This is something that I wrote two years ago - in recent times I have had some happier experiences as a performer and as a teacher, but this was relevant at the time, and so I am publishing it anyway.
“Music education
is so important for children,” I say, putting as much conviction
into my voice as I can. “It helps in so many ways - to develop the
brain, to develop self expression, it can even help children with
their maths!”
Ben's mother nods
and smiles, her eyes tired and rather desperate as she looks at her
son, who is attacking the music stand with his violin bow, à
la Jack Sparrow. I must
sound convincing, because I can tell that she's beginning to think
that yes, maybe it is worth plodding on then - maybe it is
worth the fights to get him to stand his testosterone-fizzing body
still, for ten minutes three times a week with a violin clamped under
his chin - maybe it is worth the money she pays to bring him for his
lessons every week, worth the trauma of listening to him whine and
squirm the notes out of his small, factory made instrument.
I feel a worm of
guilt wriggle in my stomach. Should I have my fingers crossed behind
my back, when I spout this “music teacher” talk?
Should I tell her
about my performance on Saturday evening? Does she really need to
know? Does she need to know how I, a grown woman with three teenage
children, the product of so many music lessons, spent all Saturday in
a cold sweat, my fingers shaking, the vomit churning at the bottom of
my throat - just because I had to perform a Bach solo that I love?
Would it help her to know how I washed down my beta-blockers with a
glass of wine before the performance – and how all I wanted to do,
in the hours leading up to it, was to leave my children and husband
of twenty years and run away to Peru? Does she need to know about the
humiliation, the great feeling of worthlessness that drained me, the
next day, because, even after the wine and the beta-blockers, my
hands shook so much that the bow felt as though it had shrunk to the
size of a pencil and spent the entire piece bouncing up and down like
a rubber ball on the strings?
No, of course she
doesn't need to know about those things. Instead, I tell her about
those times when I was a child and fell in love with music – the
times I will never forget. The Wednesday evenings in Saudi Arabia,
when my father would load four of his six daughters into our rusting
Chevrolet and we would ride through the dusking city, through the
blare and snort and fart of Riyadh traffic, past the flashing neon
signs and the feathery palm trees, the high rises and the mud houses.
We would drive right to the edge of the city, where concrete melted
into sand and rock and you could look out for miles across flat and
empty desert, to where the sun was sinking in a welter of dusty pink
glory. And there would be our friends, Ruth and Erasmus, middle aged
doctors with grown up children, who would welcome us into their house
with beaming smiles, would ply us with tea and orange juice and
sticky cakes from French Corner, filled with custard and fruit.
Malcolm would be there as well - fierce, eagle eyed Malcolm who, in
his youth, had played with the great recorder players of Europe and
Knew His Stuff. We would sit in a circle, in the orange light of the
lamps and put up our music stands, take out our recorders and open
up the boxes of music that stood in the centre of the room.
We never knew what
was going to come out of those boxes – whether it would be music by
Telemann, or Purcell, or Bach, or Schickhardt or Loeillet. Sometimes
it would be music we had played before, but more often than not, it
wasn't. Ruth would hand out our parts and we would open them up, see
the squiggles on the page – flat instructions, printed black on
white. And then we would begin to play, Erasmus on the guitar –
pretending it was a lute - his eyebrows disappearing into his hair as
he peered at the music over the top of his glasses; Ruth with her
fat, sausage fingers sticking out high over the holes of her
recorder, so that she was always a quaver behind the rest of us, her
soft grey hair, loosening from its bun and waving around her round,
sparkling eyes; Malcolm, his breath rasping from his nostrils into
his beard, stamping with a desperate foot and wagging his recorder up
and down in an attempt to keep us all together; my sisters and I, our
cheeks flushed, all bright eyed with eagerness.
