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IN
THE BEGINNING
I
started playing the fiddle when I was seven or eight years of
age. My parents decided to send me to a music teacher for formal
lessons rather than wait to see if I had either the skill or
desire to pick it up on my own. This strategy seemed to work
pretty well, because by the time I felt that I really wanted
to play, when I was 12 or 13, I had already developed some very
helpful basic skills which I could use.
My music teacher was Jessie Christopherson (no
relation to Kris!). Jessie lived within walking distance of
our house in S.E. London. To my eight year old mind she seemed
very old (she was probably in her early sixties), very posh
and very intimidating. And her house was like that too - old,
posh and intimidating! It was much bigger than ours and very
dark - going there for lessons was a bit like visiting Miss
Havisham in "Great Expectations"! But she turned out to be a
great teacher. Her manner was pretty strict and harsh (I can
still remember her shrieking instructions at me - "Up bow!",
"Sharper!" and so on.) but I soon learned that she was a kindly
old woman behind it all and, more importantly, that she was
very broadminded about music. Up to then I was of the impression
that classical people didn't approve of any other kind of music
so I was very impressed to discover that she enjoyed all kinds
of things, even some of the new groups of the time such as The
Who and The Rolling Stones.
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