Daniel Swenberg is one of the foremost players of early plucked instruments in this country, and we are so fortunate to have him come to Cincinnati to invest in our music and community. He is playing in Catacoustic's November 13 concert of Italian song. I recently asked him some questions to give us a sense of his life as a professional lute player.
Tell me about your musical background? What instrument did you
start on? How long have you been playing early plucked instruments?
When I was very young, I started Suzuki violin (a very brief
stint). I didn’t take to it. I took lessons, but it wasn’t my thing.
Eventually, I asked my parents to quit-- during a delusional phase of thinking
I'd be a basketball star! As a teenager who wanted to play guitar, I had to
petition my parents to prove my seriousness, taking classical, as well as rock
lessons.
I have been playing lute for around 22 years. I played guitar
before that. As a guitarist with a jazz background, I was interested in chamber
music and improvisation. When I went to North Carolina School for the Arts, it
was lute music that enthralled me. Before I graduated, I was playing lute music
and reading lute tablature on a seven stringed guitar.
What is a typical week in your life like? You travel so much. How
do you manage?
I spend roughly half of the year on the road: typically 150-180
days of the year. The week varies, depending on if I am on the road and where I
am. If I am out of town for a concert, I do fewer things but am able to be more
engaged in a single project. At home in NYC, I do more musical projects at once
and teach students. And my cats are very demanding of their lost time and
attention!
Travel can be tiring at times, but in general, I like it. I get
to meet great people and go to good cities and get to have wonderful
experiences. I end up in interesting places that I want to get to know better.
It is seldom that I am filled with regret.
How many types of early plucked strings do you play? How do you
keep them straight?
Within the lute world, I play Renaissance and Baroque solo lutes
and continuo instruments (guitar, theorbo, and archlute). I also play 19th
century guitar and mandolin. I own approximately 20 instruments in slightly
different variations. I play around 7 different types on a regular basis and
keep them at the ready for a recital at a month’s notice. Consistently, I play
all the types of lutes. This is common of other lute players, but I play a few
more than is typical. (Dave Walker, Lucas Harris, and I keep a similar
routine.) Most early plucked instrumentalists focus on one type of lute,
theorbo, and guitar. My interest in 19th-cent guitar, Renaissance,
Baroque, and French instruments may be a bit excessive… I think I can credit
and blame my mentor and friend Pat O’Brien for that – his interest in the
variety of plucked instruments and their colorful history is a fascination that
he encouraged.
What is your favorite type instrument to play?
My favorite instrument is theorbo and the variety you can play as
a continuo instrument. It is a strange instrument, with a wacky tuning, but I think
I understand it pretty well. If I were going to a desert island, I would bring
a 17/18th-century (Baroque) lute. I love the repertoire, and the
instrument is ingenious.
What do you think of early music in the US now? Audience perception? Playing
level of musicians?
The performance level keeps getting better. I am encouraged,
teaching at Juilliard and University of North Texas, by how many students
continue to be interested in the field and can play at such a high level –
amateurs, as well. With the Internet and groups like the NY Continuo
Collective, it is easier to find teachers and people to play with. It keeps
getting better.
Audiences remain what they are.
There was a time when early music seemed new and exciting and a reaction
against classical music - and had that energy. As we age, that has disappeared
a bit. I hope that more young people get exposed to classical music… This
exposure is so much less than what it was when I was a child. More people need
to come to concerts and appreciate some of the subtleties. Early music is like
a sports game: if you watch it for the first time, you won’t be hooked. You
need to know the how the plays work and appreciate the subtleties to be hooked.
Where do you see the future of early music in the US?
I teach in NY at Juilliard where many people come from all over
the world, and many end up staying there after graduation. They start groups
there, and it is great. However, I hope that ultimately people will go back to
more of the mid-sized cities (like Cincinnati) and start wonderful series and
groups there. Early music should not be just a San Francisco, Toronto, Boston,
and NYC world. They need to spread the gospel.
What should someone do, if they are interested in beginning or
playing the lute or theorbo more seriously?
That depends on where they live. Find out if there is a good teacher
nearby by going to the Internet and visit the Lute Society of America’s webpage
to find out about possible resources. There are plenty of rental instruments,
and the Lute Society holds summer and
winter meetings/workshops where you could get experience. Large cities are
certainly easier. In Cincinnati or northern Kentucky, you could go to the Lute
Society meetings and rent an instrument. With Catacoustic there is always a
bevvy of good lute players coming through. Chris Wilke, Dieter Hennings
(Lexington), Tina Gutierrez, and Larry Brown are all local players who could
help keep their enthusiasm going.
All photos taken by Tina Gutierrez
http://www.tinagutierrezartsphotography.com
1 comment:
Enjoyed your concert at the Bach Festival.
In contrast with melancholy in the usual sense, true depression is characterized by anhedonia--the inability to enjoy, or even feel, including sadness, or tears; sleeplessness, inability to sleep, lack of energy, feelings of worthlessness, frequently to a delusional degree. Certainly agree that one in this state would be incapable of appreciating your poignantly sad songs.
Thank you,
Bill Donovan MD
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