Jun 5, 2013

Free writing object: basketball (pretend to be the object)


Free writing object: Basketball (pretend to be the object)

I see people walk by though no one picks me up.  After ages a group of young boys1 pick me up, fondling me.  They place their hands on me on every spot eventually—those sweaty hands.  I tell them to lay off and to let me rest in peace but now I’m bouncing up and down.  I am being hurled, thrown at them—each other—to the hoop.  I am ricocheted off the backboard but it doesn’t hurt.  I feel nothing but I sense I am part of a bigger plan/game2.  They set me to the side and I’m not sure whether I feel relieved or sad—sad that they do not continue to play with me.  Now a group of older humans—female3—pick me up and they are putting pressure on me, making sure I am inflated, playable.  They proceed to throw4 me around from person to person.  One time a lady threw me from one end of the hall to the other and I made a swishing sound through the hoop.  They could not believe her—she made me score5.   


1: A group of teenagers who happen to be best friends from Roosevelt Elementary school when it wasn’t abandoned in Ames, Iowa.  The school is now closed and the whereabouts of the basketball are unknown.   2: The game they were playing was half-court because another group of kids were playing on the other half.  3: A group of sixth graders, where before, it was a group of fourth graders. 4: Their method of throwing the basketball was significantly stronger, being older and taller than the younger boys.  5: In the game of basketball, the score means shooting through the hoop.  Past the 3 pt. line, it counts as 3 pts.; from the half-way mark, it’s 4 pts.; and lastly, anywhere nearer the 3 pt. line, it’s 2 pts.

Practicing Piano


Practicing Piano
               The thing that I’ve focused most on in life is practicing piano.  And it used to be difficult for me to remain focused.  I was often distracted by life’s quick pleasures.  But, when I was young, I practiced at least two hours a day usually to prepare to go to a reputable university or college for studying music composition in order to be a concert pianist of my own musical compositions.  When I lived at Florida State University for two years, I began to lose interest in the discipline of piano playing.  My college professors had begun to continually criticize me during lessons in an alienating, unfriendly, and strict manner that made me lose touch with the musical “oneness” I had with the piano.  Ever since leaving FSU’s school of music, I could not handle the stress and despair that entailed practicing.  And much like the pianist in the autobiographical essay, “Every good boy does fine,” by Jeremy Denk—a renowned pianist—I have experienced tedious, torturous, heart-wrenching exercises that I mostly avoided and attempted to cover up (in lessons), which might have something to do with the fact that I’m not a concert pianist.  I’ve had many good teachers and many poor ones.  One of my piano teachers who I’d admired had a particular disdain for me and my methods, and taught me in a put-down, arrogant manner, I thought.  She one time made fun of me during master class, I thought, when she said, “don’t you think it’s amazing how he stops in the middle of the passage and plays the chord over again, class?” when I had difficulty finishing a piece.  Don’t get me wrong, though, I learned a lot in my convoluted experience at FSU, mostly from Mrs. Mastrogiacomo, a former piano professor with whom I had a class for ensemble, Piano Duo.  We played Rachmaninov’s “Vocalise” for four hands in front of a large audience.  During the performance I had rushed and she later complained to me about this, which was a legitimate criticism.  But the one lesson I took from being at Florida State University in the School of Music was how to keep a beat during a performance.  The driving force behind a composition is a steady beat, I’ve learned from her, and one absolutely must count in one’s head otherwise the piece will be unintelligible.  The trick is to not make the notes fit into a beat (when performing eighth notes or quarter notes), because that would just make it sound mushy.  The trick is to play as “naturally” as you can, and also confidently.  The other teachers I had made it seem as if I had uncontrollable problems with my playing, and I never felt included among their seemingly “favorite” students.  (I was kicked out of the music program due to bad grades, which fortunately brought me back to Iowa).  I had entered the university with a scholarship, and perhaps I could have practiced more, but I had lost interest due to mental illness, and in many ways, I became a worse pianist when I left than before I had arrived.  Except there are many phrases that stuck with me ever since, such as, “hear the beat when you play,” “the piano keys are like levers,” “practice scales,” “learn Mozart,” that became obsessive mantras whenever I sat down to play.  Like Mr. Denk, I recently found a way to quiet these hallucinatory voices. 

