Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts

Saturday, July 4, 2009

The Riverbrook Piano Improv-a-thon

There are marathons and bike-a-thons and walk-a-thons, but on Sunday, June 22, Riverbrook Residence in Stockbridge, MA hosted what may have been the world’s first Piano Improv-a-thon!

Riverbrook, the oldest facility for women with developmental disabilities in New England, is where I teach music. In collaboration with Riverbrook director Joan Burkhard and the many wonderful people on the staff, this event helped fulfill my aspiration to show that, no matter who we are, beauty is inherent to us all by virtue of being human.

Over the course of the afternoon, people of all ages, backgrounds and levels of musical experience—including many of the Riverbrook women—improvised with me on the beautiful Samick grand piano that graces the Riverbrook living room.

The Piano Improv-a-thon was a fundraiser for the Riverbrook music program, which is giving women with developmental disabilities a powerful and transformative means of self-expression. We raised almost $4500—far more than anticipated.

The Improv-a-thon performers collected pledges for their participation from family, friends, and colleagues. (For example, many of my husband’s fellow teachers at Taconic High School supported his participation in the event.) Contributions also came from dozens of individuals and businesses throughout the Berkshires, the Hilltown area and beyond. The Red Lion Inn, The Taggart House, Bardwell, Bowlby and Karam Insurance, Consolati Insurance, Boston Seafoods, Zabian’s Jewelers, Guido's Marketplace, and Once-Upon-a-Table restaurant, were among the many who donated.

Children as young as four years old participated, as did some of the Riverbrook residents and many of my older students. As you’ll hear in the audio clips below, each improvisation was completely individual. Yet, a sweet interconnection manifested itself, arising from that deeper level where beauty is born.

Riverbrook is a rare and special place for women with disabilities. It is an environment where beauty and interconnectivity can flourish among everyone who walks through its doors. As our piano improvisations released the creative impulse in each participant, an unusual alchemy of music, ease and freedom emerged that afternoon. I actually think this was a world's first!

Here is a sample of the twenty-four Riverbrook Improv-a-thon performers. Click on “audio recording” to hear their performances. More photos and audios are coming--stay tuned!

Nancy Babcock, Worthington, MA

Nancy studied piano for a short time when she was a girl, but was told that she had "no musical talent."

Click here for audio recording





Carol Ray, Riverbrook Residence

Carol has lived at Riverbrook for many years and is beloved by residents and staff alike. Carol expresses her exuberant relationship to life through playing music and dancing. She participated in our performance, "Flying Free: Music without Limits."

Click here for audio recording



Isabella DeFelice, Richmond, MA

Isabella is four years old. Her two sisters and brother--Gabriella, Daniella and Dominic--study piano with me. Isabella is just beginning. Our occasional forays into music are entirely improvisational.

Click here for audio recording




Tracy Salvadore, Riverbrook Residence

Tracy loves singing and playing the piano. Occasionally, when we're improvising something upbeat, a staff member or resident will start dancing to our music. This gives Tracy great joy and amusement!

Click here for audio recording




Frieda Pilson, Chappaqua, NY and Richmond, MA

Frieda has played piano for much of her life. Classically trained, she longed to free her creative musical voice. She began studying with me a number of years ago and now improvises freely, as well as composing her own strikingly original piano pieces.

Click here for audio recording




Tom Weeks, Southfield, MA

Tom works for the New York Life Insurance Company. He sings with the Berkshire Choral Festival and has a beautiful tenor voice. Tom began studying piano with me in 2008. His improvisations have a distinctly "vocal" quality: beautiful melodies are always emerging from him!

Click here for audio recording


Bram Fisher, Richmond, MA

Bram and his brother, Satchel, both study piano with me and play in the school band. They clearly love music! Each boy has a distinctly individual sensibility, as expressed in their performances of jazz and blues pieces and familiar songs, improvisations, and their Garageband compositions.

Click here for audio recording


Tanny Labshere, Riverbrook Residence

Tanny and I played a semi-improvised interpretation of "We Shall Overcome" and "America the Beautiful." Two weeks prior, we had played this duet for Governor Deval Patrick.

Click here for audio recording




More photos and recordings from the Riverbrook Piano Improv-a-thon are coming soon--stay tuned!

Sunday, November 16, 2008

America the Beautiful

By Jessica Roemischer

I can safely say that I’m a pianist by birth. My mother played beautifully and during her pregnancy with me, as she practiced Brahms and Schumann, their melodies no doubt penetrated the walls of her womb and entered my developing consciousness. I have no idea when it was that I first tried to plunk out notes on the piano. I was that young.

In 2006, after working for a few years as a senior editor for What is Enlightenment? Magazine (now EnlightenNext), I returned to teaching and performing music. In so doing, it became apparent that music is with me still. It’s in my blood. These days at the piano, I give every bit of my attention to each note, each span of silence, the arc of each musical phrase. I shape sound and silence like a potter shapes clay. In return, music gives me doubtless confidence—in beauty.

I recently read a short statement from integral thinker Steve McIntosh, and the penny dropped. McIntosh articulated my thoughts exactly, placing the experience of beauty in a far-reaching context. He said that the advancement of human culture is pulled forward by beauty. He called beauty—and truth and goodness—evolutionary “attractors of perfection.” As we awaken to these primary values, they “draw us forward into increasingly more evolved states and stages.”

I am performing regularly: in rural churches, at stylish cafés and elegant country inns, at weddings, at funerals, at fundraisers, even at bowling alleys. The people who hear my music come from diverse social and economic backgrounds. Some who wholeheartedly respond to my playing are life-long Republicans (one is close to George W. Bush), others are dyed-in-the-wool Democrats. Music touches something in us that’s more essential than these distinctions. That gives me hope.

In my last posting, a pre-election interview with global activist Dr. Don Beck, he spoke about the need for a new kind of leadership—one that transcends partisan politics. His emphasis was an apt one. As it turned out, 48 million people in the US voted for John McCain and 52 million for Obama. We are still a divided nation and our problems are enormous. I am inspired, however, by what this country represents and by what it can become. I remember the Pledge of Allegiance: “…One nation under God, indivisible.” That motto instills in me a powerful and disarming sense of patriotism.


Barack Obama, an African American, was just elected to the highest office in the United States. I was amazed, as many were, to see him walk across that long platform in Chicago to declare his victory on the evening of November 4th. I have a dream that America, under President-elect Obama’s leadership, will become the nation whose lofty credos are inscribed on so many of our government buildings in Washington. I am optimistic that this country can regain its standing as a beacon of possibility for millions around the world. Hopefully, this is a new beginning.

I believe that the power of beauty can and should be called upon to help catalyze this transformation. Beauty awakens that place in us where we are far more alike than dissimilar. Beauty emanates from our deepest selves. In light of the immense challenges we face, that dimension of us should be activated intentionally, awakened by evolutionary attractors of perfection such as transcendent music, to move us towards a wholly new future.

Two years ago I was asked to perform at a campaign fundraiser for Deval Patrick, who subsequently became the Governor of the State of Massachusetts. He was making an appearance here in Berkshire County. For the occasion, I created this piano interpretation of America the Beautiful.