Hi folks,
This is it - this is the moment I've been waiting for and working for for the
last 2 years and maybe much longer. Tomorrow I fly to India for an indefinite
stay to study tabla and get deep and mystical with it. I'm ready for this
moment! (So are my tabla, which broke yesterday...)
To fill you in since my last big posting, I'm now a retired Nova English teacher
and full-time musician/music student. In the last month, I've taught my last
bundle of Nova 40 minute lessons, plus had a few good gigs in Kyoto and Osaka
with some great sitar players. The last gig was in beautiful Kurodani Ei-un-in
temple, with a fantastic garden as the backdrop. I played with Christophe Rossi
(from France) and also did a short set with 2 of my students plus my new
guru-bhai Hiromichi Okazaki. As my farewell gig it was really nice to see a lot
of the folks from work - teachers and students - there to at last see why I've
been so obsessed with India and with tapping on my chair during lessons all
year.
I've had a great time in Japan - especially having played with so many excellent
musicians and developed my own music as a result, plus of course meeting and
establishing a wonderful relationship with the lovely Sayaka.
In the last week I've been lazing on Koh Chang in the Bay of Thailand. What a
beautiful place - bamboo huts by a small palm-lined beach. I spent all day
swimming, reading, sleeping, practising and eating. Lots of eating. :-) It IS
rainy season in Thailand but luckily only the last couple of days were
especially rainy. Otherwise I've had a beautiful interlude in Thailand. The
only down-point was watching my tabla skin slowly tear as I practised in my hut
during the rain yesterday. The moist conditions combined with a skin defect
I've been watching for a few months to result in one broken tabla. I'm thankful
it broke now, not last month before my last gigs! Soon it will be just like
new...
And now tomorrow I fly off for smelly stinky hot India. No more life-of-luxury
in lovely Japan! No more sushi and Kirin. And no more suit-and-tie...
Sayonara Kamo Gawa, namaste Ganga. From now on it's hard-core practice and cold
showers. Curry and chai. And Guru-ji telling me "don't spread fingers" and
"loose!" and "te-te more prominent!"
Blessings to all,
Love
Shen
Aum Mani Padme Hum
PS - Other small news for Australia-jins: I bumped into Epizo Bangoura a couple
of weeks ago. He was giving djembe workshops just down the road from my place.
Natsukashii (how nostalgic...)!
--
__________________________________________________________
Sign-up for your own FREE Personalized E-mail at Mail.com
http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup
CareerBuilder.com has over 400,000 jobs. Be smarter about your job search
http://corp.mail.com/careers