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Musically related or otherwise.
Everyone does (makes a fool of themselves) at times .... i would hope
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heck yes! When I was a performance major, I had a few performances where I think I sounded like 5 year old kid with ADHD. There are days when you just don't bring it and you end up looking like a total chump. The worst part is when people come up to you and say "that was very good" or, "it wasn't too bad". You know when you've made a fool of yourself. But yes, it happens to everyone at some stage.
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I'm about to do it at a jazz festival next week. A drummer who I know from the gym asked me if I were interested in playing at a local jazz festival. He thought an opening might occur and I simply agreed without knowing all the ins and outs.
I've played all kinds of jazz in my life to include other types of music like rock and pop. Well, it seems the cafe's owner wants the group to cater to a younger crowd and now I've been sent pdf's and jpegs of rock music and other music I hopefully thought I had left behind.
On top of that there's guitarist and unless he's really good there's always a chance that he'll insist on playing all the time. As a piano player I prefer to switch off and let the guitarist play and let him use his chords, but I've found in practice the guitarist's thinking isn't reciprocal. (Having two chord instruments can make things cluttered ... and louder.)
There's also a trumpeter and a singer. I was hoping for a piano trio or maybe a quartet where I'm pretty much calling the shots, but since the drummer booked it, I would assume he's in charge.
It doesn't pay much and since I've agreed I'm already locked in.
We're getting together (all six of us) Wednesday at my house for a rehearsal. One remote but possible plus, maybe, just maybe the singer has her own sound system and I don't have to schlep all my stuff (which is five trips back and forth to the car ... for the same money that everyone else makes). I'll get there at least 90 minutes ahead of time just to set up. Most singers will show up shortly before with a mic and cable as optional accessories.
I'm not a happy camper but I have myself to blame.
Note to self ... Ear plugs, don't forget ear plugs.
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On a daily basis! That's who I am.
Regards,
BruceD - - - - - Estonia 190
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No. Never.
(And for whoever believes that, PM me cuz I have a bridge I'd like to sell you!)
Lee
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Yeah, fall semester I didn't have a piece memorized for my jury. That was fun...
I still got a B, lol.
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On a daily basis! That's who I am.
Regards, Same here. Actually, with me, maybe several times a day. As I get older it bothers me less and less.
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Anyone who looks at this site knows the answer.
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Yeah, fall semester I didn't have a piece memorized for my jury. That was fun...
I still got a B, lol. Oye. I know the feeling. My first semester I decided to play the entirety of Beethoven's Op 27 No 2. Where do I have a memory slip? The first movement. Everything else went well.
Conservatory of Music @ Brooklyn College Piano Performance, Class of 2014
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At the time this happened, I was mortified, but now, I wish I had a video of it to post on YouTube ('cause it would be much more popular/enjoyable than my actual playing!): Somehow in high school--because I could sing really well--I was accepted into the "show choir"--i.e., singing and dancing simultaneously ... Bad news, as I am NOT a dancer ... During a rehearsal, I wasn't paying attention and walked backwards off the edge of the stage, went over the top of the upright piano in the orchestra pit, and planted myself, butt first, in a rather small garbage can ... (Thank God it was empty!) I am totally blind, but I would've given anything to see people's faces at that one moment--the silence was delicious!
I am no klutzier than average because I'm blind, although this fact gets lost on a lot of people.
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I once walked on stage to perform, bowed for the audience, turned around, and realized that there was no piano bench. The audience all started laughing. I scanned around and saw the bench (one of the really heavy ones!) positioned at the far corner of the stage. The stage hands did not notice what was going on, so I had to walk across the stage and move it in place (while everyone continued laughing...). I now laugh telling the story myself :-)
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HMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM.
I have:
-Passed out onstage (I had the flu and was trying to be a hardass by not cancelling). -Tripped while walking onstage for a concerto performance (a few PW people witnessed this). -Put photocopies of accompaniments/chamber music in a new binder upside down or out of order and didn't realize it until you know when. -Knocked my glasses off of my face. -Tripped when reaching inside the piano during contemporary pieces (Crumb, etc.). -Dropped things inside the piano during contemporary pieces (nothing beats a good old BOOM, SCRAPE, BUZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ during the softest moments). -Driven to the wrong venue. -Driven to the wrong STATE. -Booked plane tickets from B to A instead of A to B. -Shown up with the wrong music. -When doing a phone interview for a job, I forgot about that whole "time zones" thing and did the interview in my car in the parking lot of a McDonald's. On the flip side, I was pretty relaxed and had a great interview (didn't get the job, though!). -Forgotten ties, belts, socks, pants, shirts, jackets, etc. -Double-booked recitals. -Not really my fault, but a recent gig somehow printed my bio and headshot from about 10 years ago (even though I sent them my current press kit). Apparently I'm a strapping young lad and finishing up my undergrad! -Also not my fault, but I've been advertised (and paid) as "Braden Kaliska". The bank still cashed the check, thankfully.
