Pictures of my final day in Rocky Mountain National Park followed by the bus ride to Denver, Colorado (train delayed due to track damaged by inclement weather).
Transcontinental Trip III: Rocky Mountain National Park
Transcontinental Trip II: Utah to Colorado and Rocky Mountain National Park
Here are photos taken on the train from Utah to Colorado, then on the drive through Rocky Mountain National Park from Granby to Estes Park, Colorado.
Transcontinental Trip I: San Francisco to Nevada
Day 2: Visiting Ranger Sierra at Pinnacles National Park
Day 1: Visiting Ranger Sierra at Pinnacles National Park
I had a great visit with ranger Sierra at Pinnacles National Park, the newest national park in the U.S. I hiked for two days, seven miles the first day by myself and seven miles the second day with Sierra. I thought I spied the endangered California condor, but it turned out it was just some turkey vultures.
Piano Repair Needed
O dear! My beloved Kawai upright piano has a problem with the retractable keyboard cover.
Here’s what the piano looks like:
The retractable cover has three hinges each with three screws on each side to attach the outermost section of the keyboard cover to the main portion of the keyboard cover. (Click on the photo to see a larger version.)
The left and middle hinges are completely unattached from the outermost section of the keyboard cover, leaving the right hinge, which is only partially attached. In fact, the outermost section of the keyboard cover is close to falling off completely.
Here’s a closer look at all three hinges (left to right):
All the hinges on the sheet music holder foldout section and elsewhere on the keyboard cover are fine.
I have some, but not all of the screws that have fallen out.
Shelter Notes
“Shelter” is a work of sensuous intensities and melancholic moods that coalesces out of a seemingly relaxed and ordinary environment.
I. Stomping Ground
Shelter’s first movement is influenced by old Jewish dance music that gradually increases in tempo until it reaches a frenzied culmination. The movement begins with a serious and expansive bassoon solo, punctuated by strings and echoed by English horn with a modified melody. The feverish force of the piece draws the listener ineluctably in. After attaining a whirlwind culmination, the first movement ends with a brief recapitulation of the initial theme and a final slow “olé”.
Note to players: Avoid the feeling of pushing the piece forward by playing on the back end of beats of increasing tempo. Also, tempo changes should not occur all at once at measure downbeats, instead starting within measures to progress toward downbeats.
II. Resting Place
The second movement starts in four waves of increasing length: beginning with only the first player, restarting with the first and second players, and so on, until all four players are playing. Then, the players echo their final wave more quickly with discordant embellishments. Next, polyrhythmic strings accompany a gradually descending bassoon solo that pauses dramatically before reaching its nadir. Following brief Arabian polyrhythmic flourishes, including a lush cello solo reminiscent of the prior bassoon solo yet synchonized with viola, the movement settles into a wide open sound texture created by hypnotic woodwind pulses. The cello addes some soulful caresses, repeated with viola harmony, to create a morbid landscape. The woodwinds come to a polyrhythmic forefront until the strings join them playing the previous hypnotic woodwind motif. The strings intensify their polyrhythms, eventually joined by bassoon and a soaring English horn. The woodwinds subside and the strings again play intense polyrhythms until the piece unwinds in four waves of decreasing length, losing one player each wave until the final tone.
Note to players: Make an effort to hold notes for full duration and to follow tempo and dynamic markings to convey the fully hypnotic effect of this piece.
Visit to Family in Seattle
Greenpeace Rainbow Warrior Berths in San Francisco
Clint and I saw a great activist art exhibit as part of a tour of Greenpeace’s Rainbow Warrior ship currently berthed at San Francisco’s Pier 15. We had an amazing time talking with old friends and new.
The last few pictures were taken on the way to and at Pier 39 where we saw the sea lions and the mirror maze!