The great joy of traveling to
shows, campuses and studios is meeting so many different people in our
business. This blog features Tereasa
Payne and Simon Hutchings, a married couple who are very, very busy and
successful doublers. And they are happy
too! No jaded musicians, these! Here is their story, and you will find within
it, some real words to live by.
JMS: Tereasa, if I recall, we first met at the
Kentucky Flute Society Flute Fair in 2009.
I remember being struck by your wonderful playing of a great Schocker
piece as well as your fabulous outfit!
TP: Yes Joan, we first met at the Kentucky
Flute Society’s Young Artist Competition.
I did play the Shocker “Rain and Shine” and yes, I think I got as many
compliments on my outfit as my playing that day! Well, the Shocker just called for something
dramatic, didn’t it??? But… I didn’t win the competition. I was thrilled with my performance and the
audience gave me a standing ovation after the Shocker. But, I came in Third in the competition. Such is the way it goes with competitions and
auditions… you just do your best and be your own judge. You certainly can’t be everything for
everyone, so you just have to play it the way that makes you happy. I think that’s my performance motto, “I’ll
play it my way, I’ll have fun, some will like it, and some won’t. But, I always give every performance all the
energy and dedication that I can. I put
myself into it. And, that makes me feel
fulfilled and gratified.
JMS: Many would do well to share
your attitude! How is it to be married
to a musician, Simon? Do you ever work together?
SRH: I
can't imagine being in a marriage with anyone other than a musician. Everyone
makes sacrifices for what they value in life, but the time and commitment
involved in becoming, and being, a professional musician...it's so time
consuming, and emotionally challenging - I imagine it's like being married to
an athlete. That being said, given that we are both woodwind doublers, with
different "primary" instruments, our marriage is perfect (in so many
ways!!!) in the sense that we are able to advise and support each other to a
greater degree than almost any situation would allow.
JMS: Tereasa: How would you describe your career today?
TP: My career today can be described in professional
terms as “multi-faceted.” In reality,
it’s just insane! I get to play
flute/piccolo in orchestras, as well as flute, clarinet, saxophones, and ethnic
flutes with touring Broadway shows, and accompanying world-renowned artists, as
well as teaching as an adjunct flute instructor at Bethune-Cookman University
and Daytona State College. A typical
month might include Mahler, Mozart, “Wicked,” and The Temptations! It’s a crazy schedule, and it takes a lot of
hours of preparation and practice to keep all those horns in shape. A list of the instruments that I perform
on: Piccolo, Flute, Alto Flute, Bass
Flute, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Soprano Sax, Alto Sax, Tenor Sax, Bari Sax,
plus the Ethnic Flutes: Dizi, Quena,
Romanian Panpipes, South American Panpipes, Ocarina, Bansuri, Fife, Irish
Flute, Pennywhistle, Native American Flute, Recorders, and Shakuhachi.
JMS: How does the
scheduling work out for you all? Do you
ever work together, or share instruments?
SRH: We
have been known to share/lend instruments on occasion...for instance, we only
took one tenor sax to Utah last summer - when I returned to Florida a few weeks
earlier than Tereasa, she used my instrument in Utah, and I used hers, which
was back in Florida...or, I'll sometimes use Tereasa's piccolo (her Powell is a
better instrument than mine) if I have a show that has piccolo on, and she's
not using hers. We are able to sub for each other on a fair number of the gigs
we do, although the fact that we are hired together on a lot of them means that
subbing for each other is often not possible.
JMS: Tereasa, how do you play all these
instruments, and still be an award winning flutist?
TP: I often compare the life of a woodwind
doubler to that of a triathlete. Does
the triathlete’s running suffer because he/she practices swimming and
biking? No, the extra effort and
training you put into the other sport improves your overall body and mind for
all three events. Has playing the
clarinet and saxophone harmed my flute playing?
Quite the opposite, my flute playing has improved because I have to be
more away of what I am physically doing to create the flute results that I
want. In addition, the styles that I
have learned playing saxophone, like rock and jazz, have broadened both my
musicality and my rhythm immensely.
Everyone always asks how I can manage to play
all these instruments at a professional level.
The answer is the same thing I tell my students, “Practice!” I practice constantly. A typical day for Simon and I, if we don’t
have any concerts, shows, or students, is to get up, start practicing, break
for a lunch together, go back to practicing, break for dinner together, than
back to practicing. We take one day off
a year, December 26…Christmas. LOL, well
we work on actual Christmas, so we celebrate the holiday on the 26th! Our “date nights” are usually me giving him
flute lessons, and him giving me jazz lessons!
For Christmas he gave me a new soprano saxophone mouthpiece… I am head
over heels in love with this guy!
