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You are here: Home / Archives for music

Sing Anyway

November 18, 2011 at 11:27 am by Claudia

Don and I had one of those conversations that happen when you wake in the early morning hours and chat a bit before going back to sleep. It was about music. Remember that song? What were the lyrics? Who sang it? – followed by both of us singing snatches of the song.

Do you know I used to be a singer? I was. I started out in school choir, church choir, vocal ensemble, then went on to perform in musical theater for years and I sang at weddings, too. Yes, I got paid to sing. Music has always been an important part of my life.

When I went on to graduate school to study acting, I moved into classical theater. I didn’t sing as much. Then I started teaching and coaching and, well …. not much singing anymore. The last time I sang in public was at my niece’s wedding. Since she has a 15 year old daughter, you can see just how long it’s been.

But I still sing. Like most people, I sing in the car, I sing around the house, I sing to the dogs, I sing with Don.

Sometimes I play the piano and sing,

I realized this morning that I haven’t sung very much lately. Life has been tough. I haven’t felt there was much to be joyous about. When I feel like that, I pull back, move inward and set up protective walls around myself. I imagine that’s a normal human reaction.

And, apparently, I don’t sing.

That’s not a good thing.

“Some days there won’t be a song in your heart. Sing anyway.” 
Emory Austin

Act ‘as if.’ Whenever I feel down or am scared of trying something new or am unhappy, I try to use these words. Act as if. Act as if I’m joyous. Act as if I’ve got tons of money in the bank. Act as if I’m a published writer. Act as if I have no fear. Act as if I haven’t a care in the world. Act as if all is well.

Soon I start believing it. And then it starts to manifest.

That’s what singing anyway is about. If you sing, even if it’s only in the shower, you can’t help but feel lighter and happier. Your mood changes. It’s transformative.

So I’m going to remind myself to do just that. To sing anyway.

I hope, whatever the trials and tribulations in your lives, you find a moment to ‘sing anyway,’ too.

Filed Under: music, singing 20 Comments

On the Transformative Power of Music

November 15, 2010 at 3:59 pm by Claudia

In another life, I was a singer. I played the piano. Much of my life in my growing up years had to do with music. I sang in school choirs, in church choirs, in special vocal ensembles. My love of music and theater merged in Musical Theater and I sang my heart out onstage over and over. I sang in weddings; more than I can count. I was fortunate enough to go through a public school system that had wonderful music programs (as well as drama.) My parents often had music playing. I grew up listening to Frank Sinatra and The Original Cast of South Pacific and Judy Garland. So I was around music in some way, shape or form all the time, even if it was being made to sit down at the piano and practice.

There is a power in music that can touch my very soul. I distinctly remember a time when I obsessed about a piece of music, absolutely sure I had heard it somewhere. I was only 10. But I’d never heard it at home, in the classroom, on the radio. It was Grieg’s Piano Concerto in A Minor. Mrs. Drake, my piano teacher had assigned it to me. I knew it somehow, recognized it as something already deeply familiar to me. I’ve had that same feeling with Rachmaninoff.  As sure as I knew my name, I knew those pieces. Like the time I stood in the bathroom as a little girl and told my mother I knew her before I was born. I knew that to be true, as sure as I was standing there.

My musical tastes are eclectic. Jazz, Big Band, Folk, Motown (my hometown), Rock, Rhythm and Blues, Pop, Broadway Musicals, American Popular Song, Classical….the list goes on. If I hear something new to me that I can’t get out of my mind, I will research it until I find it on CD or some other form. I spent endless hours in my room listening to music as a young adult. Then I would do research. There’s not a lot I don’t know about the history of the Broadway Musical. Or the history of American Popular Song. My favorite thing to do was to go to the record store and buy a new album. I’ve always had a secret desire to have my own radio show where I could play all the many types of music that I love and tell the story behind each piece.

I remember the first time I heard “I Want to Hold Your Hand.” I was in elementary school and I had never heard anything like it before. That sound. I heard it coming from the radio that sat on our corner table and I was transfixed. Same thing when I heard “If You Could Read My Mind” by Gordon Lightfoot. His sound, those words…they touched me in a profound way.  I developed a love for folk music in high school and saw Gordon Lightfoot in concert, as well as Judy Collins and Joni Mitchell. Where was I the night Nixon resigned? At a Joni Mitchell concert. She announced the news from the stage. And in those days when I knew how to get backstage at Masonic Auditorium in Detroit, I was lucky enough to meet Gordon Lightfoot and Judy Collins. Now I’d be taken for a stalker.

During my last year in college I always had rehearsals late into the night so I would take an afternoon nap. I’d shut the blinds, put on Aaron Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” and off to dreamland I would go. To this day when I hear that beautiful music, I think of those long-ago afternoons. A simpler time.

Rhapsody in Blue, any Gershwin song, Bernstein, Sondheim (I could write a book on my love for Sondheim), Frank Sinatra singing “I’ve Got You Under My Skin” – I can’t get enough of that music. Barbara Cook singing anything. She brings me to tears. Earth, Wind and Fire – they fill me with joy. The end of Stravinsky’s Firebird. I don’t think I’ve heard anything more powerful and resplendent.

I’ve always had such an emotional response to music. Don and I went to Tanglewood one summer. It’s such a beautiful outdoor setting in which to hear music. I sat there listening to the Boston Symphony in that gorgeous setting and cried. The experience was transcendent. I’ve had many such experiences, have you? I think music can touch a place deep within – it can unlock all those emotions we keep a lid on, the feelings we have denied because we have to in order to get through daily life. Music can sneak its way in to that hidden place and free us.

Years ago, a few months after my brother’s untimely death, I traveled from Boston to Philadelphia to visit my close friend Joe. Joe is a very talented organist. As I sat in his church and heard the opening notes come out of that gorgeous instrument, I started to cry. And I couldn’t stop. I cried, quietly, through the whole service. Healing had begun.

Joni Mitchell recently recorded a new version of “Both Sides Now.” Now her voice is deeper, more smoky, more knowing. The arrangement is haunting. When I heard it for the first time, I was profoundly moved.  There is a lifetime of living between that first version recorded as a young adult and this new one. A lifetime of happiness, pain and sorrow. And it all comes out in her voice, her lyrics, sung at this time in her life. Music performed from the heart at a specific moment in time can do that.

Lately, I’ve been playing Pat Metheny over and over: his piece “Last Train Home.” It is so hauntingly beautiful that I cannot stop listening to it. Yes, I get obsessive. But when a piece of music effects me so deeply – whether it makes me want to dance, or sing along, or just immerse myself in its beauty – I have no choice.

I don’t sing publicly anymore, just around the house. The last time I sang in public was at my niece’s wedding. I wanted to turn down her request because I was rusty, but all I could hear was my late brother’s voice in my head saying “What the…? What do you mean, you’re not going to sing?” So I did.

I don’t know of anything else that can move me so profoundly as music. Interestingly, as I get older, I also like silence. And I think that is why music seems to be even more powerful lately. If music is on all the time, it loses its power. When it comes out of silence…then it resonates.

So I’ve been thinking about music a lot lately. And I find that when I can’t get an idea out of my mind, I need to write about it. I’d love to hear about what moves you. Has a piece of music changed your life? What are your favorites? Please share – I’d love to read about your experiences.

Filed Under: music 28 Comments

A handy gadget

September 16, 2008 at 6:10 pm by Claudia

I’ve been sitting at the sewing machine, once again piecing my quilt. My iPod is playing Diana Krall singing “Dancing in the Dark.” This CD was arranged by the legendary Claus Ogerman, who arranged lots of Jobim’s music – most memorably on Francis Albert Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim. I love Frank Sinatra singing most anything, but that particular recording is my favorite of his because he’s restrained, beautifully taking us on a journey through sexy bossa nova rhythms. I think he’s at his best, along with “Fly Me to the Moon”, and “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.” Back to Diana Krall: I recommend this recording highly! “Dancing in the Dark” has the most wonderful arrangement with a Brazilian samba-like accompaniment by a full orchestra. It is on The Look of Love.

Thought I’d share this handy (at least to me) gadget I found at my local quilt shop. I believe the owner said it came from Japan.

The left side is a mini cutting mat and the right side has a sandpaper/emery board-like finish.
I can cut and trim pieces that I have sewn on the mat and the other side is terrific for marking fabric before sewing.

I don’t know about you, but I don’t always want to get up and walk to my larger cutting mat. I work in a small space and after the initial cutting of fabric is done, I can put away the large mat and work with this little guy right next to my machine. It folds up and looks like this:

I assume Cotton Boll is the name of the manufacturer. It has proven to be invaluable in my little, little space.

Autumn is in the air, and after my initial sadness about my garden, I am now happy that Fall is here. Funny thing about the seasonal changes – I always think I’m not ready for the changeover, but when it is time, I’m absolutely ready. Mother Nature knows best.

More later.

Filed Under: music, quilting Leave a Comment

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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