I have already written about my piano teacher, Alice Funk, who ushered me through Grade Eight piano. After the group lessons with Mrs. Peters, I had three violin teachers. Two of whom I adored and one who made me work too hard.
My cousin,
Mark was taking violin lessons from Mary Ediger. So, naturally, Mrs. Ediger
became my teacher too, because we could carpool and have our lessons back to back.
After Mark stopped taking lessons, my mom would drop me off and go to Polo Park
to shop. I would go in the side door of the little bungalow and straight down to
the basement to wait my turn, listening to the sound of the student ahead of
me. With any luck, Mrs. Ediger would be in a chatty mood and the lesson would
be derailed by her stories.
Her house always
smelled of freshly baked Zwiebach. Having a Mennonite music teacher had been a
theme so far in my life. I loved Mrs. Ediger. She took a lot of time to talk to
me. She showed me how to clean my violin and taught me a trick that to this day
holds true. If you start to practice and it doesn’t sound so good, put your
violin down for ten minutes and then go back to it. It will instantly sound
better the second time around. This never fails. I tend to practice this way.
Ten minutes on, ten minutes off. By the end of two hours, I am ready for Carnegie
Hall.
Another
drop of wisdom that came from Mrs. Ediger must have come from a conversation
about me studying music. She said, “You don’t want something you love to become
a chore.” These words have stayed with me. I love playing in orchestras. Practicing
and getting the notes under my fingers and the music in my head make it more
enjoyable. But I can skip a day. I have skipped many days. Every time I play
the violin or the piano, I love it.
So young...
There may
have been another reason Mrs. Ediger steered me away from the professional world
of music. It is grueling. Musicians work all hours cobbling together an uncertain
income. The classical world can be cutthroat and competitive. It would not have
suited my less than intense personality and she probably saw this. The
discipline and determination to succeed at a musical career were not part of my
psychological profile.
I prepared for
a few exams with Mrs. Ediger. I remember getting First Class Honors on one of
them. Mrs. Ediger was so pleased.
Then, she
started to cancel some lessons. I think my cousin Mark and his dad, my Uncle
Peter knew what was up, but I was unprepared for the phone call from her. She
talked to me directly and did not leave it up to my mother to tell me. Sitting
on the hard chair by the phone alcove with the beige telephone receiver in my
ear, I fought back tears. I could hardly speak. Mrs. Ediger told me she had Multiple
Sclerosis and had to quit teaching. It took all the wind out of my sails. I
cried so hard after that call. I can’t remember if I visited her or saw her again. But
she remains vivid in my memory, a short, soft woman with wire rimmed glasses
and light brown hair and always with the kindest words and longest stories.
The teacher
I had after that was recommended to my mom. I don’t remember by whom. Maybe Mr.
Wilson, my music teacher at school? It had to have come from someone with a prodigious
child. Because, Mrs. G. had been a child prodigy. They lowered her to the stage
in a peanut shell. She had made it to Carnegie Hall. By the time I became her
student she was long past those glory years. She lived in a gorgeous home on
Wildwood Crescent. Always dressed in a fine ensemble with make-up and perfume
and a rigid posture. She demanded too much of me. I sight-read a piece one week
and was expected to have it memorized the next. She was the first of my
teachers to insist on my performing at the Manitoba Music Festival. There was
no way I was cut of that cloth. Mrs. Ediger and Alice Funk both let me know of
the opportunity and were willing to coach me in that direction. They both knew,
I think, that I would flounder in front of a large audience. Instead, they
opted to nurture and draw out whatever musicality I possessed. Which they knew
was not enough to pull it off as a soloist. Bless them evermore!
And bless
my mother for listening to me and agreeing that I needed to find another
teacher.
Which
brings me to Gwen Morrow – the absolute best person for me to meet at the time
I needed it most. She came after my year of Mrs. G. My mom probably felt I
should stick out the year. But, lessons with Mrs. G were not cheap and I was
miserable. Gwen Morrow was recommended to me by a school friend who was taking
lessons with her. I was in high school by now and playing in the Winnipeg Youth
Orchestra. The violin was becoming a part of my identity.
Gwen lived on Garfield St, near Notre Dame Ave. By this time, I was
driving, much to the relief of my mother. I drove myself to my lessons. I think
I was paying for them too. Gwen always had her violin out and played with me. One
of the first things she told me was that she had not studied music at university
and so she was not a member of the Manitoba Music Teachers’ Association. She
wanted to be clear that if my intention was to become professional, then she
was probably not the right fit for me. I assured her that I was not interested
in a career in music.
She told me
she had quit playing the violin when she was busy raising her five children.
Once they were old enough to do without her for an hour, she started to
practice again. And then teach. Thank goodness for that!
My beloved teacher, Gwen.
I studied
with Gwen through to Grade 8 Royal Conservatory exam. I had learned some of the
easier Bach’s Sonatas and Partitas and the Accolaÿ Concerto. One day, after my
lesson, Gwen told me she was not able to teach me anymore. Not any longer; any more. She had come to the end of her pedagogical abilities. If
I wanted to go further, Grade 9 or 10 or beyond, I would need to find a new
teacher.
