Music
as Meditation: When is a Jig Not a Jig?
Hasn't
it been reported that the Philosopher Wittgenstien believed that a
philosophical treatise might be written completely as a series of
questions? If a serious work on the nature of reality could be
written that way, why not a press release about the upcoming Music as
Meditation planned for Sunday, March 1, at 5:00 PM at Christ
Episcopal Church in North Conway?
When
is a Jig not a Jig? How could a jig be written in 2/4 time? Why did
J. S. Bach choose such a meter for the last movement of his keyboard
partita #6? Why did he choose such a complex work for the 1725
notebook he gave to his second wife Anna Magdalena Bach?
Why
does a composer so capable of complexity work with a simple theme
like “Ah vous dirai-je maman” otherwise known as “Twinkle,
Twinkle, Little Star?” What makes a pianist want to play such a
work? Might it be that the simple tune weaves through variations
spanning light and dark, motile and lyrical?
Had
Beethoven really heard the popular tune for the second movement of
his trio (opus 11) for piano, cello, and clarinet, in the lanes of
Vienna? Is it helpful to balance the mathematical precision of a
Bach Fugue with a romantic work like Rachmaninov's Prelude in G flat,
Op 23 No 10? Why is it that so many composers write a short piece in
each of the 24 usual keys? How grateful will Ms. Schwindt be to hear
Mark Rossnagel play her little Etude in E flat, part of a
(mostly-unfinished) set of such pieces? (Hint: the answer is very, very, grateful!)
Mark Rossnagel, visiting classical pianist, will perform at March's Music as Meditation |
And
finally, what could be more important than preserving the living
memory of these pieces by playing and listening to them? Will we be
imbued with the emotions of the pieces, or with the opposites of
those emotions?
What
is NOT in question is that we will delight in the playing of visiting
pianist Mark Rossnagel, who holds a Bachelor's degree in organ
performance from SUNY Binghamton, where he studied with the late
Jonathan Biggers, and a Master's degree in piano performance from the
University of Southern Maine, where he studied with Laura Kargul.
Jenny Huang-Dale, cello, and Judith English, clarinet, are sure to
join Ellen Schwindt, piano, to perform the aforementioned Beethoven
Trio. We will share a poem Bach liked enough to pen into his wife's
notebook and other musings on the nature of aspects and music.
Music
as Meditation is a monthly gathering of listeners and artists
interested in the spiritual—though not necessarily religious—source
of art and music. Music as Meditation in April has a folk music
focus. The gatherings take place on the first Sunday of each month at
5 PM at Christ Episcopal Church in North Conway. Admission is free.
Donations toward the upkeep of the Steinway piano are gratefully
accepted. Call or e-mail Ellen Schwindt for more information:
ellen.m.schwindt@gmail.com
603-447-2898.