               Not that piano “practice” is a process that I cannot enjoy; it’s easy to practice by myself without any guidance.  When directed by a teacher, piano practice is a difficult concept to grasp for anyone because I am not sure what it entails, which was a vague request my teachers made of me.  Since I had passed my auditions with a scholarship, I felt like I had to envelop and maintain everything my teacher said which may or may not have been what they intended.  What does a concert pianist do for practice without a teacher?  Somehow, I felt less sure of music programs in general since I received little guidance on how to feel at ease with the piano.  I am flabbergasted with the idea of a performance degree that schools of music offer, because you spend so much time learning how to play a piece already composed by someone long ago so that you can perform it “in the way that it’s intended.”  But, it doesn’t add anything to the realm of music because that would make you the thousandth person who has played that piece—maybe the fiftieth who has garnered enough reputation to make a recording.  Music “reiteration” seems to me like it’s almost as passive an activity as watching TV, unless of course, you are there to learn.   One teacher put it, “piano playing is orally passed down from pianist to pianist,” which is true for some disciplines, though some are passed down through literature.  I think only a few people, though, understand the hours that is necessary to compose that piece that you are playing—say, for example, Rachmaninoff’s Second Sonata.   A piece with that many notes is someone else’s creation, copyright, and therefore, why waste your time learning it?  Maybe that’s why music performance is a dead-end job.  There’s no creativity in re-interpretation compared to, music composition, for instance.  Essentially, piano performance majors are hardly different than oral story tellers.  Don’t get me wrong, however, every pianist needs to learn about the renowned concert pianists of the past, because they have things they expressed that are relevant to us today.  The “serious” Artistic stuff is composition because you are adding something new to the world and somehow leaving a unique imprint for others to follow. 

Jun 3, 2013

When I was alone, I wasn't really alone.


Solitude
               In the fall of 2012, when I was alone I wasn’t really alone, technically, but I felt alone.  I was with many people at an outside restaurant whom I did not know.  They were speaking with each other unintelligibly to me, the content of their dialogue was conveniently tuned out by my ear-cancelling headphones.  For weeks I would show up there and I would concentrate on writing poetry and composing music.  Some of my favorite compositions were composed while I was in a state of solitude.  I had minimal interaction with waitresses during this time, as I really wanted to finish my thirty minute composition and my goal was to make it sound as Tchaikovskian as possible.  I quickly found that it was too difficult to write a single piece, especially in the shadow of Tchaikovsky’s “Romeo and Juliet,” which lasts 18 minutes.  He had actually written a shorter version first then he later revised it after consulting with Balakirev, a contemporary.  I used software to be able to compose music away from the piano: Sibelius is a notation software, and cakewalk is a simpler notation software that has a more user-friendly interface. Cakewalk also has a playback function, which is an absolute necessity.  For me, one has to hear the melody sort of in one’s head much like how one remembers a melody from a composition.  Even before one improvises on a piano, one must hear the melody before actually hearing it and expanding on it.  On the outside, spectators look at you as if improvisation is a spontaneous art and just like the method of composition, but actually a lot of thought has gone into it beforehand.  When I sit down to improvise, I can immediately tell whether it’s a bad melody or good one, and it usually is luck that lands on a good one.  One must learn to separate the visual aspect of the keyboard from the abstractness of music theory behind the keyboard.  It’s not enough to memorize I-V chord progressions and more complicated ones, although they are helpful.  The trick is having an idea, much like a computer scientist has with a project, before beginning an improvisation or composition.  When I sit down to compose, I don’t see numbers for chord progressions because I simply don’t have the time to write them out, although, I can create something that sounds amazing using advanced music theory, I presume.  Knowing which note is going to be a voice and then, knowing the rhythm of the voice and hearing where I want it to go next is the skill I’ve sought to develop since middle school.  I do this by figuring out the interval, or if I have a really good ear, I can immediately tell what the interval is, and then inputting it into the software program.  I wrote six pieces that Fall that I thought were going to be thirty minutes long each, but they turned out to be five minutes long on average.  But later, I discovered that if I combined all of them, they sounded unified.  And much like Tchaikovsky’s tragic eighteen minute composition, this one has many pauses and climatic moments, I think.  If I had the time and the courage, I’d learn my own composition and play it.  As an improviser and composer without any real distinguishing license, I am content with just feeling like I have piano composition as a side hobby; it’s not that important to me to finish the music degree I had started eight years ago.

Another time I felt absolute solitude—like nothing bothered me and I wasn’t psychotic—was when I was alone in my room for days on end, though I did not confine myself entirely to its location but since I did wonder about the house frequently.  I remember being in there the most while I was unemployed during a summer years ago, mostly while my father was away at work and I still had some remnant of discipline left in me.  I would see my dad return regularly from work at 3:30pm, but I was alone and I could divide my tasks up how I saw fit according to my priorities, such as: reading, playing/practicing the piano, and watching TV/playing video games.  While this was hardly nature driven as in the case of Thoreau’s story, “Walden,” I thought that surrounding myself with technology would ease the passage of time.  In retrospect, I have found this to be rather passive and a wasteful way to spend time, except for reading and composing music.  But during this time, I improvised a few pieces that I recorded (and put on YouTube) of the exact feelings, emotions, and desires I had for a particular woman who’s now moved on.