Sunday, October 18, 2009

PA Arts Sunday - Part One - A Beautiful Harpsichord and a Cantankerous Alto Trombone

Friday night, the Anchorage Civic Orchestra gave their fall concert. It was the first concert of that orchestra that has featured a choral work. The masterpiece was Antonio Vivaldi's Gloria. We also performed Rossini's Semiramide Overture and Mendelssohn's 5th Symphony, the Reformation Symphony. Overall, the orchestra did quite well. There was a big audience and they gave the orchestra a standing ovation.

For Vivaldi's Gloria, a harpsichord was needed for the basso continuo. Anchorage musical educator, sometimes composer and cellist, Linda Marsh-Ives had just completed a long-term project harpsichord, so she volunteered the instrument. It played magnificently.

Here are two pictures of it:
I usually play tuba with the orchestra, but there were no tuba parts, and Chris Sweeney, who usually plays first trombone with the orchestra was busy, so I subbed for him. The Mendelssohn symphony requires an alto trombone for the first part. I had only played an alto trombone one time before this concert. I wasn't doing very well in the final two rehearsals. I finally figured out the mouthpiece that came with UAA's alto wasn't right for me. The Horn Doctor in Anchorage fixed me up with a new mouthpiece, and I did, well - I did OK.

Here's the Vincent Bach alto trombone I played (in the foreground) next to my Antoine Courtois tenor:

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

How civilized but playing musical instruments in Taliban controlled Pakistan and Afghanistan is a crime.

Philip Munger said...

Anonymous asshole @ 10:433 am,

In the 1990s I helped raise money to get women artists out of Afghanistan, through a European organization. We saved dozens. And male artists too. And precious musical instruments. I had to stop participating in the organization that was helping them though, because they also help Palestinian women artists, and are now on a terrorist list because of the latter activity.

Many of the Afghan women we saved in the 90s, when they went back to the Afghanistan liberated by Bush, were murdered. Most of the rest remain in Europe.

I'm about to start deleting your comments for being purposefully untrue.

Anonymous said...

"I'm about to start deleting your comments for being purposefully untrue."

Please explain what part of "How civilized but playing musical instruments in Taliban controlled Pakistan and Afghanistan is a crime" is untrue. You just admitted above that Afghan women musicians were murdered by the Taliban.

Anonymous said...

Ummm...very nice instrument, but it isn't a harpsichord. It's a virginal, and it has a different string arrangement, plucking point,and sound.