Let the music play!
Home bound does not mean life stops. But the past week has been challenging and we’ve seen the emotional effects and the physical constraints of… Read More »Let the music play!
Home bound does not mean life stops. But the past week has been challenging and we’ve seen the emotional effects and the physical constraints of… Read More »Let the music play!
Sometimes I do things that maybe not everyone would do, and this is no exception. What have I done? I joined the first year Jazz… Read More »Mind & Body: Dance!
This is a day-long Jazz Symposium to mark International Jazz Day 2020. You are warmly invited to take part as an active participant in the… Read More »Jazz Day 2020: Inside Out | Outside In
This August I’ll be welcoming lots of string players to the University of Chichester Conservatoire for the European String Teachers Annual Summer School. I am… Read More »ESTA Summer School 2020
I find stories in my life, and they teach me. This is one of those. Every morning I prepare the lunches, not because of any… Read More »It was there, waiting
Saturday / Sunday April 18-19
Time: 10am-4:30pm
Venue: University of Chichester
The Chichester Cello Weekend, organised by Professor Laura Ritchie, brings cellists keen to develop their performing skills, technique, and musical appreciation together for a remarkable weekend of music making. All music is arranged to suit participants’ individual levels, and everyone plays in a fantastic cello-orchestra that rehearses throughout the two days. Sunday’s 4:30pm gala concert is open to friends and family.
Music includes from arrangements of popular hits to Bach to a contemporary gamified piece of music by Rebecca Askew and a special commission for the group by Bruno Newman. Participants will have opportunities to work with composers, to play solos for our guest artists: Ivana Peranic and Emma Collingham, and to participate in workshops on working with an accompanist and chamber music, where they can experience playing with a piano trio.
Participant fees: £35 students, £55 adults. Book online: http://bit.ly/CelloWE2020
For more information contact Laura on l.ritchie@chi.ac.ukRead More »Cello Weekend 2020
Words are so precious. They form like clouds, from nothing in our minds, and we use them to convey what we think and feel. They’re… Read More »Failure? Look again.
Yesterday something extraordinary happened.
I was asked to run a session for colleagues at my university on learning and teaching as their first session of a Postgraduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching. Planning for this was like swimming in alphabet soup in my mind and gathering words – I knew what I did not want the session to be, but I wasn’t sure how I would or should tailor the session. I knew nothing about the group – who they were, why they were there, what their responsibilities or roles in their jobs were, or what their experience or conception of learning entailed – and all this matters.
In the past I have run sessions where the room is set out as an orchestra and everyone comes in to find that they will be not observing, but playing in that orchestra. Magic. This year though, that felt like hard work. (After yesterday though, I would like the opportunity to do that with this group) What I did instead was to divide them into groups of four and give each group an instrument. Each group had a different remit: one group was explicitly ‘taught’ by me, one group was told to just figure it out however they liked, one group was given roles for everyone – a facilitator, a scribe, someone to make an abstract map (mind map or the like) of the learning and happenings, and one person to be a designated researcher to find resources. Then after an exploratory 15 mins we came back to discuss what happened, and compare the perceptions of the learners and the others in the groups. -and to perform whatever they ‘figured out’. We heard twinkle twinkle from one group, Clair de lune from another (on viola! yes, I gave them a viola!!), and an improvised jazz/percussion piece from another group.
It was impossible in a short 90 min session to convey what they were actually experiencing from a theoretical standpoint.
Experience is a marvellous teacher, but when you are swimming in the water, you cannot also drink it or wash with it. One thing and ‘one think’ (as one of my children used to say) at a time.Read More »Yes I can? YES YOU CAN!
There are many things that we do in life, and this is one of my best. It’s funny how these things make themselves manifest. Every… Read More »Dear Orchestra, I love you.
Thoughts Spring Tulips In My Mind I was encouraged to write a story, and I thought oh there are so many stories, thoughts,… Read More »A Six Word Story: