city, to study with someone a great deal more pretentious and

more expensive than Mrs. Smith. But then I tried to master

Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1, for which I had developed a somewhat warped passion, and could not. That failure told me that I could not be a musician, although I continued

to study music in col ege.

The problem with that part of my musical education was

that I stopped playing piano, and Bennington, the college I

went to, insisted that one play an instrument. I didn’t like my

piano teacher, and I wasn’t going to play or spend one minute

of one day with him hovering over my shoulder and condemning me with a baronial English that left my prior teachers in my mind as plain-speaking people. I loved the theory classes. Mine was with the composer Vivian fine. The first

assignment, which was lovely, was to write a piece for salt and

pepper shakers. I wrote music away from the piano for the

piano, but after the first piano lesson I never deigned to darken

the piano teacher’s doorway again. At the end of the year, this

strategy of noncompliance turned out to be the equivalent of

not attending physical education in high school: you couldn’t

2

Music 1

graduate without having done the awful crap. When my

adviser, also a musician but never a teacher of music to me,

asked me why I hadn’t shown up for any of the piano

lessons, I felt awkward and stupid but I gave him an honest

answer: “I don’t like the asshole. ” My adviser smiled with

one of his this-is-too-good-to-be-true looks - he was amused

- and said he’d take care of it. He must have, or I would not

have passed.

My adviser, the composer Louis Callabro, taught me a lot

about music, but there was always a kind of cross-fertilization

- I’d bring the poems, the short stories, every now and then a

novel. Lou was a drunkard, much more his style than being

an alcoholic. I had met him without knowing it on first

ar iving at Bennington. I loved the old music building and

sort of haunted it. He came out of his studio, pissing drunk,

stared at me, and said, “Never sleep with a man if you want

to be his friend. ” I adored the guy. Eventually I’d show him

my music and he’d show me his short stories. It was a new

version of I’l -show-you-mine-if-you-show-me-yours. I later

understood that the all-girl Bennington’s expectation was that

the girl, the woman, any female student, should learn how to

be the mistress of an artist, not the artist herself: this in the

college that was the early home of Martha Graham. The

equality between Lou and myself, our mutual recognition,

was no part of the school’s agenda. This is not to suggest that

Lou did not screw his students: he did; they al did. I always

3

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