Corrections for Low Horn Concerto

Posted By on April 30, 2009

There has been some considerable interest lately in my “Concerto for Low Horn and Orchestra”. Interestingly enough, we have just recorded this work on CD; it along with the “Introduction and Main Event” for horn quartet and orchestra, the “Concerto for Tuba” and the orchestral tone poem “Karankawa”. This project was recently completed and I am hoping to have the CD released by Christmas 2009.

Mostly the questions have been about various performances of the piece with the piano reduction. As a matter of fact, over the past year, I have coached many students on the “Concerto for Low Horn”. And every time I have to alert them to the two major misprints in the horn part. I also have a few tips for the pianist. So I have therefore decided to list the misprints and suggestions on this blog as follows:

FIRST MOVEMENT
Bars 20- 29: all of the F-sharps should be F-naturals.

Bars 32- 54: this part works better at a slightly slower tempo, about 108.

SECOND MOVEMENT
The bass-clef starts in bar 28.

A NOTE ABOUT THE PIANO PART:

FIRST MOVEMENT:
bars 21-29: is it possible to have another person, like the page turner, play those chords in the left hand thereby allowing the pianist two play both treble lines?

bars 29-31: the ad lib notes can be, for example, all the back keys or another pentatonic scale. The same thing for bars 127-134.

SECOND MOVEMENT:

It would be really great if the pianist could play harpsichord on this movement since that is what the orchestration asks for.


Bass-Trombone Concerto PREMIERED! (YouTube link)

Posted By on April 28, 2009

Twelve years ago, during an AHQ trip to Hong Kong, I met up with the Mr. Phil Brink, who was at that time, the bass-trombonist in the Hong Kong Philharmonic. Phil wanted to commission me to compose a concerto for his instrument. It was a strange time for me in my life. I was going through some serious changes. And I was suffering badly from writer`s block. I told Phil as much. But he remained confident and patient, encouraging me to take my time and wait until the muse inspires. We put no dead-line on the commission.

About two years later, I personally handed the score over to Phil during another visit to the Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts. I really was not terribly sure that I was presenting him with a work that was consistent with the high quality of my other pieces. Phil took the score with gratitude, and I didn`t hear a lot about it after that. I knew that there was some activity concerning the rearranging of the first movement for band and there was even a performance of this in Paris quite a few years ago. But the work, as far as I know, remained unplayed.

Then in 2008, I received an e-mail from Phil Brink informing me that he was planning to perform the Bass-Trombone Concerto with his new orchestra, the Thailand Philharmonic. He had apparently been practicing the part like a fiend and had become totally convinced that the work was indeed worthy of performance. He kept me informed about the progress on scheduling the work and was duly excited when it was indeed programmed on the 2008-2009 season. He even invited me to Thailand for the world premier! Coincidently enough, I had already booked a CD recording project in Warsaw in the very same week. As a matter of fact, my brother Kyle Turner was scheduled to record the tuba version of the concerto. Kyle had seen the score back several years ago and had expressed an interest in performing-recording it. It was by sheer chance that the two performances were due to take place the same week. I sent flowers to Phil Brink for the world premier of the Bass-Trombone Concerto. I heard that it was a success. And I was told that it had been filmed and recorded and would eventually be available on YouTube. And lo and behold, it is! And here is the link:

This is a truly splendid rendition of the concerto. It was really exactly as I wanted it. And it is astonishingly similar to the interpretation my brother had offered in the version for tuba. I am indeed quite proud of the work. And I am very grateful to Phil Brink for having commissioned me and for having not lost confidence in my creative talent. Phil Brink is the instructor of trombone at the College of Music at Mahidol University in Thailand.

The CD recording with my brother Kyle Turner`s version on tuba will be released on the Albany label, within the year on the album entitled “Karankawa”.

Surprise Change in of Personnel for AHQ European Tour

Posted By on April 17, 2009

As I mentioned in the earlier blogs, there is a grand European tour for the American Horn Quartet approaching with great rapidity. I have been working on all of the hundreds details around the clock. Yet STILL there is always the unexpected which pops up when you least desire it to. In this case, it was the sudden illness of AHQ colleague David Johnson. I won`t provide any details in this blog, but it is a serious enough problem to cause him to cancel his participation in the aforementioned tour.

