The image I want to get across is that of the fifteen-year-old boy
with the beginning traces of a mustache who hangs out in the
band room after school playing the opening bars of a Billy Joel
song on the piano. This is the kid who, in the interests of adopting
some semblance of personal style, wears a fedora hat and a scarf with
a black-and-white design of a piano keyboard. This is the kid who,
in addition to having taught himself some tunes from the Songs
from the Attic sheet music he bought at the local Sam Ash, probably also
plays the trombone in the marching band, and experienced a seminal
moment one afternoon as he vaguely flirted with a not-yet-kissed,
clarinet-playing girl, a girl who is none too popular but whose
propensity for leaning on the piano as the boy plays the opening chords of “Captain
Jack” give him a clue as to the social possibilities that might
be afforded him via the marching band.
If the clarinet-playing girl is an average student musician, she
carries her plastic Selmer in the standard-issue black plastic case.
If she has demonstrated any kind of proficiency, she carries her
Selmer in a tote bag that reads “Music Is My Bag.” The boy in the
piano-key scarf definitely has music as his bag. He may not yet
have the tote bag, but the hat, the Billy Joel, the tacit euphoria
brought on by a sexual awakening that, for him, centers entirely around
band, is all he needs to be delivered into the unmistakable realm that is Music Is My Bagdom.
I grew up in Music Is My Bag culture. The walls of my parents’ house
were covered with framed art posters from musical events: The San
Francisco Symphony’s 1982 production of St. Matthew’s Passion, The
Metropolitan Opera’s 1976 production of Aida, the original Broadway
production of Sweeney Todd. Ninety percent of the books on the shelves
were about music, if not actual musical scores. Childhood ceramics
projects made by my brother and me were painted with eighth notes
and treble clef signs. We owned a deck of cards with portraits of
the great composers on the back. A baby grand piano overtook the
room that would have been the dining room if my parents hadn’t forgone
a table and renamed it “the music room.” This room also contained
an imposing hi-fi system and a $300 wooden music stand. Music played
at all times: Brahms, Mendelssohn, cast recordings of Sondheim musicals,
a cappella Christmas albums. When my father sat down with a book,
he read musical scores, humming quietly and tapping his foot. When
I was ten, my mother decided we needed to implement a before-dinner
ritual akin to saying grace, so she composed a short song, asking
us all to contribute a lyric, and we held hands and sang it before
eating. My lyric was, “There’s a smile on our face and it seems to
say all the wonderful things we’ve all done today.” My mother insisted
on harmonizing at the end. She also did this when singing “Happy
Birthday.”
Harmonizing
on songs like “Happy Birthday” is a clear indication
of the Music Is My Bag personality. If one does not have an actual
bag that reads “Music Is My Bag”—as did the violist in the chamber
music trio my mother set up with some women from the Unitarian Church—a
$300 music stand and musical-note coasters will more than suffice.
To avoid confusion, let me also say that there are many different
Bags in life. Some friends of my parents have a $300 dictionary stand,
a collection of silver bookmarks, and once threw a dinner party wherein
the guests had to dress up as members of the Bloomsbury Group. These
people are Literature Is My Bag. I know people who are Movies Are
My Bag (detectable by key chains shaped like projectors, outdated
copies of Halliwell’s Film Guide, and one too many T-shirts from
things like the San Jose Film Festival), people who are Cats Are
My Bag (self-explanatory), and, perhaps most annoyingly, Where I
Went To College Is My Bag (Yale running shorts, plastic Yale tumblers,
Yale Platinum Plus MasterCard, and, yes, even Yale screensavers—all
this in someone aged forty or more, the perennial contributor to
the class notes).
Having a Bag connotes the state of being overly interested in something,
and yet, in a certain way, not interested enough. It has a hobbyish
quality to it, a sense that the enthusiasm developed at a time
when the enthusiast was lacking in some significant area of social
or intellectual life. Music Is My Bag is the mother of all Bags, not
just because in the early 1980s some consumer force of the public
radio fund-drive variety distributed a line of tote bags that displayed
that slogan, but because its adherents, or, as they tend to call
themselves, “music lovers,” give off an aura that distinguishes them
from the rest of the population. It’s an aura that has to do with
a sort of benign cluelessness, a condition that, even in middle age,
smacks of that phase between prepubescence and real adolescence.
