Are you ready to talk about page turns? I realize that page turns may not seem like a captivating topic, However, if you’ve ever had a page turn go wrong in a moment when you don’t want to have anything go wrong, you know how important page turns are. Even in the age of bluetooth pedals, poorly prepared page turns can mar an otherwise lovely performance.
I’m warning you right now that page turning is a subject that I am liable to rant about, just ask my students. At our harp camp, Harp Quest Summer Live, the evening before our closing concert is spent making sure that all the students who have forgotten to prepare their pages take care of them. The mantra they hear from me is this: “No loose pages!” And then I usually tell them this story:
I was fourteen years old and accompanying our high school choir in a performance of Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms. This is a difficult work for chorus, and we were doing the version that is accompanied only by harp, organ and percussion. In the orchestral version there are two harp parts, and they are combined into just one part for this version, so you can imagine that the part is challenging.
This performance was a big deal for me, because I was still in junior high, and for this concert, actually two performances, I was accompanying the big kids. It felt really important. The first of the two performances went well. The second one was at a church. They provided a music stand for me, and it was one of those folding metal stands that are commonly referred to as wire stands.
Here’s where the page turns come into play. We were at the beginning of the third movement, and I went to turn my page and the music stand collapsed. That alone would have been a moment to remember, no matter how much I would want to forget it, but it was worse than that. The choir director had given me a photocopy of the original part to practice from, and that’s what I was using for the concert. Here’s the rub: I had never taped the pages together. So when my music stand collapsed, the pages went everywhere.
A good samaritan in the audience jumped up and gathered my pages and then I had to find the right ones and jump back in to play. While I wasn’t scarred for life, I did learn a powerful lesson about how to prepare and prevent page disasters in a performance.
Over the years, I learned a lot about the art of turning pages, not just taping them together, and I want to be sure you know them too. So trust me, you actually need to know how to manage, prepare and practice your page turns, whether you’re using paper or a pedal. And yes, you ned to practice them too.
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