My first thought, of course, was of Kristina, with whom I have been concertizing at a very high level these past few years. In the past we have been quite successful with using Karl Pitoch of the Detroit Symphony as a replacement, once for Geof Winter and one time for Charles Putnam. Mr. Larry Johnson in Oregon has also stepped in and played my part on the Schumann Konzertstück, as has OPL colleague Nagy Myklos.

But my confidence in Kristina was such that I was prompted to put her forward as the main candidate for this tour. She has a huge pile of music to learn! But we tackled a good portion of it today and have the weekend to work on the remaining works. I shall be informing all of the concert organizers of this temporary change in personnel.

American Horn Quartet 2009 U.S. Tour

Posted By on April 7, 2009

Here it is, the 7th of April, and I am only now sitting down to write about the AHQ U.S. tour which officially ended over two weeks ago. It was a very successful tour, there is no doubt about that. But I had made the journey to the States several days prior to the first concert of the tour. I flew to San Antonio, Texas to visit my mother and her husband as well as my brother Ken. Meeting up with the lads of the AHQ in Dallas, we were driven by Mark and Ute Miller, the organizers of the Mount Vernon, Texas Music Festival. This is a delightful little chamber music festival which takes place about an hour and a half east of Dallas. The hall was full and the audience was extremely enthusiastic. Here is a link which leads you to a review of the concert: http://www.winnsborotoday.com/articles/2009/American%20Horn%20Quartet.html

The next day, the group was driven to the University of Texas in Commerce. As we were unpacking our horns and suits and generally preparing for the evening’s concert, Charlie Puntam alerted us to an alarming problem with the first valve on his horn. The thing was most stubbornly stuck and would simply not move! It took the efforts of 4 people, holding parts, making suggestions and fetching various tools to finally take the valve casing apart and clean it out. Thus was the concert saved! But it was a close call.

The following morning we all flew to Austin to perform at the University of Texas. Our competition that evening was the famous comedy musical “Spamelot” and a UT basketball game, all taking place within a half a mile of each other. But we had a respectable crowd. My mother showed up dressed as a matador and looked spectacular! The AHQ also gave a masterclass at UT and presented a very interesting question and answer session about living and working in Europe.

The next leg of the tour took us to Ithaca New York. It was the 2009 Northeast Horn Workshop which took place the 13th through the 15th of March and was organized and hosted by Alex Shuhan. The AHQ were the guest artists at this event, along with Gail Williams and Adam Unsworth.

On March 16th, we all drove to the Rochester Airport and departed for Columbia, South Carolina. We were to be teachers and lecturers for the band at Fort Jackson. We heard some fine playing from the soldiers there, including a horn quartet from Ft. McPherson. The recital was given at the university of South Carolina, an event organized by Bob Pruzin. The members quartet were all presented with the “Coin of Excellence” by the staff of the Army Band at Fort Jackson.

The IHS Mid-South Workshop at the University of Memphis was the next and final stop on this tour. It was hosted by Dan Phillips, whose hospitality was exemplary. We had a rather busy schedule there: masterclass, recital, performance of my Introduction and Main Event with the University of Memphis Band, and something a little out of the ordinary for me. I performed as guest artists with the Southern Comfort Big Band of the University of Memphis. I was supposed to play “Nature Boy” which had been arranged especially for me. I had practiced the part that had been sent to me and had interpreted the style to be blues-y, laid back and a bit smoky. I knew I wasn’t going to get a rehearsal and I knew the band was going to be rather loud. But imagine my surprise when the introduction imitated a rousing Stan Kenton big band sound. The brass, drums and saxes were up full blast ad the harmony was stacked. And I…..was totally smothered. Nevertheless I carried on and blasted my subtle rifts as accurately as I could. The whole business was funny really.

