Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Happy Birthday, Lis!!

Happy birthday to Lis! 
Yesterday we celebrated with a family dinner of Moo Goo Gai Pan, Giozos, rice, and spinach salad plus a sundae bar for dessert.
Todd, Vanessa, Curt, Craig, Pooma, Sarah, Granny Slash, and JC.
(I realized later that I had not gotten a picture of Trinity, too.)

Originally due to be born on Christmas Day, I contemplated naming her Noelle. But she was born December 30 AND she was a Lisa, not a Noelle. Funny how kids name themselves sometimes!

Sunday, December 29, 2013

A Birthday Song

In honor of Lisa's upcoming birthday, a Willie Summerville original!


Sure wish there was a roll for the player piano of this song!

A Two-Day Game

When we're together, our family loves to play board games. Dominion, Ticket to Ride, Skip-Bo, Apples to Apples...

... and A Christmas Story Monopoly!
Emily and Cole got me this game a few years ago, and I love to play it with JC and Trinity.
Boompa and I had it out and going within a couple of hours of their arrival.
Like all versions of Monopoly, it can be a loooooong game.
JC wins free parking.

This time we went two days! I was out first on the second day, with Boompa being the eventual winner.

Saturday, December 28, 2013

The Ropkey Armor Museum

Yesterday we headed to Crawfordsville to visit the Ropkey Armor Museum. But first, we ate lunch at Little Mexico in downtown Crawfordsville.

 Trinity, Boompa, Grammy, JC, and Todd.

It was QUITE decorated.
Even in the bathrooms!

After lunch, we headed out into the country to the museum.
We'd taken JC and Trinity there during Groompa camp, but it was Sarah and Todd's first time.
We all laughed at how Sarah parked the car right in the sights of this tank turret. If it were armed and fired, the car would've been gone!
Todd walks down a line of tanks.
JC poses by some armored cars.
And Trinity stands on a ladder to peek into one from Desert Storm. All the tanks, cars, motorcycles, planes, etc. still run and can be driven/flown except for two planes.


This museum, tucked away in rural Crawfordsville, really has to be seen to be believed. It is a treasure of military history, and it's free.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Meet Millie!

Here she is - Lisa's Christmas dog, Millie!
 Millie is 5 or 6 years old and was originally at a kill shelter in Johnson County. Details are foggy, but she was rescued from there and taken to Natalie's Second Chance Shelter in Lafayette, a no-kill animal shelter.

She's named for the lead character in one of Lisa's favorite movies, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers.
 The two are bonding well.
And she's fast becoming family!

Merry Christmas!

What kid sleeps in until 8:30 on Christmas morning?!? JC and Trinity, that's who! 

Meanwhile, their grandmother, who has been up since 5:30 AM, is bouncing off the walls waiting for them to awaken and come downstairs to open their gifts. (I admit that at 7:30 I grabbed my sleigh bells and jingled them a bit. The kids slept through that, but it got Sarah out of bed.)
Our tree.
The stockings, filled and ready to be opened.
Finally!! Trin cuddles Bailey while JC lines up behind her, ready to come see what is under the tree.
NOW they're awake and excited to rush and open their gifts!
Lisa and Sarah come trucking along, too.
Anxious to be able to get thank you notes to everyone, Trinity wrote down the name of each gift giver and what they gave her.

Lisa was getting a very special gift. I found a tin with puppies on it, and wrapped a bottle of dog shampoo and some doggie treats, and then put them inside.
She opened the shampoo first, and was a bit puzzled.

And then the light dawned.
"Are you getting me a DOG???"

Why yes. Yes we are. Merry Christmas, Lisa!

Granny Slash, Pooma, Jenny, Aunt Leslie, and Uncle Rick arrived at 1:00 for Christmas dinner.
Pooma, Jenny, Leslie, Rick, Lisa, Granny Slash.

We had a standing rib roast, ham, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, broccoli salad, Christmas jello, Beef House rolls, butter, strawberry jam, cherry jam, pumpkin pie, pecan pie, cherry pie, gingerbread, and Christmas cookies.

Needless to say, no one starved.

Then we had a family gift exchange.
Granny Slash, JC, Trinity, and Bailey.
Leslie and Rick.
Craig, Pooma, and Jenny.
Todd and Trinity admire the snowman apron Granny Slash embroidered for Sarah.
Granny Slash digs into her gifts.
Trinity shows her dad some of her gifts later in the day.

The rest of the afternoon we played games, gabbed, and ate pie. And then after dinner, we had a google chat call with Jessica, Kyle, Cole, and their families.  (We chatted with Curt earlier in the day.)

Merry Christmas!!

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Making Christmas!

(Catch that movie line? I'll reveal it at the bottom if you didn't.)

Making Christmas cookies on Christmas Eve is a family tradition and this year was no exception. I made the dough in the morning and let it chill for a couple of hours, then baked the cookies in the afternoon. When dinner was over, out came the icing and nonpareils.
Everyone got a plate with an assortment of shaped sugar cookies. I decorated a few, but then my role became that of moving decorated cookies to the waxed paper sheets and mixing up more icing.
The whole family worked together.
After their gingerbread house-making competition last night, there was some friendly trash talking going on between Lisa and Sarah with the cookie decorating, too!

