Friday, February 12, 2010

Guggenmusik


The most popular form of community bands here in Switzerland is called Guggenmusik. There are literally hundreds of guggenmusik ensembles in Switzerland. As a musician, I find the music very difficult to listen to as it is very loud, very out of tune, and very crass. Imagine a really loud and out of tune pep band that has been told to blast all of their music as loud as they can. However, as a music educator, I see that it fulfills a very important purpose in giving musicians no longer in school a place to continue performing. 
What is Guggenmusik?
Guggenmusik translates as Happy music and certainly seems to bring the best out of both those who perform it and those who are entertained by it. The bands are generally about 40 strong and combine large percussion sections of bass drums and trolley mounted kit drums with even larger brass sections of trumpets, trombones, euphoniums and sousaphones. The music they play is mostly popular music (chart hits etc) but the performance is as much about visual impact as it is about the sound. The first thing that catches the eye is the colorful costumes influenced by the traditions of Carnival, often with masks and a political or topical theme. Originally associated with Winter Carnivals, as Guggenmusik has evolved it has taken on it’s own life and has become a focal point of Carnivals with bands taking centre stage and performing well polished ‘concerts’ for their audiences. Guggenmusik bands of today give concerts that are not far removed from rock concerts with all the passion, enthusiasm, and spectacle that goes with them, not to mention their own fans that follow them around.
Where did it start?
For centuries there has been a tradition of groups of drummers parading through the streets of Swiss towns and cities in the week before Shrove Tuesday to frighten away the Spirits of Winter (a festival known as Fasnacht). In 1948, in Basle, the first Guggenmusik was formed combining brass instruments with the drums. The early masked and exotically dressed Guggenmusik bands, barely heard over the heavy pounding of the drummers, played basic, discordant tunes. The following year Lucerne heard it’s first Guggenmusik and since then it has grown to the point that there are now around 100 bands playing in Lucerne’s Fasnacht alone (and they are all from Lucerne or the surrounding area!), it has spread right across Switzerland and has found a second home in Germany. There are now few European countries without a Guggenmusik.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Wintersportwoche (Winter Sport Week)


We are currently enjoying Wintersport woche. This is when the entire school goes to the Swiss Alps for a week of skiing, snowboarding, swimming, hiking, and sledding. This picture is of my advanced intermediate ski group that I have been in charge of for the week. As you can see, the weather has been beautiful. It's sure a nice change from the dreary, snowy, rainy, cloudy weather we've been experiencing since early December.
Each of the three grade levels at the school goes to a different ski resort in eastern Switzerland. The grade level that I am with is at Flumserberg. There are 80 people in our group including students and adults. While we have adults here that prepare all the meals, the students are required to help with kitchen and dining room duties as well.
Our Christmas break was about one week shorter than what I am used to, but the wintersportwoche came just two weeks after that, marking the end of the first semester. Will also have the following week off for winter holiday.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Christmas in Switzerland

While there are many similarities, Christmas in Switzerland is generally very different than in the US. I've found this wonderful completely description on the Rick Steves website: http://www.ricksteves.com/plan/destinations/switz/swissxmas04.htm
Here are a couple of the key items from the article (but make sure you click the link to go to the entire article - very interesting):


Samichlaus
Each Christmas Swiss children receive a visit from Samichlaus — that's Swiss German for St. Nick — and his black-clad henchman, Schmutzli. Visits are traditionally on St Nicklaus day, Dec 6, but Switzerland's dynamic Christmas duo can arrive at any time. Samichlaus knocks on the door, frightened but excited kids answer. Samichlaus consults his big book of sins — co-authored by village parents — and does some light-hearted moralizing. Then he asks the kids to earn a little forgiveness by reciting a poem. After this and some assurances that they will reform, Samichlaus allows the children to reach deep into his bag for a smattering of tangerines, nuts, gingerbread, and other treats.
Swiss Tree and Christmas Eve
Traditionally the tree is cut and decorated on 24th. Pine houses — the open beams glowing with all the candles — feel ready to go up in flames but locals are bold with their candles. A classic Christmas dinner comes with scalloped potatoes with melted cheese and milk baked into it, boiled ham, walnut cake and finely-decorated gingerbread cookies. If the family is religious, they'll often have a Bible which has been in the family for generations. The Swiss and German equivalent of the St. James edition is their Martin Luther edition. The grandfather will read the gospel story.
The trees — good quality means a well spaced branches for candle placement — are decorated by the family. Candles, kept upright by dangling ornamental counter-balances, are then lit by the children. Presents are generally opened while the candles are lit. Trees stay up until Jan 2 as the candles are lit again on New Years eve for good luck.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Das Wetter in der Schweiz

Now that winter is almost here, we seem to have fallen into a rather consistent weather pattern. The 10-day forecast this morning read something like this: rain, rain, rain/snow, rain/snow, rain/snow, rain, rain, rain/snow, rain/snow, rain. Highs are in the mid 30's to low 40's. At least it is easy to plan how to dress in the morning.
In addition, the amount of daylight is getting very short. Right now we are at 9 hours of daylight heading toward 8 hours by the solstice. I am very much looking forward to June when we will have about 16 hours of daylight.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

School Schedule

I am currently on a three week holiday. This is very common for Swiss schools. The "jahresplan" here looks something like this:

Aug. 10 - start of school
Sept. 26-Oct. 19 - fall break
Dec. 23-Jan. 3 - Christmas break
Jan. 17-22 - Wintersportwoche (the whole school goes skiing or other winter sports)
Jan. 23-31 - winter break
Mar. 27-Apr. 11 - spring break
July 2 - end of school

There are other religious holidays that my school observes which may fall in the middle of the week, so a Tuesday holiday is not uncommon. There is also a 3-day religious holiday in May (Ascension).

The school year is long, but there are ample breaks built in. I think, however, that I will be looking forward to a long summer break once May, 2011 rolls around.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Things I miss/will miss

What follows is an ongoing listing of all the things I miss about the US and the things that I will miss when my exchange is over and I am required to leave Switzerland. This list is not intended to offend anyone from either country, but to merely point out differences. Keep checking back because this list will change as I experience new things here.

What I miss about the US:
My family and friends
My dog
Air conditioning during hot weather
Ice cubes
Steaks, thick and juicy steaks
Affordable food, gasoline (benzin), clothing, and STARBUCKS
Bar soap (as opposed to liquid soap)
Being able to tell whether to push or pull a door just by looking at it
Free parking almost everywhere
Streets that are wide enough for parking AND two-way traffic
Grocery stores (any store for that matter) open evenings and Sundays
Sunshine on winter days


What I will miss when I leave Switzerland
My incredible new friends
Not having to take care of the dog
The scenery!
The Nespresso store
Rösti
Champagne toasts during morning break on teacher birthdays (yes, real champagne in school and during school)
No hall passes
The use of turn signals (almost always)
Mittagessen (we actually take time to taste lunch here)
Paprika chips
Chocolate!!!!!! (and lots of it)
Every day is jeans day.
Train travel