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FEATURE PROFILE
Eve
Miller:
Baroque Cellist,
Rock Cellist,
and Glad to Be Back
A life on the road finally caught up with Eve Miller. It happened
on a rainy Monday afternoon at a rest stop off I-5 outside
Bellingham, Washington.
Eve
Miller, a cellist with Tempesta di Mare, is also a well-known,
highly regarded player in alternative rock bands. On that
day, she was touring with Rachel's, a band she's played with
for fifteen years.
"When
you're on tour," Miller explains, "the food's
usually really bad and there's not a lot of time for
exercise. You have to work to keep up your health. We usually
take opportunities at rest stops to jump up and down, run
around with a soccer ball."
That
day, the effort backfired. "It had rained the night
before, I was running full speed across the grass, I went
to kick the ball and my feet just went out from under me.
I guess I threw my arms out to catch myself," she says.
Miller
broke her left arm very badly: three breaks in the humerus
and extensive radial nerve damage. Her hand and forearm were
paralyzed.
The
months of rehabilitation that followed, with no guarantee
of recovery, were grueling. It took four months before she
could move her hand at all. Three more months passed before
she could play again, a potentially devastating layoff for
a professional musician who normally practices many hours
a day.
Miller
approached rehab with the same kind of intensity with which
she approaches music, spending hours a day on physical therapy
combined with shiatsu, acupuncture, herbal medicine, energy
work, and the massage technique called Rolfing, to which she
gives particular credit. It worked. "It's amazing how pieces
of the body can regenerate," says Miller with curiosity and
wonder.
She
trained as a mainstream classical cellist. But while a student
at Baltimore's Peabody Conservatory, she was introduced to
baroque performance practice by Ann Marie Morgan—Tempesta
di Mare founding member and last December's viola da gamba
soloist. "I loved it, I loved it from the get-go," says Miller
about baroque cello.
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FEATURE ARTICLE
(continued)
Also while at Peabody, she met fellow-student Christian
Frederickson, violist. Frederickson had founded Rachel's with visual
artist Jason Noble and Miller joined them. "At the time, Jason was
doing prog rock: weird time signatures and that kind of thing. In
'92, we started making recordings in peoples' basements and just
went on from there," she says.
Rachel's went on to receive increasing critical
regard and an enthusiastic fan base. Recent recordings include Systems/Layers,
a music/theater piece created in collaboration with the Saratoga
International Theater Institute (SITI Company). Miller also played
cello for many years in the singer/songwriter-led alternative rock
band, Matt Pond PA.
Rock cello? Not that unusual. Cellos have had a
place in rock as far back as the early Beatles and "Yesterday."
But performing with acoustic strings in live rock club settings
is unusual. "Wrangling the sound issues of acoustic versus
electric instruments, cello versus drum set, it's challenging,"
she says with relish.
But the rock'n'roll lifestyle was taking
its toll on Miller. For five years, she toured almost 180 days a
year. Even before her injury, she regretfully left Matt Pond PA.
It wasn't just the non-stop clubs. "When you're
away, you lose touch with other people. When you're home more,
there are more opportunities to collaborate, to work with different
people in different ways," says Miller.
Recovered, she's as busy as ever. She just worked
on a score for King Lear with director Jeffrey Frace and
Christian Frederickson from Rachel's, she's playing with other bands,
she's putting together an album of songs for children, and after
having been benched during most of Tempesta's last season, she's
especially enjoying playing with them this year.
Playing in a baroque orchestra is different from
her other work, but it has its own rewards. "What I like so
much about Tempesta is that it's not about just giving a straight
rendition of what's on the page. Even though the group is
very well-rehearsed, spontaneous things happen in performance,"
she says. "It's all about listening and being in touch
with the other musicians, which is fantastic in this orchestra because
there's no conductor. You're constantly shifting your
attention from Gwyn to Emlyn, to the oboe, to how your part fits
in with the violas who are standing right behind you."
"There are always those surprising moments
when you're like, wow, what are they doing over there!"
says Eve Miller. "Then it comes together."
She's back.
Anne
Schuster Hunter, Contributing Editor, is a writer and art
historian living in Philadelphia.
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