Music Is My Bag people have a sexlessness to them. There is a pastiness
to them. They can never seem to find a good pair of jeans. You can
spot them on the street, the female French horn player in concert
dress hailing a cab to Lincoln Center around seven o’clock in the
evening, her earrings too big, her hairstyle unchanged since 1986.
The fifty-something recording engineer with the running shoes and
the shoulder bag. The Indiana marching band kids in town for the
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, snapping photos of each other in
front of the Hard Rock Cafe, having sung their parts from the band
arrangement of Hello Dolly the whole way on the bus, thinking, knowing,
that it won’t get better than this. Like all Music Is My Bag people,
they are a little too in love with the trappings. They know what
their boundaries are and load up their allotted space with memorabilia,
saving the certificates of participation from regional festivals,
the composer-a-month calendars, the Mostly Mozart posters. Their
sincerity trumps attempts at snideness. The boys’ sarcasm only goes
a fraction of the way there, the girls will never be great seducers.
They grow up to look like high school band directors even if they’re
not. They give their pets names like Wolfgang and Gershwin. Their
hemlines are never quite right.
I played the oboe. This is not an instrument to be taken lightly. The oboist runs a high risk of veering into Music Is My Bag culture,
mostly because to get beyond the entry level is to give oneself
over to an absorption with technique that can make a person vulnerable
to certain vagaries of a subcategory, the oboe phylum. This inevitably
leads to the genus of wind ensemble culture, which concerns itself
with the socio-political infrastructure of the woodwind section,
the disproportionate number of solo passages, a narcissistic pride
in sounding the A that tunes the orchestra. Not many people play
the oboe. It’s a difficult instrument, beautiful when played well,
horrifying when played poorly. I was self-conscious about playing
the oboe, mostly because so many people confuse it with the bassoon,
its much larger, ganglier cousin in the double-reed family. The act
of playing the oboe, unlike the graceful arm positions of the flute
or the violin, is not a photogenic one. The embouchure puckers the
face into a grimace; my childhood and adolescence is documented by
photos that make me look slightly deformed—the lipless girl. It’s
not an instrument for the vain. Oboe playing revolves almost entirely
around saliva. Spit gets caught in the keys and the joints and must
be blown out using cigarette rolling paper as a blotter (a scandalous
drugstore purchase for a twelve-year-old). Spit can accumulate on
the floor if you play for too long. Spit must constantly be sucked
out from both sides of the reed. The fragile, temperamental reed
is the player’s chronic medical condition. It must be tended to constantly.
It must be wet but never too wet, hard enough to emit a decent sound,
but soft enough to blow air through. The oboist must never stray
far from moisture; the reed is forever in her mouth, in a paper cup
of water that teeters on the music stand, being doused at a drinking
fountain in Parsippany High School at the North Jersey Regional Band
and Orchestra Audition. After a certain age, the student oboist must
learn to make her own reeds, build them from bamboo using knives
and shavers. Most people don’t realize this. Reed-making is an
eighteenth-century exercise, something that would seem to require
an apprenticeship before undertaking solo. But oboists, occupying a firm, albeit
wet, patch of ground under the tattered umbrella of Music Is My
Bag, never quite live in the same era as everyone else.
Though I did, at one point, hold the title of second-best high school
player in the state of New Jersey, I was a mediocre oboist.
My discipline was lacking, my enthusiasm virtually nil, and my
comprehension of rhythm (in keeping with a lifelong math phobia)
held me back considerably. But being without an aptitude for music was, in my family, tantamount
to being a Kennedy who knows nothing of politics. Aptitude was
something, perhaps even the only thing, I possessed. As indifferent
to the oboe as I was—and I once began an orchestra rehearsal without noticing
that I had neglected to screw the bell, which is the entire bottom
portion, onto the rest of my instrument—I managed to be good enough
to play in the New Jersey All State High School Orchestra as well
as a local adult symphony. I even gained acceptance into a music
conservatory. These aren’t staggering accomplishments unless you
consider the fact that I rarely practiced. If I had practiced with
any amount of regularity, I could have been, as my parents would
have liked me to be, one of those kids who was schlepped to Juilliard
on Saturdays. If I had practiced slightly more than that, I could
have gone to Juilliard for college. If I had practiced a lot I could
have ended up in the New York Philharmonic. This is not an exaggeration,
merely a moot point. I didn’t practice. I haven’t picked up the
oboe since my junior year in college, where, incidentally, I sat
first chair in the orchestra even though I did not practice once the entire time.
