Hubris

Life of Pi-ano

Kathryn E. Livingston, Weekly Hubris banner

Some folks grow up around ponies, beaches, sailboats, rosary beads, or with an effusive auntie. I, on the other hand, grew up with and have always lived with pianos. I don’t know why, since neither of my parents were musicians (nor am I), but from birth until now (my elder years), I’ve always had a piano in my surroundings. My siblings and I don’t recall how it got there, but an upright Stroud piano has always resided in the Schenectady, New York home in which we were raised. Being a bit fanciful, I’ve long suspected that my life’s insistent piano theme had something to do with the fact that I would one day marry a musician; it’s my hunch that my familiarity with music (though not my proficiency), gave me a leg up when it came to my prospective spouse.”—Kathryn E. Livingston

Words & Wonder

By Kathryn E. Livingston

Duets with a neighborhood friend, c. 1961.
Duet with a neighborhood friend, c. 1961.

Kathryn E. Livingston, Weekly Hubris

BOGOTA New Jersey—(Hubris)—March 2024—Some folks grow up around ponies, beaches, sailboats, rosary beads, or with an effusive auntie. I, on the other hand, grew up with and have always lived with pianos. I don’t know why, since neither of my parents were musicians (nor am I), but from birth until now (my elder years), I’ve always had a piano in my surroundings. My siblings and I don’t recall how it got there, but an upright Stroud piano has always resided in the Schenectady, New York home in which we were brought up.

Being a bit fanciful, I’ve long suspected that my life’s insistent piano theme had something to do with the fact that I would one day marry a musician; it’s my hunch that my familiarity with music (though not my proficiency), gave me a leg up when it came to my prospective spouse. When he asked me (on one of our very first dates) to Tanglewood Music Center in Lenox, Massachusetts to hear Mahler’s Fourth Symphony I confessed, “I don’t really know Mahler. But I do love Debussy and Ravel.” I wasn’t trying to impress him; it was simply the truth.

From the age of seven until my senior year of high school, I took piano lessons. A lovely divorcée who lived a few blocks away with two Steinway baby grands, schooled me on Prokofiev, Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and other greats, and though I didn’t excel on the instrument, I became conversant. My parents never nagged me to practice but became reverently still on the occasions when I did (predictably, half an hour before my lesson).

Grandma Ruth, pianist of the silent movies, c. 1922.
Grandma Ruth, pianist of the silent movies, c. 1922.

Thus, when I began dating an aspiring professional clarinetist, I knew a bit about the topic of music. It also may have helped that my grandmother had played the piano at the silent movies while her father ran the projector, and, when I was a child, she’d often pop into our home and sit herself down at the piano bench for a buoyant romp; as her fingers flew over the keys one could easily imagine racing horses or Model-Ts.

But none of this really explains why, after my husband and I married in 1977, I insisted that we purchase our own (used) Wurlitzer piano which then (at a cost in cash to us and in back pain to several lean young men) had to be lugged up to our fifth-floor walkup in Washington Heights, then carted down to the fourth floor when we moved to a larger apartment, and then, finally, driven out to New Jersey in the back of a pick-up truck when we moved to the suburbs.

The author and her Wurlitzer, c. 1978.
The author and her Wurlitzer, c. 1978.

It didn’t make any sense, but not to have a piano didn’t make sense to me, either. And so, I told my husband, “I absolutely must have a piano in my life.” This was a peculiar demand, given the fact that I rarely played, as writing and mothering soon replaced the meager time I once spent tickling the ivories. But a piano made me feel at home wherever I was. A piano just sits in a room, “holding the space.” It occasionally beckons, but it doesn’t force itself on anyone (though at Christmas time, I occasionally feel the need to bang out some carols). The fact is, I can still play and once in a very great while, I do. A piano’s presence lends the possibility of music.

Alas, when our eldest son was three, he grabbed a wooden spoon and swiftly lopped off the ivory tips of each and every Wurlitzer key while I was chatting on the phone. (This is the sort of activity that toddlers engage in while their mothers are preoccupied.) Nevertheless, the piano could still be used so we signed the kids up for lessons, and for several years I listened as our three sons passionately pounded away. (This paid off: our youngest became a composer of electronic music.)

The mostly-silent Baldwin. 
The mostly-silent Baldwin.

