Upon graduating from high
school, Firth attended the New England Conservatory
of Music where he studied with Roman Szulc, then the
timpanist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. In addition
to his studies in Boston, Firth made biweekly trips
to Juilliard in order to study with Saul Goodman. When
Szulc retired from the Boston Symphony Orchestra and
auditions were held for the position, Firth was selected
for the job. At age twenty-one, Firth was the youngest
member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Boston
Pops Orchestra, the average age in 1952 being about
fifty-five. Not yet finished with his bachelor's Degree
from the Conservatory, he had to make special arrangements
in order to complete his course work and degree.
Firth's teaching career at the New England Conservatory
also began before he had graduated, first in the preparatory
department, then as head of the percussion department,
a position he has held since 1950. He has guided numerous
gifted students through their education, not only at
the conservatory, but also at the Berkshire Music Center,
Tanglewood, summer home of the BSO. Percussion students
who have studied with Firth hold key positions throughout
the world. He is hesitant to mention outstanding pupils,
but he fondly recalls a class on percussion techniques
for a Copland seminar that included three young conductors
- Claudio Abbado, Zubin Mehta and Seiji Ozawa.
When asked about Firth's teaching style, Late Show
with David Letterman drummer Anton Fig, who studied
with Firth at the New England Conservatory, stated
that "Vic is a very dynamic and forceful individual.
He draws you into his highly productive work ethic.
His lessons give you clear direction, not only with
music but with life. He provides a balanced role model
for the importance of work, family and compassion for
other human beings."
This work ethic, along with the support from his wife,
Olga, and two daughters, Kelly and Tracy, provided
the drive to succeed in the business world in addition
to performing music. Unsatisfied with the sticks available
during his early years, Firth, like many percussionists,
began making his own. Realizing that a concert violinist
might spend $2,000 to $10,000 on a bow, he thought
it strange that a superior quality stick was not widely
available for symphonic percussionists. He began with
timpani mallets, making round heads with no seams.
As his students began using his sticks and dealers
began asking for them, he made the decision to expand
the manufacturing process.
Unlike his other successful business ventures - an
investment partnership and an art gallery - Firth had
no clear plan for developing his stick business. The
driving principle was quality, with a guarantee that
each pair would be straight and matched in pitch. What
began in 1960 as a basement operation out of his home
has now expanded into a corporation with two plants,
a main office and 150 employees to handle the
manufacture and worldwide sales of over 12 million
sticks a year.
Never one to rest on his success, Vic also began another
flourishing venture that most percussionists may not
know about; a line of professional
gourmet products.
For Vic it was a natural evolution from crafting
wood sticks and mallets to designing professional salt
mills, peppermills and rolling pins. Bringing some
of the same business practices from the music industry,
Firth works closely with many of the most successful
chefs in the business to craft the highest quality
wood products available to the home baker and professional
chef.
Although most young percussionists are familiar with
the name Firth because of his sticks and mallets, many
promising students first encounter Firth's musical
substance through his numerous compositions and etudes. The
Solo Timpanist and The Solo Snare Drummer etude
books have set the standard for audition material at
the all-state or college entry level.
As a performer, Firth recalls memorable performances
with such legendary conductors and musicians as Leonard
Bernstein, Serge Koussevitsky, Leopold Stokowski, Jascha
Heifitz and Vladimir Horowitz. "Vic is quite simply
the consummate artist," says Boston Symphony conductor
Seiji Ozawa. "I believe he is the single greatest
percussionist anywhere in the world. Every performance
that Vic gives is informed with incredible musicianship,
elegance and impeccable timing. I also feel very lucky
to count him as a dear and cherished friend, and it
has been one of the great joys of my life to get to
know him and his dear wife Olga."
Asked what his key to success has been, Firth responds, "I
still enjoy the music as much now as I did when I started!" Other
keys to succeeding include a highly competitive nature
and enthusiasm for life. "Mostly, though," says
Firth "I've just been in the right place at the
right time."
