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During my student years at the
University of Kansas, with my teacher, Sequeira Costa,
his step daughter, and other students in his studio,
Lawrence, Kansas, USA, 1992.
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During the ceremony of the "Outstanding Graduate Teaching
Assistant Award," with the Chancellor of the University
of Kansas, Gene Budig, Lawrence, Kansas, USA, 1992.
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At
age three I was introduced to movement, painting, and music.
The first of these happened in my mother’s ballet
school, the Estúdio Escola de Dança Clássica
de Anna Mascolo. There, I emulated flowers, insects,
clouds, etc., and explored feelings through motion and
gesture. As
I aged, movement classes gave way to formal ballet apprenticeship.
I soon realized that body control and flexibility enhanced
my overall performance of daily tasks (including practicing
and performing at the piano). My painting classes in the
studio of Cecília Menano were plain fun! Even though
I had limited talent for expression through the visual
arts, I enjoyed attempting to draw people, animals, flowers,
and
landscapes. The people in my drawings often looked more
like toothpicks with awkward limbs, and my cats and dogs
resembled
extra-terrestrial creatures. But as long as my imagination
had an outlet, I was happy. Music, however, was the only
means of expression that had the ability to carry me into
deeper states of mind. The sounds produced by the piano
and the feeling of its keys under my fingertips fascinated
me
from the start. At the piano, I felt comfortable expressing
my innermost feelings with complete freedom, and living
otherwise unlivable fantasies. The instrument became a
close friend
of mine, an accomplice in the creative process.
With Gil Miranda, one
of my first music teachers, Oberlin, Ohio, USA,
2002.
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With Sharon Miranda, Gil
Miranda's wife, also one of my first music teachers,
Oberlin, Ohio, USA,
2002.
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I
attended the Saint Cecília
Music Academy in Lisbon, starting at age three, where my
main teachers were Gil and Sharon Miranda. After loosing
touch with them for several decades, I recently learned
that they had relocated to the USA many years ago. Gil
served on the music faculty at the Oberlin Conservatory
of Music, in Oberlin, Ohio, until his retirement in 2002.
At age six, I began formal piano studies with Professor
Noémia de Brederode, in Lisbon. Her love of music
was so exhilarating and contagious, that I couldn’t
help but feel the same way. I later enrolled in the National
Conservatory, where I continued to study with Professor
Brederode. Two years before graduating from the Conservatory,
I began private lessons with Professor Tania Achot, who
introduced me to a different technical approach to the
piano. Whereas Professor Brederode favored a method based
on a steady arm and active articulation of the fingers,
Professor Achot focused on the arm weight and the independence
of the fingers. In the meantime, I transferred to the Oporto
Conservatory of Music, where I received the diploma in
piano with honors. I left Portugal in 1982 to attend the University
of Kansas because, at that time, there were no institutions
of graduate education in music performance. At Kansas,
I earned my Doctor of Musical Arts degree, under the guidance
of Sequeira
Costa, who studied with Mark Hamburg, Edwin Fischer,
Marguerite Long, Jacques Février and Vianna da Motta
(one of the last pupils of Franz Liszt and Hans von Bülow).
With Sequeira Costa, my
piano teacher at the University of Kansas, during
one of my visits back to Lawrence, Kansas, USA,
1994.
Graduate Doctoral Hooding Ceremony, with Dr. J. Bunker
Clark, at the Leeds Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence,
Kansas, USA, 1997. |
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Later,
still in the USA,
I studied with
Edna
Golandsky in New York City,
and Joseph Gurt of Eastern Michigan
University, two of the leading
proponents of the Dorothy Taubman’s
approach to piano technique. Dorothy
Taubman spent over
forty five years studying and researching
piano pedagogy, and developed a
piano technique based
on the scientific understanding
of the human body and of the laws
of
motion.I met both Edna and Joe
in 1991, during
one of the annual Dorothy Taubman
Piano Institute
workshops, in Amherst, Massachusetts.
Due to
the pressures
of building a vast repertoire in
little time, and
to practicing many consecutive
hours without proper awareness
of the alignment
of arm
and hand movements,
I developed severe tendonitis.
To my dismay, I realized that,
unless
I changed
my technique
entirely,
I would never be able to play the
piano again. The Taubman lessons
enabled
me
to return
to playing and to improve and strengthen
my technical
skills
considerably.
I have been pain-free ever since I attended
the workshop in 1991, and have
also learned repertoire that, prior
to that time, I had considered beyond
my
reach.
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©2004
ALEXANDRA MASCOLO-DAVID |
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