[Come summer heat, much of my blogging momentum melts away. Hence an experiment until Labor Day: fifty minimalist posts about whatever.]
E-mail to a pianist, inspired by two young grandchildren learning to play the cello and violin:
Hello, Ms. ____,
I have your name from your husband, who I met about three years ago at a Princeton Democratic Party meeting. (I move slowly on these things.) I don’t know if youβre still teaching and have time, or what you charge, or — if time and money work for us both — whether you might be interested in taking me on as an experiment.
I had piano lessons from the ages of 7 to 17, again in my late forties, yet again between 1998 and 2001. I was badly taught the first time (by friends of my father, doing him a favor), not really better later, and there wasn’t much the most recent teacher could do, although I liked him. I never learned to sight read, and was unable to memorize.
Several weeks ago I opened the piano (still tuned every six months) and discovered everything had gone with the wind. With difficulty I could pick out the first two major scales with both hands, forgetting where to turn the thumbs under. It took about thirty minutes to work out the fingering and hesitantly put together the first eight bars of the first Prelude of the Well Tempered Clavichord, which I hadn’t played before. (I had played the first Fugue, quite well but not by heart; it looks like Greek to me now.)
However, it is said that Socrates spent his last thirty minutes before drinking the hemlock to which he had been condemned learning to play a new song on his flute-like instrument. Β When asked why, he replied: “So that I may know it.”
I just turned 84, although I’m told I don’t look it, and don’t (yet) have arthritic fingers. Β I am sure if I start again, this time it should be as if I were a beginner, even if there may be somewhat faster progress at the outset than with a real beginner. Is this a challenge you feel you could take up?
Many thanks for your consideration.
Her immediate answer: She would be delighted to meet, after her husband recovers from a recently broken ankle, to see if we can work something out.
You mayΒ call me Socrates, at least for now.
Oh, how exciting! π
I do hope her husband recovers from his injury fully.
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Thanks, Takami. I too hope he recovers, before my impetus fades. π
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Nina, good luck, and happy tinkling on the ivories! Hope you get started soon! Christine
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Thank you, Christine. “Soon” is the operative word. See my reply to Takami Ibara, above. π
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Fabulous. I started over once, learned more the second time around, but haven’t taken a lesson since I was 20. Your Socrates story inspires. Good luck ! π
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The Socrates story becomes more and more apt as the years go by. Glad it inspires you too, Van. And good luck right back — with whatever the inspiration leads to.
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You’re a brave soul, Nina! And an impressive one. Hope you and this equally brave teacher can work something out–and that it’s enjoyable for all concerned (which, I suppose includes Bill AND the cats!)
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She is brave isn’t she? Taking me on is a project where I’m sure she doesn’t know what she’s getting into. As for me being brave, I’m equally unsure what bravery has to do with it (other than managing what I’m certain is going to be her hefty hourly fee). It’s not as if I’m aiming for the concert stage! And of course, if it’s not enjoyable, we can always stop, although it won’t be because of Bill or the cats. Bill has been urging me to begin again for years. And the cats seem to like classical music. When I put a CD on the Bose, one or the other of them curls up near it.
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Hi Nina: I can really relate to your efforts! I began piano lessons when I was 30, with a very traditional teacher who insisted on lots of scale practicing plus Clementi pieces. I had this fantasy of playing Bach on the small harpsichord I had purchased and struggled to tune up all the time,. (It had leather quills and was beautiful to behold!) I did fairly well
but then, to my dismay, realized that I was never going to be
that performer I had in my fantasy, and slowly stopped practising. I finally sold that harpsichord to a “real” performer.
I still have a piano, that I keep tuned, and periodically attempt to play the old pieces that I knew so well–but alas, its a struggle. So I salute your return, It is most admirable–you awaken in me that long ago desire, and might even inspire me to try again!
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Good! Do it!
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I have a piano that I haven’t touched in 10 years. I should probably sell it. Enjoy your lessons!
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If you’ve kept it tuned and the sounding board isn’t cracked, you’re sitting on quite a bit of money by keeping it. On the other hand, does the fact you did keep it mean anything? By me, ten years is like yesterday. Any residual yearning to “tinkle the ivories” again?
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No, not really. My fingers are nimble but always a bit short to reach an octave. I had some level of talent but not the fingers to match. My piano is digital (but not a keyboard). I don’t remember if they need to be tuned. I don’t think so. Ten years is the blink of an eye!
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No, digital pianos don’t need tuning. Twenty years ago they cost about $2400 new. So yours might go for $1000, depending on the make.
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If you can find a buyer….
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If that’s a joke, I’ll leave it alone. If not, I would research market value by calling a few used piano retailers and then advertise on Craig’s List and/or bulletin boards at Curtis in Philly and at the Music Department at U Penn. Good luck!
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I think about it from time to time. A piano takes up a lot of room.
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Thinking about selling it from time to time seems to take up some room in your head, too.Maybe there’s a better use for all that room in both places? π
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Dear Socrates, I have tried to learn the piano three times β last effort three years ago for eighteen months β and it sits beside me now. I still dream; let us know how you get on.
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Dear Plato, I certainly will keep you posted. (That’s what Socratic dialogue is all about, isn’t it?) Just please give new teacher and me a couple of months to settle in with each other.
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