Mentoring Moment – Winter Lyre Care

From the Lyre Newsletter for Michaelmas-Advent 2004 Volume #48:

As we are still in the winter season, be aware that heated indoor air can be a major hazard for your lyre! Lyres, as well as other instruments made of wood, can crack if the wood dries out too much over time.  To prevent this possibility, add some humidity to the air your lyre lives in.  The best way is with a humidifier for your whole house, or for the room where you keep your lyre.  If that is not possible, or in addition to room humidity, add moisture to the air inside your lyre case.  You can use a Dampit, or “snake” made for violins and cellos and available at music stores.  Or, make a homemade case humidifier with a piece of sponge inside a film container punched with holes. (2024 note: Since film containers are no longer in common use, the D’Addario small instrument humidifier is another option.)

Protect your lyre further by wrapping it in a piece of silk.  Include the case humidifier or Dampit in the “package”.

LANA Study Group Begins February 24 – RSVP Required

LANA Study Group Begins February 24 – RSVP Required

LANA is initiating a study group for members! It will be held via Zoom at regular intervals, and the subject matter will be related to the lyre, to music inspired by anthroposophy, and to the Movement for Musical Renewal.

Madonna Cards published by Raffael-verlag

Our first study will be a reading and review of Reinhold Faeth’s article entitled ‘The Madonna Pentagram’, where he outlines the reasons for revising the order of the Madonna Sequence images.  It was published in Zeitschrift Seelenpflege, January 1998.  In 2002, Raffael-Verlag, publishers of ‘Madonnen Bilder’ prints and cards, adopted a revised sequence of these paintings, based on this article. Our study will use the English translation by David Barford and Rose Edwards, January 2003. Because the order of the pictures differs from that traditionally used, we felt it would be helpful to share this article and give others the opportunity to work through this important and well-presented content.

The study will begin on Saturday, February 24 and continue monthly for 4 sessions.

The study will begin on Saturday, February 24 and continue monthly for 4 sessions. In order to accommodate LANA members from different parts of the world who have already expressed an interest to participate in this study, we have made the time decision as follows: 1300 EST, 1200 CST, 2100, 1900 France, 2000 in Israel, and 700 (Sunday) in Wellington, New Zealand

Please RSVP via email to Debbie Barford dsbarford@yahoo.com

Zoom invitation will be sent on RSVP, along with further suggestions for study materials.

The article is linked here.

Sets of Madonna cards and large prints are available in the LANA Store.

--Debbie Barford, on behalf of the LANA Board

LANA Board News

Catherine Read

It is with great pleasure that we welcome Catherine Read back to the LANA Board of Directors. She will be a great asset as part of the publications team within our Cultural Realm of LANA. 

Catherine Read has been playing lyre since 2008 as part of teaching the Waldorf Curriculum at home (from Kindergarten through Grade Eleven, described in The Genius of Home, SteinerBooks).  She has attended Lyre Summer Conferences and played for Advent Garden festivals.  Catherine was previously on the Board of the Lyre Association of North America from 2002-2009, and was on the Faculty of the Dorion School of Music Therapy from 2005-2009.  She was a founding member of Resonare, a music foundation course out of Anthroposophy, and was the founding editor of Soundings.  Catherine is currently liaising with the Tir-Anna lyre workshop to support an internship in lyre building of the Derscheid Legacy lyres.

Colleen Shetland

We would also like to express our gratitude to Colleen Shetland who has joined Christof-Andreas Lindenberg as an Emeritus member of the LANA Board. She has been a very active part of our Board for over 20 years, serving as LANA president during our 2015 international conference in Detroit, and making a key contribution to the development of our association. We are very grateful to Colleen for her years of service to LANA!  

Music Review – Joy in the Holy Nights

My husband Joel and I returned home from our early December travels to a marathon of Christmas activities and music!  Besides accompanying rehearsals for the Oberufer Three Kings Play (with music from Upper Esk, performed on Epiphany), we played for four Christmas services and many of the morning services and contemplations taking place during the 12 Holy Days following.

Throughout these activities, we had a wonderful time exploring John Billing’s Joy Songbook, just released on the LANA website as a digital download. Our community loved hearing the selection of traditional European Christmas carols – some, shorter for interludes in the service; others, longer with embellishments.  Thank you, John, for this timely book of carols arranged for lyre!

