Grace Notes Music
saxophone and clarinet lessons with Meg Grace
Make music with confidence and satisfaction

Newsletter for music lovers who want to gain confidence in and explore their inner musician.

What's New, Pussycat?

Try Something New. Be Creative. Improvise. Keep Learning.

Today's edition of Musician's Motivator looks at ways we can build up our creative resiliency.

Try Something New.

Last week, I asked our goddaughter, Bree, what she wanted to do on our weekly date. She suggested a treasure hunt. Great idea, Bree! I don't think you have to be 14 to appreciate a treasure hunt. We mid-century citizens of the world can enjoy them, too.

LetterboxingI did some googling and found letterboxing.org. This site lists treasure hunts by area (city, zip, neighborhood) and also by date placed. I found one in SE Portland that had been created in August, 2009.

A treasure hunt provides clues for the hunter to decode. In letterboxing, the found treasure consists of a small blank booklet, rubber stamp, and stamp pad. You bring your own personal rubber stamp to mark in the booklet and use the stamp in the found treasure stash to mark in your own log book. Since we were newbie letterboxers and didn't have our own personal rubber stamps, we wrote messages and drew pictures in the booklet at each found treasure.

Be Creative.

At a future get-together, Bree and I will create a new treasure hunt and add it to the letterboxing website for others to enjoy finding.

Improvise.

My students have been learning how to improvise, as in creating music on the spot! This is in preparation for the Spring recital, Sonata Improv. Each musician will prepare a solo, a fully-notated piece of music; and add an improvised section to the piece.

Improvisation is such a daring act. And yet, not so scary when approached gently. We've been working on exercises to get the improv muscle strengthened. Each week, I'm pleasantly surprised at the new musical creations that come out of their instruments. Rather, the music that *they* create!

Keep Learning.

Last Saturday, I enjoyed a performance by Belle Voci, a 24-voice women's vocal ensemble. They sang a great variety of styles and languages. In addition to English, they sang in Latin, French, a West African tongue, German, Spanish, Italian, and Estonian.

Estonian singersIt was the Estonian piece that has stayed with me. Since hearing it, I have undergone a journey of learning about Estonian music. Lauliku Lapsopõli is an Estonian folk song arranged by Veljo Tormis for female voices.

A solo voice begins the piece, singing the haunting melody in a clear, high voice. Soon she is joined by more and more voices layering tight, high harmonies above her. The sounds are exquisite, evoking images of high mountain snow and ice for me.

However, the lyric speaks of summer and birds and ducks, and how the singer learned so many songs.

"When I was very little, al'leaa,
I grew so prettily, al'leaa,
I was but one night old, al'leaa,
just two days old,
mother took my cradle to the meadow,
put my crid on the heath,
put a duck to rock the cradle,
the bird of summer to push me.
The duck had many words,
the bird of summer had lots of songs,
the duck sang many songs to me there,
the bird of summer, it spoke to me a lot.
That is where this child learned the songs,
this crazy one [got to] know the words,
all of them I placed on paper,
all of them I hewed into a book.
That is why I have so many words,
that is why I have lots of tunes."

Ongoing Process

When I was at the library on Sunday, I checked out a CD of orchestral music just because it had the word Estonia on the jacket. It is the music of Norwegian composer, Edvard Grieg, performed by the Estonia National Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Paavo Järvi. Trying something new.

How are you flexing your creative muscle? By trying something new? By continuing to learn? By improvising? All of these? Oh, that's great to hear!

Thanks for reading! The next edition of Musician's Motivator will be out on Wednesday, March 24, 2010.

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Read the next edition of Musician's Motivator  March 24, 2010.


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