by Carol Anne Black from Halifax, NS
Nov 21, 15
I've always played the piano. As a child I played because my dad wanted me to. When I went away to university I played because it made me think of home. Now I play to remember my dad.
He never played himself. My dad's mother was a piano teacher, but he was stubborn and he never let her teach him. That same stubbornness made him determined that I should learn.
As I learned, dad could sit in his chair in the living room and listen to me play our reddish-brown baby grand for hours. He used to say “You've got real feeling for the music.”
He would call out “Nope”, to help me when I got a note wrong. Once he called out “Nope” and I squinted at the notes and cross-checked with my fingers and realized I had gotten it right.
“It's supposed to sound that way", I said. Every child has a moment when they realize their parent doesn't know everything. That was mine.
I met my partner Tim two years after my dad died. For my 29th birthday, Tim had a surprise for me. He took me walking through our neighbourhood - left here and right there. He wouldn't tell me where we were going.
We had an electronic keyboard, but Tim knows I dreamt of baby grands. Owning one is still a dream for us, which is why I was confused when I realized we seemed to be heading toward the local piano shop. We knocked on the door. The owner greeted us and told me I could play any piano I wanted and that we could stay as long as we desired.
Tim had arranged for the me to go in after hours to play the showroom pianos. It was just the two of us. Tim sat in a chair across the room. I picked the 7-foot concert grand piano. I played the Entertainer and some Schubert. I played Lucy and Linus, the Peanuts theme song. While I played, Tim listened. I played until my fingers were tired.
There's something about making music with your own hands that enriches the soul in a way that listening to another play never can. My dad gave me that gift. It's Tim who is helping me keep it.