Please send your reviews and stories from the season to Lyrists@gmail.com.
Margo Ketchum
Devon, Pennsylvania
Lyrists@gmail.com / 610-608-9281

Second-Hand Lyres for Sale

The Lyre Association recently received a list of currently available second-hand lyres from Gundolf Kuehn in Germany.  Gundolf does a beautiful job of refurbishing used lyres, and all his instruments are very high quality and typically come with new strings.  There are many lyres available on this recently updated list, and Gundolf reported that he has hired a new employee who is training to become a lyre maker, which increases his lyre workshop to four builders/refurbishers.

Gundolf is happy to send pictures of the lyres via WhatsApp.  His email address is gundolf.kuehn@t-online.de.

2023 Lyre Conference Report

Participant Reflections on the 2023 Lyre Conference

From July 30th through August 3rd, the Lyre Association of North America was delighted to be able to welcome friends and members from across the US and beyond for our annual summer conference, held this year on the campus of Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School in Ghent, New York, to celebrate the lives and musical contributions of Channa Andriesse Seidenberg and Maria Schüppel - composers, educators, performers, and therapists, who lived and worked actively on either side of the Atlantic throughout decades of the 20th and early 21st centuries into their 80’s. . . . [More from Sheila Johns, Sally Willig, David Barford, and Jay Yasgur….]

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LANA's Annual Members’ Meeting

The Annual Members’ Meeting of the Lyre Association of North America convened on Sunday, July 30th at 4:15 p.m. EDT at the Hawthorne Valley School in Ghent, NY.  The meeting served as the opening to our four-day summer lyre conference and provided an opportunity for LANA members and friends to learn about the work of the LANA Board over the past year. The meeting was held in a hybrid form, with several LANA members joining remotely and 20 others attending in person.

For the last three years, the Lyre Association Board has operated out of a three-fold model which honors the multi-faceted nature of its work.  As an organizing structure, we identify three “realms” (Cultural, Economic, and Rights), and within each of these realms, there are three working groups, each overseen by one Board member, who works closely with the other members of their realm.  During the course of the Annual Members Meeting, all of the LANA Board members addressed their specific work areas and noted the past year’s accomplishments.

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LANA Board Retreat – Madonna Sequence with Music

Prior to our recent summer lyre conference, the Board of the Lyre Association met for our annual retreat on July 29th.  In addition to exploring and refining a vision for our cultural, rights, and economic realms of work, we devoted a full afternoon to deepening our understanding and appreciation of the musical approach to the healing sequence of Madonna pictures (mostly by Rafael),which can be used for both therapeutic and hygienic purposes, most often accompanied by the lyre.

The first presentation was out of the combined work of Sheila Johns and Catherine Read (who joined the meeting just for this presentation).  Twenty one years ago, Sheila and Catherine participated in a series of working sessions with Channa Seidenberg and Jean Anderberg at Channa's house in Philmont, New York, to work on Channa's idea that there may be a correspondence between the Zodiac and this sequence of paintings.  Specifically, Channa thought that the twelve pictures appearing on the pentagram form (see the linked Faeth article) would have a relationship with the Zodiac.  We chose to meet in the Holy Nights because Catherine had just returned from several days of working on the eurythmy gestures for the Zodiac with Marjorie Spock in Maine.  The gestures were fresh in her memory as well as in her 'muscle memory'. 

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Kimberton Regional Lyre Workshop

After the service on Sunday, September 3rd, at the Devon Christian Community, Veronika Roemer and Margo Ketchum (from PA), Sally Willig and Saeko Cohn (from Spring Valley, NY), and Rika Yamashita (from Japan) presented a sharing of lyre music and songs that followed a day-long workshop led by Veronika.

Selections included: Theme Song from the Japanese film "Spirited Away", pieces by Channa Seidenberg, Thomas Pedroli, Christof-Andreas Lindenberg, and more.

Several of our participants have shared their reflections….

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A Letter from LANA member in Japan

A Letter from LANA member in Japan

I, Kayoko Matsubara, suffered stroke (cerebral hemorrhage) last year, which caused me right-sided hemiplegia. It was "fatal" for lyre player like me. (I don't sing. I need to play not only a melody line but accompaniment together with both hands.)
In the abyss of despair, German lyre builder Gundolf Kühn offered me a lefty lyre. A kind of miracle occured when I started to play it with my left fingers. My right hand reacted as if it would like to move again!

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The Lyre in Malaysia

Lyre Festival in Malaysia John Billing, Republic of Ireland

In September of this year, Lau Yee Ching invited me to Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia for a four week “Lyre Festival” of concerts and workshops.  During the weekdays, the two of us, occasionally joined by Ching’s student Le Xin, practiced a repertoire of duo and trio pieces. First, however, came a little sightseeing.

