Piano Lessons - Billy Collins

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Oh how I adore this Billy Collins poem - I sat down in wonder after I read it, laughing at how my own left hand takes its revenge while I'm working on my new bluesy piano song. This is me playing the piano with my dad at 10.

1.

My teacher lies on the floor with a bad back off to the side of the piano.
I sit up straight on the stool.
He begins by telling me that every key
is like a different room
and I am a blind man who must learn
to walk through all twelve of them
without hitting the furniture.
I feel myself reach for the first doorknob.

2.
He tells me that every scale has a shape
and I have to learn how to hold
each one in my hands.
At home I practice with my eyes closed.
C is an open book.
D is a vase with two handles.
G flat is a black boot.
E has the legs of a bird.

3.
He says the scale is the mother of the chords.
I can see her pacing the bedroom floor
waiting for her children to come home.
They are out at nightclubs shading and lighting
all the songs while couples dance slowly
or stare at one another across tables.
This is the way it must be. After all,
just the right chord can bring you to tears
but no one listens to the scales,
no one listens to their mother.

4.
I am doing my scales,
the familiar anthems of childhood.
My fingers climb the ladder of notes
and come back down without turning around.
Anyone walking under this open window
would picture a girl of about ten
sitting at the keyboard with perfect posture,
not me slumped over in my bathrobe, disheveled,
like a white Horace Silver.

5.
I am learning to play
“It Might As Well Be Spring”
but my left hand would rather be jingling
the change in the darkness of my pocket
or taking a nap on an armrest.
I have to drag him in to the music
like a difficult and neglected child.
This is the revenge of the one who never gets
to hold the pen or wave good-bye,
and now, who never gets to play the melody.

6.
Even when I am not playing, I think about the piano.
It is the largest, heaviest,
and most beautiful object in this house.
I pause in the doorway just to take it all in.
And late at night I picture it downstairs,
this hallucination standing on three legs,
this curious beast with its enormous moonlit smile.

 

Just DO!

I was going through some old art files and I found this paper, a quote from painter Sol Lewitt to sculptor Eva Hesse. It remains one of the best pieces of creative advice I ever found- reminding me the process is just uncomfortable, and there is nothing wrong with that. "Stop mumbling, grumbling, humbling, stumbling...stop it and just DO! I have much faith in you and though you are tormenting yourself, the work you do is very good. Try and do some bad work!"

I'm so glad that after years of practice, I'm (often) more comfortable scrawling around and doing. And then somehow, miraculously, each time, finding a fleck of gold.

 

Prints are HERE! Sponges, Brasil, Open Studios Saturday

From my newsletter...
What a trip to Brasil -  beautiful, confusing, nerve-wracking, joyous, bursting with music, bursting with paradox. I came back with a wider heart - call me up and we can have some mate and talk about it more, as I'm still working to shape it into songs. I painted and drew my way through the trip, completing WaterPost Subscriptions, which you can see the fruits of here.

Brasil Waterpost Prints

Prints for you!

With the help of Daruma Press, I've made a limited edition set of giclée prints of my favorite Brasil Waterpost paintings. Each print will have hand drawn/written variations. And, for my fellow coop dwellers, the Communal House Sponge Glossary is available too! 

We’re also hosting an open studios and opening at the Compound Gallery THIS SATURDAY June 6th, 6-9pm. Come sit at the feet of the stunning collage show by my studiomate Kate Mink, and join me in my studio for prints and snacks.

Pillow Forts and Closets

Last month I emerged grateful and healthy on the other side of my two (?!) hand injuries from the winter, and now back on the click track demo train. I should be done with them in the next week, and will share one or two of the process recordings with you. You can read about them, and lots of other things I think about, here on my a-few-times-a-week blog. And stay tuned there for the much more official recording project.

So much love,

Melanie