Friday, February 14, 2014

My Pre-Performance Rituals

What are your pre-performance rituals?  I have found that certain rituals result in a better performance for me.  What are they?
  • Trim nails.  Nails that are just the slightest bit long throw me off.
  • Take a nap - especially before night gigs.  Hands-down, this is one of the best thinks you can do to sharpen your mind.
  • Get a full night's sleep the night before, if at all possible.
  • Have a cup of coffee 30 - 60 minutes before your performance.  I always have a cup of coffee before performance.  It gives me a little edge on my focus and alertness, but not too much.  There is a pianist who swears by 5 shots of espresso before his performances.  I have to look him up, but will edit this post later to tell you who this is.
  • Eat.  Don't ever play on an empty stomach.  Ideally, don't over-eat, because this can cause a blood sugar crash later on.  I keep almonds, yogurt, bananas, etc, with me on my gigs to keep a steady supply of blood sugar.
  • Protein helps.  If I have a morning gig, I alway do better with eggs!  I like ideally like to have a steak or red meat before evening performances, but concert pianist Vladimir Horowitz always had fish.  Fruits and vegetables are great too, but don't forgo your protein.
But there's more to a successful performance than ritual.  Most importantly, make sure you let go of all fear and play from love.  Love your music as you play it!  Listen to the sounds you're creating.  Listen to the soul of the instrument as it sings and the savor the gentleness of your tone.  Go slow and easy.  Wait for your focus to peak and your tension to ease completely before you go for that run. Let go of all inhibition and move to the music however you like; however you feel.  Enjoy yourself and stay focused.  

Top 10 Love Song Requests for the Piano Player

The pianist can take two love birds down memory lane and help them remember their nuptials or celebrate their love.  I spent 2012 - 2013 playing for a lot of weddings and anniversary parties where I did just that.  Then I became the living room (lobby) pianist for Salamander Resort & Spa.  Young and old, many couples choose the resort to celebrate their anniversary or just enjoy a romantic getaway.  Couples often come over and request a song from their wedding; perhaps the song from their first dance.  This means that love songs are a staple of my repertoire.  It's so wonderful to look up from my playing and see couples embracing and smiling as I play, often swaying to the music.  Once I had an older couple get up and start dancing to "All I Ask Of You" from Phantom of the Opera.  There was no one else around at the moment, and it's not really a danceable song, but they didn't care!

I hear that reservations at the resort are at an all-time high this Valentines weekend, so I'm expecting a lot of requests.  I generally expect requests for love songs sung by Frank Sinatra, Barbara Streisand, Etta James, Billy Holiday, Harry Connick, Jr, Celine Dion, and Michael Buble.  If I don't know the song, I download it to my musicnotes.com library on my iPad and play it for them.  It costs me a couple of bucks, but it's permanently in my collection and I can print it or read the music straight from my iPad at any time.  Here are the most-requested love songs:

  •  As Time Goes By (from Casablanca) - Herman Hupfeld
  • At Last - (sung by Etta James and many others) - Harry Warren/ Mack Gordon
  • It Had to Be You - (from Casablanca and When Harry Met Sally) - Isham Jones and Gus Kahn
  • My Funny Valentine (from Babes in Arms) - Rodgers and Hart
  • The Shadow of Your Smile  (Love Theme from "The Sandpiper") - Webster and Mandel
  • Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars (also known as Corcovado) - Antonio Jobim
  • They Say It's Wonderful (from Annie Get Your Gun) - Iving Berlin
  • I've Got You Under My Skin (from Born to Dance) - Cole Porter
  • All I Ask of You (from Phantom of the Opera) - Andrea Lloyd Webber
  • My Heart Will Go On (from Titanic) - James Horner and Will Jennings (sung by Celine Dion)
It's kind of  interesting to note that most of these songs come from Broadway musicals or classic movies.  I'd love to have your input on the above list.  What are your favorite love songs?

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Autobiography: The Long Road

I was cleaning up my website today when I came across this autobiographical nugget I wrote in 2006 upon the eve of my concert at The Sheila C. Johnson Performing Arts Center.  I had completely forgotten that I wrote this.  It has important information about my formative years.
____________________________________________________________
Jennifer Warren-Baker, age 10 or 11?


















The Long Road
originally published on www.musicbyjennifer.net in 2006

By Jennifer Warren-Baker

This is not the story a child prodigy.  Quite the opposite, I was an average piano student who struggled to read the notes on the page.  In fact, the only awards I ever won were for spelling bees, writing contests, and drama.  But my piano teachers recognized my good ear and the feeling I put in my music.  This was a sign of things to come.

