Saturday, April 21, 2012

Concrete walls & Rosin

The first week of the summer term has passed quickly, with lots of lesson planning taken care of and many an hour spent in front of the photocopying machine. The past week has also been rather rainy and cool, which I hear has been a welcome break from the very hot weather Montserrat had been experiencing during the two weeks I was away. Ironically, London was still in the grips of some unseasonably cold weather when I was there.

Being in London over the Easter break gave me the opportunity to procure lots more resources for the island. Piano and music theory books, and small things like rosin and valve oil - which, while you would ordinarily get any other music store back home, cannot be found here and must be specially ordered in. I also managed to get some wall guitar hangers which, apart from doing what it does, always look good when it comes to sprucing up the image of a music classroom!

I have to say though, the walls that make up buildings over here are strong enough to withstand a hurricane - no pun intended. My classroom walls were made up of extremely sturdy and tough concrete brick, and the accompanying drill bits which came with the borrowed drill barely put a dent in it. So I had to run to the hardware store and pick up a new set of drill bits, and after screwing in five guitar hangers (two screws each), I had broken one in half, chipped off another, and two more are now too blunt to do anything.

Maybe I need a proper lesson in drilling school.

Battling with the walls.

All set up and good to go.

Having had a term to set up the old Salem Primary as the new designated music education 'centre' for the island is paying off well - we now are slowly amassing a steady stream of instrumental donations which will be taken care of looked after. The primary school wider-ops music programme Small Beginnings will also now be run from the new location in Salem. I am still in need for more wall guitar hangers (I only had enough space for a maximum of five to bring over), as well as basic keyboard damper pedals.

And from the looks of it, another new set of drill bits.

The Xinjiang Folk Dance which we did last month was recorded again, this time at Government House with full costumes and in proper HD! After trying to attempt some slick, multi-camera angle video editing on the frustratingly basic Windows Live Movie Maker, here's the result!


No comments:

Post a Comment