Frazzled

Dateline: June 26 2019, Brookline MA

surprise surprise, I’m pooped

i know 9 hours to some is a long drive, to others it’s not so bad. But preface that with 3 long days of early starts and late-late nights checking off to-do list items barely faster than more are added, while already running on fumes, and before that throw in 3 weeks of roaming to get to know a new city, some late night post-concert collegial hangs with new friends

and keep the stress level generally high as rental leases are signed and schools are visited and professional concerts come and go at a pretty quick pace… yeah..

of course, it’s me who’s keeping me up right now writing this silly blog entry!

and it was totally worth it to be back in kw to take care of my kids again for a few days on my own with them, as their last days of school in this community come and go, launching them on into their next everything.

Tomorrow, the family reunites and we explore beantown. This weekend, we relax on cape cod with friends. Monday, I fly to Jackson Hole Wyoming and they head north to my in-laws in Gatineau QC. Mid-July, we reunite again for a day of Uhaul packing and chamber music empty-house-partying before my son and I drag what remains of our stuff across Canada.

watch this space!

Wait, wait, it's August?

Dateline: Aug.6, 2019. Danville California

Since last I wrote, it's been about a month. I can't believe that's accurate, even as I count the weeks and begin to think back through everything we've done along the way.

There was the second week of GTMF in which I hiked even more, and then grabbed a photo with Yefim Bronfman who was the guest artist playing Rachmaninoff's Third Piano Concerto at the end of the week.

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Turns out I was in the Aspen Festival Orchestra 22 years ago when Bronfman played the same piece there - my introduction to it - and midperformance he broke one of the lowest piano strings which necessitated a piano technician coming to the stage to replace it and retune the instrument… A memorable happening that I had only remembered when in Jackson Hole this time Bronfman needed to interrupt the dress rehearsal to request a swap of the concert grand with another option backstage. So I approached him after rehearsal and told him of my Aspen memory, and he acknowledged with a chuckle that he did indeed also vividly remember that experience. So that was fun.

And then the festival was over and I was headed back to Ontario to load up the U-Haul and drive our stuff across Canada with my son, to deposit in our new apartment in Edmonton.

Before I got to the airport my roomies with a car drove me into Jackson for a little touristing. We saw police on horses. I asked why he got to wear a cowboy hat while she got to wear a helmet. She said, “Cause I'm the smart one.”

Before I got to the airport my roomies with a car drove me into Jackson for a little touristing. We saw police on horses. I asked why he got to wear a cowboy hat while she got to wear a helmet. She said, “Cause I'm the smart one.”

We also grabbed lunch at The Bunnery (this is the delicious, if messy, veggie burger with cheese)

We also grabbed lunch at The Bunnery (this is the delicious, if messy, veggie burger with cheese)

When we were (mostly) done loading the U-Haul truck back in Kitchener, we did what everybody should do when they're moving out of a house - host a chamber music reading party! What a great way to say goodbye.

When we were (mostly) done loading the U-Haul truck back in Kitchener, we did what everybody should do when they're moving out of a house - host a chamber music reading party! What a great way to say goodbye.

On July 16 at noon my son and I pulled out of the driveway and headed East, to head North, to head West. We drove along the Trans-Canada Highway, through Sudbury, Soult Saint Marie, Thunder Bay, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and finally into Edmonton, arrivi…

On July 16 at noon my son and I pulled out of the driveway and headed East, to head North, to head West. We drove along the Trans-Canada Highway, through Sudbury, Soult Saint Marie, Thunder Bay, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and finally into Edmonton, arriving just about 52 hours later on the 18th.

We brought our cats along for the ride. They survived!

We brought our cats along for the ride. They survived!

And at some point along the way I took a very brief nap on the U-Haul ramp. It was surprisingly comfortable! I'd do it again.

And at some point along the way I took a very brief nap on the U-Haul ramp. It was surprisingly comfortable! I'd do it again.

I took a break from writing this post and lost my train of thought, not that it should be very complicated simply recounting the steps along a summer’s worth of travel.

more next time.

watch this space!

This time next month

Dateline: Aug 9 2019. Bishop, CA

Next month I’ll be in Edmonton performing with my new colleagues in the ESO, helping my kids adjust to their new schools, and helping my wife find her way in a new town.

But today we drove from Danville CA to Bishop through Yosemite. We had spent several days in the Bay Area visiting friends we hadn't seen since we moved away four years ago, using my childhood home as basecamp. In Yosemite we headed straight for the Falls and spent an hour or so playing in the bouldery river before piling back into the car for the afternoon drive to Bishop where I’d found us a motel for the night before our long next leg to the Grand Canyon and Springdale Utah (at the south entrance to Zion Canyon), where we’ll be sleeping tomorrow night.

