Sarah Catherine Pomeroy, attorney at law and pianist
My daughter Sarah is an amateur pianist. She is 24 now, and started taking lessons when she was either 6 or 7. I cannot recall exactly now, as the years have passed. The piano has always been a part of Sarah's life, and I noticed her musicality even at a young age.
When I was a young mother, I had a book of Disney themes for the piano. Sarah particularly enjoyed the theme to Winnie-the-Pooh, and the Mickey Mouse Club march. Our piano was always in the living room, so there was a room completely devoted to the piano Sarah would often sit on the little sofa in the living room and she often held a wooden stick. Sarah would point the stick at me and command that I play Winnie - the - Pooh, or Mickey Mouse Club, and she would march around the room. As soon as I stopped she would demand, that I play it again.
I often would sit her on my lap and point out the keys or the notes, or let her plink out any notes she wanted while I played. Sarah was fascinated with the instrument, and quickly decided that she wanted to take lessons.
I think she started lessons with the amazing Madeline Karn in 1st or 2nd grade. Sarah seemed to pick up the piano quickly, and along with her Piano Adventures series of books, I always made sure that Sarah also had a book or piece of music that she chose. I remember when she had a beginning book of "Peanuts" music, and how much that book influenced her playing. In fact I think she has a real talent for jazz piano playing, and I could see her taking that talent to another level at some point in her life.
Sarah's lessons continued through school, and sports and marching band. Piano was simply part of her life, and she never waivered in her commitment to the instrument. As she progressed, Sarah often practiced while I was making dinner. I may have been sautee-ing chicken, but I was also listening to a steady progression of Bach, and Beethoven and Schubert, along with Disney tunes and songs from Broadway shows.
Sarah's teacher Madeline Karn did not have a yearly piano recital to my regret, but when Sarah was a senior she did perform a senior recital. At first, when I saw her ambitious program I started to get heart palpitations, but as I listened to her practice I saw that the program was something she could accomplish.
The evening of her recital I was so touched by the people in attendance, relatives, friends, some of her teachers....it was so incredible. Sarah started the evening playing Always, which was my mom's favorite song. My mom had died in 2004, and the recital was in 2008, so she was unable to attend.
It was simply so incredible.
Sarah played Schubert, Scott Joplin, and many other incredible pieces. She also did her own rendition of Take Five by Dave Brubeck...it was a wonderful evening.
Sarah just graduated from law school at Ohio State this past week. She is studying for the bar examination now, and I think piano playing will consist of short intervals to play out her stress. Sarah is moving to Washington DC in October and I am going to miss the impromptu dinner time concerts. She kept the piano side of her on the "down low" throughout law school, but she did play at the law school talent show, and I hope that her law colleagues, saw that it is the piano that really makes her the incredible person she is today. When she is at the piano, she goes to a deep musical place, to spread the joy that she feels about this beloved instrument.
For some reason when she is at the piano, she isn't Sarah the student, or Sarah the leader, or Sarah the extrovert, instead she is a vehicle to play out the musical message, taking the essence of the music, to the people she cares so much about. By playing the piano, she is saying, forget everything you think about me and what you preconceive about me, and listen to the music I am creating for you.
Right now she is planning to buy a piano and take it with her to Washington DC. I would like to think that someday she will trade me, and I will take her small apartment piano to an assisted living facility and she will take my beautiful, black, six- foot Baldwin Grand to a wonderful home where music and the piano will be the center of her family's home and life.
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