I grew up in the intellectually rich and affluent suburbs of Washington, DC.  My close proximity to the city ensured that a plentiful amount of cultural events were just a Metro ride away.  As a young child, I listened to my mother play out of Broadway piano books.  She was an amateur pianist, and her greatest hits list included Camelot, Sound of Music, Dance of the Rosebuds, and Tennessee Waltz.  My parents took me to outdoor jazz concerts and played lots of movie music and Motown in the home. While mom played her Broadway and sang it to me at night, Dad cranked out recordings of his African-American favorites, including Otis Redding, The Four Tops, The Supremes and the Temptations. And then there was the orchestral music of Superman and Star Wars.  From a home environment that favored the jazzy, upbeat flavor of Motown and Broadway, the traditional, Methodist church service was another world musically.  In church I heard everything from classical organ and vocal music to bell choirs and Bach.

I suppose these earliest musical influences led me to beg for piano lessons.  I wanted to play like my mother and make that music with my own fingers.  For reasons unbeknownst to me, I was drawn to music.  After teaching myself to read music, my wish for lessons was finally granted.

When my skills were adequate to study the classics, I learned Mozart, Beethoven, Bach, Schumann, and others.  My teacher was not to keen about expanding my horizons beyond the insular world of classical music, and this may have resulted in the gradual decline of my practice habits.  On a hunch, she bought me a book of Scott Joplin rags, and I was immediately hooked.  I clearly had a knack for it, and classical was soon on the back burner.  For a while, I just played ragtime and composed.  It was clear to my teacher that I didn't fit the "mold" and I was not following the course of her ideal student.

With about six years of piano lessons under my belt, my mother said I wasn't practicing what I was supposed to, so she wasn't paying.  In reality, I was busy composing my own fabulous stuff and my teacher didn't know how to deal with a creative soul.  I was fifteen.  That departure marked a painful break from formal instruction that I greatly regret.  I went on to compose and teach myself new pieces until college.

In college, I tried to bury my musical ability.  I convinced myself that I could never make a living at music, but the truth was, I was miserable without the piano.  Although I chose English as a major, I spent every hour I could in the practice rooms of the music department.  I played all the time, often composing new piano material.  After dabbling in several non-commital majors and wasting a lot of time in two different schools, I married a man who gave me the encouragement I needed to get back on track with music.  With his encouragement, I enrolled in the music program at George Mason University.

My five-year hiatus from formal instruction meant that I had a lot of catching up to do,  but I kept reminding myself that I was not marketable without theory knowledge and good sight-reading skills.  Much to the surprise of my professors, I stuck to my guns and worked hard to refine my classical skills.  Once again, I didn't fit the mold, but I did what I had to do.  To my relief, the faculty allowed me play one of my original piano compositions at each jury and recital, provided that the full score was in their possession.  Composing piano music is still my first love, and I regularly perform my compositions in public.

After receiving a music degree that many termed "useless," I decided to try my hand at teaching piano,  more to make a living than to fulfill a divine calling.  Let's just say that the teaching worked out.  It became my life's work and mission, with the benefit that I had a darned good time doing it.  I still love teaching my 50 students, all of whom bless me every day with entertaining anecdotes about the trials of middle-school dating.  My five-year old student, Libby, shocked me with her mature conclusion that "Every Good Boy Does Fine" is sexist. For those who don't know, this is a sentence that helps musicians remember that the order of the line notes in the treble clef are E-G-B-D-F.  I think she's absolutely right, so we made up the sentence, "Every Girl Better Dress Fancy."  Although our new sentence favors the female gender, I'm not sure that the dress code will meet the approval of the feminists. [The writer wishes to interject here that she quit teaching in late 2013.  See "Why I Quit Teaching."]

While maintaining a large roster of piano students, I moonlighted with numerous musical theater groups and church gigs, where my appreciation for song and lyrics suddenly blossomed.  The day the Twin Towers collapsed, I found myself alone at the piano in mourning.  In tears, I wrote my first song titled "Why Do We Wait?" A year later, my husband had a pulmonary embolism that nearly killed him.  While he was in the hospital, I wrote another song titled "It's Not My Time To Go."  Although I'm not sure these were my best songs, they marked the beginning of a new direction in my composing.

