X
X
Back to the top
X

Blog

Sharing Harp Music with the Hawaii Island Chamber of Commerce

I was honored to play The Queen’s Music for the Hawaii Island Chamber of Commerce last month. Each quarter, the Chamber hosts a New Member Luncheon, and I was asked to play the harp for this group.

 

It’s always a pleasure to bring the harp out to a group of people who don’t usually get live music in their meetings. Looking forward to playing more for them as time goes one.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Turning of Autumn. The Music of The Queen

Turning to Autumn

Seven years ago, around this time, I recorded my first CD, “Seasons of the Soul.”

 

In writing the music for this CD, I used the system of Chinese Medicine – the seasons. Summer, Spring, and Winter came to me relatively easily.

 

Autumn was another matter entirely.

 

I wanted Autumn to be light and cheery. It is my favorite season after all – season of my birth, when the aspen trees of my home state of Colorado turn colors, the crisp dry crunch of leaves, even the season when I first arrived in my adopted home of Hawaii.

 

But in Chinese Medicine, it is the season of death and decay. I didn’t want to face that. I struggled and twisted. And eventually found my way into the Circle of Life. Death, it turns out, is just a step on the way to Winter, which turns again into New Beginnings.

 

 

Once I understood that, the music came easily. You can listen to my interpretation of Autumn here…>>>  https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/cymberlilyquinn

 

As you listen, think of things in your life that are ready to turn to crispy leaves, gently falling to the ground, eagerly awaiting the crunch of your feet. Make a big pile of them, and jump in!

 

 

Lili’uokalani: The Queen of Hawaiian Music

If you listen to modern Hawaiian music, you are listening to the Queen. The last monarch of Hawaii, Lili’uokalani was also one of the nation’s more prolific composers. Like all royal children, she was trained in music, and she wrote more than 300 songs, and about 150 are still in existence today.

 

Before her time, Hawaiian music was created from chanting and drumming. But with the arrival of the missionaries, so came the modern idea of melody and harmony. Liliu’okalani took these ideas and created beautiful poetry and melodies that reflect her deep love of nature, beauty, love, and devotion to Church and God.

 

When I first heard her music, it seemed so familiar in melody, so foreign in words. In my research, I found that we had church music in common and that her favorite instrument for composing was the autoharp.

 

It has been my great and humble honor to bring her music to life again through my own arrangements of her music and to play them with the talented flutist, Kathy Dorn. More recently, Kathy and I have joined together with the incomparable actress Jackie Pualani Johnson, who has a passion for Living History and bringing the monarchs of Hawaii’s past to life. It is with the blessing of the Lili’uokalani Trust that we are able to do this work.

 

 

 

 

I look forward to including more of the Queen’s Music in an upcoming dance production, called The Whale Hula, that is under construction. I’ll make more announcements about The Whale Hula in the near future.

 

 

Getting Started with Harps – Class 2: Four Different Harps

Anyone who wants to play harp has to face the daunting challenge of choosing their first harp. It’s a very personal decision, like choosing which dessert you want to eat. Knowing what goes into each type of harp is really helpful, so I made this video to help you get started.

In this video, I introduce you to a variety of non-pedal harps: Several lever harps including the the standard Harpsicle Harps Fullsicle (with electric pickups), the Harpsicle Grand (also with electric pick-ups), and the Salvi Egan electro-acoustic. And I’ll show you a different kind of harp, a Paraguayan-style harp that I built myself, based on the designs of harpmaker, John Kovac.

The best way to choose your first (or next) harp is to rent and try several different harps. If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area, you are lucky because Jim Peek has a large rental library of harps. I can connect you to Jim if you want to try different harps.

If you live elsewhere, be sure to visit your local harp store – local is a relative term. You may need to drive several hours to get to your “local” harp store. And if you live far away from any store, please feel free to email me and ask questions. I recently helped a composer from Dubai, United Arab Emirates to pick his first harp.

No matter what you choose, you will learn a lot about what you love. As Harper Tasche says: “When you get a harp, your life will change forever. Fortunately, it is always for the better.”

 

How I Found My Mid-Life Purpose: An Interview with Hourglass Workshops

Lots of folks ask me how I got to be a harpist, and are surprised to learn that I started playing harp when I was 42 years old. I was fortunate to be asked by Hourglass Workshops to tell the story of how I left corporate life behind and began a new chapter in my old love, music. Hope you enjoy this interview with Cherryll Sevy and Nancy Burns.