I never practiced and yet I always practiced. My memory is always of being unprepared, yet I was forced to sit in the chair for so many hours that I suspect something else must have been at work,
a lack of consciousness about it, an inability to practice on my
own. “Practice” was probably among the top five words spoken in our
family, the other four probably being the names of our family members.
Today, almost ten years since I’ve practiced, the word has lost the
resonance of our usage. I now think of practice in terms of law or
medicine. There is a television show called The Practice, and it
seems odd to me that I never associate the word sprawled across the
screen with the word that wove relentlessly throughout our family
discourse. For my entire childhood and adolescence, practicing was
an ongoing condition. It was both a given and a punishment. When
we were bad, we practiced. When we were idle, we practiced. Before
dinner and TV and friends coming over and bedtime and a thousand
other things that beckoned with the possibility of taking place without
all that harrowing noise, we practiced. “You have practicing and
homework,” my mother said every day. In that order. My father said
the same thing without the homework part.
Much of the reason I could never quite get with the oboe-playing program was that I developed, at a very young age, a deep contempt
for the Music Is My Bag world. Instead of religion, my family had
music, and it was the church against which I rebelled. I had clergy
for parents. My father: professional composer and arranger, keyboard
player and trombonist, brother of a high school band director in
Illinois. My mother: pianist and music educator of the high school
production of Carousel genre. My own brother a reluctant Christ
figure. A typically restless second child in youth (he quit piano lessons but later discovered he could play entirely by ear), my brother
recently completed the final mix of a demo CD of songs he wrote
and performed—mid-eighties pop, late Doobie Brothers groove. His house is littered with Billy
Joel and Bruce Hornsby sheet music, back issues of Stereo Review,
the liner notes to the digital remastering of John Williams’s score
for Star Wars. Music is the Bag.
I
compose songs in my sleep. I can’t do it awake. I’ll dream of
songwriters singing onstage. I’ll hear them perform new songs, songs
I’ve never heard, songs I therefore must have written. In childhood
I never put one thought toward composing a song. It would have been
like composing air, creating more of something of which there was
already quite enough. Wind players like flutists and saxophonists
need as much air as they can get. Oboists are always trying to get
rid of air. They calibrate what they need to get the reed to vibrate,
end up using even less, and dispense with the rest out the corners
of their mouths. It’s all about exhaling. On an eighth rest, they’re
as likely to blow air out as they are to steal a breath. There’s
always too much air for oboists, too much of everything, too many
bars when they’re not playing and too many bars where there’s hardly
anyone playing but them, too many percussion players dropping triangles
on the floor, too many violinists playing “Eleanor Rigby” before
the rehearsal starts. Orchestras have only two oboists, first chair
and second chair, pilot and copilot, though the “co” in this case
is, like all “co’s,” a misnomer. The second oboist is the perpetual
backup system, the one on call, the one who jumps in and saves the
other when his reed dries up in the middle of a solo, when he misses
his cue, when he freezes in panic before trying to hit a high D.
I’ve been first oboist and I’ve been second oboist and, let me tell
you, first is better, but not by much. It’s still the oboe. Unlike
the gregarious violinist or the congenial cellist, the oboist is
a lone wolf. To play the oboe in an orchestra is to complete an obstacle
course of solos and duets with the first flutist who, if she is hard-core
Music Is My Bag, will refer to herself as a “floutist.” Oboe solos
dot the great symphonies like land mines, the pizzicati that precede
them are drumrolls, the conductor’s pointing finger an arrow for
the whole audience to see: Here comes the oboe, two bars until the
oboe, now, now. It’s got to be nailed, one flubbed arpeggio, one
flat half note, one misplaced pinky in the middle of a run of sixteenth
notes, and everyone will hear, everyone.