The next few years resulted in a few more serious ballads, and then I began to try my hand at comedic material.  I had played several funny characters in plays during my formative years, and had briefly written a humor column for my college newspaper.  So comedy was a natural development in my songs.  Serious and comedic, I write from life, and from my experience of the many twists and turns that a woman encounters in today's world.

I expect some controversy over my lyrics, but they are my own voice, and as an artist, I must speak for those who cannot.  I hope that for some, my lyrics are more than entertainment.  Perhaps some can see their own life in my songs and feel reassurance that they are not alone.  There is a mutual pain that all women feel at some point in their lives, and perhaps my songs might help some women (and men) work through their pain, and even laugh about their trials.

___________________________________________
Maybe someday soon I'll get the courage again to share my musical comedy and not-just-piano songs.  

Monday, February 10, 2014

Recorded Accompaniment and the Extinction of Live Musicians

Live musicians and accompanists may be an endangered species.  Why?  Many theater and music programs, due to budget constraints or other reasons, are trading in their live accompanists and musicians for pre-recorded accompaniment tracks.  The increasing availability of recorded musical theater accompaniment tracks makes this a cheap and easy option for a theater director who wants to put more money into a fancy set and costumes.  A local school near me is using recorded tracks instead of an accompanist this year, after several years of using accompanists.  Several local churches are increasingly using recorded tracks with their choirs. Even the Red Hot Chili Peppers admitted to using a pre-recorded track at the Superbowl this year!  It seems that recordings are all the rage.  We have the technology, and the sound equipment, so why not?  We can give everyone a perfect performance and fake it, or lip-sync, although I don't think I could fake it on my piano.  So what's the problem with all this recording madness?

The problem is that it's not real!  

I think our technology has made superficiality comfortable to us.  In our virtual, hyper-edited realities on Facebook, Youtube, and TV, we are ok with fakeness.  We project falsely perfect worlds in our electronic media, making everyone think that perfect is the only way to be.  Does this have anything to do with the fact that depression has reached epidemic levels in our country?  I think so.  Back when I taught piano, my students were so used to hearing perfect, edited recordings on the radio, they couldn't be satisfied with their performance unless it had the same degree of flawlessness.  I had to keep reminding them that all that stuff they hear on the radio is not a real performance, but the result of many, many takes and many hours of studio time.  But that is another rant for another day. 

Back on track.  It's time take the megaphone and give my loud and brazen opinion on the matter:  
LIVE MUSIC IS ALWAYS BETTER!  Canned music always degrades the performance.  It also gives the audience the message that music must be absolutely perfect, or it's not good enough.  And it gives the accompanist who is sometimes replaced with a recorded track that he or she it not good enough. 
In the 13 years I've been a musical theater accompanist, I've been lucky to work with several directors who understand the value of a live accompanist or pit band.  This has helped me to stay gainfully employed as I utilize my piano skills.  Here is why accompanists or a live band are more desirable in performance:
  1. Live music is impressive and more exciting.  It has the wow factor that recordings don't.
  2. Trained musicians need employment!  Yes, we need to work!  Don't replace us with recordings!
  3. A live accompanist or pit band can slow down or speed up with a singer who is not on tempo.
  4. A live accompanist can transpose with a transposing keyboard if the key is too high/ low for the singer.
  5. A live accompanist or pit band can skip ahead and find the singer when s/he skips a few bars.  This does happen, and a pre-recorded accompaniment can spell disaster in these instances.  
  6. There is no substitute for the human factor, and the energy and feeling that a live band or accompanist projects.
  7. A singer can decide to spontaneously hold a note extra long for impact/ expression, and the musicians can adjust.  This adds an extra element of freshness that recordings don't have.  Each performance is unique and is not controlled by the timing of the track.
  8. In theater, the time it takes to accomplish action or dialogue sometimes varies, and musicians can lengthen or shorten musical underscoring where needed. 
I do invite your comments on the matter.  Chime in!

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Embellishment in Music - Good or Bad?

