A view of Post Falls, Idaho (5-17-18) |
Last
Thursday (May 17), Mike and I set off for the VW dealership in Post Falls for warranty
work on the GTI. We arrived there about
10:30, and the service department took the GTI right into the shop to check it
out. They confirmed that the car is fine, and we were on our way again at
11:00. Mike was reassured, and we were both relieved that we didn’t have to
leave it and make another trip to pick it up. Naturally, Mike had looked
forward to geocaching, but it was a rainy day. He found several anyway.
Mike hunts for a cache near Post Falls |
From Post Falls, we drove on into Spokane. The
lilacs are mostly past in our valley, but in Spokane (as at our farm), they were in
full bloom last week. Spokane calls itself “the Lilac City,” and celebrates its
beautiful lilacs with a festival that runs several weeks in May. Thinking of
that brought back memories of my participation in the Greater Spokane Music and
Allied Arts Festival, a well-organized music competition held the second week in
May. The festival appealed to my dad, a piano teacher, and he enrolled a half dozen
of his students each year, beginning about 1958. Let me tell you about it.
Lilacs at the farm (5-20-18) |
The
Festival is an adjudicated classical music event for young musicians. (That
word “adjudicate” means that someone is going to judge your performance.) Divisions
were classified according to age and naturally, the assigned music became more
difficult as the student advanced in age and ability. Sometime in the fall, I
think, the program would arrive, specifying the assigned music the student was
to play. In addition, he was to play a second number of his choice, also
classical.
The
Festival was a big deal in the regional music world. Piano students (other
instruments, too) came from miles around to play before adjudicators, who were noted
musicians. (One year, Van Cliburn’s mother was an adjudicator.) Each class
consisted of eight or ten participants. The competitions were held in various
Spokane churches. For instance, I remember playing at least once at Temple Beth
Shalom. The grand pianos were on loan from local showroom(s).
The
adjudicator sat at a table up front, not far from the piano. The order of play
was predetermined, so eight or ten of us would line up in order and await our
turn to perform. Each participant stayed in his seat until given the signal to
approach the piano. When it was my turn, I followed the same format as the
others. Doing my best to make eye-contact with the adjudicator, I said, “My
name is Kathy Dobson. I will play ABC by XYZ. For my second number, I’ll play
DEF by QRS.” Then I would sit down at the keyboard, adjust the bench, try to
calm my shaking fingers, and begin to play, hoping for the best. (I was never a
consistent performer.)
After
finishing the required number, each student would sit quietly, while the
adjudicator wrote. (Are we having fun yet?) When he gave the solemn nod, the
student played his second number, and when finished, arose from the bench, acknowledged
the polite applause of teachers and parents, and returned to his place in the
row.
My
dad was all over this as a fine opportunity for the student. Regardless of what
my mother thought, she was supportive of my dad. She always made me a beautiful
dress to wear. There I was – a kid from the sticks on display – looking good
and playing miserably. I felt totally out of place. The atmosphere was
competitive and unfriendly. You could cut it with a knife! I had difficulty
memorizing music, and as the years went by and the music got harder, the
experience became worse for me. It was useless to complain. I was the piano
teacher’s daughter, and I had to go.
Homestead lilacs |
The
fateful year was when Daddy enrolled me in a Bach class. (I was 15.) The music looked
simple, which was deceptive. The important thing in this class was the
interpretation, and mine was – well, off. I can’t blame my dad. He tried, but I was uninspired. At the end of the class, the adjudicator rose to address the participants. I remember his saying, "If this is your first Bach, I hope you won't give up." The better students were asked to stay for a workshop. The rest of us were dismissed. I was mortified -- near tears. Mother said, "Let's go shopping." This was my first inkling that maybe she had some sympathy for me.
That
was the last time I played at the Spokane Music Festival. “I’m not going,” I
said the next year, and to my surprise, my parents accepted that. By that time,
my confidence was shot, and I had developed a real mental block against
memorization and performance. KW
2 comments:
I'm sorry you didn't have a pleasant experience with the past music festivals. I liked the Lewiston Music Festival. That's what it was, a festival. Those were some of the most memorable times of schooling, except for the time my girlfriends from different towns got together, and I was a goner.
The Lewiston Music Festival was altogether more relaxed. The grading was a simple 1, 2, or 3. I nearly always received a "1." There were school employees (teachers) backstage to help relieve the tension. I was involved in band, too, and that was fun. The Spokane festival continues, but Lewiston's was discontinued. You know, things change over 50+ years.
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