The tour ended, the gentlemen of the quartet flew their separate ways, and I headed up to New York City. I was to meet with Gregg Squires, the producer of my newest CD, an album which features Karankawa for Symphony Orchestra, Concerto for Low and Horn and Chamber Orchestra, Concerto for Bass-Tuba and Orchestra and Introduction and Main Event. But that is another blog.


Repertoire for 2 AHQ Tours

Posted By on February 10, 2009

From March 7th until March 22nd, I will be on the road with those grumpy old men from the American Horn Quartet. We shall be performing and coaching in five different locations in the US: Commerce and Mt. Vernon, Texas, U. T. at Austin, the IHS Northwest Horn Workshop in Ithaca, NY, Columbia, South Carolina and the IHS Mid-South Regional Workshop in Memphis. For more information about this tour, you can check out David Johnson`s website at www.davidjohnsonhorn.com. I have decided to list here the repertoire for this tour:

Quartet for 4 Horns by James Langely
Fugue in c-minor by J. S. Bach
Barbara Allen by Kerry Turner
Three Movements for Four Horns by Kerry Turner
Sinfonia 11 by J. S. Bach
Intuitions by Kazimierz Machala
Carmen Suite by Bizet (arr. Turner)

Quartet Nr. 3 (1st and 3rd Movements) by Kerry Turner
Sechs Kleine Stücke by Anton Richter
In These Delightful Pleasant Groves by Purcell
Fugue Nr. 16 by J. S. Bach
Three Songs from West Side Story by Bernstein

Introduction and Main Event for 4 Solo Horns and Wind Ensemble by Kerry Turner
Antico by Dana Wilson

Following this tour, I shall once again hitting the tour circuit with the AHQ. This time we will be all over Central Europe from May 10th until June 13th. I will eventually post another detailed blog about this tour, but for the time being, I will list the cities and repertoire for the tour:

Neunkirchen, Saarbrücken, Luxembourg, Chemnitz (D), Saint Nazaire (F), Paris, Tonbridge (UK), Versailles, Bonn (D) and Bernkastel-Kues (D). And this will be the repertoire:

West Side Story by Leonard Bernstein
Sologne by Georges Barboteu
Quartet Nr. 3 by Kerry Turner
Suite from Carmen by Bizet (arr. Turner)
Garota de Ipanema by Jobim (arr. Morais)
Hungarian Medley by Walter Perkins
Casbah of Tetouan by Kerry Turner
Take 9 Antiphonal Fanfare by Kerry Turner
Farewell to Red Castle by Kerry Turner

Fantastic Revue for the "Rotterdam Chamber Players" CD!

Posted By on February 2, 2009

Plausible Interest
Chamber music by
Kerry Turner –
reviewed by
PATRIC STANDFORD
‘… accessible, neatly made, technically challenging …’

Kerry Turner is a Texan by birth, a native of San Antonio, but for the last twenty years has been resident in Luxembourg where he is a member of the Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra, a notable French horn soloist and a member of the American Horn Quartet.
As a composer he certainly knows what he is doing, and does it extremely well. His work is accessible, neatly made, technically challenging — yet like all the best competent writing it doesn’t make any severe demands on the listener, even though the players might find it a tough test. Horn playing is a tough test, and the horn quartet, so rarely appealing to composers because they don’t know how to make a success of it, is one of the toughest to make sound warm and untroubled. Turner creates the sort of music that leaves the listener comfortably unaware of technical problems, either in its making or playing.
His Quartet No 3 for horns is fifteen years old this year, and has a syncopated buoyancy (covering four octaves!) and a witty good humour that could be, for British listeners, reminiscent of two of our great knights, Walton and Malcolm Arnold at their best.
There is a short wind quintet, Berceuse for the Mary Rose, beautifully written for the medium, portraying the great ship’s battles, a homage to Henry VIII (quoting his academic but jolly song ‘Pastyme with good companye’) and the subsequent long sleep on the seabed. There is also a very effective Sonata for horn and strings, and a piece called Quarter-After-Four, a worthy short companion to the Brahms Op 40 trio for horn, violin and piano.
The final track is a superbly symphonic Rhapsody for nine instruments — commissioned by a Mr Maarten Hudig of Rotterdam for ‘the smallest possible orchestra’ — a structurally well made piece in four linked sections which are significant snapshots of the composer’s past life, people, places, a picture, a church, and a brief finale that draws all the threads together.
Turner knows how to handle instruments well, and how to maintain plausible interest in his work. I usually maintain that a composer’s music is only boring if he is. Turner can’t be!
Copyright © 4 November 2007 Patric Standford

You can order this CD directly from MSR Classics. There is a link on this website.