My
parents’ presence at a high school orchestra concert turned
what should have been a routine event into something akin to the
finals of the Olympic women’s figure skating long program. Even from
the blinding, floodlit stage I could practically see them in the
audience, clucking at every error, grimacing at anything even slightly
out of tune. Afterwards, when the other parents—musically illiterate
chumps—were patting their kids on the head and loading the tuba into
the station wagon, I would receive my critique. “You were hesitating
in the second movement of the Haydn Variations.” “You over-anticipated
in the berceuse section of the Stravinsky.” “Your tone was excellent
in the first movement but then your chops ran out.” My brother, who
was forced for a number of years to play the French horn, was reduced
to a screaming fight with our father in the school parking lot, the
kind of fight only possible between fathers and sons. He’d bumbled
too many notes, played out of tune, committed some treasonous infraction
against the family reputation. My father gave him the business
on the way out to the car, eliciting the alto curses of a fourteen-year-old,
pages of music everywhere, an instrument case slammed on the pavement.
This sort of rebellion was not my style. I cried instead. I cried
in the seventh grade when the letter telling me I’d been accepted
to the North Jersey regional orchestra arrived three days late. I
cried in the tenth grade, when I ended up in the All State Band instead
of the orchestra. I cried when I thought I’d given a poor recital
(never mind that the audience thought I was brilliant—all morons),
cried before lessons (under-prepared), cried after lessons (sentenced
to a week of reviewing the loathsome F-sharp étude). Mostly I cried
during practice drills supervised by my father. These were torture
sessions wherein some innocent tooting would send my father racing
downstairs from his attic study, screaming “Count, count, you’re
not counting! Jesus Christ!” Out would come a pencil—if not an actual
conductor’s baton—hitting the music stand, forcing me to repeat the
tricky fingerings again and again, speeding up the tempo so I’d be
sure to hit each note when we took it back down to real time. These
sessions would last for hours, my mouth muscles shaking from atrophy,
tears welling up from fatigue and exasperation. If we had a copy
of the piano part, my mother would play the accompaniment, and together
my parents would bark commands. “Articulate the eighth notes more.
More staccato on the tonguing. Don’t tap your foot, tap your toe
inside your shoe.” The postman heard a lot of this. The neighbors
heard all of it. After practicing we’d eat dinner, but not before
that song—“There’s a smile on our face, and it seems to say all the
wonderful things . . . ” “Good practice session today,” my mother
would say, dishing out the casserole, WQXR’s Symphony Hall playing
over the kitchen speakers. “Yup, sounding pretty good,” my father would say. “How about one more go at it before bed?”
My mother called my oboe a “horn.” This infuriated me. “Do you
have your horn?” she’d ask every single morning. “Do you need your
horn for school today?” She maintained that this terminology was
technically correct, that among musicians, a “horn” was anything
into which air was blown. My oboe was a $4,000 instrument, high-grade
black grenadilla with sterling silver keys. It was no horn. But such
semantics are a staple of Music Is My Bag, the overfamiliar stance
that reveals a desperate need for subcultural affiliation, the musical
equivalent of people in the magazine business who refer to publications
like Glamour and Forbes as “books.” As is indicated by the use of “horn,” there’s
a subtly macho quality to Music Is My Bag. The persistent insecurity
of musicians, especially classical musicians, fosters a kind of jargon
that would be better confined to the military or major league baseball.
Cellists talk about rock stops and rosin as though they were comparing
canteen belts or brands of glove grease. They have their in-jokes and aphorisms, “The rock stops here,” “Eliminate Violins In Our Schools.”
I grew up surrounded by phrases like “rattle off that solo,” “nail
that lick,” and “build up your chops.” Like acid-washed jeans, “chops” is
a word that should only be invoked by rock and roll guitarists but
is more often uttered with the flailing, badly timed anti-authority
of the high school clarinet player. Like the violinist who plays “Eleanor
Rigby” before rehearsal, the clarinet player’s relationship to rock
and roll maintains its distance. Rock and roll is about sex. It is
something unloved by parents and therefore unloved by Music Is My
Bag people, who make a vocation of pleasing their parents, of studying
trig and volunteering at the hospital and making a run for the student
government even though they’re well aware they have no chance of
winning. Rock and roll is careless and unstudied. It might possibly
involve drinking. It most certainly involves dancing. It flies in
the face of the central identity of Music Is My Baggers, who chose
as their role models those painfully introverted characters from
young adult novels—“the klutz,” “the bookworm,” “the late bloomer.” When
given a classroom assignment to write about someone who inspires
her, Music Is My Bag will write about her grandfather or perhaps
Jean-Pierre Rampaul. If the bad-attitude kid in the back row writes
about AC/DC’s Angus Young, Music Is My Bag will believe in her heart
that this student should receive a failing grade. Rock and roll is
not, as her parents would say when the junior high drama club puts
on a production of Grease, “appropriate for this age group.” Even
in the throes of adolescence, Music Is My Bag will deny adolescence.