 I was taken to Taiping, Ching’s home town, a few hours north of  Kuala Lumpur. Taiping is famous for its beautiful lake set in parkland with enormous “rain trees” (Samanea saman Fabales) covered with epiphytic ferns. We took walks here every evening – when the temperature had dropped from the daily 34 to about 25 degrees centigrade. Many birds were chattering in the trees, and around the lake, we saw storks and some hornbills, which made strange honking sounds as they flew around the tree tops.

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LANA and WECAN

As the Board of LANA has examined how we can expand our influence through our Outreach working group, we have made a decision to put increased focus on exposing early childhood teachers to the lyre through making 7-string children's lyres available through our Lyre Rental program and by adding music and texts on the mood of the fifth and pentatonic music to our Music Sales offerings.  Along those lines, we have created an ad for the upcoming annual conference sponsored by the Waldorf Early Childhood Association of North America (WECAN) in February of each year. In addition, one of our local LANA Board members will have a table during the conference to distribute relevant information, to share sample copies of music, and to make children's lyres available for conference participants to try.

We wanted our members and friends to see the ad we placed so all of us can spread the word that LANA has a number of resources to support both lyre playing and singing for early childhood educators!

2023 LANA President's Letter

Dear Members and Friends of the Lyre Association of North America,

Witnessing the terrible conflicts and tragedies in our world today is making us more aware than ever of the importance of human connections that can bring comfort and solace to those in need. Many of us have found the soothing tones of the lyre to ease the stresses of our lives for ourselves and for those who are listening. The opportunity to bring the sound of the lyre to the children at Waldorf schools and to those attending religious services and concerts continues to bring joyful experiences to many of us. As we play for Advent gardens and various Christmas festivals this year, I hope that each of us can find peace and joy in our lives as well.

After a pause of three years, it was wonderful to finally have an in-person lyre conference this last summer! Those of us who were able to attend enjoyed the warmth of friendships renewed and fostered through the four days spent exploring the lyre tones and playing beautiful music together. The members of LANA’s Board of Directors were also able to meet together and make plans for furthering our mission with new initiatives and programs to support our members.

Through our website, we sell music and accessories to lyrists from all parts of the world, offer mentoring services, rental lyres for new lyre enthusiasts, and provide financial help to those who wish to travel to conferences and workshops.

It is our sincere hope that you have benefitted from your membership in LANA and might consider showing your appreciation through making a gift of any amount to further our mission. As we look toward the new year, we ask for your support. Even modest tax-deductible donations from our members and friends around the world are critically important in defraying the costs of accomplishing our mission.

We also invite our members to consider promoting membership in LANA among your lyre-playing friends so that more people can enjoy the community support of the ‘freed tone’ that is so rare in our world today.

With this mailing, we are happy to include a seasonal gift of music for all our members and friends to thank each of you for your continued financial as well as soul support for the work of the Lyre Association of North America!

With warmest regards and all good wishes for this Advent season, Holy Nights, and the New Year ahead,

Nancy Carpenter and the Board of LANA 

Welcome New LANA Board Member

Saeko S. Cohn

The Board of the Lyre Association of North America is very pleased to introduce our newest Board member, Saeko Cohn.  We invite all of our members and friends to read a bit about Saeko below.

A native of Nagoya, Japan, Saeko came to North America in her early 20's to study literature at the graduate level. She met anthroposophy through becoming a mother, and soon, the lyre came into her life. She had played the piano since childhood and the flute since age 15, but she had never thought of pursuing music professionally. However, after she bought a 7-string pentatonic lyre for her son's third birthday and began to play it, Saeko decided to devote the rest of her life to promoting music through the modern lyre. Her first lyre teacher was the late Kerry Lee, and after Kerry's passing, she has continued studying the lyre with such experienced teachers as Martin Tobiassen, Christian Giersch, Veronika Roemer, and Hajime Kira. Saeko regularly travels across the Atlantic to attend lyre seminars focused on solo and ensemble performance, repertoire building, accompanying eurythmy with the lyre, and teaching the kinderharp to children. Over the years, she has developed special affinity for planetary (mirrored) scales, the Mood of the Fifth, and the Maria Renold tuning.

