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Thwarted, slightly, by a chair

15 Dec

There are times when adrenaline works well for you, your fingers feel like oiled machinery on a track. That was last night for me. The Beethoven went like a dream, all the little runs slotted in and I nailed all my entries. The bits in Don Giovanni that felt shaky before, even still in rehearsal in the afternoon, somehow worked out.

I was terrified in the Sinfonia Concertante as I didn't feel as confident about the part but I acquitted myself well, despite my chair.

You see, in the church we were performing in there was a distinct lack of single chairs, and because I wasn't playing cello full time, my chair kept disappearing as other orchestra members suddenly needed one. Just before the concert started I had to run around looking a spare one. I finally found one in the front foyer and put it in my place, telling my cello section-mates to stab anyone trying to take it with their bows.

But when I walked down to the cello section and sat in it before we started the piece, it made an ominous cracking sound. I dared not move a muscle in my lower half for the whole performance in case my chair disintegrated. I shifted once, and the chair complained with another crack. At interval, two audience members, who were sitting right next to me in the first row, mentioned it to me so I didn't come back and truly fall on my rear end. When I thanked them and said I did know the chair was broken, one woman said 'I know! I could see it in your face!' That was probably the panic then.

The extra elements of stress we don't need right in the middle of a concert! Whew.

Starting in January: Mendelssohn 1, Barber of Seville overture (oooh so glad I'm not playing flute now!) and Saint-Saens' Morceau de concert for solo harp.

 

2 Responses to Thwarted, slightly, by a chair

  1. Emily

    3 January 2009 at 11:19 pm

    I was once demi-thwarted by a standmate’s endpin. Her rock stop failed, and in the middle of some Corelli concerto grosso, her endpin skidded across the floor in a most percussive manner. Without even a thought, my leg shot out, and we finished the performance with her cello being supported by my awkwardly extended foot. Fun!

     
  2. Erin

    4 January 2009 at 11:25 am

    Wow, good save Emily! I watched one of the first desk LSO cellists have her spike skid off forward and she almost lost her cello. Her desk partner didn’t even really react, but she got it under control in a few bars and just smiled ruefully at the conductor, it would have been Gergiev or maybe Colin Davis…

     

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