Godzilla Eats Las Vegas

Saturday was the band concert in Schliengen. I’m borrowing a bassoon that belongs to the Schliengen band, so in addition to playing for Kandern, I decided to play at Schliengen’s concert.

The stage is set

The stage is set

Band concerts in Germany have a different atmosphere than American band concerts. Band is more than just a musical group; it is a “Verein,” or club. There were members of the Schliengen band that had been members for 30 or 40 years! During the concert, they took 2 “Pausen” (intermissions) to chat, drink, and enjoy each other’s company. There was a party afterward for all the band members, too. Suzanne, Isaac and I left around 11:45pm, and we were some of the first band members to leave!

Drinks during intermission

Getränke während der Pause

Suzanne played piano in the final piece, “Godzilla Eats Las Vegas” by Eric Whitacre.

Suzanne holding the program

Suzanne holding the program

The program notes started with a warning to audience members: “Everything that happens in the next 15 minutes is part of the music. If you get the urge to run away, please remain seated. Know that all of the crazy sounds are actually part of the music” (that’s my rough translation of the German).

The piece required performers to sing, march, scream, imitate lion roars, play garbage cans, play a ratchet, and perform  mambo, tango rumba, and cheesy lounge music. When Godzilla was defeated, we had a party on stage; we cheered, clinked wine glasses in faux Las Vegas toast, blew party favor noisemakers, and threw confetti. It was a very disjointed, odd piece, but lots of fun.

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Rauchen Verboten

Smoking Forbidden!

Smoking Forbidden

Today I was running home from HBR (at this point I had already run 16 miles), and I saw these 2 kids (7-9 years old?) up ahead. When they saw me, they turned around and tried to hide something. Not fast enough! I had seen that lighter!

I came up to the boys; they had lit the end of a small stick  on fire and pretended they were smoking. I said, “Kinder! Was ist das? Das ist schlecht!” (“Children! What is this? This is bad!”). They tried to make excuses. I told them that smoking turns your teeth yellow. One of them said it was “Kuhl” (Cool). I said, “Nein! Nicht Kuhl! Schlecht!” (No! Not cool! Bad!). They crumpled the stick and threw it on the ground. I almost said something about starting forest fires, but I couldn’t think of anything quickly enough. I left, and I’m sure they just picked up right where they left off with a new twig.

Smoking in Germany is very common. Smoking in public places was banned a couple years ago, but it is a way of life for many people. The two kids had probably seen lots of smokers, thought it was cool, and wanted to try it out. Hopefully they will realize soon that it is not cool!

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Rachel’s Birthday

Yesterday was Rachel’s birthday. A group of us went to the pizza place in Schliengen (the Grotto) to celebrate. It was a fun time!

She opened presents:

Reading the card...

Reading the card...

Enjoyed the company of friends:

Kari and Greenie provided the entertainment

Kari and Greenie provided the entertainment

And ate amazing pizza:

My delicious Pesto Pizza

Delicious Pesto Pizza

Actually, this is my pizza. Rachel wouldn’t have liked it because it was a Pesto pizza. She thought it looked like a swamp. Greenie said, “If you sneezed on it, no one would know!” Kari gave him a disapproving look and said, “Mike! Filter!”

Topics of discussion included Rachel’s favorite birthdays, favorite gifts, and the like. One of her favorite gifts was a Shamrock Shake from McDonald’s. Now, does this make any sense? If she likes green milkshakes, why can’t she get past green pizza?

I don’t think we can get Shamrock Shakes here in Germany, and I don’t think anyone can transport one from the States to Kandern without it melting. Does anyone know if we can buy mint extract here?

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Hadd énekeljen az egész világ

“Let All the World in Every Corner Sing”

This was the theme of the ACSI Honors Choir and Strings festival in Budapest, Hungary.

Hungarian Goulash

Hungarian Goulash

The three of us from BFA stayed with a family from the school. They had actually been at BFA several years ago, so we had some fun conversations. They lived right across the street from the Communist Statue Park. After the fall of Communism in Hungary, they took these statues down from their locations all over Budapest and put them in this park.