Perhaps no one summarizes Firth's esteem in the percussion
community better than jazz drummer Peter Erskine. "I
have had the great pleasure of knowing Vic personally
for twenty-five years," Erskine says, "and
thanks to television and recordings, I have known his
great music-making as timpanist for the Boston Symphony
for even longer. And I have used his sticks since high
school. Vic is the consummate musician, teacher and
business person. No matter whose drumstick you use,
we must all be grateful to Vic Firth for raising the
level of stick and mallet design and production. Simply
put, I wouldn't want to make any of my music without
his sticks, and I cherish the friendship of the man
and his family."
Vic retired from the Boston Symphony Orchestra in
2001 after a 50 year tenure as timpanist. In 1995,
he was inducted into the Percussive Arts Society's
Hall of Fame.
Even
though he's the last person to admit it,
in the percussion world, Vic Firth is a national
treasure. With 50 years of experience as
the timpanist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra,
having played under the baton of the greatest
conductors of all time, Vic has a wealth
of knowledge that we wanted to tap into. Here
are a few of our questions:
| As
a young student, you learned from some
of the greatest historical figures in the
percussion world. Can you share some memories
and things that you learned from these
masters? |
|
You
are famous for making "adjustments" to
what composers notated on the timpani parts
in order to accommodate for a specific sound
quality or texture that you want to achieve.
First,
do you feel any apprehension about "improving" upon
a composer's notation? Can
you site some specific examples where you've
made changes? Second,
how did Seiji Ozawa or guest conductors
of the Boston Symphony Orchestra react to
your interpretations? |
|
| Your
playing style is often likened to that of a
drumset player in a big band -- you control
the tempo, often even more so than the conductor.
Is this a role that you consciously take on
wherever you play, or has it developed over
the many years playing specifically with the
BSO? |
|
| Can
you give us an overview of your concept of
sound on the timpani? |
|
|
Written
by Rick Mattingly, Reprinted with permission, Modern
Drummer Magazine
Volume 25, No. 11, November, 2001
When
Vic Firth joined the Boston Symphony Orchestra
in 1951, the average age of a BSO member was fifty-five.
Firth was twenty-one -- the youngest person to
ever land a position with that orchestra. Now,
as Firth begins his fiftieth season with the BSO,
he holds the distinction of having been in the
orchestra longer than anyone else.
He's
not the oldest member, though. And Firth has
no plans to shoot for that particular goal. "Fifty
is a nice, round number,"
he says. "So I think I might just throw it in
after this season. They want me to stay, but there's
a saying that it's better to leave a year too soon
than a week too late. Although my wits and responses,
as far as I can tell, are as sharp as ever, I think
there is an obligation to never be less than your very
best. So I'd rather leave on that note than to wait
a year or two too long, as I've seen some of my colleagues
do. You tend to remember that more than all the years
of good playing.
 |
"I think what's given me
the longevity is that I've enjoyed it so much,"
Firth says. "I came into one of the most highly
skilled groups of players in the world. From day
one I was absolutely bowled over with the sound
made by the individual musicians and the orchestra
as a whole. And to this day I've never gotten over
the joy of contributing to the beautiful music
we produce. When we play Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikovsky
-- all the standard war-horses -- it is readily
understandable why that music has lasted so long.
And when you get to the more contemporary music
of Bartok, Stravinsky, Shostakovich, and Prokofiev,
there is such greatness there that it must be tough
for a young composer today to realize what you
have to do to write music like that."
Firth has also enjoyed working
with the world's greatest conductors and soloists
over the past half-century. "Even though
you play certain pieces many, many times, it's
interesting how each conductor and soloist interprets
those black-and-white dots on the page," he
says. "Each one is a musical sculptor who
does different things with the same tools. That's
part of what has always been exciting for me.
No two performances are ever the same. Performing
has always been an adventure, and the thrill
of that adventure is still with me. Maybe I found
the fountain of youth in music."
Vic Firth was born in Massachusetts
and raised in Maine, the son of a musician who
started Vic on trumpet when he was four. Over
the next few years, he also took lessons on trombone,
clarinet, piano and percussion. By the time he
was in high school, Vic was playing percussion
full-time and studying with the legendary George
Lawrence Stone. By age sixteen, Firth was working
professionally as a drumset player in a big band.
|
"Within
the Boston Symphony, the timpanist is a real time
bearer," Firth says. "I control the tempo;
I can make it, break it, shape it, or destroy it.