A woman rushes over to the piano tonight when I'm playing at Salamander Resort & Spa.  I soon learn that I am playing her favorite piece, a bossa nova jazz piece called "Corcovado (Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars)" by Antonio Jobim.  She says she just started her piano lessons, and this is the song she's learning (her choice).  She notices I'm playing from sheet music but throwing in a lot of musical "bling," as I call it (extra runs and arpeggios).  She says it's beautiful, but seems intrigued with my method.
"You mean you're just making it up on the spot like that?" 
"Yes, that's what I do," I reply.  
I make up my interpretation on the spot.  I add tons of notes that aren't written, but I stay in the chord.  I have a sketch in my mind (I even put notes on my leadsheets), but I try to make it a little different each time I play it.  This is what jazz is, people.  And a lot of it is not planned!  Why do I embellish?  Two reasons:
1.  Because sometimes the arranger who arranged that version of the song you're playing wasn't that creative.  You see, s/he probably had to dumb down the song to boost sales to a market of average pianists.  If you play a piece like this exactly as written, the piece will often sound empty and dull.  In all honesty, I prefer a lead sheet with no left hand written out.  That leaves me to complete creative liberty, and I can also showcase my advanced technique by adding some runs, tricks, and arpeggios.  I can thicken harmonies, change chords, change registers, or just add more texture by changing the left-hand accompaniment pattern.
2.  Because it keeps your performance fresh if you incorporate new, spontaneous ideas with each performance of the piece.  And this captures people's hearts.  (I believe that you play with more feeling when you're making it up as you go along.)
But guess what?  A lot of musicians are scared to death to experiment with embellishment.  They have been programmed from the first lesson to play EXACTLY WHAT'S ON THE PAGE, NOTE FOR NOTE.

But isn't that like following a script?  Or being controlled by a piece of paper?  Who wants their art to be completely controlled by a piece of paper?  Not me!  It's just too rigid for an artist.

Now I should speak up in defense of classical music.  I do play exactly the notes on the page when I am playing Beethoven and Chopin -- as it should be.  For classical pieces, your interpretation does not take the form of adding extra notes.  You can experiment with tempo variations, dynamics, and articulation, but adding extra notes insults the composer.  I am a composer, so I get this.  But for jazz and popular, the invitation is wide open to interpret and arrange that piece however you want to.  How do people react to my creative arrangements?  Most people, by and large, love it.  Many want copies of my arrangments. However, you do have those uptight squares who say stuff like:
"I like it played exactly like it's supposed to be.  Look, there you go again, [as I'm embellishing].  You probably can't help yourself, can you?" (actually quote from a listener)
This same individual told me that Stephen Sondheim can't write music, so I basically dismissed his comments. Of course, I adore Sondheim's edgy Broadway hits.  I can't take it personally when someone makes a dig at my style.  I won't change who I am as an artist because one person dislikes my style.

 

Little Mermaid Musical Hits the Presses!

Read All About It!

Thanks to the Blue Ridge Leader for providing some great coverage of our upcoming show (2 articles).

 Blue Ridge Leader, February 5, 2014


Blue Ridge Leader, February 5, 2014




Thursday, February 6, 2014

Little Mermaid the Musical - PREVIEW VIDEO!

Here is the preview video for "The Little Mermaid" the musical, which will have its world premier at Blue Ridge Middle School on Feb. 28, 2014.  A music medley runs in the background, and you can get an idea of the costumes.


Want to come see the show?  Don't delay in ordering your tickets!  All four performances of last year's production of CATS sold out a week before opening night!

ORDER ADVANCED TICKETS HERE. 

Show dates are:

  • Fri, February 28 7:30pm
  • Sat, Mar 1 2:30 and 7:30pm
  • Sun, Mar 2 2:30pm
  • Sat, Mar 8 7:30pm
  • Sun, Mar 9 2:30pm
Hope to see you there!

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Home Recording: Cables Matter!

"How do I get my computer to record my digital piano?"

I get this question a lot.  And I have been known as the cable doctor over the years, making numerous house calls to configure my friends' computer to piano connections, whether they desire to record audio or MIDI.  Oftentimes, I find that they don't know what kind of cables to use or where to find them.  If you have a digital piano and you want to make pristine recordings, the number of rings on the end of the cables matters a lot!  You'll want to make sure you're recording in stereo sound, and this is where most people make errors when choosing cables for home recording.  You will not be able to record in stereo if you don't have the right number of rings on your cables (see below)!  These are the two products you'll need to do home recording.  How much is it going to cost?  About $20 or so:

1.  Hosa 1/4-Inch TRS Male to Dual 1/4-Inch TS Y-Cable 4 Meter :  My favorite cable for recording!

2.  Hosa 3.5mm female TRS to 2.5mm male TRS adaptor (ok, the one in the picture below is not the exact one I linked to here, but it has the right specs and will work fine). 