A Cubist rendition of Marx and Engels

A Cubist rendition of Marx and Engels

Hungary+Russia=Friendship

Hungary+Russia=Friendship

Though it was exciting to experience Hungarian food, history and culture, that was not the purpose of our trip. We were there doing a music festival. There was a choir of 70 students and an orchestra of 8. The orchestra portion of the festival is relatively new, and without BFA students there (they were on high school retreat), the numbers were rather limited. Only 4 of these 8 were actually students; the rest were teachers (Peggy, Katie, me, and Hannah Wood from ICSB).

From Thursday through Saturday, we had lots of rehearsal time interspersed with master classes, meals, and sight-seeing. Most of our pieces were just for orchestra, although we did 2 combined numbers with choir.

On Sunday we had two performances. The first took place in a church with very resonant acoustics.

The orchestra performed at the church in Budapest

The orchestra performing at the church in Budapest

As you can see, I was playing cello. I only played violin for one piece. My left pinky was really sore by the end of this weekend, but now it feels tough and strong! I had never played that much cello in my life! We had an interesting time figuring out where to set up in the somewhat confined space of the church. We had to arrange ourselves so we wouldn’t stab choir members with our bows. I also had to figure out where to put my violin so it wouldn’t get crushed by my cello or the choir members traipsing across the front of the sanctuary. We moved from concrete floor to carpet, so we had to remove the duct tape rock stops from the floor. I couldn’t throw away the duct tape at that point in time, so I stuck it on the stand and attached my rosin to it.  I’m amazed we kept track of the music and instruments without breaking or losing anything!

We hauled everything back to the school (which made an interesting ride with 2 cellos sitting on top of 6 people in a van full of keyboards and music stands) and got ready to play the last concert at ICSB in the gym. That went really well – we had enough time to play an extra piece that had been cut from the previous performance. The choir sang a good variety of challenging pieces.

The orchestra kids really bonded together this week. They had lots of time together. We tried to keep the atmosphere relaxed – we let the kids call us by our first names (although the kids enjoyed calling me Miss Musick most of the time), and we wore jeans. I broke up the many hours of rehearsal with some fun stretches (inspired by Dr. Joiner, Feldenkreis, and Dad’s back exercises). The kids loved the chance to lie on the floor and relax their muscles.

The orchestra kids relaxed before the concert at the school. No stressing out here!

The orchestra kids relaxed before the concert at the school. No stressing out here!

You may wonder if it was worth it for us to do a festival with only 4 students. Yet this festival was incredibly valuable for these kids because it was their only chance during the entire year to play in an ensemble! Most small international schools have very small music programs. They are fortunate if they have a choir. It is rare for these schools to have any kind of an instrumental program.

The first violinist was from Budapest; she takes lessons in Hungarian, but does not have an orchestra. The 2nd violinist and flautist were from Madrid. They ARE the music program there! The cellist had taken lessons in his country, but had almost no orchestral playing experience. This lack of experience caused some difficulties with sight-reading, but these kids all improved greatly in ensemble playing ability.

The best part was seeing their excitement in playing with a group. They didn’t even realize what they were missing out on! The cellist soaked up every little bit of advice I gave him (on sight-reading, staggered bowing, fingerings, modes, composition, etc.), and the violinist from Spain is already getting excited about next year’s festival!

The festival was as beneficial to me as it was to the students. It gave me a chance to get a feel for music programs in other ACSI schools. In international education, music programs have a very difficult time growing because of the transient nature of both staff and students. There are also circumstances unique to each country (for some, it takes months to order music). Many of the schools have limited space for rehearsing ensembles. There is also the issue of navigating rental contracts in another language. The barriers seem much larger for instrumental programs than choir; this is compounded when a new teacher would have to take over every couple years and navigate the cultural, linguistic, and practical issues all over again. There are also the financial issues – how many of these parents can actually afford to rent or buy instruments? How can they commit to something that demands lots of time if the family may have to uproot in a few years? I had not realized how few opportunities the students have to play in ensembles, but in seeing the obstacles, I understand better why it is that there are so few. BFA is a unique school in Europe. Coming from public schools in the States, BFA is small school; compared to the other private international schools in Europe, BFA has a really big music program. It seems hard to believe that 15 string students is large, but it is the largest in the group of schools present at the conference.