Music Review: Bielharz – ‘Beispiele 2’

Beispiele 2 Studien und Spielstucke fur Mehrere Lehrern

Review by Sally Willig

As we know, one of the joys of playing lyre is the experience of playing in community with others.  From the introduction to these pieces, Gerhard Beilharz explains that this collection was intended to satisfy the needs of lyre players of all levels to be able to play together.  In keeping with this intention, the composers who contributed to this collection made their arrangements accessible to all skill levels so that even a beginner could participate and enjoy the experience of ensemble playing. In Beispiele 2, we find a compilation of pieces from some of our most popular composers, namely, Christof-Andreas Lindenberg, Julius Knierim, Christian Giersch, Raimund Schwedeler, Gotthard Starke, Jan Nilsson, Lothar Reubke, and Pär Ahlbom.  Most of the pieces can be played either by single instruments (for example, one soprano lyre & one alto lyre), or by larger ensembles, with more lyres on each part.

The opening piece is Christof-Andreas Lindenberg’s “Explore the Lyre” for soprano and alto lyres, a lovely piece with moving arpeggiated lines and a recurring motif that seems to answer the arpeggiated melody.  There follows “Kanon Zu Ostinato” by Julius Knierim, which features a canon in D Major over an ostinato of the Tao tones.  It is suggested that the ostinato in this piece is accessible to beginner lyrists.  There follows a set of short pieces by Christian Giersch for soprano and alto lyre, including two Kanons that appear in a fairly straightforward way, suitable for all levels of lyre playing in their simplicity.  “Morgenstimmung” by Raimund Schwedeler, begins with a simple theme played in unison with soprano and alto lyre followed by more richly textured variations, and then ending with a final arpeggiated variation for soprano lyre(s).  Following this, Gotthard Starke gives us “Studie” for two soprano lyres.  There is also a small set of pieces from Jan Nilsson that makes use of other instruments in addition to the lyre: “Music für Leier und Klangspiel,” in which Klangspiel is the top voice over soprano lyre, and “Kanon”, in which the top voice is indicated for flute, the middle voice for violin, and the bottom voice for alto lyre. Another set of pieces by Lothar Reubke is written for three lyre voices. “Spielstuck für Klangspiel und Leiern” is written for Klangspiel in the top voice with lyre parts below.  “Übung fur Leirchoir” and “Speilstuck für drei Leiern” are for soprano and two alto lyres. “Tageslauteby Pär Ahlbom, in which the sounds of each day of the week are compressed into short little pieces, is the final composition in the collection.  According to the introduction, it is thought that this piece was written for a special glockenspiel in the town hall in Västerås, Sweden.

Since I have played several of these pieces in ensembles over the years and received positive feedback from audiences, I can attest to what a wonderful collection this is. It is also very convenient to have these pieces together under one cover to draw from. 

Please note that this collection is currently on sale in our online Music Sales collection. 

Remembering Susan Starr on All Souls Day

Susan Starr with Puppets

It is with sadness that we must share the news of the recent passing of LANA member Susan Starr – beloved daughter, sister, teacher, mentor, and friend, who crossed the threshold on her 73rd birthday, March 20, 2023, in La Mesa, CA.

Susan was devoted to the lyre and was a supporting member of our Lyre Association for many years.  During those years, she enthusiastically participated in LANA conferences whenever she could to further her musical experience and education.

Susan Starr, Lyre Day 2021, with children playing the lyres Now donated to Lana

As a beautiful example of her generous nature, Susan donated the following lyres to the Lyre Association of North America through her estate, to be used in our Lyre Rental service to members:

  • Tir-anna extended soprano lyre

  • Rose lyre

  • Auris pentatonic children’s lyre

  • Gaertner 12-string diatonic lyre

The following account of her memorial service and life sketch was recently sent to us by a good friend of Susan’s, and we would like to share it with all of our members and friends:

Susan's memorial service filled the auditorium of the Waldorf School of San Diego with well over 100 in attendance. Friends from her school days in Chula Vista, her fellow teachers, students, and their parents as well as Anthroposophical Society members and her extended family shared memories of her many loving and thoughtful deeds. It was especially memorable to hear stories of Susan’s early life from her father. Susan's legacy to us all is the generosity of her "willing", her "doing", and her open-heartedness. 