The cable set-up below makes nice stereo recordings.  For you techno nerds, TRS means tip, ring, and sleeve and is just a fancy acronym for a stereo jack with both R and L signals.  TS is a mono cable that is missing that second ring, and therefore only has a single L signal (mono).

TRS = 2 RINGS = STEREO
TS = 1 RING = MONO



Keyboard to Computer Cable Diagram (www.freethepiano.blogspot.com)

 

Now you may be wondering what software to use, and how much it will cost.  For basic home recording, even semi-professional recording, I use freeware called Audacity.  Audacity is freeware that is available as a free download from the Internet.  It also has basic editing tools which I use all the time.  You can make mp3s and even compress them to a small size that is convenient for e-mail and web.  But don't forget to download the LAME mp3 encoder also!  More on this in another post...




   

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Arranging Mermaid Music: The Artistic Process

Knowing that my work was going in a more creative direction, I accepted an offer to be the musical arranger of a new musical early last year.  This is the third musical I have had a creative role in.  I also arranged the music for Tom Sweitzer's "Sky" in 2007, and I composed the music for "Twelve Dancing Princesses," (Very Special Arts of Loudoun) in 2005.  The new musical is titled "The Little Mermaid," and is written by my longtime colleague, Dolly Stevens.  This is a much larger-scale expansion of a short musical she co-wrote with Tom Sweitzer in 1995.  In addition to re-writing the script, Dolly added 19 additional musical numbers to the original production, including about five instrumental/ dance numbers that I would be in charge of composing. We have a sample of some of the music here:


So what does the arranger do?  As musical arranger, I work with the composer to develop her basic ideas and interpret them into a more sophisticated end-product.  Not only do I arrange the piano accompaniment for the show, but I also arrange the music for a 3-piece trio to play.  An overview of our artistic process helps others understand how the composer and arranger work together to bring the music to its final form.

"Little Mermaid" Playwright & Composer Dolly Stevens (L) Works With Arranger Jennifer Warren-Baker (R) 
1.  COMPOSER composes and records the songs.  First, Dolly (the composer) would record mp3s of the vocal numbers she composed.  She would e-mail these or put them on a CD for me to work with.  Sometimes she also gave me a hand-written lead sheet with chords, melody, and accompanying lyrics.  Most of the time she didn't give me the rhythm, though, and it was my job to figure out the time signature and rhythms she sang.  The recording I got was of her singing, along with basic piano chording.  Dolly is very strong with her theory and chords, and she has basic piano skills, but she needed someone with more advanced piano skills to develop the piano accompaniment into something more sophisticated.  She also needed someone experienced with notation software to write out her music professionally.  Enter the arranger (me).  

2. ARRANGER transcribes the songs.  Step 1 of my job was to listen to her songs, figure out the rhythms, sometimes the chords, and the melody, so that I could correctly transcribe the music in Finale (my notation software).  This part of the process is called transcription.  It is tedious work, and it is my least favorite part of the process -- but necessary.  Once the music was transcribed into professional-looking lead sheets that she and the actors could read (chords and melody), she could teach it to them, and I didn't have to be there.  As a rule, I create a PDF of all my Finale sheet music files, then load the PDFs to my iPad so I can read the music without fumbling with papers (more on this process in another post).
"Song of the Sea" Lead Sheet, viewed on Jennifer's iPad

3.  ARRANGER develops piano accompaniment.  Once I had transcribed her songs into a clean-looking, professional lead sheets, I developed vibrant piano accompaniments to accompany the singer/s. This is when I start having fun, because this is the creative work.  After developing the accompaniment, I recorded it for rehearsal purposes.  Dolly and I use Audacity because it is freeware and can make nice, compressed mp3s that are just the right size to e-mail back and forth.  

4.  COMPOSER edits/ approves arrangments.  After e-mailing the composer a recording of the piano accompaniment, she either approves or makes edits to the arrangement.  It is my job to make sure these edits are applied to the final score and rehearsal track.  The finalized rehearsal track then gets sent to the school's webmaster, who puts them on a webpage for the kids to practice with at home.  

5.  ARRANGER notates final piano accompaniment in Finale.  If I had time, I would write out the full piano accompaniment in my notation software after recording it, but oftentimes, this would have to wait until later.  I had all the piano accompaniments memorized and the lead sheet could function as a cheat sheet for me.  To save time, I could play the full piano score without having it fully notated.   