Most of this stuff doesn't happen on a regular basis, but it's always funny (retrospectively) when it does.
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-Also not my fault, but I've been advertised (and paid) as "Braden Kaliska". The bank still cashed the check, thankfully.
It's actually kind of amazing what a bank will cash sometimes, particularly when you deposit the whole thing.
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During a recital a friend and I were doing a duet, and the airconditioner turned on; blowing her pages off, and I kept playing while laughing like an idiot On a side note, I once slipped and fell on a wet floor while carrying "wet floor" caution signs.
Last edited by Mozart'sGal; 05/21/12 12:12 AM.
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“It’s not what your are, it’s what you don’t become that hurts.†~Oscar Levant
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Not exactly making a fool and it's a friend of mine
We sat at the very last row in the cavernous Alice Tully Hall (before renovation) for a concert by Fou Ts'ong. We had just read an newspaper article in which Fou Ts'ong said something about noises made by the audience and how that affected his performance.
Throughout the performance my friend used her pair of opera binoculars to look at Fou Ts'ong. Fou Ts'song was playing his last piece (a Beethoven Sonata) and my friend proceeded to fold and put away the pair of binoculars and in doing so made a surprisingly loud and high piercing noise. I saw Fou Ts'ong abruptly turned his head at our direction with a decidely unpleased expression on his face and I thought so did everyone in the audience. I was so embarrassed.
Last edited by newport; 05/21/12 12:56 AM.
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-Also not my fault, but I've been advertised (and paid) as "Braden Kaliska". The bank still cashed the check, thankfully.
It's actually kind of amazing what a bank will cash sometimes, particularly when you deposit the whole thing. Only in the US of A.
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I was giving a concert with introductions to the pieces I was playing, so I had a wireless mic clipped onto my tie. It didn't pick up any piano sounds (I tested), so I just kept it turned on during my playing. At intermission, I went back to the green room, where I was greeted by my then girlfriend, who congratulated me on my playing, made some seductive comments about my anatomy, and then groped me. I responded in kind, THEN realized that my mic was still on. I turned it off, and did not go out to ask anyone whether the signal had made it into the hall. I didn't want to know! After the concert, I was greeting audience and again forgot the mic. Turns out that out that the mic signal could pass through one brick wall from the meet-and-greet room (moderately embarrassing), but not through three or four walls from the greenroom. Whew!
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I'm about to go make a fool out of myself. I have an 8 am ear training final today. It's far too early to sight sing in mezzo-soprano clef...
Conservatory of Music @ Brooklyn College Piano Performance, Class of 2014
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I'm about to go make a fool out of myself. I have an 8 am ear training final today. It's far too early to sight sing in mezzo-soprano clef... I am so happy I am done with Aural Theory and Sight Singing. Good luck with your final.
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Years ago I was paid for a concert dedicating a new piano in a church. I borrowed a dress from a neighbor (didn't play in it first). In the middle of a Rachmaninov Prelude the dress slipped down off of my shoulder revealing my strapless bra considerably on the audience side. OMG!
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Well this one time I entered a concerto competition and I had a bad memory slip and there was maybe three seconds of complete silence and I dropped the f-bomb. Apparently it was loud enough for the judges to hear, and my teacher got kind of upset with me. I was pretty embarrassed then, but it's pretty funny to think about now looking back on it.
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Began "playing" the intro to a Sondheim song on a digital without plugging it in.
Starting "singing" along with a chorus and the conductor had to come over and remind me to shut up.
Forgot to come in for about the first minute of Amahl and the Night Visitors.
Had the bench break while I was practicing.
Played two wrong notes during a performance of Petrouchka.
Last edited by pianoloverus; 05/21/12 03:45 PM.
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I played like an idiot in a master class for Ralph Votapek once. And I had just been talked into getting a "Peter Brady" perm (hey, they were in fashion again for a nanosecond around 1990). So I looked like an idiot, also.
And I think he was still upset about a bad review HE had gotten for the same piece I played.
And he'd just been a judge at the Tchaikovsky Competition and had that level of playing still ringing in his ears.
Bad situation all around.