On my flight back home to Germany (it really does feel like home – German doees not seem at all foreign compared to Hungarian!), God gave me a reminder that His timing is perfect, and He is guiding every one of my steps in life.

A Hungarian girl seemed a little nervous and unsettled as she found her seat, which turned out to be next to me. I struck up a conversation with her, and it turns out that she was on her way to America to be a nanny for a year through Au Pair. She had never been to America before, so she was somewhat distraught about leaving her family behind and going to a new place where she had no friends. As the plane left the ground, I saw her look out the window at her home country as it began to disappear beneath us. She grasped her tissues, and I remembered the emotions that had been sweeping through my own mind last July as I, too, watched the Chicago skyline grow smaller as I left my family behind to start a new life in a new country where I knew nobody.

I encouraged this girl with my own story of my journey to Germany. As we cruised above the wispy clouds, she showed me pictures of her family. She also showed me a picture of the school where she had taught for 2 years; it just “happened” to be a part of an Evangelical church. Throughout our conversation we shared that we are both believers – and we both stressed that true faith is more than just following tradition or going to church. What an encouragement to find another believer! At one point, she said, “You are like an angel! God put you here on this plane.” She expressed her faith that she is not making this move alone; God is with her. My presence on that flight was an extra reassurance to her that God is indeed taking care of her; He even gave her an encourager on the plane to make it through the first leg of her journey to America!

As we arrived in our layover airport in Munich, we prayed for each other and exchanged emails; I’m praying that she has met the people with Au Pair and that God will provide her regular spiritual encouragement and strength, especially as she will be living with a Catholic family. She came armed with several Bibles in Hungarian and English, so I know she will rely on God to get her through the times of loneliness, doubt, fear, and longing for home.

What are the odds that this intersection between us would take place? One Christian teacher recently left family and friends in America to start a job in Europe; the other Christian teacher just left family and friends in Europe to start a job in America. I fully believe that God put me on that plane “for such a time as this.” He orchestrated that meeting. What a beautiful reminder of how God cares for us!

“Hadd énekeljen az egész világ” – “Let All the World in Every Corner Sing” – it is a privilege to be a part of God’s ensemble of believers, the Body of Christ. We not only exalt His name by make literal music together; we also sing God’s praise together in our interactions and relationships. Through God’s contrapuntal genius, this Hungarian girl and I met on the unison moment of a voice crossing. For one hour today, I sang in unison with someone from another corner of the world.

More pictures:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2045247&id=187701865&l=aeeed69701

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Crazy Days

Yesterday and today have been crazy days. Why? I’m leaving for Budapest tomorrow, so I’ve been trying to fit a week’s worth of lessons into 2 and a half days. Today I taught 7 lessons, orchestra, study hall, and attended a music department meeting; I still have another lesson, a prayer meeting, and Bible study after school. Ahh!!  I’m still looking for someone to sub for orchestra class tomorrow and I haven’t packed yet, so I hope I’ll be ready to head out tomorrow.

Katie, Peggy and I are going to Budapest to participate in the ACSI honor music festival. The choir program has been big in the past, and last year they added an honor string part of the festival. This year, however, the honor festival takes place during BFA’s high school retreat, so we were unable to send any students. This leaves about 3 string players! We don’t want the honor string program to die out, so we’re going to play with the students and coach them on some music. It should be a fun experience for the students. Hopefully it will inspire and challenge them to grow musically.

The other schools involved in the ACSI honor festival have a lower percentage of MKs; please pray that we would be a good witness to the students through our cooperation, teamwork and caring efforts.

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Musick Notes #012

Newsletter 012

For more pictures, go to:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2044803&id=187701865&l=e2e9bc8b31

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Candlelight Dinner

Candlelight Dinner is a show that BFA puts on for the German community every year. This year, it took place this Friday and Saturday. It involves testimonies, music, dance, and drama. This year’s theme was “Brokenness to Beauty.”