Susan was born to Yvonne and Don Starr, March 20,1950, in Chula Vista, CA. She was the second of three children.  She attended Hilltop High School and graduated from Southwestern University in Chula Vista with a major in Humanities in 1972.  From there, she spent seven years living in British Columbia, Canada, where she discovered anthroposophy and the Christian Community. She was attending Simon Fraser University as a Kinesiology major when she became interested in early childhood education and eurythmy. She decided to pursue eurythmy training.  She met and married a fellow eurythmy student. After her marriage ended, she completed the Waldorf kindergarten training.  In 1985, she was a pioneering faculty member of the Early Childhood Program at the Princeton, New Jersey Waldorf School, where she stayed until 2002.

Susan eventually returned to San Diego and taught for a year at the Sanderling Waldorf School before moving to the Waldorf School of San Diego, where she was the lead teacher in the Rosemary Kindergarten until 2014.

She went on to mentor Waldorf kindergarten teachers and families all over the US and in China.  She was known by everyone for her incredible talent and generosity in puppetry arts.  She shared puppet making and puppet shows every chance she got.

Susan learned to sail from her father, who has since followed Susan across the threshold on September 19, 2023.  She loved to take friends out for a sail on the San Diego Bay.  She was a talented singer and lyrist, even playing lyre in her apartment courtyard for neighbors during the lock down. She gained permission from her landlord to plant beautiful flower gardens all around her apartment complex.  She sang with an a cappella group in which her mother had also sung when she was alive. She was an award-winning equestrian in her youth.  She was a vegetarian and supported many charitable causes, including animal rights groups. Every year she walked to raise money for the Anthroposophical Prison Outreach. 

Susan was a wonderfully gifted and generous-hearted friend.  She is dearly loved and greatly missed.

Some further personal reflections follow here:
From Heide Radcliff, Princeton Waldorf School, NJ
Susan was the hardest working kindergarten teacher that Princeton Waldorf School ever had. She was essential in building up the N-K program at the Princeton Waldorf School. 

Susan had 24 students and managed her class and each child with great sensitivity and skill. Each child received a hand sewn doll or figure for his or her birthday. When my daughter lost her Mashenka, Susan had the “Gnomes” make another one for her, and it was not even Karla’s birthday when this occurred.

Susan had each child in her heart and suffered when she felt that a child was not taken care of in the most nourishing and healthy way. In the early mornings, Susan even assumed care for a little boy until he was picked up by the school bus to get him to his special school. 

Susan made the role of being a kindergarten teacher into her life while she was in Princeton. 

From Diane Barlow, Princeton Waldorf School, NJ
Our dear Susan. My fondest memories were when she was teaching in a rented church space, and on some Fridays, she had to pack up her entire classroom to make way for church-sponsored activities. She was so devoted to the children and the program that she did this without complaint, even though it was a big deal. 

From Sheila Johns, LANA member and fellow teacher in Mainland China
Susan had a great love for the lyre, though she always regarded herself as a student.  She participated in many conferences of the Lyre Association as well as the Association for Waldorf Music Education because she was passionate about music and self-education.  Although not an official host, when AWME held summer conferences at the San Diego Waldorf school, Susan made herself available to help and support our efforts in every way possible. When Andrea Lyman, president of the Association for Waldorf Music Education, and I traveled to China in 2016 to initiate the first formal training in Waldorf Music Education there, we were delighted to find that Susan was staying in the kindergarten building where we would be teaching, having proceeded us by several weeks.  She enthusiastically ‘showed us the ropes’ in many of the practical areas that were foreign to us, for which we were deeply grateful, and both Andrea and I were impressed with the natural authority and genuine respect that she had earned from Chinese kindergarten teachers not only in the south where we were, but throughout China, where she was well-regarded and invited for return visits. I saw a whole new side to Susan during the time we were together in China.  It has been lovely to reflect on this experience, as it ended up being the last time I saw her.

Susan’s love for life, for music, and her devotion to the protection and nurturing of the children who crossed her path over many decades will be a legacy that will live on well past her many years of service here on earth.  Especially at this All Soul’s time of the year, we are remembering Susan and feeling blessed to have had her as a colleague and a friend.

Request for Reviews, Photos, and Impressions ...

… of the Lyre 2023 Summer Conference

From July 30 through August 3rd, LANA was very grateful to be able to host our first Lyre Conference since 2019 in upstate New York. We are planning to devote our next blog to a review of this conference, and we are inviting any members or friends who were in attendance to consider writing a few paragraphs to contribute to our content. Feel free to just write about one aspect, including our two public offerings, or to characterize the whole. In addition, we will have many more photos to share! If you attended the conference, please send your contribution to lyrists@gmail.com by Friday, November 10th.

Sheila Johns and Marcela Paz Moreno

Public Sharing