I learned about time when I was in high school, playing
from 9:00 pm to 3:00 am in a jazz group with older
men. Boy, did I learn to maintain time, because everybody
around me was drunk! I don't think I took even a
sip of a beer until I was in my twenties because
I saw these guys making such fools of themselves.
 |
Vic
with Saul Goodman |
"I
don't pretend to be a moralist, but I've seen a
lot of people come and go, and the ones who stay
are the ones who eat right, sleep right, and don't
do abusive things to themselves. To really be a
creative, professional musician, you have to be
honest with yourself and the music."
After
graduating from high school, Firth attended
the New England Conservatory of Music, where
he studied with Roman Szulc, who was then timpanist
with the Boston Symphony. In addition, Firth
traveled to New York City twice a month to study
with New York Philharmonic timpanist Saul Goodman."Saul
had a natural feel for the instrument and understood
the difference between Brahms and Stravinsky and
Bach and Bartok," Firth says.
"He knew how to color the sound to fit the music,
because you don't use the same stick, the same stroke
and the same sound for everything."
When
Firth won the Boston Symphony audition upon Szulc's
retirement, he became fascinated with sound and
phrasing. "At the time I joined the orchestra,
we had a principal viola player who looked like
a plumber's helper in terms of his hands," Firth
remembers. "Each of his fingers was the size
of my big toe, but when he picked up that viola,
the sound he made was from heaven. So I would listen
to him, and then I started listening to the cellos,
and I decided that's what the timpani should sound
like. Most timpani players try to phrase with the
brass section, because all of us drummers started
out in marching band. But when you learn how to
phrase with the string section, you get a whole
different concept of what kind of sonority you're
creating that contributes to the sound of the orchestra."I
used to do whatever I could to bring the sound
of my instruments into a richer category," he
explains. "Some of the composers were
not that knowledgeable about timpani, and so
I took it upon myself to alter the parts. Sometimes
I'd go too far and it didn't sound like that
composer's music any more, so I'd back off."
 |
Many of Firth's changes
have been penciled into timpani parts and passed
among timpanists throughout the world. "There
are a lot of things you can do to achieve a
higher quality of sound," Firth says.
"For example, in the first movement of the
Tchaikovsky Fourth Symphony, the timpani plays
a background ostinato on the F that's written on
the fourth line of the bass clef. I would also
put an F an octave lower on my largest drum and
play them in unison. Conductors never noticed,
but it made for a richer, warmer sound."
One of the hallmarks of
Firth's playing is the way it blends into the
total sound of the orchestra. His timpani rhythms
do not cut through the orchestra's sound as
much as they support that sound from within,
serving as the internal heartbeat of the music.
In some respects, Firth's approach to playing
timpani with an orchestra can be compared to
the late Mel Lewis's approach to playing drumset
with a big band. In fact, when Firth was head
of the percussion department at the New England
Conservatory of music, he invited Lewis to
be on the faculty."
Mel was a great artist and
interpreter of sound," Firth says. "We
needed a drumset teacher at the Conservatory,
and I said that they should bring up this guy
from New York. This goes back at least thirty
years. Mel wasn't the world's greatest technician,
but when it came to playing in an ensemble
and bringing sounds to that ensemble that played
into the arms of the music, this guy could
do it. Mel was all color and imagination for
sound and the way he blended into the group
was phenomenal.
|
"As far as the technical
aspects, I was always very technically skilled
myself, so I said I'd teach the students technique,
because all the drumset players had to go through
me as well. And the first thing they had to work
on was George Stone's Stick Control. I
didn't care what level they were, we started
on the first page and did those first thirteen
exercises. Before I got done with them, no matter
where they started at, they increased their ability
three hundred percent."
Unlike drummers who concentrate on the speed
at which they can play the Stick Control exercises,
Firth was interested in a different aspect of
technique. "There's no question that speed
and chops are a major part of your ability," he
says. "But when a student started with Stick
Control, all I was concerned about was the
quality of sound. Regardless of the sticking,
every exercise should sound like exercise 1,
which is just 8th notes played with alternating
hands. Those exercises should be devoid of any
inflection. The idea was to be in total control
of the sound.
