Thursday, March 12, 2009

Acceptance!!

4 comments
Ok, so it's not really as exciting as all that. I got my "unofficial" acceptance letter to the Butler School of Music at UT Austin. While it is very exciting to actually read on paper my "superior level of accomplishment and potential for professional gowth," I already knew I was getting in....well, about 91.6% sure anyway. But yay! One down, 2 to go. My official acceptance for UT will come within a couple weeks....maybe then I'll know how much scholarship I got (if any).

Did I mention 'yay'?

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Sigh...

2 comments
It has occurred to me that I need to post more pics. I don't have enough pics on my blog. I should remember to take more pics so that I can have more pics on my blog. I guess that would have to require a somewhat more social life. Since all the ppl I would call up to go do something live in the midwest. But I am hopefully getting a job at Petco this week so maybe I'll just be working all the time and not have to worry about a social life.



I need a man. Then if I'm only hanging out with one person all the time I will have an excuse. And besides that I really want a man.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

UT Austin

0 comments
Ok, so last week I made the long drive down to University of Texas at Austin for my last audition (I think it was last weekend....no, it was 2 weekends sorry). It was crazy!! Well not really. But you know how UT has one of the biggest "party school" reputations and is really liberal? Yeah, the atmosphere was permeated with it. It was Saturday at the school of music and it still felt that way...and the kids that play classical music are probably the most right wing of the liberals that you would find there.

So anyway I got there, found the PERFECT place to park...right outside on the street so I didn't have to hike a mile with my harp. I was rushing because the rain clouds that followed me all the way to Austin finally started leaking while I was unloading...not too bad though thankfully. I checked in, unloaded my harp, and went up to the 5th level. Yup, the 5th, and that is not even the top floor of the music building, it has 6 floors at least. I have also finally figured out a way to carry ALL my harp stuff at the same time: harp, stool, harp bag, and music bag. So yay one trip! I went to the top floor and found a practice room. I was really hot from carrying all the stuff and turned on the air in the room...until I was not so warm and starting to get chilly. Unfortunately, once I turned off the air again I didn't' warm back up, and I realized just how airconditioned the building was. So I practiced before my audition time with freezing fingers that I could never quite get warm. Thankfully, when I went in to audition, the room was warm, so no cold fingers!!

I played very well. I had already told myself that no matter how good or bad I played, it was ok because I was well prepared and there was nothing else I could have done. But, thankfully I did play very good. I played my Pizzoli Etude no 29, Hanel concerto, and Scintillation. Except, I still didn't get to play all of it!! I was actually secretly upset that they stopped me after 6 pages becuase I had prepared it so well and really wanted to perform the whole thing. But oh well.

After my audition, I packed up everything and loaded the harp wagon back up. Thank goodness it wasn't raining this time.

I found Panda Express on the way home and ate lunch there. Yum! Then back to Dallas...and no more auditions!!! Now I get to play the waiting game. All of the schools have pretty much told me they would accept me, so I'm not worried about getting in somewhere. I just have to wait now to see how much money they will give me, because that is ultimately what it is going to come down to. We'll see in the next month or so.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Chicago!!

1 comments
Ok, so the plane flight was pretty good. Long again though. This time I just read my new book. It is called Crown Duel by Sherwood Smith. I really liked it...there is some action, intrigue, politics, and romance. Some parts were predictable but I really liked it when I got done and the end was really good....the chemistry of the ppl were good too.. but don't worry it's not a "romance novel". It was good you should read it.
So I was just writing this up and I think I should turn off the autosave becuase I already typed this up once and I was highlighting it to change the text and somehow it all erased and then it autosaved. Soooo...I'm writing this again. whew....

Ok so I arrived at Chicago O'hare. I hate that airport. It is so always so busy, and it is huge and built like a maze. I literally felt like a rat in a maze about 3 years ago when I had a connection in there once and had to change terminals but the train was down and they were doing a lot of construction in the halls. It even had those orange road detour signs up to direct us pedestrians. It took me at least 1/2 hour to walk to my next gate...anyway I landed late because we were taxing in the air for about 20 minutes before we could land. The lady that was picking me up had told me to meet her at the arrivals, but she said it was the upper level...i know becuase I wrote it down the week before when I talked to her. There was no upper level however, and after standing up there finally made it downstairs and we managed to find each other. She was really sweet and nice, and she teaches voice at NIU. I was also going to stay at her house for the next 4 days in one of the rooms that she normally rents out to students. She was so nice and drove me to the grocery store to get some food to eat while i was there. I loved her house...it was a big old wood-panneled house which is awsome becuase I LUV wood panneling and the smell of wood...especially old wood. mmmm. So her house was awsome.

