The news has been depressing lately: a mysterious air crash apparently taking 239
lives; a distinguished nominee to head
up the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division scuttled by a cabal of racist
Republicans and terrified cowardly Democrats;
the endless reports of the clown show at the annual meeting of CPAC, the
Conservative Political Action Conference.
In a desperate effort to preserve my Tigger-like good spirits, I have
retreated into my viola, which never disappoints me, though I often disappoint
it.
I have been re-learning the Prelude to the second Bach cello
suite as arranged for viola. Almost
fourteen years ago, when my sister threw a big party in Washington D .C. to
celebrate her seventieth birthday, the invitations asked for attendees not to
give presents, as she had everything she needed and her apartment was not
large. I decided that despite the
request I would give her a gift -- I played the Prelude for her at the party. I explained that the gift had cost me a great
deal of effort but no money at all, and that it would not take up any room in
her apartment once the party was over.
The Bach suites are of course among the best known works of
the Classical repertory, originally made world-famous by Pablo Casals and more
recently played with unsurpassable beauty and grace by Yo-Yo Ma. They are quite demanding, but the Prelude is
among the more accessible movements for an amateur violist like me, and it is
very beautiful. When I went looking for
the score in my several shelves of viola music, I quickly found a copy of the
six suites, but not the copy on which
I had marked my fingerings and bowings fourteen years ago. That has mysteriously disappeared, so I have
been laboriously going through the movement putting in new fingerings and
bowings. If you listen to the piece [you
can hear the great Russian cellist Rostropovich playing it here] you will find
that it is relentless -- the notes keep coming with scarcely a pause. Hence it is absolutely crucial to be on the
right bow [up or down] at each moment,
because if you get wrong-footed, so to speak, there is nowhere to recover. I just about have it sorted out and in a day
or two should be able to play it creditably.
The low notes sound great on my viola.
Once that is done, I will turn to the viola part of a famous
Handel Passacaglia originally written for organ and arranged for violin and
viola by Halvorsen. It has come to be
nicknamed "the unplayable Passacaglia," and if you listen to it here,
as played by Itzhak Perlman and Pinchas Zuckerman, you will understand
why. It manages to go from quite
manageable to impossible in the space of perhaps ninety seconds. There is not the slightest chance that I can
play all of it, or indeed most of it, but there are a few sections that I and
my companion violinist should be able to handle, and their beauty is worth the
effort.
Perhaps all of this will shield me from for a bit from the
horror that America has become [and, if one is being truthful, always
was.] An old warrior has some right to
retreat from the battlefield for a bit and sit around the campfire, telling the
old stories and singing the old songs.
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