Monday, November 10, 2008

Cherry Hill Lecture Recital


Yesterday afternoon I presented a lecture recital for the Members Only Tea at Cherry Hill in Inez, NC. It is lovely venue with a fine Steinway and excellent acoustics. The audience - about fifty folks, I believe - sat in two rooms off the sides of the main hallway as well as on the steps and in the other end of the hallway.

My Roberston ancestors who owned the anthology lived just a few miles from Cherry Hill. Alstons and Kearneys married some of my Roberstons and Skinners. The Alston and Kearney names are also associated with Cherry Hill.

I think it's safe to say that the Roberstons would have at least known the residents of Cherry Hill. It seems likely that they would have visited there on occasion and vice versa. A little more speculative is the idea that the music of the Skinner Anhology was played there. It's quite possible that it was.

It was a special privilege and delight to share the music and my research at Cherry Hill. During the reception that followed, I learned a great deal and met many fascinating people.

One gentleman thought he had seem a Knauff piano before. Knauff, the arranger of the Virginia Reels in the anthology, did run a piano factory for a time in Farmville, VA.

I met several people who share Skinner or Kearney ancestors with me way back.

I also met a great-great...granddaughter of Albert Jones. Jones was the architect of Chowan's MacDowell Columns as well as a couple of other houses in town. I learned that Jones was from Warren County and more of his houses are very close to Cherry Hill.

I learned that a friend of over 10 years might share some Skinner ancestors with me. We never knew we both had Skinners our family trees.

Jonathan Johnston joined me for the concert. He played the reels and the Boieldieu and also read the descriptive titles during the Battle of Prague. Our rehearsal went smoothly, and with that piano in that acoustic, our sounds meshed better and we discovered some things about how to shape the Boieldieu. So much of that piece seems the same that it takes a while to really zero in on the contrast and the shape that it does have. Jonathan also mentioned that The Battle of Prague came more into focus and sounded much more convincing in the Cherry Hill setting. Several folks mentioned a passage that I think was probably in the Battle of Prague that reminded them of the Keystone Cops, which got me wondering if an excerpt from Battle Prague might have been used by silent film pianists.

On the way to Cherry Hill, a deer walked onto the road ahead of the car and nonchalantly stood in our lane. We stopped and waited for the deer to realize the danger it was in. Then it ran quickly back towards the woods which were far across a field.

I had been excited about the very meaningful experience of playing this music at Cherry Hill for several days leading up to the event. I didn't reaize how tightly wound I had been until I started to unwind on the drive home! We stopped for a filling supper at the Logan's in Roanoke Rapids.

Today I'm pondering further tasks I should pursue regarding the anthology, in addition to lecture recitals. I need to make usable scores of the rest of the piano works and research them as well. I currently have 20 or less of the works in a usuable version. I'd like to write an article for some scholarly organization on the contents of the anthology. I'd like to make a recording of some of the music. And I'd like to edit an edition of a selection of the works.

I enjoyed practicing some of the pieces today. Bigger portions are getting memorized even though I wasn't particularly aiming to memorize this music. The longer I'm a musician, the more I realize that a lot of the richness and enjoyment of the work comes from having pieces of music as your daily companions whether that be in practice, rehearsal, or performance.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

MacGregor Plaid



I found this image here.

Last night, Kathy and I drove up to Williamsburg, had great open-faced turkey sandwiches and listened to some celtic harp playing at Shields Tavern, and bought me a MacGregor tartan bow tie to wear for my Skinner Anthology performances. The Skinner Clan is a subset of the MacGregor Clan. For a time, the use of the name "MacGregor" was outlawed, and Skinner was one of many names used by Macgregors during that time.

I wonder how connected my Skinner and Robertson ancestors felt to their Scottish heritage. It is well-represented in their collection of music which includes variations on "Kinlock of Kinlock," "The Devil among the Taylors," "Auld Lang Syne," as well as Virginia Reels. The opening of the Battle of Waterloo sounds like a fiddle tune as well.

Chowan Alumni Event

On October 18th, I played a few selections from the anthology for a group of alumni of Chowan University. The particular group consists of graduates who attended in the first few years after the school reopened following World War II.

I played "Natchez on the Hill" and "Love in the Village" from the set of Virginia reels, the first of the two waltzes from Der Freischutz, the variations on Auld Lang Syne, the Battle of Waterloo. I concluded with a piece I wrote this year called "Columns." This Chowan etude commemorates the 160th year of our school. The structure of the piece is based on aspects of our main and oldest building, the MacDowell Columns. The middle section of my piece is a slow wistful waltz loosely based on the school's alma mater. This slow section is a musical thought for our resident ghost, the Brown Lady.

This mini-concert took place in the Mulberry Grove room after a nice lunch. There was a huge poster of the MacDowell Columns that emphasized the recent restoration. I played on a nice older Yamaha upright that was given to the school last year. It was first time playing on that particular piano.

I thought this was the ideal audience and occasion for music from the anthology as many of these alumni were from this part of the country and have an interest in the history of the region.

AGO Northeast NC Chapter Lecture Recital

On September 20th, I presented a lecture recital for the Northeastern North Carolina Chapter of the American Guild of Organists at our home in Murfreesboro. As I prepared for the recital, I considered how and how much to use the square grand. On the one hand, having a Skinner descendent play this music on the Skinner/Roberston family piano would be about as authentic as we could get. On the other hand, the timbre and tuning (I did the tuning!) might become a little grating or disappointing after a while.

Because that's what I was thinking, I initially planned on limited use of the square grand to provide a little bit of flavor, but to play the majority of the recital on the much better sounding Steinway.

However, as I practiced on the instruments, I started to feel like many of the pieces worked better on the square grand. In the end, I played around half on each, but having performed very little on square grand in the past, it felt like I played most of the recital on the square grand.

Our friend, Johnathan Johnston, provided some violin playing for this recital in the Boieldieu and the Virginia reels.

AGO members sang along on the choral closing to The Battle of Waterloo: Britons Strike Home.

Our good friend, Agnes Lassiter, provided chocolate cake at intermission.

The complete program with original spellings from the scores is listed below.


Mademoiselle Sontag’s Waltz
Henri Herz

Life Let Us Cherish with Variations
Mozart

Life let us cherish while yet the taper glows
And the fresh flower, pluck ere it close.
Why are we fond of toil and care
Why choose the rankling thorn to wear
And heedless by the lily stray which blossoms on our way?

The Cottage Rondo
M. Holst

Battle of Warterloo
G. Anderson

Advance to the Battle – Cannon
The Battle –
The English Horse Guards Advancing to Attack the French Curassiers
The Prussians Advancing
Heavy Cannonade
The French in Full Retreat
Bugle Horn
The Rejoicings
Lamentation for the Slain
Britons Strike Home

Bonaparte’s Retreat from Moscow

Intermission and Refreshments

Virginia Reels
G. P. Knauff

Natchez on the Hill
Mississippi Sawyer
Whiskey Barrel
Love in the Village

Kinlock of Kinlock

The Huntsmen’s Chorus in Weber’s Der Freyschutz
N. Bull

Beauties of Masaniello, La Muette de Portici,
Wilhelm Iucho
Composed by Auber,
Selected and arranged as a Divertimento
For the Piano Forte
Dedicated to Miss Elizabeth Whittelseuf

Overture to Calife de Bagdad
Boieldieu

Charles J. Hulin IV, piano
Jonathan Johnston, violin

1830s Griffen and Scudder Square Grand
Rebuilt in the 1980s