Rhapsody for Nine Instruments (English, Deutsch, Francais)

Posted By on January 16, 2009

For those of you who are interested in a larger ensemble work of mine, I would like to suggest you take a look at “Rhapsody” for nine Instruments which was composed in 2001. The instrumentation for this 13- minute fantasy piece is flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, violin, viola, cello and contrabass. There is a spectacular recording of “Rhapsody” on the CD entitled “Rotterdam Philharmonic Chamber Players- CHAMBER MUSIC OF KERRY TURNER” which was recorded in 2006 and features the great Dutch horn player, Martin van de Merwe. This CD is available on the MSR label (MS1186) for which there is a link on this website. You can also listen to excerpts from it on the “Discography” page of this website. If you would like to read more about “Rhapsody”, please go to “Catalogue of Works” and then to “woodwind”.

Für diejenigen die, an einem etwas grösseren Kammermusikwerk von mir, interessiert sein sollten, möchte ich nun vorschlagen, dass Sie mal das Stück “Rhapsody” für 9 Instrumente anschauen. Es wurde 2001 komponiert. Die Besetzung dieses Fantasie-Stückes ist für Flöte, Oboe, Klarinette, Fagott, Horn, Geige, Bratche, Violoncello und Kontrabass. Es gibt eine spektakuläre Aufnahme von “Rhapsody” auf der CD “Rotterdam Philharmonic Chamber Players- CHAMBER MUSIC OF KERRY TURNER”, die 2006 produziert wurde, und stellt den renomierten Holländischen Hornist, Martin van de Merwe heraus. Diese CD trägt den MSR Label (MS1186) , dessen Link auf dieser Website zu finden ist. Auf der “Discography -Seite” dieser Website, kann man ebenfalls, einen Ausschnitt davon anhören. Falls Sie sich wünschen, etwas mehr über “Rhapsody” zu erfahren, gehen Sie bitte bei “Catalogue of Works” und anschliessend bei “woodwind”.

Pour ceux qui sont intèressè à un plus large ouevre de musique de chamber de moi, je voudrai proposer que vous regardez “Rhapsody” pour 9 Instruments qui à ètè ecrit à 2001. La formation pour cette pièce est flute, hautbois, clarinette, basson, cor, violine, viola, violoncello et contrabass. Il y a une enregistrement spectaculaire du “Rhapsody” sur le disc “Rotterdam Philharmonic Chamber Players- CHAMBER MUSIC OF KERRY TURNER”, avec le grand maitre du cor Martin van de Merwe. Cette CD est disponible sur la MSR label (MS1186) de quelle il y a un “link” sur cette site ici. Vous pouvez pareilement ecouter un petit extrait sur la page “Discography” de cette site. Si vous desirez lire encore plus du “Rhapsody”, veulliez acceder “Catalogue of Works” et puis “woodwind”.

Six Lives of Jack McBride and Quarter-After-Four

Posted By on January 2, 2009

I would like to make an advertisement for two of my best works, “Six Lives of Jack McBride” for horn, tenor, violin and piano and “Quarter-After-Four” for horn, violin and piano.

“SIX LIVES OF JACK MCBRIDE” was commissioned by Charles Putnam and the IHS Meir Rimon Foundation. It was premiered in 1994 at a recital hosted by the American Ambassador to Luxembourg at his residence. I sang the solo tenor role of Jack McBride, Charles Putnam played horn, Attila Keresztesi on violin and Beatrice Rauchs performed the piano part. The work’s main theme is based on an old Gaelic theme from the Orkney Islands. I wrote the following about “Jack McBride”:

Flipping through an encyclopedia or perusing at a bookstore, one’s eyes pass by dozens of pictures and titles of the most dramatic events in history. If one allows his eyes however to halt haphazardly and focus on the subject on which it lands, he may become instantaneously captivated by the pictures or words before him. He is for a moment transported to the time and location of the story. From Admiral Peary’s conquest of the North Pole, or the slaying of Captain Cook by the Hawaiians, to the Battle of Hastings, every recorded event in history from all over the globe is at one’s fingertips. It is indeed the closest we can get to time travel.

The idea to write a work which deals with the notion of global-historical time travel has always fascinated the composer. To find, however, a musical medium in which to protray this concept can prove to be difficult. After reading about and viewing televised documentaries on the phenomena of reincarnation and the practice of hypnotizing individuals for the purpose of “going back” to possible previous lives, the composer thought that this might be the best scenario in which to set the piece. We have at once a recurring, consistent character (the person being hypnotized) in Jack McBride, who being of Gaelic descent, is given an old Gaelic theme. He then gives a firsthand account of his six previous lives, which happen to be the times and places that fascinate the composer the most.

The six lives in the character of Jack McBride:

1. Auschwitz – During World War II approximately 4 million people, mostly Polish Jews, were dragged from their families and homes and sent on trains to Oswiecim, the site of the infamous Auschwitz concentration camp. Jack McBride was among them.

2. 1850 – The great expanse of the western plains, stretching from Canada to Texas. The early settlers of this wild terrain built their farms on vast stretches of land, sometimes several days’ ride from another human being. On certain Sundays the settlers from all over central Texas would come together at the church and after the service and business discussion, they would dine together and enjoy one another’s fellowship. Jack McBride remembers.

3. In April, 1789, the crew of the trade ship Bounty was forced to mutiny against their captain, the notorious lieutenant Bligh. Aware of their crime against the British Crown, they sought out a remote uncharted island, where they set fire to the ship and lived out the rest of their lives. On the ship’s register – Thomas Hampton, boatswain.

4. In 981, Erik the Red set sail from Iceland to explore and settle the land he called Greenland (“he said people would be much more tempted to come there if it had an attractive name.”) Most of these settlers established themselves in Julianehaab (The Eastern Settlements). Because of the increasingly poor conditions, the settlers were eventually cut off from the rest of Europe. Archaeological evidence of grave finds reveals a grim story of progressive deterioration in this hardy Norse colony. It is unlikely that any of them survived into the sixteenth century.

5. According to Matthew 4:25 in the Holy Bible, “Large crowds from Galilee, the Decapolis, Jerusalem, Judea and the region across the Jordan” met on a mountainside and listened to Jesus Christ preach his message to the world. A voice from somewhere deep in the past of Jack McBride’s transmigrations gives an account.

6. The year 72 AD. On the eastern edge of the Judean desert, on the brim of the Dead Sea fault, 15,000 Roman soldiers laid siege to the fortress citadel of Masada, which had been occupied by the Zealots for two years. Because of its position high on a four-sided cliff, the Romans could not succeed in capturing the city. After enslaving people from the surrounding settlements (including other Zealots), they forced them to build a giant ramp up to the fortress. When they finally arrived at the top, the Romans discovered to their horror that the occupants of Masada, some 967, had committed mass suicide. This is witnessed through the eyes of one of the Roman soldiers.

This work is a very serious composition indeed! It is one of my best works to date. I have performed the role of Jack McBride many times at concerts in Luxembourg, Germany and Switzerland. And I am very often willing to travel long distances to sing it. So if you are interested in performing this dramatic piece with me, please do not hesitate to contact me.

“QUARTER-AFTER-FOUR” was commissioned by Mr. Attila Keresztesi, the violinist who was so active in the creation of “Jack McBride”. These are my notes from 1996:

Every night around four fifteen I awaken. It is neither sudden nor brought on by a bad dream. Usually my mind is quite blank when I drift out of a deep sleep. Then as if on cue the first haunting thought occurs. It is usually a dilemma I have not been able to resolve. I’ll turn it over in my head one more time until I’m reminded of something I said to someone who may be mildly related to the dilemma. Embarrassment, anger, and regret come over me as I relive the stupid remark…there in the darkness, under my sheets.