Before Danville, we were in Beulah Wyoming visiting my side of the family for nearly a week. The family has a cabin - a modest house, really - in idyllic Black Hills paradise, Sand Creek Country Club. My grandparents used to live there and we’d drive out almost every summer growing up to stay for weeks playing, fishing, hiking, visiting… Now my mom is the owner and my brothers and I have made it our common summer rendezvous point a few times in the last several years. The brothers hang out, their partners catch up, the cousins play, the innertubes get inflated, the grasshoppers get trapped, the fish get caught, the touristing happens (Mt. Rushmore, Devil’s Tower, etc.), and we all go our separate ways again until the next time. Maybe New Year’s in a different city, maybe next summer back in Wyoming. We’ll see!

I even had a nifty practice space.

My nifty practice space behind the garage in Sand Creek

Before Beulah, my daughter performed in a pair of shows at the conclusion of her musical theatre camp in Kitchener, my father-in-law and his lovely wife visited from Ottawa to witness said shows, we had one last inter-family meal with my sister-in-law’s bunch in Waterloo, and one last sit-down with my mother-in-law in Kitchener, and one last fire pit party at which to burn a chunk of old-enough financial records — and one final oven spray-cleaning treatment to try to make that damn thing really shine — before handing over our rental-house keys and hightailing it out of Ontario to get this big trip finally started in earnest.

So much stress, so many feels. So much help from family and friends, so much uncertainty about what exactly comes next. I mean, we have our calendar already pretty fleshed out for 2019-20, but you know what I mean. New home, new job, new schools, new friends for all of us. Whee!

watch this space!

The most beautiful place(s) on the planet

Dateline: September 7 2019. Edmonton, Alberta

Time flies when you’re on the road! Last post was from Bishop California, August 10. (Our big summer trip had started back in Kitchener Ontario back on July 26.) The next day we drove through Nevada - where we came frighteningly, epically close to running out of gas in the middle of nowhere - to Arizona where we just caught a stunning sunset at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, and then into Utah for a very late arrival at the very nice Holiday Inn Express in Springdale. Morning after that we hiked the Virgin River up to the incredible Narrows in Zion National Park, and day after that we drove through AZ and New Mexico down to El Paso Texas where we lived for the next 5 days while I performed in El Paso Pro Musica’s Summerfest’19: “Spanish Nights.”

The week was a heavy one; El Paso had just days before suffered the horrible mass shooting that left so many innocents dead. EPPM stepped up and rearranged our schedule to accommodate several memorial events at which our superstar and hometown hero cellist Zuill Bailey performed a beautiful and moving set of solo pieces… a series of moments none of us witnesses will never forget.

Our final concert at UTEP on the 17th was actually only the first of many that Zuill and Alfredo have gone on to perform with other colleagues in other communities around the country over the ensuing 5 weeks, so I felt in the end a bit like a training partner, flexible enough to handle the unpredictability of the week’s schedule and helping to iron out kinks in the program those two guys would then take out on the road… It was so fun getting to know the other players - Zuill had worked with each of us separately in different contexts previously, so he created this opportunity to bring us together, and I dare say it went well. I had fun, anyway. There was some exciting weather drama one evening when a massive thunderstorm rolled in and the sudden heavy rain leaked -poured - through the roof and ceiling into the kitchen of our new-build AirB&B house - while our kids were “home” alone as their parents enjoyed a nice dinner out with the festival folks.

From El Paso we drove north, hitting 4 Corners where Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah meet, and Mesa Verde National Park just outside Cortez, Colorado - where we did a relatively quick drive through to view some of the easier-to-access cliff dwellings and table-top community archaeological dig sites. Relatively here means we only spent 3 hours going up and around the Mesa top, instead of an entire day or two. Sunset fell as we drove back down the mountainside and we ended the day with a room at the Inn at the Canyons in Monticello, Utah. And their pool was open when we checked in, and a few of us took advantage. That’s a nice place, I recommend it!

So it was now the 19th of August and we continued north to Moab where we took a few hours’ detour into Arches National Park, which of course was awesome and really deserves a full day or two, but c’mon, we were on a tight schedule at this point! From Arches it wasn’t too too far to get to Logan Utah where we were looking forward to seeing old friends for a couple days - Brad and Denise were my roommates in Boston when I was there for my Masters and met my future wife, and when I left after one year to join Cypress, they became her roommates when she moved in after me for her second year of her own Masters. So, yeah, good, old friends! We stayed two nights with them and enjoyed a beautiful little hike on the Limber Pine Trail at the end of Logan Canyon, that Denise drove us up to and that doubled as a dog walk for their relatively new 90lb puppy, Grizz.