WhoDwaldi Howard (by Kawai) 5' 10"
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Oh, also, I had to play for a voice jury once immediately after P.E., forgot to take a dress shirt to change into, and had to perform in a dirty P.E. uniform T-shirt with nice dress pants.
WhoDwaldi Howard (by Kawai) 5' 10"
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Yes I have. On what is arguably the most recognized concert venue in the world, albeit in the small hall. I still call it my debut though...and what a debut it was, to open an e minor sonata in D major.
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Yes, but I'm not going to post it here for all the world to see!
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(...) Played two wrong notes during a performance of Petrouchka.
Horrors.
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Yes...mainly at high school.
1) In year 7, me and my friend accidentally spilt a small vial of silver nitrate all over our dresses, and we only realised when we went out in the sun...
2) I was so eager to answer a question that I shot my hand up into the air and flicked off my glasses (by accident)
3) I was in a school play (i had a singing part) and I had to dance as well. However, my partner for the dance wasn't there, so I had to spin like a top all by myself while everybody else on stay did their spin with the partner...
4) I coughed so much during a orchestra rehearsal (i'm in the orchestra playing turmpet) that I had to grab my bottle and gulp the whole thing with everybody staring at me...
HSC pieces: Shostakovich Piano Concerto op 102. movement 1 Chopin Op10 No1 Debussy Broulliards Preludes Bk1 Kats-Chernin Russian Rag Messiaen Regard d'letoile Mozart Sonata for 2 pianos D major
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Years ago I was paid for a concert dedicating a new piano in a church. I borrowed a dress from a neighbor (didn't play in it first). In the middle of a Rachmaninov Prelude the dress slipped down off of my shoulder revealing my strapless bra considerably on the audience side. OMG! At least the bra stayed on! I was at a high school arts program reunion concert and a singer's strapless dress and bra slipped down far enough to show more than most of the audience wanted to see. The MC came onstage after she sang with a very red face... The last time I embarrassed myself on stage was when I was accompanying two singers in a row. I started playing the second guy's piece in the same key as the previous song so I stopped and started over. But I had my music - another accompanist got on stage and then realized he didn't have the singer's music in his binder.
Last edited by Arghhh; 05/22/12 02:17 PM.
Professional pianist and piano teacher.
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Musically related or otherwise.
Everyone does (makes a fool of themselves) at times .... i would hope Are you kidding? One night while playing at some function with my band, we were doing Color My World by Chicago, “old songâ€. Anyway, on the second verse my mind went blank and I totally lost where I was on the keyboard. Thank goodness the guitar player picked up where I left off during my 30 second temporary Acoma. It was a total brain freeze. I felt like an idiot. This is what happens when you play a series of chords over and over again for so many times, you do it automatically to where you can actually think about of other things while playing but then suddenly, a thought enters your mind and cuts off that magic automatic motor connection. You end up feeling like a fool because you weren't paying attention to your music.
Last edited by RUSS SHETTLE; 05/22/12 02:57 PM.
Russ Yamaha CP5 Casio PX130 Yamaha AP Upright
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I make a fool of myself pretty much on a daily basis. Right now, no hilarious stories really stick out, so hopefully I'll think of a few later. But one time, back when I didn't have Internet, a TV (still don't want one of those), or newspaper, and I was caught up in a whirlwind of accompanying (i.e. not connected to the world), I missed daylight savings time. This made my ETA at my church gig an hour later than it should have been, and I didn't realize that anything was wrong until I marched in and settled down on the piano bench, supposedly 20 minutes prior to service as usual. I was apparently so caught up in my own world that it took me a second to realize that everyone was staring at me, and the pastor had stopped her sermon to wait for some divine inspiration with which to make fun of me. Ultimately it came in the form of something like "Yes...God is patient with all of us, even when we have to wait for Goldberg as he walks in, casually pretending not to know about daylight savings time."
I've also had more than my fair share of missing chamber scores, mixing up rehearsal/lesson times (I hate those "where are you??" calls when I think I'm done for the day and have settled down with some tea. My first response is "I'm sorry, I got caught up at a doctor's appointment. I just left...be there in 5!"), and finding out on stage that I forgot to practice that ONE impossible spot in someone's concerto reduction. Well, I am always learning from these experiences, and I'm glad I have them in school rather than out in the real world!
