Becoming a Ricci Artist

Dear Friends!

I've got some great news to share

It's been a while since I've written here. I've spent the summertime having some quiet reflection and rest. I hope you had some of the same, or whatever is most important to you.

So, it's been several years that I've been looking for a great travel cello. Things have gotten so complicated with the airlines that it's virtually impossible to travel with a cello without a separate seat for it, which is prohibitive for presenters. Recently, my musical partner Beatrix Becker introduced me to Ricci Carbon Instruments of Salzburg, which sponsored our last European duo tour by supplying a cello. I was amazed by the quality of the sound and the ease of playing. The Ricci did what no other carbon cello I've tried can: it succeeded in both an ensemble and a solo setting. Audiences loved the sound and I felt comfortable sharing my music through its voice. See the photo above for its beautiful natural appearance. And I never had to worry when checking it at the airport- it's mighty strong.

Because of my enthusiasm for the cello, Ricci and I have teamed up to make me an official Ricci Artist, playing their cellos, helping to find them a home and make a name here in the States. It's very exciting to me to finally have an instrument of this caliber that I can travel with without worry- it really takes the edge off!

I'll be playing the Ricci at my next solo show, here in Brooklyn, October 21st. Come hear it and me do our thing. I'll be singing and playing some new material that's been percolating over the summer. I hope you can join me there! It'll be an intimate evening to share music and thoughts together. Here's a link for tickets.

with love and gratitude,
Noah

A Week's Worth
The NYC skyline from Brooklyn

The NYC skyline from Brooklyn

It's been a terrific week of music and experience. I started at home in New York  with a recording session with the great Natalie Merchant. I played cello in a string quartet with piano and her amazingly iconic and powerful voice. It was a real privilege to be a part of this special album, a part of the Carnegie Hall Lullaby Project, which sends songwriters to cowrite lullabies with mothers in prisons and shelters.  

yesterday i arrived in LA, to perform and record with the wonderful composer and pianist Peter Adams. Here's a view of the Pacific Coast this am. Enjoy the weekend. I hope to see you at a show or elsewhere soon!

-Noah

 

Elegy for David Bowie

SAINT BOWIE: Dedicated to the Orlando victims and their families.

I was planning to release my Elegy for David Bowie today, which I feared would be too late, but I see that the timing is actually just right. This sad week of the massacre in Orlando is a good time to celebrate Bowie, to be consoled by his bravery. Nobody did more to open the pathways to sexual and gender freedom than David. Please share this video.

In this piece of original music for cello, I'm joined by the wonderful Wells Hanley on piano. The recording was mixed by Mark Plati, Bowie's longtime co-producer, music director and friend. 

David was a messenger from another realm. The Man Who Fell to Earth wasn't just a movie role. He came from another planet, another space and time in which Freedom is just another part of life. Where being a sexually diverse being is normal and why wouldn't everyone appreciate that? He shared that vision with a planet just beginning to rotate into sexual freedom- when Space Oddity hit the airwaves in 1969, mainstream America was just figuring out that you don't have to be married to have intercourse. David’s being was so far beyond that envelope, somehow representing the entire spectrum of sexual possibility and gender identification, a single flash of his physicality sufficient to convey a huge throb of freedom. As the tweets of the Arab Spring called dissidents to mass demonstrations, David’s body language sent climactic shudders down the spine of Western sexuality, calling us to throw off the tyranny of the heteronormative and gender binary. In his music, he gave the bird to the monolithic shame which obscures our complex sexuality- helping millions to shine a light into previously darkened corners of existence.

What a service he did his adopted planet. Whether we identify as LGBTQ or identify with them, empathizing with their path of freedom, we can appreciate the changes Bowie brought with him to Earth. To live under the dumbed-down version of sexuality and gender provided by the mainstream is to accept a lesser view of ourselves as humans. Without the much deeper, complete view of who we are as sexual beings, we’re forced to settle for a broken mirror. Seeing ourselves through the shards of this pane damages our ability to fully know ourselves. And if the Oracle’s imperative, ‘Know thyself,’ is the key to our well-being, we can never truly be well.

As a teenager silently struggling to recover from sexual abuse and to understand my own place in the sexiverse, David held up a looking glass that was fully whole. I’ve said many times that he saved my life, and I say it again because it’s true. No one in my life was so able to reflect to me the alright-ness of my experience and inner world. And I think this was true for so many hundreds of thousands, largely because of the enforced code of silence and shame around sexual and gender diversity. David penetrated those private places without us even needing to speak of our struggles. Flying his UFO of radio and record, he came right into our worlds and healed us, lightening our burdens and removing our grief. If you want to assess his impact on our culture, just imagine if he hadn't been here; imagine the breadth of personal devastation had he not descended to Earth. Massive worldwide mourning at his death and ascension reflect the impact he had not just on the world of sound, but on the inner world. And to address his impact on sexuality is to address only one facet of his complex and radical impact on society.

So with these words, I bow down to Saint Bowie and I give thanks for his tremendous impact on my life, knowing that his influence will remain forever. The Changes he brought us can never be undone.