I’m so excited that the Takoma Park Play Day 2012 is coming up soon! I look forward to it every year.
Instead of performances strung together, the festival is interactive. The Play Day festival brings together the people of our community, both young and old, to enjoy each other’s company while playing board games, engaging in imaginative role-playing, or running around in intense games of freeze tag. I love watching attendees play newly-learned strategy games, successfully navigate through an obstacle course, or finish a round of “Simon Says” with local senator Jamie Raskin.
One of my favorite things about Play Day is that children, teenagers, adults, and elderly members of the community all come to celebrate together and get to know each other. I remember playing chess with a retiree at a Play Day in 2009 when I was ten years old. Although I was a new chess player, the experienced woman with whom I played seemed very excited to share her knowledge and skill with a beginner. Her love of chess inspired me to learn more. I’ve continued enjoy playing the game ever since.
This year, Play Day takes place on September 22, from 10-1 at the Takoma Park Middle School. You can find out more about this amazing day at http://takomaplays.org/.
"Education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire." --William Butler Yeats
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Becoming a Young Musician
I was asked to give a talk at the Takoma Park Folk Festival about how and why I became a young musician. Here are my notes:
(Start by playing Twinkle Theme) This was the first piece I learned to play on the violin.
Hi. I’m here to tell you a little about why I love playing the violin. But first, I thought I’d play a piece I’ve been working on recently. This is Gigue by Veracini. (Play Gigue)
*
Four years ago a friend invited me to his violin recital. Performing were students from the age of 3 all the way up to 18. All the performers were incredible. The teacher (who I now know as James) sat on the floor and helped the youngest player hold her violin as she picked out the first few measures of Twinkle. I loved seeing how the relationship he had with young children developed over the years. Later in the recital, he cried when he acknowledged the high school seniors who were soon to leave his studio and go off to college. At the end of the recital, James himself played a jazz violin solo and looked like he was having a lot of fun playing it.
On the way home from the recital, I asked if I could learn to play the violin. Two weeks later, I had my first lesson--on my tenth birthday!--and have played almost every day since.
*
Although I was ten years old when I started, many beginning Suzuki students are much younger. Students start with a “box violin” (show) made from something like a tissue box and a ruler. With this, a student can learn to hold a violin, how to have correct posture, and how to coordinate the hand holding the violin and the hand holding the bow. Soon, students graduate to their first real violin, a moment of great celebration.
At first, students learn to play particular rhythms. For example, one rhythm is called “Mississipi Hot-Dog.” (Say it again and clap it out.) Students start playing Twinkle using these specific rhythms. (Demonstrate.) By the end of the first Suzuki book, students are learning Bach Minuets. (Play Minuet 1.)
Suzuki students begin to learn these songs not by reading music but by ear. Students listen to recordings of pieces as much as possible, then learn to pick out the tunes (with the help of guidance from James and from their parents). By Book 4, reading music is a much bigger part of the experience of learning new pieces, although listening to recordings of pieces remains important most of the time. The first piece I mostly by reading music was a concerto by Seitz. (Play Seitz 1.)
Remember the rhythm “Mississippi Hot-Dog”? Knowing it and the other early rhythms continues to be useful all the way through the Suzuki repertoire. For example, a piece I am working on right now, a concerto for two violins by Bach, starts with exactly this rhythm. (Play the rhythm on one note, then play the very beginning notes of Bach Double.)
*
In addition to weekly lessons with James, I practice every day. Young musicians practice for different lengths of time. Often students start out playing for twenty minutes or less at a time. Practice time increases as students get older and more advanced. I practice my Suzuki music about an hour a day.
One thing that is different about Suzuki is that parents are very involved in both the lessons and in practice.
As students get older and more mature, parents begin to hand over more responsibility to them. But even for advanced students, parents still attend most lessons and often help out in practice sessions as well.
Practice has a lot of parts. In addition to learning new pieces, I work on:
Scales and arpeggios (demonstrate)
Workout: Working on a better tone, or skill building exercises for things like how to play chords, various
bow techniques, and vibrato. We often practice these things on earlier pieces. (Demonstrate vibrato using Twinkle.)
A final part of my daily practice is playing all of my old pieces, from Twinkle forward. The Suzuki method
encourages us to build a big repertoire of music we can play at performance level. This is also important because each piece helps us work on some new technique, so continuing to play old pieces helps us build on those skills.
*
An especially nice way to keep up with old pieces is group class! A few times a month, the whole studio gets together and plays many old pieces together. The beginning Twinklers come as do more advanced students. Often we play together, but sometimes we perform solos for one another to help us feel comfortable performing for people publically. I’ve made many friends in the studio this way.
In addition to group class, I play in a youth orchestra, attend a music camp for a week each summer, and got to play in my first string quartet this year. I’ve also played at the farmer’s market a couple of times and at a wedding. (The bride and groom paid me with a gift certificate to the Kennedy Center!)
