join us. We had settled on a program of Haydn op 20 no 4, a great arrangement of Cole Porter's Begin the Beguine by Evan Price and Beethoven's epic op 127 - we knew we needed to carve out a serious chunk of rehearsal time.

Fortunately, Heath had learned of a beautiful new rehearsal retreat venue in New Hampshire called the Avaloch Farm Music Institute led by director Deb Sherr. Deb is also director at Greenwood where Jesse and Heath first played chamber music together) We were thrilled to be able to reserve a spot for the first week in October.

As we made the drive north to New Hampshire, the foliage gradually deepened in color and by the time we reached the farmlands around Avaloch, it was a riot of reds and golds. We were greeted by Deb who showed us the exquisitely decorated barns and comfortable lodgings. Thanks to Deb's vision and the generosity of founder Alfred Tauber, even in its first year, Avaloch seems to embody an atmosphere of generosity and appreciation for the value of the artistic process.

It was with great relish and abandon that we rehearsed in our studio that first evening and so began a fabulous week of digging into the Beethoven and Haydn. Of course, we would have been remiss in our duties not to take an occasional break to take in the full Avaloch experience...

Water Dog

...Emmy takes a dip in the nearby pond...

Mindful Heath

...Heath takes it all in from a canoe...

And the decadence didn't stop there. Our rehearsals were punctuated by delicious feasts (3 a day in fact) created by the wonderful Deborah - a true artist! I can personally confirm that the catfish listed on the menu was transcendent! (That became a word-of-the-week...)

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One of my favourite experiences of the week was on our last night, when we played through our program for Deb, Deborah, Diane and Dodi, who had taken such wonderful care of us all week.

Avaloch Farm Music Institute

It is a rare and special opportunity to rehearse in a peaceful setting, where everyone has the mental space to be totally present and focussed on musicmaking and connectedness. Many thanks to Deb Sherr and all the staff at Avaloch!

e and e at avaloch

Teaching Begins!

After months and months of planning, it was a very special moment to receive an email with a list of students who had signed up to join the Newport String Project! It was with immense delight that Emmy and I finally met this illustrious group at the Dr Martin Luther King Jr Community Center in Newport on Monday. In the lead up to the occasion, students at the MLK Center had enjoyed several workshops led by Emmy - an instrument petting zoo (in which several "shy" violins were coaxed out from underneath a blanket) and a fantastic story hour featuring the tale of a farmer's daughter and how she brought her whole community together using a very special talent.

So, as the students for the first official class, their anticipation was palpable! They listened attentively as we explained how we would be starting out with paper violins - learning the names of the different parts of the violin, learning how to make music together as well as how to care for a fragile musical instrument. Eyes lit up as we explained that, in a few months, there would be a special graduation concert where they would show all the songs they had learned and would be presented with their "real" violin.

The questions came thick and fast

"Could I try making a paper violin at home?"

"Is it ok if I make a special suitcase for my paper violin?"

"How long does it take to make a real violin?"

Luckily, there was still time to learn some songs and dances together, as well as time to practice the very important art of "taking a bow".

As parents arrived to pick them up, students bounced over, eager to share what they had learned. Emmy and I, a little tired but blissfully happy, started to pack away our violins when a first grader appeared beside us and presented us with a wonderful souvenir to mark the occasion... It's going to be a great year!

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