Eric Whitacre

A few weeks ago I posted the list of living composers I hoped to interview. Among them was Eric Whitacre. The guy is a freaking rock star. I mean, look at him. Someone tweeted about his TED talk yesterday. I watched it and teared up. I loved his story, what he thought of choirs and then hearing the basses around him sing the kyrie from Mozart’s Requiem for the first time. (It’s such a great piece of music, I can just imagine what he experienced sitting among the basses.)  You can see his talk here.

My choir did Whitacre’s Lux Aurumque, the first piece that was performed via the virtual choir. It’s an absolutely stunning work of art, as you’ll see. I can’t wait to see the complete video of Sleep.

By the way, the camera repair shopped called me and the repair is going to take WEEKS. I don’t know how I’m going to cope.

Scans From My Past

I went to the Florida Institute of Technology for one semester only, and while there I was the coxswain for the crew team. We’d get up before dawn to go for a run and then row on the Indian River.

I hated running, wasn’t good at it, and so once everyone else was far ahead of me I’d use that time to explore the area which was still largely rural. It was spectacular. So lush. There was an abandoned mansion nearby that had all the beauty of decaying splendor. I saw and dodged my first alligator there! (I forget if I froze or climbed a tree.)

I also discovered and learned about bioluminescence. The water in the river would light up around you as you waded out with the shell. I’ve never seen it anywhere else since, but that effect was magical. The whole place was magical: orange groves, the sparkling river, that magnificent mansion being taken over with spanish moss. But most of all I also discovered that the hour just dawn is the most enchanting time of the day. It has that particular stillness, but also the sense that everything is about to happen.

A local newspaper did a piece about the crew team. This is us coming up out of the water out of after practice.

I’m out of the picture, sitting to the left of this guy. I felt bad because I was a terrible coxswain, and I didn’t yet accept that some things you’re good at, others, not so much. I barely accept that now! But it stung because the thing I wasn’t good at was leading and motivating the team. The other coxswain was amazing at it. She not only got them to work harder, they had more fun doing it!