The evening starts with a fancy dinner and an introduction by a German narrator. The first testimony was Insa, a German artist who went through a time of struggle: could she be an artist and truly express herself while being faithful to God? During her time of brokenness, she first rejected her art, but after realizing she could not live without art, she rejected God. Eventually, she came to the realization that God had made her to create art; these were not two mutually exclusive aspects of her life.

After the first half of her testimony, two students and I played “Bridge over Troubled Water.” This was a song she had chosen to represent her time of brokenness. At the end of her testimony, another group sang “Gracias a la Vida.”

Warming up in my office

Warming up in my office

Our performances went well – the second night was especially top-quality! I had been nervous about keeping my violin in tune because we had to wait off-stage by a door that opened into the cold air. In the dress rehearsal on Wednesday, my E string went out in the middle of the piece, so I finished the piece on the A string. Fortunately, the actual performances went well!

The next testimony was by a BFA teacher; a native German speaker read his story in German. His story was about his son who was born with a genetic defect; he lived a short life, yet even within all the pain and struggles, there was hope because the son trusted in Jesus.

The final testimony was a riveting account of a woman who had gone through a severe time of depression in Africa. In her Afrikaans accent, she told how she had been driven by success, but reached a point where that striving to succeed was not enough to hold her inner structure together. When that collapsed, she had no desire to live. She took a revolver, loaded it, undid the safety latch, and was about to end her own life when the phone suddenly rang – it was her friend from South Africa asking what she was doing. Her husband inexplicably felt something was wrong and came into the room a couple moments later to find her with the revolver in her hand. He got help for her. During this, her darkest time, she realized that she needed God. She could not keep up the meaningless rat race of life. It took this great time of brokenness for her to allow God to heal her and bring beauty back into her life.

Her testimony was depicted by two dances. The first was a jazz dance that showed her rejection of God; the second was a ballet that showed her submission and longing for God. The dancers portrayed the contrasting emotions in a powerful way.

Dancers show some attitude, expressing rebellion against God

Dancers show some attitude, expressing rebellion against God

The finale was a sign team/drama act choreographed to Natalie Grant’s “Perfect People.” Several people held up “cardboard testimonies” during this part – On one side, the cardboard said something they had struggled with; they flipped it over to show how God had changed that to something beautiful and whole.

Cardboard Testimonies

Cardboard Testimonies

There were about 500-600 people who came to Candlelight Dinner. Please pray that they would recognize their own brokenness and need of God!

My week was full of Candlelight Dinner preparations this week. Next week, however, my week will be full of Budapest preparations! On Wednesday I am flying out to Budapest with Katie Roberts and Peggy Stuckey to attend an ACSI honors music festival. Last year was the first time they added strings to the music festival, and BFA sent the largest number of string students. This year, it takes place during BFA’s high school retreat, so BFA won’t be able to send any students. Therefore, the three of us are going to play with the few students there, coach them, and keep this string part of the festival alive for future years. I’ll be switching off between playing cello and violin!

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Sun-Day

Today was a sunny Sunday! It really brightened my mood, and I was thanking God all day for the warmth on my face and the smell of wet grass and mud.

I was happy to be in the sunshine!

I was happy to be in the sunshine!

I woke up early (7:30) because the sun was shining on my face. It wasn’t a bad thing – I was happy to see the sun! I made baked oatmeal for breakfast, had some quality time with God, and went to church.

After church I ate out with the Loves (WorldVenture people), then went for a little walk up the hill.

Reading bench

Reading bench

I sat in this bench reading for almost an hour!

Then I came back and ate some tuc crackers with homemade hummus (amazing recipe from an international cookbook).

As I write this, the light is starting to fade, but it’s 6pm. I am thankful that there is still daylight at this hour. Back in December, it started getting dark at 4:30, so I felt like I never got to see the daylight!

Thank you Lord for the sunshine, and thank you for the seasons of darkness that help me appreciate the sunshine that much more.

