By Donald H. Harrison
LA JOLLA, Calif.—Organizers of the San Diego Jewish
Music Festival had the opportunity to incorporate into their festival a
performance by the San Diego Symphony of George Kleinsinger's "Tubby the
Tuba," along with "Critters" by local composer John Lorge.
But how could these charming pieces be made to fit into the overall Jewish theme
of the festival?
On Sunday, April 2, the answer became clear—they could fit by analogy.
Just as the different animals on the biblical ark all went to the same place,
thanks to their conductor, Noah, so too do the instruments in the San
Diego Symphony all play the same works of music, thanks to guest conductor,
Matthew Garbutt.
To
drive home the point, a model of Noah's Ark big enough for three or four
costumed children to stand in was constructed in a breezeway of the
Lawrence Family JCC. Young concert-goers were invited to come in and
see "Noah," "his wife," and "some of the animals"
and, then, while they were at it, to "pet" the instruments that
perform in the Ark that we know as an orchestra.
The children were permitted to draw a bow across a violin, to blow a horn, and
to beat a drum either as the dessert or an appetizer to a morning and afternoon
"Toon Tunes" Concert at the Center located in the La Jolla section of
San Diego.
Our
grandson, Shor, who is almost 5, happily tried the various instruments, but
seemed the most impressed by the violin proffered to him by Eileen
Wingard, a family friend at whose home Shor has enjoyed vegetarian Passover
seders. For him, the drum was "old hat" because he has a small set in
the "sleepover room" Nancy
and I maintain for him at our home.
For Nathaniel Manor, 3, and other children who made their way through the
crowded hands-on exhibit, the drum was far more irresistible, under the tutelage
of James Miles, the Symphony's education and outreach director.
You might expect that a musical piece about animals would imitate how they
sound, but "Critters" instead was a musical essay on how various
animals move, including the kangaroo, porcupine, yak, hippopotamus, lizard,
electric eel, elephant, tiger and the seal.
Ken Bell, a narrator with the deepest of voices, read couplets about each of the
animals. "The porcupine is somewhat silly, he also is somewhat quilly."
"Sniggely, sniggley sag; the yak is covered with shag." "What fun
to be a hippopotamus and weigh a ton from top to bottomus."
Clever as the poems were, the audience proved to be a tough crowd. With
some infants crying, some preschoolers calling "mommy," and others
having cases of the 'fidgeties," Bell and the orchestra had their work cut
out for them.
The
story of "Tubby the Tuba," who wanted to play a melody and not just oompah-pah-pah,
seemed to capture the attention of more children, including grandson Shor who
climbed onto my lap for the performance. Nancy surreptitiously took a time
exposure photo of the two of us listening to the concert.
In this musical story, another animal of which Noah surely would have been
proud—a bullfrog—teaches Tubby the Tuba that one's voice can be both deep
and yet melodious. On returning to the orchestra, Tubby paid little
attention to his usual teasing by some of the other instruments. He bided
his time until he had the opportunity to show the new conductor, Signore
Pizzicato, how beautifully he could play a tune. Charmed, Pizzicato invited Tubby
to continue and eventually the entire orchestra followed his lead. The artistry
of Scott Sutherland on tuba was spotlighted during this piece.
Shor, Nancy and I were delighted with this, another in our continuing series of
adventures built around the story of Noah and the Ark. In the not so distant
past, Shor and I had attended a dress rehearsal of a church
opera based on the story, had read two
versions of the biblical tale, enjoyed a color-changing T-shirt bearing a
picture of the Ark, and had watched the DVD Fantasia 2000 in which Donald
and Daisy Duck nearly get separated forever on the Ark. It's an open question
who enjoys Ark-eology more, me or Shor.
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