Lots
of music, lots of instruments
Amy Rosenthal
started playing the violin at five. Then, there was the piano
at seven. Since then, there's been the flute and viola. To
come, the cello and maybe more.
The 13-year-old
has had success. She's the 2003-04 Kenneth R. Mares Scholarship
winner at the Webster University Community Music School.
The scholarship
helps to fund her music lessons and also makes her a spokesperson
for the music school. She's asked to perform at various functions
sponsored by the school.
But, the seventh
grader at John Burroughs School isn't sure she wants a career
in music.
Amy said, "I've
been considering a career in science, maybe as a doctor. I
really like math and science in school."
But, for now,
she's involved in all kinds of music and musical instruments.
One of her new
efforts is practicing as a violin duet with Sarite Brown,.
They have a recital coming up this month.
"We met at
the Webster Music School. We've been trying to practice at
least once a week," Amy said.
She started violin
lessons, using the Suzuki method, at age five. She used a
quarter-sized violin at that time. Her mother, Debby, started
at the same time. Debby said, "It was something we could
do together."
Amy's been taking
lessons ever since, progressing through a half-, three-quarter
and finally a full-sized violin. She now takes lessons with
Susan McDonald at the Webster Music School.
The piano lessons
started two years after those on the violin. She now has piano
lessons with Sandra Geary of the music school.
Her recital playing
started shortly after the beginning of the lessons.
Amy admits that
she gets more nervous now before a recital than she did when
she was younger.
"Now, the
music is harder, I've worked on it harder and there are more
ways to mess up," she said.
And when the audience
is larger, that helps make her more nervous. Her largest audience
for a solo piano recital has been 200. But, she's also played
in an orchestra before an audience over 1,000.
With all the instruments
she plays, Amy has had experience of playing complicated pieces
on some and easier ones on others.
For instance,
she just started playing the viola last summer. She plays
the viola with the John Burroughs orchestra. Most of those
players haven't had as much overall musical experience as
Amy.
But, she's also
much less experienced on the viola than on the violin or piano.
Like most musicians,
Amy sometimes gets bored with practice. "I get tired
of a piece. But, then I'll take a week off from it and then
I like it again," she said.
Amy said the best
experiences she's had in music are associated with summer
music camps in Aspen, Colorado. She said, "The camps
have hundreds of kids from all over the world."
The camps are
held in ski resorts which are devoid of skiers in the summer.
There's a wide
variety of classes, ranging from full orchestra, to ensembles
and quartets.
Most of her playing
involves classical music.
Her favorite violin
pieces are Accolay's "Concerto No. 1 in A minor"
and Bach's "Concerto for two violins."
Her favorites
on the piano are Debussy's "Deuxieme Arabesque"
and Chopin's "Nocturne in C-sharp minor."
Not all of her
extra-curricular activities involve music. She's a Girl Scout
member. "I like the activities and being with my friends,"
Amy said. The kids go on camping trips and do community service
projects.
She also came
up with her own idea to help sick kids who are in the hospital.
Her mother is a radiologist at St. John's Mercy Medical Center.
Amy created individual
"care packages" for the kids. The kit combines a
written original story with a craft exercise they can make.
The craft and the story have the same theme.