It looks like it's going to be an amazing World Harp Congress in Vancouver in a couple of weeks!
Welcome to Lauren Scott's harp blog! I'm a professional harpist based in the UK. Here you will find all sorts of harp musings, in a bid to spread a bit of harpyness. Thanks for visiting!
Wednesday, 13 July 2011
Harp Summit
It looks like it's going to be an amazing World Harp Congress in Vancouver in a couple of weeks!
Wednesday, 6 July 2011
being calm
- having to sightread a community opera - an unmarked horrendous harp part in open key signature with loads and loads of notes... and accidentals
- having a 3 session day yesterday, enough to make anyone tired and frazzled
- being blocked in the car park at 9.30pm by some silly woman who was refusing to move her car
- being told I could park in a specific space this morning, and then being told by someone else 5 minutes before rehearsal that I had to move my car
- trying to play and watch the monitor at the side of stage so I could follow the conductor for the off stage harp part, only for loads of crew to suddenly stand in front of it and block my view as soon as I start playing
- finding the person who was looking after my harp outside the backstage door whilst I got my car had buggered off by time I got back with the car
Friday, 1 July 2011
Inspiring
Monday, 20 June 2011
Laser harp
Ok, so they aren't actual harps....... but have you noticed how laser harps (that are actually built to look like a harp) seem to be popping up everywhere? With lots of science centres now having one.
I've not actually seen one in the flesh, but wouldn't an encounter with one in a museum be fun, and inspiring?
Glen Hill of Mountain Glen Harps seems to be building some great laser harps. Here he is explaining about one he has built for a children's Hospital.
What an amazing and therapeutic thing it would be in that situation. There is lots of info on Glens website about how they work. Essentially it's much like the midi harp in that each "string" triggers whatever is programmed on the software running it, but in this case of course you break the laser beam to make the trigger. Glen also has a blog with some pretty cool pictures of custom harps he is building.
A more traditional laser harp (without it being in confines of a harp shaped box) is nothing new, but I really like this next YouTube clip. Arpa di Luce is a collaboration between Gianpietro Grossi- Laser Engineer, Francesco Murano-Light Designer and Pietro Pirelli-Musician and visual artist.
Tuesday, 7 June 2011
Hijab Initiation
Wednesday, 1 June 2011
Let there be light
Sorry, not Michael Nyman's theme from The Piano (The Heart ask Pleasure First) on the harp.... though it is played nicely here on the celtic harp by Italian harpist Mario Lipparini..
...but check out the lights on Mario's harp!
They are called "Rebecca Light" and were invented by a lighting engineer who plays the harp and the website where you can buy them is here

But I'm a bit concerned that on the website they sell a pedal switch for "when your harp must be silent for a passage"
Does that mean that they are not silent? ;-(
Hopefully it's just a mis-translation from Italian to English?
At $325 for the starter kit it's a bit too much to pay out if they do make a noise.

Wouldn't they would be cool on a pop gig though, and a really fun thing for solo gigs.
Anyone used them and can say whether they found them noisy or not?
If they are silent maybe someone can have a word with Santa.....Christmas is only 7 months away!!
Sunday, 29 May 2011
Catriona McKay

Andy and I heard them play at the Edinburgh Festival last year and we were so blown away by this really amazing duo! Catriona is an inspiring harpist to see live, and if you live anywhere in the North West please do come along to see them.
Sandbach is just a minutes drive off the M6, there is free car parking and we even have a lovely Italian restaurant which does before and after concert meals for us just opposite the venue!
Full details are on Sandbach Concert Series website and you can buy tickets online here
Friday, 20 May 2011
Cheating
Vaughan Williams Sea Symphony.
Spot the difference between chord symbols and pedal markings on this hire part?
(Double click on image to see closer view)
1. What is that harp part all about then? Pages and pages of badly written arpeggios that go at the speed of light with impossible page turns. The only way to play them is to cheat and read chord symbols instead.
2. Wouldn't it have been great to have been a fly on the wall and seen the confrontation between the first harpists who had to play this piece and Vaughan Williams? (I know what I would have said to him about it!)
3. Why is my own copy of this piece only partially marked up?
I try not to play this piece if I can all help it as it's not a joyous experience to play with it's constant fistfuls of notes, but I've played this three times now in the past year.
So I suppose it's about time I thoroughly marked up my own part rather than relying on scribbled on hire parts, so that I have a fighting chance of being able to actually read all that information on the page whilst playing it at speed..



