Tuesday, October 11, 2005
Piping in the Rain / Knocked off the Top
All things considered, the Anne Arundel games went well, despite horrible weather.
On the plus side, I took a 1st in the 2/4 march and got my second Above Grade Level - further improving my chances of making it into Grade III. On the down side, for reasons I'm not clear on, I didn't place in the piobaireachd contest. I felt I was in tune and played very well, despite playing in the driving rain (the other contest was moved under cover). The rest of the top 3 in the grade were there as well, though, and placed in both their contests. So I've dropped to at best 4th. One more contest for the year, and it's over.
I took 2nd in the fiddle contest (out of only two contestants!), but it was very close - I was only 2 points out of 400 behind Daryl Murray, a fact that judge Bonnie Rideout made sure to mention. I think I've done this very technically challenging 3-flats set justice, and it's time to prepare to do something different for Richmond. The junior competitors were all extremely good, but reluctant to play in the post-competition session, and I was called upon to lead them, something I got high praise for from one of the parents afterwards.
The band's showing was okay - 3rd out of 5 - and it showed the areas we need to work on.
Elke has got me looking at the tunes of Marshall and Gow, and I'm enjoying that. John has me playing my tunes agonizingly slowly, with total control over every ornament and note change, and it's radically improved my playing, especially in the 2/4 march. More of my F and E doublings are coming off correctly, and my tachums are much less crushed.
I've also been noodling on the new wooden whistles a bit; I'm really enjoying the C whistle. I transposed all my F-major and D-minor tunes up a whole step, so I can play them on the C whistle as if I were reading music for a D-whistle, and several of the tunes sound very good on whistle. The D-whistle is also quite nice, and I'm trying to get used to the G# key.
The first fiddle club meeting of the season had a lot of good tunes, and the session was enjoyable. I kept switching between electronic chanter (w/ computer speaker), fiddle, and tenor banjo.
On the plus side, I took a 1st in the 2/4 march and got my second Above Grade Level - further improving my chances of making it into Grade III. On the down side, for reasons I'm not clear on, I didn't place in the piobaireachd contest. I felt I was in tune and played very well, despite playing in the driving rain (the other contest was moved under cover). The rest of the top 3 in the grade were there as well, though, and placed in both their contests. So I've dropped to at best 4th. One more contest for the year, and it's over.
I took 2nd in the fiddle contest (out of only two contestants!), but it was very close - I was only 2 points out of 400 behind Daryl Murray, a fact that judge Bonnie Rideout made sure to mention. I think I've done this very technically challenging 3-flats set justice, and it's time to prepare to do something different for Richmond. The junior competitors were all extremely good, but reluctant to play in the post-competition session, and I was called upon to lead them, something I got high praise for from one of the parents afterwards.
The band's showing was okay - 3rd out of 5 - and it showed the areas we need to work on.
Elke has got me looking at the tunes of Marshall and Gow, and I'm enjoying that. John has me playing my tunes agonizingly slowly, with total control over every ornament and note change, and it's radically improved my playing, especially in the 2/4 march. More of my F and E doublings are coming off correctly, and my tachums are much less crushed.
I've also been noodling on the new wooden whistles a bit; I'm really enjoying the C whistle. I transposed all my F-major and D-minor tunes up a whole step, so I can play them on the C whistle as if I were reading music for a D-whistle, and several of the tunes sound very good on whistle. The D-whistle is also quite nice, and I'm trying to get used to the G# key.
The first fiddle club meeting of the season had a lot of good tunes, and the session was enjoyable. I kept switching between electronic chanter (w/ computer speaker), fiddle, and tenor banjo.