home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0327>
- <title>
- Mar. 21, 1994: The Arts & Media:Music
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 21, 1994 Hard Times For Hillary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 73
- Music
- A Different Drummer
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Scotland's Evelyn Glennie is pounding out a rare and brilliant
- career as a percussion soloist, never mind that she is deaf
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Walsh/Cincinnati
- </p>
- <p> The art of music so utterly depends on the perception of sound
- that it seems inconceivable for one to exist without the other.
- One can imagine a deaf composer if, as in the case of Beethoven,
- he spent decades absorbed in the world of pitch and melody before
- silence held sway. Music, after all, is first composed in the
- mind's ear, and it is no great feat for professionals to be
- able to "hear" a musical score simply by reading it. But a deaf
- performer? To hit all the right notes, to play in an ensemble
- or in front of an orchestra as the featured soloist? Surely
- this requires the ability not only to hear, but to hear, as
- well, with a musician's acuity--doesn't it?
- </p>
- <p> Consider Evelyn Glennie, a small, vivacious Scotswoman who has
- been "profoundly deaf" since she was 12. Glennie is a full-time
- percussion soloist--the only one in the classical field--and one of today's brightest young stars on any instrument.
- "People have the wrong idea about deafness," says Glennie, 28,
- currently in the midst of an American concert tour that is taking
- her to Cincinnati, Washington and Cleveland. "They think you
- live in a world of total silence, but that isn't the way it
- works."
- </p>
- <p> Glennie relates to her battery of instruments through her sense
- of touch; to heighten her sensitivity to vibrations, she likes
- to perform barefoot. She conceives of her concerts in terms
- of the play of colors and emotions. During rehearsal, she will
- station an adviser in the hall to help her gauge dynamic levels,
- but otherwise her concessions to deafness are few. "I don't
- think in terms of loud and soft," says Glennie. "Instead I think
- of sounds as thin or fat, strong or weak. The amount of sounds
- you can create with just one cymbal are infinite."
- </p>
- <p> Sharp-eyed and keen, Glennie reads lips so fluently that an
- interlocutor would never know she cannot hear. In performance
- she watches the conductor and orchestra with a fierce intensity,
- picking up visual cues and bounding from instrument to instrument
- with the grace of a natural athlete. She often gets a workout:
- Dominic Muldowney's astringent Concerto for Percussion, subtitled
- Figure in a Landscape, which she performed with the Cincinnati
- Symphony late last month, employs cymbals, marimba, Japanese
- bells, a pair of bongos, two congas, a vibraphone, four small
- drums, four wood blocks and several boobams, which are tuned
- cylindrical tubes open on one end and covered by a small drumskin
- at the other. The piece, difficult for player and listener alike,
- had her leaping from one station to another with a gazelle's
- grace, smacking each instrument in turn both accurately and
- mellifluously.
- </p>
- <p> Starting at age eight, for reasons that are still unclear, Glennie's
- auditory nerves gradually deteriorated and she lost most of
- her hearing. Today she can just barely discern the loud ring
- of a telephone right next to her ear, and she can sense rather
- than hear the rumble of a jet plane overhead. Her determination
- and natural talent, however, were enough to qualify her for
- London's Royal Academy of Music, where she graduated with honors.
- Glennie then compounded her professional challenge by setting
- out as a soloist instead of a rank-and-file orchestral player.
- Plenty of people make a living playing the piano, violin, flute
- or cello. But how many live off their skill with the snare drum,
- the marimba, the xylophone? Beethoven, after all, never wrote
- a percussion concerto.
- </p>
- <p> Percussion, in fact, did not come into its own until the mid-20th
- century, which is one reason why the repertory is so sparse.
- Glennie is an active commissioner of new works, among them fellow
- Scotsman James MacMillan's Veni, Veni, Emmanuel, a thorny, dissonant,
- virtuoso showpiece that got its triumphant American premiere
- a fortnight ago in Washington. She works closely with composers,
- advising on matters of technique and, in return for her commission,
- extracting a promise that the score will be hers exclusively
- for one year. Her taste runs also to arrangements of Chopin
- and Joplin, as well as to Japanese and Brazilian music, part
- of an eclectic approach that is winning her fans around the
- world.
- </p>
- <p> Although she is affiliated with some 40 organizations for the
- deaf in Britain, Glennie downplays discussion of her charity
- work; she would rather be known as a role model for all young
- musicians, not just young deaf people. And model she is. She
- performs some 120 concerts a year, a number the newlywed Glennie
- would prefer to reduce in order to spend more time at home near
- Cambridge with her husband, Greg Malcangi, a recording engineer.
- The flying Scot also has been the subject of two British and
- one American TV documentaries and even wrote an autobiography
- at the age of 24. The inevitable title: Good Vibrations.
- </p>
- <p> Still, she remains focused on her principal task of elevating
- percussion music to the level of more conventional instruments.
- So when she says, "if it inspires other people that I'm able
- to do this, then wonderful," she is referring to timbal and
- timpani. As for the inspirational nature of defying deafness,
- she doesn't really want to hear about it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-