"It would take several months of honing,
but gradually you could hear finesse developing
in these students' hands. They didn't even realize
it for a while, because they heard themselves
every day. But I only heard them once a week,
and I could hear major improvements from week
to week. I would make them play it triple piano,
and if they accented a single note I'd jump all
over them. I wasn't the sweetest guy in the world
when it came to teaching. But if they could take
that abuse from me, then they wouldn't have to
take so much when they became professional players,
because they would be so highly skilled.
|
 |
"I
told students the first day that if they didn't
put in a minimum of five hours of practice a day,
they shouldn't dare show their face in the room.
I had a few dropouts and a few who broke down and
cried after a while -- and a couple who tried to
take a swing at me,"
Firth says, laughing. "But those who survived
could play with superb touch and control. When you
have that kind of control and somebody tells you to
make it louder or softer, or faster or slower, you
can smile instead of starting to shake.
 |
"This applies to every drummer, whether
you're playing Beethoven with an orchestra, jazz
with brushes, or whatever. You have to have the
control to make your instrument speak where it's
supposed to. You also have to be able to phrase.
Phrasing is a word everybody uses, and the simplest
explanation of phrasing is how you go from one
note to another. And until you can learn how
to do that and have an expressive, musical vocabulary,
you haven't accomplished what you set out to
do in music.
"The whole process of playing is basically
about sound," Firth stresses.
"You put something in the atmosphere that
is beautiful, or grotesque, or shimmering, or
ugly, or anything you want, but it has to be
something specific. That's what makes it exciting.
So everything I've done was built around sound."
That quest for sound led Firth to design and
manufacture his own timpani sticks. What started
literally as a basement operation that produced
three models of timpani sticks and two models
of drumsticks has grown to be the biggest drumstick
manufacturing business in the world with over
two hundred sixty models of sticks and mallets.
|
"I
thought there was a need for a higher-quality stick
than was being manufactured at the time," Firth
recalls. "Also, I was asked to do certain
things that were perhaps more sophisticated than
a lot of timpanists were doing, so I started designing
sticks to accommodate what I had to do."
At
that time, timpani sticks were typically of the "cartwheel"
design, in which a rectangular piece of felt was wrapped
around a core and stitched. Players had to avoid hitting
the drum with the seam, as that could produce a "clicky" sound.
Firth came up with a seamless head for his timpani
mallets, and the heads were also round so that the
same amount of felt struck the drumhead no matter at
what angle the stick was held. Soon, Firth was designing
drumsticks as well as timpani sticks.
"I
started out just making a few pairs of sticks for
my own use,"
Firth says. "Then my students started asking if
they could buy some. I had a wood turner who was making
them by hand with a wheel and a chisel, so I went from
ordering ten pair for myself to ordering two dozen
pair. Then those students started graduating and going
different places in the country, and one day I got
a call from Maurie Lishon at Frank's Drum Shop in Chicago.
He had seen my sticks and wanted to sell them, so all
of a sudden I was ordering fifty pairs at a time. And
it just grew from there."
His
guiding principle was quality, guaranteeing that
every pair of sticks would be straight and matched
in pitch. From the very beginning, Vic's wife,
Olga, and daughters, Kelly and Tracy, helped out
with the family business. Tracy remains a valuable
executive at the company to this day.
"I
still have as much fun with this business now as
when we made twelve pairs a month," Firth
says. "One of the biggest kicks for me has
been getting to know all the drummers who use the
sticks, listening to their needs and gripes, and
trying to produce things that satisfy their musical
needs. I have a very profound respect for people
who have an artistic ability and understand what's
involved in making music. As a result of that respect,
I think I've got a lot of friends out there who
appreciate what I do and who know that I have great
appreciation for what they do."
One
of the first drumset artists to have a Vic Firth
signature drumstick was Steve Gadd. Firth recalls
the first time he and Gadd performed together.
