For their digital media class, Gwen, Erin and Heather of Roger Williams University have made a wonderful website that features video interviews with CMW students, parents, board members, and staff. Check it out here.
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CMW onlineFor their digital media class, Gwen, Erin and Heather of Roger Williams University have made a wonderful website that features video interviews with CMW students, parents, board members, and staff. Check it out here. Souvenir de Community PrepThe PSQ & Friends rolled out the May concert program for the first time yesterday at the Community Preparatory School, providing a free concert and dinner as the final event [see October post] in a yearlong residency, funded in part by Chamber Music America.
-Heath Marlow, CMW staff VenezuelaA large group, including colleagues from the Longy School and the Rhode Island Philharmonic’s Music School, gathered at New Urban Arts for Thursday’s Fellowship Seminar which featured Jenn Chang (a senior at Harvard) reporting on her research on the National System of Venezuelan Youth and Children’s Orchestras. Roberto, one of the program’s founders, happened to be visiting Boston (pure coincidence) and came to Providence to share further detail and show us video footage. Benito, a clarinetist now living near Boston, who grew up participating in El Sistema, was also able to join us and share his personal experience. -Heath Marlow, CMW staff Ten Years of TransformationOn Sunday afternoon, CMW celebrated "Ten Years of Transformation" in true CMW style: music and food! Jonathan Biss and his mother Miriam Fried generously donated an all-Beethoven recital for the annual spring fundraising event at the Regent Avenue School Building. An audience member’s account: "That was an amazing event. I would’ve written sooner, but if you are familiar with the habits of the boa constrictor you will know that after the boa constrictor has consumed a meal that is bigger than its own circumference, it goes into a bit of a coma for a period of time. So, having eaten like a boa constrictor on Sunday, yesterday I was in a coma – and while at first I thought it was terrible to have missed all those hours of mental accomplishment, I then realized that it was actually a small price to pay, since I now won’t have to take up any time eating again until late June. Thank you so much for inviting me. It was a stellar afternoon and evening, I truly commend you. I have been describing it to people since as having an amazing and very unusual combination of qualities: it was beautiful and elegant, and yet completely heartfelt and generous. It’s hard to achieve both. I can’t imagine the work that went into it – but anyway, it was a huge success, at least from the perspective of an attendee. I hope that everyone else rounded off the evening by writing you huge checks."
-Heath Marlow, CMW staff Dollars for DarfurFriday’s Youth Salon at the Met School’s Black Box Theatre was quite an event! After raising funds for Hurricane Katrina victims last April, Phase II elected to make this year’s Youth Salon a benefit concert to help refugees in Darfur.
And I didn’t get such good photos of the other performances: "Smile" by Charlie Chaplin (arr. Stalnaker/Montgomery), "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" performed by Chloe’s viola students, "Music Works" performed by Minna’s violin students, "The Stream Flows" by Bright Sheng performed by violinist Shaw Pong Liu, the presentation by Jessie’s Music Lab students, and a performance by a member of Terrell Osborne’s Music One. What a night! -Heath Marlow, CMW staff Uri VardiMy practice retreat week earlier this month took me to Madison, Wisconsin, where I worked with famed cello and Feldenkrais instructor Uri Vardi. Here are some of my notes: 2. View cello playing as a series of degrees of weight and lightness -Sara Stalnaker, PSQ Chris Turner WorkshopHi! My name is Heather and I am a student at Community MusicWorks. I just wanted to tell you about the workshop we had on Friday [April 13]. There were two visitors, a harmonica and a fiddle player. The harmonica player’s name was Chris [Turner] and the fiddler’s name was Rachel [Maloney]. They played country music.