 

 

http://www.hourglassworkshops.com/2016/10/31/midlife-finding-your-lifes-purpose/

PEN Women Award

Wow, what an honor to receive a Celebrity Achiever award from the National League of Pen Women in February. I was warmly greeted by a group of fabulously talented and artistically inventive women. Not a single wall-flower anywhere.

It was a pleasure to meet the other Music honoree, Lijah Raoof, Art honorees Dorothy Brown, Bonnie Jo Smith, Julia Watson, and Letters honorees Diana Chan, Erica Goss, and Lille McGhee Queen.

Many thanks to Susan Zerweck, who announced the Music awards.

Since 1897, the National League of Pen Wome has promoted the development of the creative talents of professional women in the arts. The League consists of local branches, state associates and members-at-large, a membership of about 2,000 women throughout the United States. Headquarters are in the history Robert Todd Lincoln Mansion at 1300 17th Street, N.W., Washington, DC  http://www.nlapw.org/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION HONORS WOMEN IN THE ARTS

“On Feb. 12, a location celebrity luncheon will be hosted by the Santa Clara County branch of the National League of American Pen Women, a nonprofit encouraging women to pursue careers in the arts. The luncheon will recognize eight women in the county who participate in music, writing or art.

The luncheon will be held at the Elsk Lodge, 444 W. Alma Ave in San Jose. Tickets are $35 each. Proceeds from the ticket sales go toward scholarships for women graduating from high school, college undergraduates, or women of any age returning to school to complete their education in the arts.

According to Patricia Dennis, the branch’s publicity coordinator, $7500 in scholarship money is given to four women this year. Dennis, a Campbell resident, was a past scholarship recipient in the arts category.

 

Giving Women Artists Courage

“For some recipients, this award makes a difference, giving them the courage to pursue their career goals, knowing that their endeavors were acknowledged by such a prestigious organization,” Dennis said.

Former Campbell resident, Cymber Quinn will play the harp at the luncheon. Other women to be recognized at the event include San Jose residents Lija Raeof, Dorothy Brown, Bonnie Smith, Julia Watson and Lily Quinn, along with Erica Goss from Los Gatos, and Xana Chas from Los Altos Hills.

Quinn, who recently moved to Santa Clara, was nominated for recognition by Dennis.

“Her music is absolutely wonderful,” Dennis said.

 

How a Copywriter Becomes a Harpist

As a child in Greeley, Colorado, Quinn played drums, the french horn, and multiple wind instruments, and also sang.

“By the time I was 15, I was burned out.” Quinn said, “adding that she didn’t sing or play music for 27 years.

During her musical hiatus, she worked as a copywriter for the Indianapolis News, writing obituaries. She then worked in advertising and came to the Santa Clara Valley during the dot-com boom in 1996, staying until 2004.

At the age of 42, Quinn found her way back to music after trying to heal from several surgeries and undergoing a hysterectomy in her late 30s.

“I wasn’t really recovering well,” Quinn said. “The doctors weren’t really sure why, so I started more alternative approaches to healing.”

She looked to Reiki, a stress reduction method to heal one’s body through hand movements. The Reiki master Quinn was learning from suggested finding what made her happy when she was a child. In 2008, when Quinn was flipping through a catalog, she came across a harp.

“I have this memory of being 6 years old and my parents taking me to hear the symphony – and that night the harpist had a solo,” Quinn said.

 

Harp Lessons by Skype

At the time, Quinn ordered her harp, she was living in Hawaii, which made finding a harp teacher difficult. She eventually found a harpist who taughet her how to play via Skype and showed her the healing effect it could have on other people.

In 2013, when she returned to the Santa Clara Valley, she took up teaching at The Music Place, a music school for children in San Jose. Since then, she’s been teaching harp to children and playing at churches and yoga studios. She also plays at the bedside of the elderly and ill, and at Touch to Heal Spa in Campbell.

“There are many benefits to hearing relaxing and meditative music,” Quinn said, adding that the vibrations from the harp have helped people. Quinn said that she’s even had people tell her they play her CDs on their commute home from work to relax them.

Quinn has released four CDs, in of which was featured on National Public Radio. Another album is in the works. Quinn said she is moving back to Hawaii in April.

by Jasmine Layva

Copyright © 2019 Cymber Lily Quinn All rights reserved