(Those elf pictures of Lisa and me on the fridge are from the Hershey holiday party. After the party in early December, the pictures of all the staff as elves were hung around the office for the kiddos to enjoy.)
You can tell by looking at his face that JC is working hard. (That's Sarah's arm - she and Trin got matching PJs from the pajama elf; JC and Todd's matched, too!)
Some of the final product. Pretty AND yummy!

(The movie line is from Tim Burton's Nightmare Before Christmas.)

Holiday Decorations

This year, in addition to putting a tree up on the foyer shelf, I put one on the upstairs overlook.
(Yes, that makes three lighted Christmas trees up in the house. Ho! Ho! Ho!)
Cindie gave me this beautiful gold nativity five or six years ago. It has become a favorite.
Many of my horse ornaments are on this metal display tree. They're not really Christmassy, but I love them anyway!
Lisa, Sarah, JC, and Trinity all made gingerbread houses. Those are displayed on the antique buffet in the living room.
The balustrade upstairs is draped with holly and ivy. (And Lisa, looking down at the tree Christmas morning.)
The tree with gifts, my candy cane poles in the dining room, and my Christmas tablecloth that I made years ago.

I love this house year round, but I especially love how it looks during the holidays.

Monday, December 23, 2013

Reminiscing About Opera and Madrigals

A musician I used to sing and perform with passed away yesterday.
 Dr. Blaine Edlefsen.

Blaine was a professor of music at the University of Illinois and the principle oboist for the Champaign-Urbana Symphony. He could "circular breathe" while he played - breathing in through his nose and out through his mouth at the same time. (Try as I might, I never was able to do that, even without an oboe reed in my mouth.)

I met him at church where he led the music in Sacrament meeting for years. At that time, there was a core group of strong musicians in the ward, many of whom were working on their Doctorate of Musical Arts at the university.

Charis Duke, also an oboist and a composer, decided to form an octet of singers to do madrigals, opera, and sing at churches in the Champaign/Urbana area. To my surprise, I was invited to join the group.

I was thrilled to be asked to sing with them, but also very intimidated - I was the only non-professional musician in the group. The musicianship of the others and the level of music which we performed was at the highest level, and I had to work HARD to keep up. The result, though, was that my own musicianship grew by leaps and bounds. I kept up, but just barely.

Our octet consisted of:
 Charis Duke. She lives in Philadelphia and composes operas, chamber music, and other pieces. She is also an accomplished cellist, oboist, pianist, and organist. We've been friends now for about twenty-five years.
David Duke, Charis' husband who received a DMA in opera from the University of Illinois. He is a Heldentenor and has a rich, mellow voice. He was a finalist for the New York Metropolitan Opera's program for new talent. He sings in off-Broadway productions up and down the east coast.
Robert Nakea, a concert pianist who received his DMA from the University of Illinois. Robert is from Hawaii and a teddy bear of a man. The Osmond family hired Robert  to teach piano to their kids when he was a student at BYU, and Kyle was lucky enough to study with Robert, too. While his expertise is the piano, Robert also has a lovely bass and sang that role in our group.
Cindy Nakea, Robert's wife, and a lyric soprano/opera singer as well as my voice teacher. I was a stay-at-home mom at the time with no extra money for voice lessons, and Cindy needed a wardrobe as she and Robert were going on a concert tour of Italy and Europe for the summer. In exchange for voice lessons, I sewed her wardrobe for those performances.
Jill Peper, concert pianist. Jill's degree was from Penn State, but Randy was on faculty at the U of I in the College of Veterinary Medicine and that brought them to the area. Jill sang alto in our group - her musicianship was as top notch as the rest of them!

Our group sang together for about four years, and in that time we put on two operas and many concerts. The biggest musician-compliment I have ever gotten was when Charis wrote an opera for us to perform, and asked me to sing the role of Mary, the mother of Jesus Christ. She told me she had written the role for my voice, which is (or was; it's been a few years since I sang!) more on the coluratura side than lyric soprano. I'd never had a piece written specifically for me to perform, and I doubt I ever will, so that music is very special to me.

(Coloratura refers to a type of music - very high, full of trills and runs, or a very high soprano voice that is light and airy, and can quickly touch on the notes. Here is an example of a coloratura piece sung by the Queen of the Night in the opera The Magic Flute: 


When my voice was at its best, I had a high E-flat above C.)

The opera, The Innkeeper's Wife, had an aria for Mary to sing with a high B-flat. I sweated that note, but I hit it in all the rehearsals and in both performances. (Don't think I could now!) Blaine sang the role of Joseph, and in one scene we wended our way through the audience, singing a duet together as we made our way to Bethlehem and the stage. (Jessica and Cole also were in that opera with me - what a treat!)

Blaine sang with Jessica in Amahl and the Night Visitors - Jessie performed the role of Amahl and Blaine the role of the wise man who carries the treasure box and has his finger bitten by the parrot.

Good memories, of friends who taught me so much, and of a time when I had a golden opportunity to work with an incredibly talented group of musicians.