Even at age sixteen, she will hold her ears when the rock and roll
gets loud, saying it ruins her sense of overtones, saying she has
sensitive ears. Like a retiree, she will classify the whole genre
as nothing but a bunch of noise, though it is likely she is a fan of Yes.
During the years that I was a member of the New Jersey All State Orchestra
I would carpool to rehearsals with the four or so other
kids from my town who made All State every year. This involved
spending as much as two hours each way in station wagons driven by people’s
parents and, inevitably, the issue would arise of what music would
be played in the car. Among the most talented musicians in school
was a freshman who, in addition to being hired by the Boston Symphony
Orchestra at age twenty-two, possessed, as a fifteen-year-old, a
ripe enthusiasm for the singer Amy Grant. This was back in the mid-1980s
when Amy Grant’s hits were still relegated to the Christian charts.
Our flute-plaing carpool-mate loved Amy Grant. Next to Prokofiev
and the Hindemith Flute Sonata, Amy Grant occupied the number-one
spot in this girl’s studious, late-blooming heart. Since her mother,
like many parents of Baggers, was devoted solely to her daughter’s
musical and academic career, she did most of the driving to these
boony spots—Upper Chatham High School, Monmouth Regional, Long Branch
Middle School. Mile after New Jersey Turnpike mile, we were serenaded
by the wholesome synthesizers of songs like “Saved By Love” and “Wait
for the Healing,” only to spill out of the car and take no small
relief in the sound of twenty-five of New Jersey’s best student violinists
playing “Eleanor Rigby” before the six-hour rehearsal.
To participate in a six-hour rehearsal of the New Jersey All State Band or Orchestra
is to enter a world so permeated by Music Is My Bagdom that it becomes possible to confuse the subculture with
an entire species, as if Baggers, like lobsters or ferns, require special
conditions in order to thrive. Their ecosystem is the auditorium
and the adjacent band room, any space that makes use of risers.
To eat lunch and dinner in these venues is to see the accessories of
Badgom tumble from purses, knapsacks, and totes; here more than
anyplace are the real McCoys, actual Music Is My Bag bags, canvas satchels
filled with stereo Walkmen and A.P. math homework and Trapper Keeper
notebooks featuring the piano-playing Schroeder from the Peanuts
comic strip. The dinner break is when I would embark on oboe maintenance,
putting the reed in water, swabbing the instrument dry, removing
the wads of wax that, during my orthodontic years, I placed over
my front teeth to keep the inside of my mouth from bleeding. Just
as I had hated the entropy of recess back in my grade-school years,
I loathed the dinner breaks at All State rehearsals. To maximize
rehearsal time, the wind section often ate separately from the
strings, which left me alone with the band types. They’d wolf down their sandwiches
and commence with their jam session, a cacophonous white noise of
scales, finger exercises, and memorized excerpts from their hometown
marching band numbers. During these dinner breaks I’d generally hang
with the other oboist. For some reason, this was almost always a
tall girl who wore sneakers with corduroy pants and a turtleneck
with nothing over it. This is fairly typical Music Is My Bag garb,
though oboists have a particular spin on it, a spin characterized
more than anything by lack of spin. Given the absence in most classical
musicians of a style gene, this is probably a good thing. Oboists
don’t accessorize. They don’t wear buttons on their jackets that
say “Oboe Power” or “Who Are You Going to Tune To?”