At one point, a dear elderly acquaintance graciously offered us a second piano—a Baldwin. Not wanting to insult her, I accepted the gift and for a time we squeezed both into our modest living room. Eventually, I gave the damaged Wurlitzer to a friend with a young daughter who wanted to learn (she intended to repair the keys). I miss that piano still, and I also have an affinity for my childhood piano (which a well-meaning relative stained “antique” green sometime in the late 1960s). This was a trend, much like “distressed” area rugs are now. (A pity, as I’m already distressed, and don’t need my rugs to be.)

Today, I still have the Baldwin. It’s a handy place to display photos and vases, though the intact keys are rarely touched (and should there ever be tiny tots with wooden spoons aka grandchildren, those keys will be well guarded). When I gaze at the piano I feel as if I’m in the presence of a dear old friend. We’re simply comfortable together, and neither words nor notes are necessary.

More: To read more of Kathryn E. Livingston’s work, write her at livwrite@yahoo.com, or order her books by clicking on these links: http://www.livwrite.blogspot.comhttp://www.kathrynlivingston.com, and https://www.facebook.com/kathrynlivingstonauthor.YIN, YANG, YOGINI: A Woman’s Quest for Balance, Strength & Inner Peace is available at Amazon.com or through your favorite bookseller!

Books by Kathryn Livingston
Books by Kathryn E. Livingston.

Kathryn E. Livingston was born in Schenectady, New York and lived there in a stick-style Victorian house until she left for Kirkland College (the short-lived women’s coordinate college of Hamilton College in small-town Clinton, New York). In l975, with her BA in English/Creative Writing, she moved to New Paltz to become first a waitress at an Italian restaurant, and then a community newspaper reporter. A few years later, she married a classical clarinetist she had met in high school and moved to Manhattan (Washington Heights), beginning a job as a trade magazine editor the day after their wedding. A few years later, after picking up an MA in English/Education at Hunter College, she became an editor at the visually stunning American Photographer. Motherhood (three sons) eventually brought her to suburban New Jersey, close enough for her husband to moped home for dinner between rehearsal and performance at the New York City Opera. Between baby diaper changes and boys’ homework assignments, Livingston toiled as a freelance writer on the topic of motherhood for numerous mainstream magazines. She also co-authored several parenting books, several photography books, and eventually wrote a memoir of her anxiety-ridden but charmed life and her path to Yoga: Yin, Yang, Yogini: A Woman’s Quest for Balance, Strength and Inner Peace (Open Road Media, 2014). With the kids now grown, and the husband still playing notes, Kathryn enjoys fiddling with words, writing her blog, puttering in her garden, and teaching the occasional Yoga class. (Author Photo: John Isaac/Author Head Shot Augment: René Laanen.)

4 Comments

  • Lynn Plaine

    I love your monthly musings and fond memories of Schenectady. I was there recently for a funeral and drove by the streets and parks and buildings I used to know. Even my old piano teacher’s two family. Miss o’dazz used to scare the bejesus out of me. Hope you, Mitch and family are well. Lynn

    • Kathryn

      Thanks so much, Lynn! My piano teacher was Mrs. Hope and she also lived in a two family. I never figured out how she got those baby grands up to the second floor! We were lucky to grow up in those times….though of course all wasn’t perfect. Thank you for reading my ponderings. Mitch is doing well, as are the “kids!”

  • Mercedes Garcia

    I surely love this !
    Didn’t know about your love for PI-anos Kathy!
    I LOVE PIANOS TOO!
    Can’t imagine life without one !
    My mother bought me my first piano living in Havana after entering a fabulous art school where I started to study piano and Spanish dance
    I had my life on a glorious track …..
    When my parents decide we need to leave Cuba
    my piano and dance career crumbled …. before taking off
    Now ….I do rejoice with my beautiful Steinway
    But surely wish I had studied music when my brain and ears were both optimally functioning
    Still, every note I manage to play is a joy note
    And to me the piano represents the soul of a home
    Whenever I come upon a piano, anywhere, is like seeing a special friend
    Loved reading your piano story !

    Keep writing!
    Mercedes
    Xoxo

    • Kathryn

      I remember seeing the piano in your living room! It’s a beaut! I didn’t know that to you “the piano represents the soul of a home.” Wish I’d thought of that line! Thank you for your comments, friendship and support, Mercedes!

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