by Alison McTavish | Dec 7, 2020 | Blog, Chamber Music, classical music, Drew Jurecka, Duo Concertante, Listening, Nancy Dahn, Payadora Ensemble, Rebekah Wolkstein, tango, Timothy Steeves
Medicine has come a long way from the days of bloodletting and Babylonian Skull Cures*, and the development of musical care as a form of practical therapy is becoming more and more sophisticated all the time. When the ancient Greeks moved their gaze from heaven to...
by Alison McTavish | Dec 1, 2020 | Blog, Chamber Music, Duo Concertante, Listening, Nancy Dahn, Timothy Steeves
The cream in your coffee A beautiful sunrise. Alberto Bogo at UnSplash image by Chris Robert Living in this time is a grim business, with a pandemic still raging, millions unemployed and musicians in particular facing ruin. We look to small pleasures for...
by Alison McTavish | Nov 15, 2020 | Blog, Chamber Music, Drew Jurecka, Rebekah Wolkstein, tango
image courtesy of Pointe Tango. To be Alive: not just the carcass But the spark. That’s crudely put, but… If we’re not supposed to dance, Why all this music?” -Gregory Orr So much of music is about relationships: instruments in relation to...
by Alison McTavish | Nov 13, 2020 | Blog, Chamber Music, classical music, Listening
Would you rather be trapped in a small room with 10,000 tarantulas for 10 minutes, or eat 10 tarantulas in 10 minutes? Would you rather lose all of your teeth or all of your hair? Would you rather be in jail for five years or be in a coma for a decade? There’s a game...
by Alison McTavish | Nov 2, 2020 | Blog, Chamber Music, classical music, Drew Jurecka, new music
For financial types and for musicians, it’s a way of reducing risk. But it’s also so much more for musicians. There are certainly practical reasons for musicians here and now to have a broad skill set—self-promotion, recording, self-management, composing,...
by Alison McTavish | Oct 23, 2020 | Blog, Chamber Music, classical music, Duo Concertante, Listening, Nancy Dahn, new music, Timothy Steeves
It’s said that anyone wanting an answer out of the Buddha has to ask three times before getting an answer. Until then, they are met with silence. Jason Rosewell at UnSplash Practising this makes you carefully consider your answers, although it might get you...
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