6.  ARRANGER composes instrumental and incidental/ scene change music.  In reality, not all arrangers are composers, and this doesn't ordinarily fall in the arranger's lap.  But knowing my strength with composition, Dolly asked me to compose some amazing instrumental numbers for the show (no vocals).  This is where I thrive.  I love creating music from the ground up.  I composed the dance numbers and scene change music for the show, which was my favorite part of this project.

7.  ARRANGER develops piano accompaniment into orchestral accompaniment.
The final step is expanding the piano score into an orchestral score, and making sure the other instrument parts are fully scored, with enough lead time for the other musicians to learn their parts.  I suppose this task could be handed off to an orchestrator for a Broadway-scale production, but this is not Broadway.  A middle school show doesn't have the budget to pay a large ensemble (nor does it need one), but I like to have a 3 or 4 piece band.  This time I'm scoring the show for Piano 1, Piano 2, and Drummer.  When I need bass, I'll double the bass with the left hand of the piano 1 part, or I'll have piano 2 play bass.  When I need orchestral sounds like woodwinds, brass, and strings, I'll score those in the piano 2 part.  Except for the drummer, my musicians get a mp3s to practice with and pdfs of their sheet music.  I do know how to write percussion, but I find that most drummers aren't going to read that sheet music.  They like to do it by ear.  So our drummer will just listen to all the rehearsal tracks with notes of my ideas.  We'll polish his bells and whistles in rehearsal, adding specific fills, intros, and endings.  My piano 2 will practice along with the rehearsal tracks, reading the sheet music I've given her.    

With 22 musical numbers, you can imagine the time this takes.  But the good news was that I could do all this work on my own schedule, and I didn't have to be at the first two months of rehearsals.  With my commitment to spending more time with my kids, this works well for me.  I can arrange music and record the rehearsal tracks when my kids are sleeping.  We have worked this way before, and it's only necessary for me to come in a week or two before the show opens and start rehearsing with the kids.  Since I write the piano and band music, I know it very well, and I tend to memorize it before the show opens. That way, it is easy to just step in the last week or two and play the show/ put the band together. 

The show opens at Blue Ridge Middle School in Purcellville, VA on February 28, and runs through March 9 (two weekends).  Ticket information is here.




Sunday, February 2, 2014

Why I Quit Teaching

In case you haven't heard, I retired from piano teaching in December.  My retirement has a lot to do with the fact that I was beginning to carve out a name for myself as a weekend performing artist. But the main impetus for my departure from teaching was my desire to be a better mom.  You see, the after-school and evening hours required to teach school children conflicted with my own kids' schedules.  They spent the day in school, and then spent the next 6 hours without their mother -- while I was teaching everyone else's kids.  Their father tucked them into bed, and I was still out teaching.  I tried everything to avoid closing the business.  I tried cutting back my hours, consolidating the students so I only worked a couple of weekdays, and delegating some of my duties to other employees.  But the other aspects of running a studio only continued to steal me away from my kids.  The problem was not just the after-school hours, but the all-consuming nature of running a studio, a feat I liken to running the military.  Some of the other hats private music teachers/ studio owners have to wear include:

  • receptionist (answer phones)
  • bookkeeper
  • invoicing 40 - 50 clients monthly (ok, some of you I know have 100 clients)
  • collecting payments from 40 - 50 clients monthly and quarterly
  • paying bills
  • managing 2 - 3 employees
  • managing student schedule for 40-50 students
  • managing teacher schedules
  • cleaning and maintaining studio and studio equipment
  • planning recitals and annual calendar
  • organizing Guild auditions and 20-ish individualized Guild programs
  • interviewing new students/ placing new students with teachers
  • writing and re-writing policies
  • calculating rates and rate increases
  • enforcing policies with sometimes difficult clients
And that's just the tip of the iceberg.  At some point, I realized I just didn't want the headache of running a business anymore, even though it was successful through a major recession.  Dealing with the occasional financial dispute or argument with a client, while infrequent, caused a very unhealthy level of stress -- stress that I didn't need.  I am in the season of being a mom, and I needed something more relaxing and fun.  Despite my success, I was willing to let go and make room for something new.  I was committed to making more room for my kids in my life.  And now, I have that.  I am just going to be a weekend musician.  Weekdays will be for my kids.  I get them on the school bus in the morning and meet them at the bus stop in the afternoon.  We have family dinners 4 nights a week, instead of 1 or 2.  I spend more time with my kids that I ever used to.  Not only has this changed my life, but it's changed their lives -- all for the better!   

I will continue to blog, but I have changed the name of this blog to describe it better.