music

the ginterview!



behold, jason!

the basics
name: jason f. ginter
birthday: 01.31.1981
hometown: elyria, oh
occupation: principal timpanist, san diego symphony and president and founder of jg percussion

my name is yeh: welcome!! so i understand that you have a theory on salads on the west coast. they're different from midwest salads, aren't they?
jason ginter: that's right. see, in the midwest, you can make a salad without putting any vegetables in it. you just need mayonnaise. or you can use cool whip, marshmallows, and those little mandarin oranges you get in the can. nothing fresh at all. but if you want to make a california salad, you have to use lettuce and avocado. (that's the way to make anything california- just add avocado).
m: what would your last meal on earth be?
j: a little place in san diego called la fachada mexican restaurant. it's a restaurant and a truck, but i've never eaten at the restaurant, only the truck. 

m: favorite composer? favorite piece?
j: hmmm... sibelius? his second symphony is incredible. i've also been listening to a lot of nielsen. nielsen 4. i also love the beethoven and brahms symphonies. 
m: so you've recently won your job with the san diego symphony. what was your reaction when you were announced as the winner? and what was the first thing that you did?
j: my reaction was... i went into the bathroom and had to sit down because i felt sick. and then i called my mother and she cried on the phone. 
m: and the first drink you had?
j: after the audition, i went back to the hotel and slept for four hours. i woke up, had a steak and a gin and tonic, and then went back to sleep. 
m: many of my friends and i are beginning to take orchestra auditions. can you explain a bit about your audition preparation process?
j: sure. i start three to six months before the audition. for me it was important to find out what was a sustainable amount of practice because when i was younger, i would have days where i practiced twelve hours... and then the next day i would play three, and the next six. it was never consistent. in grad school, i figured out that i could play eight hours a day, seven days a week. so that's what i did to prepare for san diego- eight hours a day for nine months. i took one day off for christmas.
m: wow. what kept you going through all of that?
j: being broke helps.

m: do you have any hobbies?
j: yeah, i have my own business that makes drum sticks and timpani mallets (jg percussion). i also enjoy surfing and driving my vespa around town... 2009 vespa gt 200, baby. 




jason gave me a tour of the jg factory...

m: what was (my former percussion teacher) sarah barnes like in college?
j: she was the girl that everybody wanted to date.

m: words of wisdom for students taking auditions?
j: play the music, not just the drums. if you look at a panel, there are a lot more musicians than just percussionists- there are bassoonists, violinists, trumpet players... so when you play the music and you think about the context in to which we fit, then the music you play makes more sense to all of those other musicians. 
m: why did you win san diego?
j: i was flexible.
m: you do yoga?
j: just pilates.... but... in an audition, it's not about playing things perfect the first time, it's about being able to adjust. you play it well the first time, but if they ask you to play something differently, you do it. orchestra is all about adjusting to what's going on around you.

m: any last words? maximum of ten.
j: molly yeh is my hero. i think she is cool.
(i count the words on my fingers)
m: wow. good for you!


jason and me about to go surfing! (hello, mum!)

friend ryan and me outside the surf shop at ocean beach

the inaugural interview: john yeh (aka DAD)





behold, my pops!! (seen here with the famous and illustrious marianne chen, my makeshift auntie- in the most embarrasing photo i could find of him on facebook)


the basics

full name: john bruce yeh

birthdate: 05.23.1957

hometown: los angeles, ca

occupation: musician, chicago symphony orchestra

my name is yeh: welcome to my blog, paternal unit! did you know that this is what i was fidgeting with on my computer last night when you yelled at me for being anti-social?
john bruce yeh: no i did not! but thank you for explaining such
m: so let's start off easy... what would be your last meal on earth?
j: it would have to be extremely large, bulk food. yes, extremely bulk food. it would have to have a large variety of food items including, but not limited too: paella (my favorite food item), caviar, probably small tastings of molecular gastronomy, and of course charlie trotter would have to be involved... oh and of course (your sister) jenna would have to contribute.