I was
already in university at this time, the second year of a Bachelor of Arts
program. My response was immediate and swift. I could not imagine restarting
with another teacher. I was not going to be a musician. I quit.
I needed to
focus on my studies. I eventually got into the School of Medical Rehabilitation.
I was working part-time job and partying much as time would allow. I moved out
of my house and in with my friend Ellen.
Ellen made me a birthday cake with my portrait on it. She's the best!
The Polish Dance - banished from my repertoire.
After the
festival, I put my violin away again for a long time. My first physiotherapy job
was part-time. Mornings at a community seniors health center. I worked for
about five hours and then went home. I started practicing the violin again. I
sucked. My muscles got tired and sore. My bow hand seized into a claw capable
of only a crude grip. My down bow was stronger than my upbow. And crooked. My
muscle memory had failed. I had forgotten how to play.
I called
Gwen and asked if I could take some lessons with her again. She told me she had
some health issues and had quit teaching. My heart sank. Memories of Mrs.
Ediger. Gwen suggested rather than lessons that I come for lunch and we play
duets for fun. My heart sang. What a perfect idea!
I went once
a week on the Notre Dame bus straight from work. Gwen made lunch and then we
had my lesson. I was always starving by the time I got there. Her food was
simple but so good. Fresh baked bread and butter, every week. And then usually home-made
soup. Pizza soup was my favorite. Then tea and some cookies. She loved talking
too and always had stories about her kids and grandkids. Then we played. Duets
by Beriot, Tartini, Vivaldi, Stamitz. I asked her try some Bartok duets. We
played through the book I had, after which she closed the book and handed it
back to me. “There, that’s done.” We stuck to the Baroque.
Me again.
She told me
all about her family and her cats. She had a lot of cats. They presented
themselves at her door and were usually admitted entrance. Graham – an enormous
white and black cat used to sit in my open violin case while we played, his
girth spilling over the sides.
They lived
in a tiny house on Garfield Ave. She raised five kids in there. I never could
see how. Where did they put them all? Her youngest son, Paul, still lived
there. The rest were paired off and having kids. She loved and worried about
them all. Her husband, George and sometimes Paul, would join us for lunch.
Gwen’s health
improved for awhile and she started teaching again. It was Gwen who decided we
were going to join the Mennonite Community Orchestra together. My days in the
Winnipeg Youth Orchestra were long gone and as far as I knew the Mennonite
Community Orchestra did not do road trips to Pinawa, MB or play in shopping malls to
promote Manitoba Pork. And there were no auditions. I think Gwen probably told
them I could cut it.
Another revelation. I could play in an orchestra, not as a professional musician, but as a proficient musician. This bit of intel was life-changing. It allowed me to move. To travel. To live in different places. Everywhere I went, there was a community orchestra that I could join on no merit at all. There were musicians galore who just wanted to get together and get into the music. This community is vast and should market itself more aggressively as the answer to all our problems.
We played a
lot of Beethoven under a very stressed conductor. Before him was a young man,
mellow and calm. Glen Klassen. I remember his deferential demeanor, if it’s not
too much to ask, could the trombones please play less loud in the section
marked mezzo forte. There is a running joke among musicians that the trombones
are never asked to play louder and are constantly badgered into toning it down.
Gwen and I
played for a few weddings and once we played a Christmas program in a quartet
at St. Peter, Dynevor Old Stone Church in Selkirk, Manitoba. The church was unheated
except for a woodstove. The temperature outside was -35 C. People came to hear
music and sing and hold hot drinks. The CBC filmed it and the host, Robert Enright
let me wear his gloves.
On another occasion we played on the stage of the Centennial Concert Hall for a New Years' Eve event featuring a newly choreographed dance and original music. Just the two of us in the spotlight until the dancers started to move. What a thrill!
The Mennonite College had a conductors program and Gwen and I volunteered to play for the student recital. This is where I first heard the Sanctus from Gounod’s Requiem Mass and my love of playing choral music was born. Finding Gwen to teach me violin opened many doors for me that I would not have found myself. She loved playing and brought me along into the joy of performing music.
After I
left Winnipeg for Toronto, Gwen and I wrote letters. Her letters were detailed
and engaging. An extension of our conversations. I wrote back. I must have missed replying to one or two
of her letters, for she sent a letter in which she stated in her blunt, direct
manner, that she would not write again unless I replied. (Pre- internet. Only
letters.) Our correspondence lasted for years. She became ill with emphysema
and quit teaching. I visited her in the hospital and at home when she was
trailing lengths of oxygen tubing behind her. She never lost her sense of humor
or grit. When her son mailed me her obituary, I was saddened, but ever
grateful. Without her, I would never have continued to play.
Still on my music stand, Bach and Accolaÿ:






No comments:
Post a Comment