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Mystery of life

Last night, the science department hosted a movie night: “Unlocking the Mystery of Life.”

Doc Parsons discussing the movie

Doc Parsons discussing the movie

The film discussed the complexities involved in life on earth; in looking at the evidence, it is basically impossible for life to form by chance. Natural selection only works in small incremental adjustments to DNA. Michael Behe (author of Darwin’s Black Box) identified something called “irreducible complexity,” which means that there is a very complex structure that exists, but all the parts have to exist simultaneously for it to be functional. If only some of the parts existed, it would be useless, and the parts would be eliminated through natural selection. It could not possibly have come to exist through natural selection. The movie gave the example of a bacterial flagellum. It has too many complicated parts that all work together simultaneously; it could not have been formed slowly and gradually.

The movie quoted Charles Darwin saying, “If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down.”

In addition to irreducible complexity, the film addressed the complexity of DNA. At the base of Darwin’s “tree of life,” how did the first life form? In the past, people thought the cell was basically an energized blob. We now know, however, that the inside of a cell is as complex as Manhattan – except there are no traffic jams and no lawsuits! Some scientists hypothesized that life was formed when amino acids naturally bonded together to form the first proteins. Yet amino acids do not bond together without the DNA’s instructions. Furthermore, there are little machines in the cell that fold the amino acid chains into proteins, yet these machines are proteins themselves. How did those first proteins form?

Another question raised by the film and the discussion afterwards was that of information. Information is another element involved in science. Doc Parsons gave the example of a Shakespeare sonnet on a piece of paper. Scientifically, you can describe it by the chemical contents of the ink and the paper and how they bond, but that still does not describe the sonnet. You can digitally encode the sonnet and put it on your computer, and it is the same sonnet, but your “scientific” analysis is completely different. The information in Shakespeare’s sonnet supersedes the physical and chemical properties. Look at DNA the same way: you can analyze the chemical properties of it all you want, but there is information there that gives instructions to make complicated living things. That information came from somewhere. The complexity of DNA is beyond that of any computer software, yet we would never say that a computer happened by chance. It takes very  intelligent people to write software (I should know; my brother is one of them!). When looking at a computer, it is logical to assume that an intelligent being made that machine. When looking at DNA, is it not also logical to see behind the perfect complexity an even more intelligent Being?

Michael Behe and others in the film approached the evidence from a very logical standpoint, and from what they could tell, there was no way that these things could be made by chance.

In many ways, it all boils down to what is considered science. Many scientists consider anything that involves God to be out of the realm of “pure” science. Deciding, however, to only look for evidence you can see (eliminating God before you even look at the evidence) is a metaphysical stance. Therefore, those who look only to “natural” forces are starting with philosophy, not science.

If there are any science people reading this, I apologize if I have described anything the wrong way using incorrect terms. This is not my field of expertise.

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Ash Wednesday

I woke up this morning at 6:55 and realized there was an Ash Wednesday service at school…. at 7:15! I managed to slip and slide my way to school on time (there was freezing rain outside; lots of people fell on their way to BFA).

When my family attended a Lutheran church, we attended the Ash Wednesday services, but in most of my church-going experience, Lent was not a big deal. For some of my friends, Lent was just an excuse to go on a diet. The spiritual significance seemed to be lost in personal goals of self-improvement rather than in identifying oneself with Christ.

In the service this morning, Bo Bowen said that the Lenten season in the church calendar is like Advent and Epiphany in that we are preparing our hearts for celebration, but unlike other seasons, this one is more solemn and reflective. During these 40 days, we identify with Christ as He “set His face to go to Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51), and we “take up our cross daily and follow Him” (Luke 9:23). Jesus’ destination was Jerusalem, where He would be crucified; our earthly end will also be death (dust you are, and to dust you will return). Yet as Jesus conquered death and rose from the grave, we participate in His resurrection – great news!

So the season of Lent gives us a reminder to intentionally do what we should be doing every day – taking up our cross and following Jesus, not grudgingly, but with the hope and peace of the Sunrise from on high.

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