Mark Dow
Movement
First. No, no, I’m wrong, right? Sorry about that. So back to measure one-nine-five. Back to the cello. The cello: one — Six before the end you have half-notes, right? You’re leading then. So let’s go back to nine before the end. That’s 296, such a pretty D-major arpeggio. The scherzo should probably be faster but I can’t do it. We’ll all end up together anyway. Second. Sorry, can we go back to B? This says accelerando. What happens I think is after the ritard — but no, it shouldn’t drag that much, though. Let’s go back to twenty-nine. Wasn’t Borodin a chemist? Anyway, let’s go back to twenty-nine. Pick it up at 100. It’s about to get a lot nastier now, for me I mean. Is this the double forte? Let’s start at the fourth bar after that so I don’t have to have a page-turn there. The viola has something important at 96 through 99 and then I answer at 100. It looks like a student numbered these on mine and got it wrong. So: measure 100. You kidding me? I can’t play this. Just play real soft and hope someone else has the melody there. What does calando mean? Slower, quieter, fading out. Does it say calando on your pizzicato too? So it does get slower there. And that recording does that too? Goes back to the first tempo? Cleveland Quartet. Pretty nice, I think. This piece is all about the cello but I’m fine with that. Third. Let’s do it one more time. That’s just excruciatingly high, and I can’t get my fingers close enough together. This damn arthritis. Sorry, wait, I’m off. I’m off. Seems right. Who’s supposed to push it, though? Let’s see what happens right at B. One, two, and — I’m not sure what key we’re even in here. Forget the whole concept of key here, Allyson. OK, from C. Cello again. Do those harmonies make sense to you? They make no sense to my ear. You can’t explain them. You’d think in the viola he’d just end with that dying out but then he comes down a fifth. I can’t explain it. It had to go down or it’s not finished. It goes down because the cello’s up here, so you go to the fundamental. Fourth. Am I playing forte when you’re playing piano? Was that right? Where do I come in? Measure 40. You come in in the second half of that measure. It’s one, two, one — no, one and two and one: vivace. All these incidentals and no fingerings. Look at this. I’m just trying to find the patterns to play. I’m just gonna drop out and play softly because I simply can’t play this. I don’t even know what notes these are.
Mark Dow is the author of Plain Talk Rising (poems), American Gulag: Inside U.S. Immigration Prisons, and the Mudlark Chap Feedback and Other Conversation Poems (2015).
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