Turning on my side, I’ll toss off an insult to myself about my irresponsibility and suddenly I am reminded of something I was supposed to do, or perhaps something I must do tomorrow. I won’t however be able to take care or it tomorrow because of that original dilemma I was pondering earlier.

I turn over on my other side, and slowly many other problems and dilemmas, each somehow related to the original one begin to circulate in my head. I toss and turn more turbulently now, and usually throw the covers off in an overheated sweat. I make conscious attempts to calm my mind, reciting the 23rd Psalm or Reinhold Niebuhr’s prayer, “God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change…”

Sometimes the clear solution will briefly come into focus through the confusion of prayers, bewilderment, and resentment. Then it too will become swirled into the grand dilemma. It remains unsolved. And the storm that haunts me every night at quarter-after-four has numbed my mind. I drift off as quietly as I awoke.

Quarter-After-Four was composed during the month of September, 1996. It was originally intended to be a piece for violin solo and piano, which was to be written for the violinist Attila Keresztesi, a colleague of mine in the Luxembourg Philharmonic. The addition of the horn brought a wider spectrum of color and special effect possibilities. It was also a logical choice to add the horn, as several horn players of international repute had suggested I compose a piece that could conceivably be programmed with the Brahms Horn Trio. I hope this piece will be added to the already fine repertoire that is steadily growing for this type of ensemble.

Both of these works have been recorded on CD: “Six Lives of Jack McBride” can be heard on the “Unlikely Fusion” CD (ebs records 6066) and “Quarter-After-Four” on “Ricochet” (musicians showcase msrcd ms1064). You can also hear short clips from each work on this website. Go to Catalog of Works and click on the picture of the cover.

Our Musical Footprint Around the World

Posted By on November 15, 2008

In my cellar, where I have set up my own personal work-out gym, there hangs a large map of the world. On this map, Kristina and I have placed colored pins on the cities around the world where we have performed. I am not sure why we originally took the initiative to do such a thing, but there it is. And as I was working out today, I thought it might be interesting to make a list of the many countries in which the two of us have performed with our various ensembles.

Kerry- either with the American Horn Quartet, the Luxembourg Philharmonic or the Virtuoso Horn Duo:

Australia
Austria
Belgium
Canada
China
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
England
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Guam
Hong Kong
Hungary
Italy
Japan
South Korea
Liechtenstein
Luxembourg
Macau
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Serbia
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
United States
(This list does not include countries in which I have practiced without actually playing a concert, such as Tunesia, Iceland, Morocco, Vatican City, Mexico, Malta, Ireland, etc.)

Kristina- either with one of her many orchestras, the AHQ, the VHD, or the Ni Ensemble:

Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Canada
China
Cuba
Czech Republic
Denmark
England
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Italy
South Korea
Luxembourg
Netherlands
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Scotland
Singapore
Slovakia
South Africa
Spain
Switzerland
United States
Venezuela
Wales

(Her list of interesting countries where she has practiced but not performed includes Ireland, Tunesia, Norway, Malta, Monaco, etc.)

Virtuoso Horn Duo in China

Posted By on October 30, 2008

It has taken me some time to get around to it, but I am finally free from other
obligations enough to write a little bit about the trip to Beijing that Kristina and I
recently underwent. The occasion was the 2nd Beijing Horn Festival, organized by
Professor Han Xiao Ming. The venue was the Beijing National Conservatory, and the event
took place the first week of October, right in the middle of the largest folk festival in
China, something they call “The Golden Days”. Because of this huge and very popular
festival, there were hundreds of thousands of people from all over China visiting
Beijing. This event however did not seem to hinder students from various provinces of the country from
attending the week’s activities at the conservatory.