"There
was a DCI convention in Florida, and they asked me
to play something with a drumset player," Firth
recalls. "I said I'd like to play with Steve
Gadd, who I had met but never played with. So I brought
some pieces I'd written for timpani and RotoToms
with drumset. Steve and I had a rehearsal that began
about 10:00 at night, and I was amazed at how little
Steve contributed. I had heard so much about his
musical greatness, but he was hardly doing anything.
One piece was a jazz waltz, and he just played 'boom,
chick, chick' through the whole thing. I was playing
all these melodic runs, but timpani is not that adaptable
to that kind of playing, and the piece really needs
a good drumset player to work. In other words, I
can only be a beautiful painting if I'm well framed.
But Steve wasn't doing very much and I was thinking,
'I'm going to die with this, and all those kids who
are coming to see Steve Gadd are going to be disappointed.'
"The
next morning we had a quick run-through, and Steve
seemed to come alive a little bit, but he still was
playing simple time. Then, when we did the performance,
he as astronomical. Everything he did was so tasty
and delivered with such eloquence. I was absolutely
bowled over by his musical intuition, taste, and
style. I realized that at the rehearsal he was listening
to what I was doing, so he would know how to integrate
his part into mine when it came time to play. And
when that time came, he played so beautifully I started
smiling."
That says
a lot, considering Firth's typical look when he performs.
Although he insists that performing great music fills
him with joy, you'd never know it from his stern
expression. "I have to tell you about a conversation
that I had with Claudio Abbado," Firth says,
laughing.
"He had come to Boston to conduct a Mahler symphony.
After the concert, we went out to get a bite to eat.
The orchestra was looking for a conductor at that point,
and he was interested in the job. So he asked me what
the orchestra members thought about him. I said, 'They're
scared to death of you. You've got a face like an irate
beaver; you look mad and mean all the time.' And he
said, 'Have you ever seen yourself when you play? That's
the same effect you produce!' So I figured if I looked
that mean, maybe conductors wouldn't dare say anything
about my playing!"
When Firth
was elected to the Percussive Arts Society Hall of
Fame in 1995, Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor
Seiji Ozawa had plenty to say about Firth's playing. "Vic
is quite simply the consummate artist,"
Ozawa told Percussive Notes magazine. "I
believe he is the single greatest percussionist anywhere
in the world. Every performance that Vic gives is informed
with incredible musicianship, elegance, and impeccable
timing."
Although
Firth has retired from teaching, students continue
to benefit from the elementary and intermediate snare
drum method books he wrote for the Carl Fischer company,
as well as his books of advanced etudes, The Solo
Timpanist and The Solo Snare Drummer. He
has also written several percussion ensemble works,
including "Encore In Jazz," that have become
staples of the literature.
Asked
if he considers himself a workaholic, Firth says
yes, but then reconsiders the term. "A workaholic,
to me, is somebody who's driven to work. But I
enjoy it. And when I'm not working, I enjoy that
with the same intensity. I'm about to go to Maine
for a couple of days. I've got a rose garden that
I monkey with, and I've got a boat that I go fishing
in. I can't sit still for more than two minutes
at a time, so I'm always doing something. But I
don't carry my work with me. I think that's part
of the secret of success in terms of accomplishment.
I'll spend a couple of days in Maine, and it's
like a tonic for me. Then I'm ready to go back
to playing or merchandising or designing drumsticks
with full enthusiasm."
Although
Firth takes his work very seriously, he also has
a robust sense of humor. He especially likes poking
fun at himself. "I used to go jogging in Maine," he
says. "There are some rocks next to our summer
house where garden snakes liked to sun themselves.
They wouldn't hurt anybody, but the kids didn't like
them. So when I'd go jogging, I'd scoop up a couple
of snakes in each hand and go jogging down the road
swinging them around. Then I'd toss them in a swamp
a half-mile down the road. You should have seen the
expressions on the faces of people who drove past
and saw this lunatic running down the road swinging
those snakes!
"When
I was young," Firth says, "I had some friends
I ran around with, and one day my mother said, 'There's
something wrong with you guys. All you do is laugh.'
Well, we always had a good time, and I'm still laughing
and having a good time. It's been a fun trip, and
if I could do it all over again, the only thing I
would change is that I would start all the adventures
earlier so I could have even more time to enjoy them."

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