Sometimes the music
was pretty, sometimes, it was lovely, but sometimes, it would spark
and catch and lift off the page and it was as though a time warp had
opened up between this concrete house in Saudi Arabia and the Europe
of past centuries, the music redolent of old stone churches, organs
and choirs. Sometimes it was music that was rich with the
extravagance of marble floored dance halls, gold trimmed cherubs
singing from pink-cloud ceilings – or sometimes it was music which
smelled of beer and roared with the life of Bruegel-busy taverns. Our
hearts would race, any evening fatigue would vanish and when we had
finished it was: “Let's play that again – please can we
play it again!” till late in the evening.
This is what I tell
Ben's mother. About the times when music turns into a magic gift of
creation across time and centuries and people of different ages.
“You're so lucky!”
Ben's mother exclaims. “You must have had the most amazing
experiences.”
And I nod and smile
again, “Yes,” I say. “I am very lucky.”
I don't tell tell
her about the years at music college where I learnt that my worth as
a human being was in direct proportion to my worth as a musician. I
do not tell her about the years of practising in practise rooms with
the light switched off, or up in the towers behind the organs where
no one could see me, terrified that someone would discover that I had
only just started learning my Tchaikovsky, or that I had not yet
perfected my Bach, or that my scales were not as well in tune as they
ought to be.
I tell her, instead,
about sitting on stage with tiger cubs, acrobats swinging overhead,
the most famous stars in the land singing and dancing beside me. I
tell her of the camaraderie of the orchestra pit, the crosswords and
knitting, the book clubs and jokes that form over a season. I don't
tell her how quickly that camaraderie can fade, once the season is
over. How colleagues that have shared a desk with me, every night
over the course of six weeks, can come to return a greeting with
glassy eyed indifference, mere weeks later. I don't tell her how,
when working with other musicians, you come to expect the
jealousy, the bitchy rumours, the snide comments.
“I wish I could
have been talented enough to be a professional musician,” Ben's
mother says and her eyes are wistful as she watches her son fold his
music into an aeroplane and send it shooting at the neighbour’s
cat. “It must be so wonderful to do something you love. When I
came to your last concert and heard you play, I could just see how
much you love it!”
Again, I nod and
smile and think back to the week before that concert - how I had been
counting down the days: “a week and it'll all be over...three more
days and it'll all be over...two more hours and it'll all be
over...two more pages....three more lines....two more bars....” how
I had looked out over the happy, applauding audience and wondered
why, at the age of forty-one, I was still putting myself through all
this.
I tell her instead,
about playing sonatas with my pianist, the excitement of trying
different interpretations; trying this passage a tad slower, or maybe
that one much faster – the process of searching for the door into
the music – the magic of discovering that you're there! This is it
- this is how it's meant to go!
I tell her about
playing Elgar - those moments when I feel as though I can see right
into his soul and my own heart breaks with the music, but is filled,
at the same time, with the rushing thrill of it.
“Well, we'll
persevere,” Ben's Mum says, eyeing her son as he throws his violin
into its case and slams the lid on it, as though trapping a wild
animal. “I'm sure it will be worth it in the end.”
And I bite my lip
and smile and the worms of guilt dance a jig in my stomach.
After Ben's Mum has
gone, I sit for a while and wonder: why didn't I tell her all
those things?
Was it just because
I need the income from Ben's lessons? Is the income from Ben's
lessons, come to that, really worth the hours I have spent, listening
to his squalling attempts to ring a tune out of the violin, trying to
persuade him that he really does have to take his violin out of its
case and at least look at it, between lessons?
No, it is nothing to
do with income. It is because, in spite of everything – in spite of
the fact that I probably have a stomach ulcer the size of Japan, in
spite of all the tears I have shed over the years, the fact that I
know I will always feel like a failure, always feel as though I have
missed something, never feel as though I am worth anything as a
musician; in spite of the fact that I know it will not get any better
– in spite of all this, I know that Ben's mother is right.
I am lucky. I
love what I do and I do not regret a single moment of my life as a
musician.
No comments:
Post a Comment