Simon and I both start every day out by
warming up on flute. The muscles just
don’t seem to behave correctly if we don’t do flute before playing reeds. Even
if we have to leave early in the morning for a gig or teaching, we get up a
little earlier to get this flute warm-up in.
It’s that important. We both play
every family of horn every day: flute,
clarinet, one or more saxophones. The
only instruments that do not get this daily treatment are my ethnic flutes. I try to practice at least one of them each
day, and then whichever ones I need to play for gigs in the next few
weeks.
JMS: So, Simon, how did you meet Tereasa?
SRH:
We met in grad school at Arizona State University, where we both were doing our
Masters degrees. I stayed on for my Doctorate, while Tereasa moved to Boston to
attend Boston University. It wasn't until about 5 years later, when Tereasa
returned to Phoenix, that we started dating, and married.
JMS: Did you plan this career, or
did it evolve?
TP: Did I grow-up dreaming of being an insane
workaholic woodwind doubler? No, I
didn’t. My dream growing up was to be an
orchestral flutist. After grad school, I
started playing my first orchestra job.
It was then that I decided I wanted to do more. That was precisely the time that Simon and I
started dating. He got me on a show,
“Meet Me in St Louis” that he was playing.
The music was fun, the theater people were wonderful, and I felt like I
had found a special place that I never knew existed. The book was flute and clarinet. Since it was mostly flute, only a little
clarinet and the music director (who, by the way, is now a well-known Broadway
tour conductor!) knew that a flutist-doubler was a difficult thing to find, so
he decided to hire a straight flutist… me.
Well, that made my goal in life perfectly clear… I must become the
world’s first (first in my young mind, anyway) flutist-doubler! So, I bought a clarinet and started
learning. Luckily, I had a live-in
teacher since Simon and I were married shortly after that life-altering
show! He then bought me a saxophone for
my birthday, and a new career was born!
It’s been crazy-hard work, which I have never
minded. It takes every waking moment to
practice, learn styles that they don’t teach you in orchestral-flutist world,
and to find reeds (flutists, we are SO LUCKY not to have reeds or spit-valves!) I didn’t mind all the hours and the hard
work. What was tough to handle was the
criticism. I heard from so many
flutists, “What are you doing, playing reeds?
You’ll ruin your flute embouchure.”
Now, I was always a tenacious child (stubborn, says my mom…). But, I took these negative assumptions as a
challenge. I WOULD become a flutist
doubler. Thankfully, I had a husband, a
mom, and an incredibly wonderful flute teacher, Marianne Gedigian, who
supported me whole-heartedly. They
always encouraged me, and believed in me.
Between their support, my stubbornness, and a whole lot of practice, I
am now a successful, working, incredibly happy and fulfilled flutist-doubler.
JMS: Simon: what is your
biggest musical influence? Person or event?
Wytko.)
In terms of working towards my particular musical goals, there are three people
I have found particularly inspiring, however...firstly, one of the Teaching
Assistants at ASU when I first arrived there (I'll spare his blushes) was very
accomplished musically, and had an incredible work ethic that I very much
admired....secondly, taking lessons with Dan Higgins and Sal Lozano (both
woodwind players in Los Angeles) proved extremely inspiring from the
perspective of experiencing musicians performing on multiple instruments to
such an incredibly high degree of proficiency. Hearing them play was a very powerful
moment for me.
JMS: Where did you go to
school, Simon? Did you feel school prepared you for your career, or did
your career evolve over time?
SRH: Trinity
College of Music, London, and Arizona State University. I have nothing but
positive memories of my education. There are certainly things I would have done
differently had I known from the outset the particular direction I would choose
in music. That's not a fault of my teachers, or the educational institutions I
attended - just a case of hindsight is 20/20. I feel that to a very large
extent that my education did prepare me well for my career. I feel very
strongly that you're never going to learn all the things you need to succeed in
any career (much less a career in music) from one teacher, at one school. It is
vital for students to put themselves in as many different situations as
possible, that will allow them to learn and grow, musically (and in other
ways,) whether that means attending different schools, studying with many
teachers, or playing with many other musicians....the process of assimilating
what they feel is positive about a situation/lesson/teacher and rejecting the
negatives, is the best way to learn music, in my opinion.
JMS: One last question: how have you both
avoided becoming jaded?
Our
musical lives are so varied, and we get to perform with so many different and
wonderful musicians (famous or otherwise) that I think it would be impossible
to become jaded. It's true, not every gig we play is musical nirvana, but
that's okay...that's not a realistic expectation of a career in music. The
simple truth is that we are making a living doing something we absolutely love
to do, and that's good enough for me!