-Heather Argueta, age 8 Teri EinfeldtHi! My name is Alana Perez, and I was in a master class. Our master teacher, Teri Einfeldt, gave us great advice. She told me and my partner Heather that we were very good violin players. She gave tricky things to try, like keep our pinky where our other three fingers are–near the fingerboard. Now let me tell you more about Teri. Well, she came all the way from Connecticut. She’s very funny, and also teaches at Hartt School. Like I said, she made us do some tricky things with our fingers and bow, but she made it real fun!! 🙂 If I get to do something with her it’ll be a pleasure. I forgot to tell that she had us do something with our bow called "lot little little lot". I’ll explain what that is. It’s when you use a lot of bow, then you use a little bit of bow, then you use a lot of bow again. Teri was a great pleasure to play with and I’m looking forward to playing with her AGAIN!! 🙂 Community MusicWorks Rocks! CMW enjoys a Red StripeOne way to bring awareness to a mission is through careful, diligent work in the community, like water on stone, making connections and cultivating relationships. Method 2: Glue a big red stripe on it. Community MusicWorks, no longer an anonymous Westminster Street storefront, now proudly displays its moniker in Pantone 032. Be careful driving next time you’re in the neighborhood, as you may be distracted by our bold attempt to raise awareness. Enjoy! -Liz Cox, CMW staff Recent note left in mailbox: "Dear CMW, congratulations on your new red signs! They are very legible & easy to read! Thanks for your strong presence on an increasingly commercialized Westminster St.!" -a bike rider Meeting Street VisitProvidence’s Meeting Street School is an incredible place. To be frank, I was not exactly thrilled to have to get up so early on consecutive mornings in order to fill in for Laura (out of commission with a bad cold) for two days of 9-10, 10-11, and 11-12 school presentations last week. But that feeling changed the moment I set foot on the brand new campus at the intersection of Eddy Street and Thurbers Avenue in South Providence. Day One. Chloe, Jesse and I can’t agree on what time to rendezvous at the office, so we each drive ourselves over to the school. I know I’m in the right neighborhood when I turn onto Eddy Street in front of a certain graffiti-enhanced Chevy Prism [see March 26 post]. We all sign in at the front desk and head down a hallway to one of the school’s large rooms for the first of three demonstrations that we’d been rehearsing over the past several days. After introducing ourselves, and our instruments, we start the program with a couple movements of the Dohnanyi Serenade, follow that up with the variations movement from the Mozart E-flat Major String Trio, and then present a dramatic reading of Hansel and Gretel that Laura had imported from her time with her string trio in Los Angeles. Using brief musical excerpts (Mendelssohn’s Italian Symphony’s first theme, Copland’s Simple Gifts, Winter from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons) to create specific atmospheres, the story would allow us to match music with emotions that we could return to in the classroom setting the following day. That was the plan, had Jesse not forgotten his music back at the office. Chloe was amazing and vamped for about ten minutes on various and relevant topics, keeping the kids engaged. I contributed a lengthy rendition of the Prelude from Bach’s Cello Suite in G, drawing it out and hoping to spot the Chevy Prism through the large windows at the back of the room as it re-entered the parking lot. Ironically, this was a situation that the Providence Quartet has used to great critical acclaim in school demonstrations. Each player independently enters the room with a different excuse ("I missed the bus" "I overslept") until Jesse (bike helmet and reflectors flashing) comes pedaling down the aisle and the ensemble becomes a complete quartet. [see November 11 post] As CMW’s Director of Development, it was certainly an unusual experience for me to get to sit in with Jesse and Chloe in this situation and become a teaching artist again. It has been quite a while since I sat down with a cello in front of a group of kids. I don’t think anyone at the performances would have identified me as an administrator masquerading as a performer, but it sure was an odd feeling to be in the middle of Hansel and Gretel and to look up and see two of our biggest local funders peering in from the hallway, in the middle of what was clearly a school site visit. After the first presentation, the rest of the morning went off without a hitch. Day Two. A word about the Meeting Street School. When I started this post by calling it an incredible place, I wasn’t just talking about the gleaming new facility. The school is a national model for classroom inclusion of children with a wide range of developmental disabilities, include those that are quite profound. Not only is it a school, but Meeting Street also boasts a national center for research and professional development for teachers and therapists. Right in our neighborhood! We start again at 9 am. This time we have all of our music, and I’m playing on my own cello (instead of my wife’s), freshly adjusted by Gary Davis and with four new strings. I can’t say enough about how well Chloe and Jesse handled these 45-minute presentations (read: carried me on their backs). Both of them have that special ability to connect with kids, and it’s easy to see why each of their CMW students have grown so attached. Chloe, as the witch threatening poor Hansel and Gretel, cackled with evil glee and got volunteers from the audience to wear witches hats and chop wood-she had the little ones in the front row in the palm of her hand! Jesse ended up "helping" several youngsters to play the Sesame Street theme, Take Me Out to the Ballgame, Happy Birthday, and Twinkle Twinkle when we put down our own instruments and spent the final ten minutes of each session giving the kids a chance to scrub away on smaller instruments that we had brought over from the CMW office.
-Heath Marlow, CMW staff |