Xiao Ming had invited Kristina and me to travel to Beijing to not only teach private
lessons in whichever format we deemed best, but also to work with ensembles, perform a
small recital and generally fill the students with enough enthusiasm to last them for a
while, or at least until the next horn festival.

So directly on the heels of our performances in Poland, Kristina and I boarded the plane
in Frankfurt and flew to Peking. This was my third trip to China and Kristina’s first. We
were generously housed at the Minzu Hotel, only a couple of kilometers from Tienanmen
Square and The Forbidden City and we were met at the airport by two students of Han Xiao
Ming, Mr. Li Tao and Mr. Yang Wen. These two young men took marvelous care of us the
entire time we were there! They really did not want to leave our sides and served not
only as guides and organizers, but translated the lessons and the narrative during the
concert as well.

Kristina explains the finer points of Mozart interpretation to a young student at the Beijing Horn Festival while Li Tao translates.We had decided to organize the four days of teaching into a masterclass format.
Consequently, I would teach a student, and then Kristina would perhaps make a comment or
two, and then we would switch so that she taught and I put “my two cents worth in”, that
is, if I felt the need to do so. This particular arrangement was rather interesting in
the end. Kristina and I have very different approaches to teaching, especially in a
masterclass setting. Whereas she tends to focus on, let’s say, the more psychological and
humanistic aspects of the student’s playing, I tend to work on the more physical side of
horn playing, for instance, pointing out curious alternate fingerings, accepted liberties
in changing dynamics and phrasing, recounting anecdotes about performances gone terribly
wrong, etcetera. As one could imagine, this type of teaching- from both of us- requires a
great deal of talking, and we were challenging our translator (Mr. Li Tao) to the hilt to
correctly translate difficult and deep concepts. A surprise visit from the celebrated Mr.
Meng Po (Paul Meng), who speaks absolutely fluent English, presented us the opportunity
to assess just how much of the translation Li Tau was getting right. And apparently he
was doing an absolutely smashing job!

Xiao Ming had been gracious enough to allow a good deal of sightseeing during our 8 days
in Beijing. Thus we were able to visit the Forbidden City, the Great Wall (my first trip
there) and the Lama Temple. Dan, Lora, Kristina and I visited the Lama Temple in Beijing.We were also able to shake our guides from time to time, mostly evenings,
and wander off into the Hu Tongs to experience another fascinating side of Chinese life.
I have to mention that we ate like kings the entire time we were there! A delightfully
unexpected turn of events arose with the arrival of my old childhood chum from San
Antonio, Mr. Daniel Vimont and his wife Lora. Lora had just accepted a teaching job at
the international school in Tianjin, only about an hour’s train trip from Beijing.Enjoying Peking Duck with current and former students of Prof. Xiaoming Han during the Beijing Horn Festival The
two of them hung out with us for a good portion of our stay. We even took a long taxi ride
together over to the more western quarter of the city where we ate at an Italian
restaurant and found a Belgian beer bar!

On one of the evenings, Mr. Meng Po, along with the vice-president and the president of
the China Horn Society, took us out for a spectacular meal at a traditional Mongolian Hot
Pot restaurant. The food, drink and conversation were all of the highest calibre. We
learned about interesting developments in the horn world in China and discussed future
plans. I was also delighted to find out that my music is very popular there and that it
has been so for some time now. What a thrill for me to hear that musicians in China are
performing my compositions!

On a somewhat more nostalgic note, I was moved at one point in the masterclasses. While
watching Kristina teach, I suddenly remembered the documentary from the late 70’s- “From
Mao to Mozart”. In this unique documentary the Chinese government had invited, for the
first time in many years, the great American violinist Mr. Issac Stern to travel to China
and give the very first masterclasses from the west in the history of the communist
government there. It was a milestone, not only in international relations and the opening
up of the “New China”, but for the music world as well. I remembered that documentary very well. And I really never ever imagined that I would be doing the very same thing, in the footsteps of Issac Stern, in China. There is enormous talent in
China! Teaching these young musicians the finer points of western classical music
interpretation and challenging them to higher levels of expertise is without a doubt an
investment in the future of the world’s fine arts arena.