22 February 2022
Double bass
The weather has been typically chaotic but at least not so crazy hot. The other night though was insane, a wild firestorm in the evening sky. Sometimes one has to let go and fly into directions that might have seemed previously off-limits. For example, in this study from last week, it’s has an abundance of sweetness, an overload of candy that overflows and seems to border on the pornographic. This kind of thing is a risky adventure for me or anyone, really. Though I actually appreciate its absurd audacity it’s the kind of picture one might find in one’s grandmother’s home placed near the hearth. In it is a charming quality that scares me.
But the memory of such a firestorm in the sky also leaves me at the same time, with a certain affection for it. The sky was so difficult to render in such a short time frame that I kind of forced my way through it on intuition alone. The sea came at the very end, and without it, I would have lost everything. I don’t know how I was able to get it to recede like it does, sometimes it’s just wild luck. So yes, it’s an over-the-top-image but a part in me is also amazed that it sort of works in a crazy sort of way. There is truth in it, despite everything, but that doesn’t always mean that it’s a great picture. Like the ultimate of cliches: “It really looked like this!” Yes, it’s kitschy, for sure, and yet, you know what? Sometimes one just needs to paint these kinds of things once in a while.
Like I’ve said previously, since childhood, everything in life has always felt like a final exam, even just playing tennis or keeping a diary. There is a perfectionist hidden within every chapter of my life. Though I pretended otherwise, every important action I’ve ever taken had always felt like a death sentence hanging over me. Remarkably though, I somehow found a way to live with it. I just lurched from one problem to be solved, to the next. Needless to say, I was wreck, and running on one cylinder.
Providentially, a solution came to me from a piano teacher at a school of jazz in Aix I had seen just a few times before moving up to the Drome back in 1999. Previously, I had been working on my own and spending time trying to figure out music theory on paper. I was attemping to learn a few Standards on paper and dutifully writing everything out in hopes that I could understand harmony theoretically.
So on the first lesson the young guy came in and I told him I was learning All The Things You Are, a favorite of everybody’s by Jerome Kern. I tried to play what I could but mangled it thoroughly. He brought his giant Contra bass and set the metronome to an easy pace and asked me to play with him. I didn’t have the changes memorised so I again mangled it. No worries, he told me. Memorise it and play from the chart for the next week. So I left the lesson excited and terrified and went home and worked on it all week.
The next week we jumped into it quickly, and of course I faltered but tried to keep up. “He didn’t stop for nothing”, as Dizzy Gilespie used to say. “No freight train, nothing” He kept going and going and I gradually began to get it. He basically pushed me in the water and waited for me to sink or swim. It was a great lesson, and it changed my life in so many small ways thereafter. But it also took patience, that magical thing that had eluded me all my life.
So a small crazy study like this reminds me not to judge too much, just keep it moving. Remember the chart, remember the double bass that stops for no one, ever. Had I not moved away from Aix, I would have kept working with him. Sadly I don’t think the little school lasted too long but it was just at the crossroads for me and I’m grateful for it.
So now years later, I’ve been on the piano every morning just because it brings me joy. Importantly though, it essentially prepares me for the day ahead. There is so much pain and irrational violence in this world, and I’ve never been able to keep at bay, so I’ve always been anxious. This was the root of my perfectionism hanging over my head like the sword of Damocles. But this piano study has moved me, soothed me, and changed me forever.