Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Little Practice Makes Perfect

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Little Practice Makes Perfect

    LITTLE PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT
    Steven Mazey

    Canada.com
    October 22, 2008
    Canada

    Seven concerts, seven cities, seven different pianos, so little time.

    That sums up the challenge that Canadian pianist Jon Kimura Parker
    faces when he hits the road with the National Arts Centre Orchestra
    Friday for a 20-day tour of Western Canada.

    Parker will perform as soloist in seven of the evening concerts
    the orchestra is presenting through British Columbia, Alberta,
    Saskatchewan, Manitoba and the Yukon.

    Like conductors Pinchas Zukerman and James Judd, and the orchestra
    musicians, Parker will also offer master classes and post-concert
    talks.

    Parker, 48, says he has to be careful to allow time each day to get
    to know the instrument he'll be playing -- a lesson he learned in the
    1980s when he walked out on stage in Guelph, Ont., for a concert with
    the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony, only to find the piano's pedals on
    the floor -- not attached to the Steinway. That audience was treated
    to the sight of Parker and conductor Raffi Armenian getting down on
    their hands and knees to correct the situation.

    On hectic tours Parker sometimes finds himself wishing he had chosen
    a more portable instrument.

    "I'm always desperate for piano time. I'm so envious of violinists,
    who can get up in their hotel room in the morning, pull out the violin,
    make coffee and practice scales for 15 minutes. I can't do that so
    easily, and it drives me crazy," Parker said recently from Wisconsin,
    where he was performing.

    "On tour, we often travel on the same day as the concert, so there is a
    limited amount of time before the concert that I can actually work at
    the piano. Ideally, I like at least a few hours on a concert day, but
    on a tour you sometimes don't get it, so you take what you can get."

    Parker says improvement in high-quality electronic keyboards in recent
    years has made his life easier when he's on the road. He sometimes
    rents a keyboard from a local music shop. On tours, he asks the
    orchestra to provide one he can use in his hotel room so that he can
    at least warm up, if not get to know the actual instrument he'll be
    playing that night.

    Parker, who will perform with the National Arts Centre Orchestra in
    Prince George, B.C., Whitehorse, Kamloops, B.C., Calgary, Regina,
    Saskatoon and Winnipeg. Parker will give five master classes, and
    take part in a post-concert talk with the audience in Prince George.

    "If I perform in a city and haven't interacted with music students,
    I always feel that a bit more could have been made of that trip. Doing
    this with the NACO makes me feel I'm a bit more a part of the musical
    community."

    Jon Kimura Parker's Canadian Tour Dates:

    October 22, Ottawa

    October 28, Prince George

    October 29, Whitehorse

    November 2, Kamloops

    November 7, Calgary

    November 8, Regina

    November 9, Saskatoon

    November 10, Winnipeg

    December 4, Kitchener
Working...
X