There’s high-end Bagdom and low-end Bagdom, with a lot of room
in between. Despite my parents’ paramilitary practice regimes, I
have to give them credit for being fairly high-end Baggers. There
were no piano-key scarves in our house, no “World’s Greatest Trombonist” figurines,
no plastic tumblers left over from my father’s days as director of
the Stanford University Marching Band. Such accessories are the mandate
of the lowest tier of Music Is My Bag, a stratum whose mascot is
P.D.Q. Bach, whose theme song is “Piano Man,” and whose regional
representative is the kid in high school who plays not only the trumpet
but the piano, saxophone, flute, string bass, accordion, and wood
block. This kid, considered a wunderkind by his parents and the rest
of the band community, plays none of these instruments well, but
the fact that he knows so many different sets of fingerings, the
fact that he has the potential to earn some college money by performing
as a one-man band at the annual state teacher’s conference, makes
him a hometown hero. He may not be a football player. He may not
even gain access to the Ivy League. But in the realm of Music Is
My Bag, the kid who plays every instrument, particularly when he
can play Billy Joel songs on every instrument, is the Alpha Male.
The flip side of the one-man-band kid are those Music Is My Baggers who are not
musicians at all. These are the kids who twirl flags
or rifles in the marching band, kids who blast music in their rooms
and play not air guitar but air keyboards, their hands fluttering
out in front of them, the hand positions not nearly as important
as the attendant head motions. This is the essence of Bagdom. It
is to take greater pleasure in the reverb than the melody, to love
the lunch break more than the rehearsal, the rehearsal more than
the performance, the clarinet case more than the clarinet. It is
to think nothing of sending away for the deluxe packet of limited-edition
memorabilia that is being sold for the low, low price of one’s
entire personality. It is to let the trinkets do the talking.
I was twenty-one when I stopped playing the oboe. I wish I could come up with a
big, dramatic reason why. I wish I could say that I sustained some kind of injury that prevented me from playing
(it’s hard to imagine what kind of injury could sideline an oboist—a lip
strain? Carpal tunnel?) or that I was forced to sell my oboe in order
to help a family member in crisis or, better yet, that I suffered
a violent attack in which my oboe was used as a weapon against me
before being stolen and melted down for artillery. But the truth,
I’m ashamed to say, has more to do with what in college I considered
to be an exceptionally long walk from my dormitory to the music building,
and the fact that I was wrapped up in a lot of stuff that, from my
perspective at the time, precluded the nailing of Rachmaninoff licks.
Without the prodding of my parents or the structure of a state-run
music education program, my oboe career had to run on self-motivation
alone—not an abundant resource—and when my senior year started
I neither registered for private lessons nor signed up for the
orchestra, dodging countless calls from the director imploring me to reassume my chair.
Since then, I haven’t set foot in a rehearsal room, put together
a folding music stand, fussed with a reed, marked up music, practiced
scales, tuned an orchestra or performed any of the countless activities
that had dominated my existence up until that point. There are moments
every now and then when I’ll hear the oboe-dominated tenth movement
of the Bach Mass in B Minor or the berceuse section of Stravinsky’s
Firebird and long to find a workable reed and pick up the instrument
again. But then I imagine how terrible I’ll sound after eight dormant
years and put the whole idea out of my mind before I start to feel
sad about it. I can still smell the musty odor of the inside of
my oboe case, the old-ladyish whiff of the velvet lining and the
tubes of cork grease and the damp fabric of the key pads. Unlike the
computer on which I now work, my oboe had the sense of being an
ancient thing. Brittle and creaky, it was vulnerable when handled by strangers.
It needed to be packed up tight, dried out in just the right places,
kept away from the heat and the cold and from anyone stupid enough
to confuse it with a clarinet.
What I really miss about the oboe is having my hands on it. I could
come at that instrument from any direction or any angle and know
every indentation on every key, every spot that leaked air, every
nick on every square inch of wood. When enough years go by, the
corporeal qualities of an instrument become as familiar to its
player as, I imagine, those of a long-standing lover. Knowing precisely how
the weight of the oboe was distributed between my right thumb
and left wrist, knowing, above all, that the weight would feel the same
way every time, every day, for every year that I played, was
a feeling akin to having ten years of knowledge about the curve of someone’s
back. Since I stopped playing the oboe, I haven’t had the privilege
of that kind of familiarity. That’s not an exaggeration, merely a moot point.