(sister jenna, more commonly known as stoop)

m: was your meal at charlie trotter's the best meal you ever ate?
j: yes. that, or alinea
m: favorite composer?
j: mozart. other favorites include stravinsky and schoenberg.
m: favorite piece of music?
j: that's tough. you're asking such hard questions!
m: if you had to have musical accompaniment to your last meal?
j: either mozart or brahms.. something extended like the gran partita... or... (he gets distracted and has to ask for directions to the freeway. we are, by the way, en route from los angeles to la jolla).
m: favorite daughter?
j: hahahahahahaha.....no.

m: if you weren't a musician, what would your job be?
j: prolly a kind of doctor. but at this point i might have changed. so maybe a chef.
m: what's it like having a 3 year old daughter and a 23 year old daughter?
j: i think it's pretty cool. you guys can learn from each other and have very cool experiences together and for me i'm going through fatherhood twenty years later again and it's really interesting because i learned from experience but at the same time i have less energy. i think it's especially cool for mia because she can learn from such older siblings and i think it helps her to be more mature.
m: you've had the same job for 32 years now, what keeps you excited to go back every day?
j: we play new pieces, we have new colleagues, and we have new performances of the same pieces that we've played time after time and we try to do them to a higher level...and the great masterpieces require many different interpretations.
(john yells at me for the capitalization thing. what gives?).
m: what's the worst part of your job?
j: the stress.
m: the principal clarinet position in the cso has been open for quite some time, and you've auditioned for it twice but haven't won. how does that feel? and what will be different about the third time around?
j: the third time will hopefully be the charm. i've learned so much over the past two years of auditioning and its a process that continues. the audition process is so different from day to day performance preparation.

m: tell us about your audition preparation.
j: you have to imagine how you would sound in an empty hall and still imagine the orchestral context. i always knew that you have to show knowledge of orchestral context, but now i've learned that you also have to sound attractive in an isolated situation. if you play exactly the way you would play in an orchestra during the audition, you might not have as good as results as if you tweeked things so you sound really good by yourself. sometimes i think you have to be more in a box in an audition because if you play with an orchestra, they give you more latitude to do things out of the box. this is sort of ironic actually. but that's been my experience.
m: do you use beta blockers?
j: i don't even know what those are.
m: what do you eat before an audition?
j: a few days before i have a lot of pasta. the morning of, eggs, or something else with protein.
m: caffeine?
j: absolutely not.

m: did you party or go crazy in college?
j: nope. no substances. the craziest thing i did was sneak into carnegie hall on a regular basis.
m: what was dan druckman like in college?
j: what? dan druckman??! he was pretty much like he is now. very serious but at the same time casual and laid back. he was a really really cool, but serious dude.


dan druckman and daughter holly

m: how many girlfriends did you have before my mum?
j: well that depends on what you would consider a girlfriend... when i was in high school, it was carol robinson. when i first got into the cso, it was nina allen. she played the horn and her father invented the allen wrench. at juilliard, i wanted diane barere to be my girlfriend. but she didn't really want to be my girlfriend.
m: ouch. sorry bout that. so that's all of the questions. any final words? no more than ten.
j: live clean, live full, live with your ears and your eyes open. is that ten words?
m: sure. we didn't go to math school.


upcoming performances


3.25
spencer topel glued together
percussion + tape + visuals
ooh we are so 21st century
the juilliard school presents
beyond the machine
8pm
willson theater
juilliard





3.26
spencer topel glued together
percussion + tape + visuals
ooh we are so 21st century
the juilliard school presents
beyond the machine
8pm
willson theater
juilliard



3.27


spencer topel glued together
percussion + tape + visuals
ooh we are so 21st century
the juilliard school presents
beyond the machine
8pm
willson theater
juilliard





3.28
spencer topel glued together
percussion + tape + visuals
ooh we are so 21st century
the juilliard school presents
beyond the machine
7:30pm
willson theater
juilliard

3.31
the famed and illustrious
carol wincenc
needed a percussionist (?!?!)
for her 40th anniversary performance
8pm
peter jay sharp theater

4.01
the solo recital of violist
david moss
and my middle eastern drum debut
{what?}
6pm
the juilliard school



4.01
the solo recital of jazzer
kristopher bowers
will involve classical percussion
{into it}
8pm
the juilliard school

4.05
the juilliard percussion
ensemble
is in for a huge beating
8pm
alice tully hall

4.10
beaming music
for organ + marimba
on the recital of keenan boswell
8:30 pm
the juilliard school



4.12
the juilliard orchestra
vs.
alan gilbert
schoenberg, ligeti,
mozart, and beethoven
8pm
alice tully hall


4.12
the solo recital of yours truly
bach, green, carter, xenakis
kids watch out
too early for you oclock
north shore country day school
suburbia, illinois

5.20
the fun neva stops with
the juilliard orchestra
and j.d.p.
and the lutoslawski concerto for orchestra
and alice tully
and 8 oclock in the pm