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Thanks for your responses and stories. I'm not sure what prompted me to bring up this topic. I didn't have anything personally in mind , as far as making a 'fool of myself'. In fact I felt I had perhaps made a fool of myself here on PW (not the first time, at least from my perspective) and hesitated to click on this thread the morning after submitting it, to see what response it had garnered. I appreciate your stories and can empathize with the many mishaps mentioned. Sometimes it just feels right to be a bit foolish. Take a step in to unknown territory, a gut feeling , a risk... in the uncertainty of outcome. A couple of summers ago I was at a large outdoor festival/concert weekend event. We had been experiencing a summer heat wave the past 3 days and it caught up with me the last evening as I wandered up close to the big stage for the last headline performance. It ended up being delayed for an hour after the previous act, with sound setup. I started feeling not well, like I may have to get out of there quick. Around this same time the band started playing with very enthusiastic response from the crowd. It had just turned dark outside, I was surrounded by a few thousand people, and rather squished in... as I was close to the front of stage. Squeezing my way through a sea of people didn't appear to be an option, especially in the state I was feeling. An idea occurred to me. What about just sitting down on the very ground I was standing upon. This seemed ridiculous as everyone else was standing, gesticulating, dancing in tight quarters and that kind of crowd movement that happens in a wave of excitement. A rarity for me to be in this setting. What the hel. I just trusted it would be okay and sat down on the field beneath me cross legged. Wow... first thing that struck me was how cool the music sounded, with all these bodies surrounding/above me blanketing the higher frequencies of a very loud amplification, leaving a warm, deep resonant sound. Even though commotion was going on all around me, no one bumped in to me during the 10 minutes or so that I sat and took to recover. A moment after I sat down, a young woman leans down and shouts if I'm okay (very thoughtful). I said, "Thanks, I think it will be okay. You ought to sit down for a moment though and check out this sound from down here." So she did, much to the chagrin of what appeared to be her boyfriend. She and I were having a lovely little chat and enjoying the music from this unique perspective. Finally her boyfriend got over his pride and embarrassment and joined us. We all sat for a few moments and then I expressed my thanks and the wave of illness I had felt seemed to have passed. We all stood up, exchanged good wishes, they drifted off, and I enjoyed a great performance to wrap up the festival.
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Many years ago, on my travels around Europe, I was in Sweden in the company of a German girl called Brigitte (we met on a train in Norway, and decide we'd travel together for a while, as one does... ). She was into classical music and we spent a lot of time listening to my Walkman when waiting for trains or walking in parks and museums. In Stockholm, we visited the beautiful Drottningholm Palace, and heard some lovely music from inside the theatre, and decided to investigate. As we went in, we heard the strains of Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro. We opened a door, and found ourselves looking at the stage, and the singers, and the orchestra, and the....audience, all dressed up in finery. There was a performance on. And we were in T-shirts & jeans, and had nearly walked onto the stage just as Cherubino was about to sing 'Voi che sapete'......
If music be the food of love, play on!
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I just now remembered this. I was playing a concert and the leader called up a song (for the big band and singer) which started with a piano introduction. I didn't have my music in front of me and played from memory but in the wrong key.
The singer was a pro and nailed her part correctly.
Lesson learned. If you're not ready to play, make it known.
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Yes, but I'm not going to post it here for all the world to see! +1
Recovering cellist, amateur pianist. Check out my blog !
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Oh yes, and once when I was playing trumpet with my school orchestra, I had a most obvious slip...We were playing Mama Mia, and I had the melody. Well, I wasn't quite used to the constant repeats (I think there were 5 in total?!) and I began to repeat the 'Mama mia. Here I go again' section the 6th time...until I realised that everybody else was playing the section after it...:X XD!!! But it was funny.
HSC pieces: Shostakovich Piano Concerto op 102. movement 1 Chopin Op10 No1 Debussy Broulliards Preludes Bk1 Kats-Chernin Russian Rag Messiaen Regard d'letoile Mozart Sonata for 2 pianos D major
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Yes I played some Bach and I forgot a whole section. Stopped and looked at the audience and I heard myself saying "I apologize" and then I looked back at the keys and continued from where I left off. That was very stupid of me.
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i've made a fool of myself SO many times! But it's making a fool of yourself that makes life interesting and fun.
All theory, dear friend, is grey, but the golden tree of life springs ever green.
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My first performance was for my piano class for my final exam, sophomore year of highschool '11-'12. Our school has a large auditorium (that is were we performed our pieces). I was the best in the class so they all made me go last. My nerves were building up the whole time. Finally when I got up to the piano on stage, I had so many "butterflies" that I could hardly stand it. I sat down at the piano and started playing Clair de Lune. I literally gronked the the second chord! It was so embarrassing. I didn't make any mistakes after that though. I just kept telling myself, "after this is summer break" and that calmed my mind. Besides, the nerves go away after a while anyway. Still - it was so embarrassing. The second chord.. I mean c'mon!
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Piano
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Piano
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