I pretty much spent the entire time locked away in the practice room. I love it when I have nothing else to do but practice and get ready for something like my audition and concert that I had to do there at NIU. I think I averaged about 5-6 hours a day while I was there. Ms Seeman got me a gig playing with the NIU philharmonic orchestra. It was thier concerto concert. I only played two pieces: La Forza del Destino by Verdi and a concerto for Steel Pan and Orchestra by Jan Bach. It was really good, and very well written for harp. You should go find it and listen to it, or even try to find a video. Very good. I'm proud of myself though. I learned the Verdi excerpt in only 5 days. Not bad, and Ms Seeman said I played really well in the concert...which is great because that is what I do best! Anyway, it was really good.
My audition was the next day. I played a little of everything. And I played really well too! I prepared really well too which makes me happy. I also got to talk to the conductor and what her plans for the future are if I should accept and come to NIU. She has a passion for orchestral music just like me, and we like a lot of the same composers. It was a good trip.

It was good that I was out of town that week, because that was the week where my family decided to get sick all at the same time with flu/pneumonia. I tease them about it and thank them, because they couldn't have picked a better time to be sick...while I was not there! But I think the Lord was looking out for me too because when I came home mom was not fully recovered and dad caught a strain of something else while I was there but I never once got sick or even felt under the weather, and if I had gotten sick at any time during that time, my auditions would have very probably been ruined, especially when I still had my UT audition in Austin the next weekend after I came home. So, all good!!

Seattle cont.

1 comments
Hey I FINALLY found my cord to get my pics off my camera...woot becuase now I can post and not have to do the pics later.
So my audition went well. I left my hotel pretty early, around 8ish in the morning, so I could hopefully be there by 8:30 to start warming up. Needless to say....I got lost. So it was good that I left so early even though it is only a 10 minute walk from where I was staying. I had a map and everything too!! But I couldn't tell where I was based on the above view map. FYI: U of Washington is HUGE!! I'm not saying it's like a whole city, but really i've seen towns smaller than this place. I was looking at the spread of buildings on the map, and one quarter of this campus is about the size of Ball State. And Ball State is not that small. I don't know how big BYU is but I am going to guess UW is probably bigger. Anyway, I got lost and got pointed in the wrong direction by a supposed student and ended up walking down this long courtyard-type walk...until I figured out where I was. Which was here...which is not where I was supposed to be.So I backtracked and found my way to the music building and the back dance studio entrance where I was supposed to come in. Walked down 4 flights of stairs and voila! there was the harp studio. So for about 20 minutes it was just me, then another harpist showed up (there were 3 of us that day, two for grad school and one for undergrad). Well, I was letting the new girl have a chance at playing the harp, when we both heard a loud POP. Ummm...whenever you here a pop on the harp it is not a good thing. It usually means a string has broke, which if you have replacement strings around is not a big deal...except it was one of the bass strings, which are not so fun to replace. Technically the string is steel wrapped silk, and is pretty thick, and to get it off requires heavy duty wire cutters. Which of course we couldn't find in the studio. But we found the replacement wire and managed to get it off without scratching the wood at the bottom (aka we pulled the whole thing out through the bottom instead of cutting it at the bottom, which you usually do becuase the top is all loopy and hard to pull through the eyelet at the bottom...I don't know why i'm explaining becuase you still probably don't know what I'm talking about if you don't play harp). Anyway, we managed to get it replaced before Ms. Lehwalder came back in. Anyway, I was the last to audition out of the 3 of us. It went pretty well, but not as well as I would have hoped. I only got to play a small portion of my Scintillation piece...bummer. After lunch I met up with her and had a lesson. She was really good, but super intense about how to play. She did this thing that she said Salzedo always did, which was swooping downward to grab the strings. It was actually quite hard, but she claimed that was how she got rid of a lot of buzzing. Also, she thought I played too high with my left hand, that is should be halfway between the sound board and the middle. But we worked on sections of Scintillation and she had some great musical insights, which I have used and have really helped.

So after my audition we bid farewell and I went back to my room. I then decided to go walking. I didn't want to go out into the city alone, becuase it was going to get dark within the next hour or so. So intead I just walked along one of the busy shop and resaurant streets along the edge of campus. There were so many asian places to eat! I saw 4 Thai restaurants (one of them I stopped for lunch), several chinese shops, a couple japanese and Korean, and several Indian places as well. This actually didn't surprise me as much becuase of how many asian students I saw...I think caucasians are a minority there. Which is fine with me because I feel part asian anyway, what with several asian roommates, a love for thier food, a Thai sister, and I'm overall fascinated by asian culture. And Asian instruments are some of my favorite too. I felt at home.

The campus was beautiful...the architecture is very castley-like (is that a word?) and many buildings where very old. I didn't have time to take a tour, but the part I saw was awsome.
A really nice street lined with trees...too bad it wasn't summertime.This is the staircase in the library...wow!!!
This is the view outside my hotel window...and they say the sun doesn't shine in Seattle.
I don't know if you can see, but this guy was playing his cello on the street corner for money..he had it hooked up to a small amp and everything. He was actually quite good! I just never saw a street corner cellist before.

Well, the next morning I got back on my shuttle to the airport...off the Chicago then!!