And finally, from Logan on the 21st we again headed north, stopping briefly at a very cool rest stop where a Lava Flow ‘geological site’ has been marked and trailed-around for drive-by tourists like us (thanks for the heads-up, Brad!), and then skirting west to experience a bit of Glacier National Park - yes, amazing - before crossing back into Canada for our last 6 hours of driving up to Edmonton. We’d left Logan around 7:30am, the day’s an unforgettable blur (you do the math), and we arrived at our new apartment at 2:30am on the 22nd.

What happened next? Watch this space!

Welcome back

I’ve re-engineered my website. If you’ve ever visited before, I hope you like the changes. Perhaps re-engineering is an overstatement; I installed a different template from Squarespace and have spent the better part of a day figuring out how to customize the design.

I did this for a very important reason: because I had the day off of work, and after practing my viola part for an upcoming ESO concert full of Harry Potter music, and biking on the machine downstairs for a bit, I felt like it.

A lot has happened - is happening - with me and the family these days, so it’s hard to know or decide where to start when staring at a blank document to fill knowing firstly that it’s entirely my choice even to include a blog within my website and secondly that whatever I write will just … be there for the world to see, and to judge.

There’s a lot of judgment going around - in the world, big and small, not necessarily or only in my own particular neighborhood - and I guess there always was and there always will be, as we individually attempt to make the most out of our lives in service of the common good, as I believe it should ultimately be, and as we look around while doing so we can’t help but notice differences in the choices other people make in contrast with our own. Did I do the right thing? Am I good at this? Should I have gone there? Should I have said that? Why’d they do that? What’s their problem? Am I annoying them? Is it something else? Can I help make it better? Will I only make things worse? Should I mind my own business? Is it worth it? What’s the right call?

And then there’s the litany of sub-choices, that inevitably someone somewhere else is figuring out how to do better, faster, stronger, smarter than you, and it’s a horrible rabbit hole of paranoia and self-destructive obsession and concern to even begin to worry about that parallel edition in this or another universe. In truth, those others have no bearing on my daily experience. At least they shouldn’t have.

But that’s the point: it’s up to me. Make the most of my moment, my moments, choose what feels right, what feels positive, helpful, impactful, useful, beneficial. Let me be different from the other, find another path, another method, another color, another shape; otherwise what’s my excuse for being? Let’s add color to the world: find a crack in the surface and fill it with gold.

Mitt Romney voted to convict. I believe him when he describes how he actually struggled with it. He knew he’d be attacked for it, but he also knows there are more important things in life than political loyalty. His faith and self-respect were strong enough to make a difference to him, for him. He’s an inspiration, religious or not. He’s a whistleblower: he’s seen something that just wasn’t ok, and he called foul.

In an orchestra, autocratic policies don’t ruin the planet, but morale can be shaken when artistic or administrative weaknesses outweigh the institution's collective strengths. When focus fails and careless exhaustion takes over, and there’s no right time to address it because we’ve just got to get through the rest of the program, our souls are chipped a little. Like a couple of my teeth - dammit, how did that happen? I can't even remember what happened, when it happened, but the impact will be with me forever.

We from so many different backgrounds, having taken so many different paths to get here where now we stand (and sit!) together, with such different perspectives and life experience(s) accumulated along the way, can on our best days feed each other with novel experimentation and open-minded efforts at working with and for each other. On our worst, we’re 56 iso-booths of misery facing the same direction but traveling a la carte, mutually self-obsessed, unaware of the potential energy inherent in our collective presence. When it’s dark, all it takes is a look, a smile, a nod, a wink, a readjustment of posture or a crane of the neck, to bring a little bright to the table, to the stage. Remember this! He says with an eyebrow. Come with me! She says with the tilt of her head.

And then it works.

When we’re in it together, we’re a team of teams, a complicated, flexible machinery crafting, shaping, hesitating, driving. My life in a string quartet was formative. I learned to listen, I listened to learn. We talked, we argued, we posited, we supposed. We argued some more, and we convinced, and we rejected. We played our hearts out, and we demanded that of each other. It was all on us, at a microscopic level - no conductor to blame, or to rely on. No section to hide within, or to commiserate with when that one lick just wouldn’t stick.

As a sub in an orchestra, you’re desperate to make a good showing, to fit in, to not fuck it up. As a new hire, pretty much the same, except you have in your recent memory the experience of playing a good audition, good enough that at least a dozen or so of your new colleagues liked you enough to say ‘join us!’ As the tenure review deadline approaches, self-doubt however unreasonable threatens to overwhelm everything. When the affirmative announcement’s made, you’re thrilled it’s finally settled, feigning eternal confidence in the “inevitable” outcome as you receive the warm congratulations.

And then the real work begins. And that’s where I’m at now. So we’re here now, it’s forever. Now that they’re committed to me, what am I committing to them? What can I contribute, daily, monthly, seasonally, to keep making it all better than before, and to keep my spirit thriving?