I also love to play fiddle music, including a lot of music I learned to love here at the Takoma Park Folk Festival. You can hear Irish and Scottish music from the band Tinsmith, playing on the Grove Stage at 3:00. (Play Rights of Man/Red Haired Boy/Sleep Soond/High Road.) I also love old-time American fiddle tunes, and traditional English tunes you can hear at the Folk Festival from the Morris Men. (Play Butterfly.) I also love listening to the Klezmer musicians here and am eager to try playing some Klezmer tunes.
Here’s a gypsy-inspired piece in the classical music repertoire. (Play part of Czardas.)
*
Why I Play
Practice is sometimes hard, but I love it. It gives me a way to express my emotions, whether they are happy or sad or peaceful or angry. Playing music can be very cathartic.
I enjoy playing with other musicians and making friends through music. I especially love when we are able to share our music with listeners and make them happy.
At the beginning, it takes a while to get in the habit of practicing, but once you can see how much practice allows you to make the kind of music you want to make, it becomes second nature. It is just part of my life.
I don’t feel right if I haven’t played my violin recently.
Look around this festival and see all these musicians here today. They are not here because they have to be. They’re here because they love to play, and to share, music.
(End with Fiddle Tune and variations, then its ending.)
Monday, August 27, 2012
Mondrian
Piet Mondrian's early paintings were traditional (although colors were often not fully representational)--then he starts becoming more abstract:
Of course, Mondrian is much better known for his abstract, linear art:
I love how Mondrian's compositions have influenced product design:
Of course, Mondrian is much better known for his abstract, linear art:
I love how Mondrian's compositions have influenced product design:
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Monday, February 27, 2012
Dragons at the Textile Museum
Last week I went to the Textile Museum in DC. It is near many of the embassies and in fact seems a little smaller than the embassies of Puerto-Rico and Ireland.
I explored the exhibit Dragons, Nagas, and Creatures of the Deep. It was about the use of dragon imagery in clothing, rugs, and other textiles. Celebrating the Year of the Dragon, most of the textiles shown are from East and Southeast Asia Chinese. In addition to images of a variety of dragons including highly stylized versions, there were also images of other mystical creatures.
I was fascinated by the idea that a particular portrayal of dragons could indicate the social class of the wearer of a textile garment. The example presented at the museum was a surcoat depicting numerous images of dragons with four claws on each hand. The annotation on the side explained that the hands had originally had five claws, indicating that the owner was of the ruling family. When he or she gave it to someone who was not authorized to wear five claws, one claw on each hand had to be carefully removed from the coat.
After investigating the museum, I ate lunch in a nearby park with two fellow homeschoolers with whom I had gone to the museum. A lovely day!
I explored the exhibit Dragons, Nagas, and Creatures of the Deep. It was about the use of dragon imagery in clothing, rugs, and other textiles. Celebrating the Year of the Dragon, most of the textiles shown are from East and Southeast Asia Chinese. In addition to images of a variety of dragons including highly stylized versions, there were also images of other mystical creatures.
I was fascinated by the idea that a particular portrayal of dragons could indicate the social class of the wearer of a textile garment. The example presented at the museum was a surcoat depicting numerous images of dragons with four claws on each hand. The annotation on the side explained that the hands had originally had five claws, indicating that the owner was of the ruling family. When he or she gave it to someone who was not authorized to wear five claws, one claw on each hand had to be carefully removed from the coat.
After investigating the museum, I ate lunch in a nearby park with two fellow homeschoolers with whom I had gone to the museum. A lovely day!
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Biblical Reference of the Week
This semester I am reading the Hebrew Bible (known to many as the Old Testament). A friend of mine and our mothers are reading the book looking at both its history and its literary influence. We are not reading it in a religious or devotional way at all.
One of our regular assignments is to look for Biblical references that pop up around us in modern Western culture. Here is one of the references I discovered this week:

In Howard Goodall's Big Bangs, a fantastic documentary about the development of western music, the host uses a reference to "forbidden fruit" while talking about the evolution of harmony into what became classical music. He said that composers were quick to snatch the forbidden fruit of thirds and sixths--forbidden because they did not work neatly in the musical system that governed religious music (plain chant). This, of course, is a reference to the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil in the Garden of Eden.
One of our regular assignments is to look for Biblical references that pop up around us in modern Western culture. Here is one of the references I discovered this week:
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Pen of Power
I saw a fascinating video on a pen that writes with electrical ink. The pen was created by researchers at the University of Illinois. It writes with silver ink that drys to form conductive "wires" that can be hooked up to a battery. Because the drawn circuits are both quick to create and flexible, the technology could be very useful for electrical engineers.
In an article about the pen, I read that it was used to make a copy of a Chinese panting called Sae-Han-Do. The ink provided power for LEDs placed in the panting. I thought that the ability to create "lit-up" drawings could be very powerful if used well. For example, someone could draw a Statue of Liberty where the torch actually burns with light. It would be fun to create drawings like these. I wonder if the pens will be available commercially.
In an article about the pen, I read that it was used to make a copy of a Chinese panting called Sae-Han-Do. The ink provided power for LEDs placed in the panting. I thought that the ability to create "lit-up" drawings could be very powerful if used well. For example, someone could draw a Statue of Liberty where the torch actually burns with light. It would be fun to create drawings like these. I wonder if the pens will be available commercially.
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