We have thousands of human-written stories, discussions, interviews and reviews from today through the past 20+ years. Find them here:
Printer-friendly version
Alice Smith

Carnegie Hall

October 30, 2006 at 2:04 AM

How do you get to Carnegie Hall?
Practice. Very, very hard.

That's pretty applicable to my recent experiences. Two nights ago I had my Carnegie Hall debut! Well, my quartet did. From The Top made a 13-part TV series that will air on PBS in April, and the episodes are pretty much just like the radio show, except you get to see the performers obviously, and they were all taped at Carnegie Hall. My quartet was asked to play a quartet by a 17-year-old Navajo girl living on a reservation in Arizona. It's called Moon's Lullaby, and it was pretty short, but very beautiful.

Even though the performance was on Friday night, we drove up Wednesday morning because over those two days we had to attend rehearsals and such. In our free time we got to explore New York! We went to Times Square and went shopping and got a caricature of ourselves done on the street. It was a really fun vacation from school, and amazing to play in Carnegie Hall.

Some of the other kids on our show were an 11-year-old Korean pianist who was playing some amazingly technical piece, and a saxophone player from Kentucky. Also, an 18-year-old violinist, Charles Yang, and a 13-year-old cellist played the Dumky trio (one of my all-time favorites) with Christopher O'Riley, the host.

I'm playing the third movement of Wieniawski next weekend with a local orchestra, the Bucks County Symphony. We've had one rehearsal so far, which went swimmingly except for, the conductor wants me to the gypsy part really slowly, slower than any recording I've ever heard. The thing is, I don't think he really knows the piece though, so I feel like I'm right, but I don't want to be disrespectful. I've decided to compromise by keeping the tempo about the same but using a lot of rubato in that section.

To Be Con't....
--alice

From Stephen Brivati
Posted on October 30, 2006 at 2:23 AM
Greetings,
I can@t remember. is there a diffenret tempo indication there? I always playe dit in roughly the same tempo as the frest but that was so long ago senilty may have struck.

Cheers,
Buri

From Sydney M.
Posted on October 30, 2006 at 2:30 AM
Congratulats, Caeli! It's so amazing that you got to play in C. Hall!! And...hehe, Colleen called you! Wow...
From Sydney M.
Posted on October 30, 2006 at 2:31 AM
Er, congratulations. My new word is congratulats.
From Alice Smith
Posted on October 30, 2006 at 2:44 AM
No, there's no tempo change in the music. It just says marcato con ritmo, so that makes me think it should be a little faster even.
From Maura Gerety
Posted on October 30, 2006 at 3:40 AM
Take it from a (part-) Hungarian, that second theme in the 3rd mvt Wieniawski should not slow down. :) It's sort of in verbunkos rhythm, so it should be somewhere between a grand military march and a fun peasant folk dance. As for the conductor, you're the soloist, he should listen to you! :)

This entry has been archived and is no longer accepting comments.

Facebook YouTube Instagram RSS feed Email

Violinist.com is made possible by...

Shar Music
Shar Music

Larsen Strings
Larsen Strings

Peter Infeld Strings
Peter Infeld Strings

JR Judd Violins
JR Judd Violins

Dimitri Musafia, Master Maker of Violin and Viola Cases
Dimitri Musafia, Master Maker of Violin and Viola Cases

Pirastro Strings
Pirastro Strings

Los Angeles Philharmonic
Los Angeles Philharmonic

Violinist.com Shopping Guide
Violinist.com Shopping Guide

Bobelock Cases

Violin Lab

Barenreiter

Bay Fine Strings Violin Shop

FiddlerShop

Fiddlerman.com

Johnson String Instrument/Carriage House Violins

Southwest Strings

Metzler Violin Shop

Los Angeles Violin Shop

Violin-strings.com

Nazareth Gevorkian Violins

Subscribe

Laurie's Books

Discover the best of Violinist.com in these collections of editor Laurie Niles' exclusive interviews.

Violinist.com Interviews Volume 1
Violinist.com Interviews Volume 1, with introduction by Hilary Hahn

Violinist.com Interviews Volume 2
Violinist.com Interviews Volume 2, with introduction by Rachel Barton Pine