Biography

Barbara Ann Fackler is an active free-lance harpist in the greater Chicago area participating in a variety of performances from ensemble member to soloist. She is a founding member of Musikwerke Fackler, which specializes in chamber music written or arranged for horn and harp, drawing from a large repertoire of original works, transcriptions and a growing number of commissioned works.

A trip to the ballet when she was four years old sparked Barbara Ann's interest in harp and the fascination has never diminished. Thanks to a mother who didn't think four was too young to begin to appreciate the arts and a father willing to find a way to get a harp in the house, she's been able to bring the music she loves to audiences where ever she goes.

Mrs. Fackler has held principal harp positions with several regional orchestras and has performed concerti by Ravel, Debussy, Mozart and Ginastera. She toured France as featured soloist and principal harp with the International Congress of Musicians. In 1986 she was harpist for Woody Herman's Thundering Herd, participating in the group's Silver Anniversary Tour. She has performed with musicians such as Peter Nero, Julio Iglesias, Pepe Romero and Richard Stoltzman and has recorded with the Millar Brass Ensemble.

Sheet music for the selections on this album is available for purchase from the artists web page and from vendors specializing in music for harp. Most of the arrangements are accessible for pedal and lever harp. Pleasantries & Diversions will be "CD of the Week" for Kansas Public Radio beginning the week of March 1, 2010.

Notes for Pleasantries & Diversions:

1) The Pleasant Ohio is a lovely tune from the region where the Mississippi and Ohio rivers converge. It's a song of hope celebrating the richness of the region found by new homesteaders as settlers moved westward.

2-4) How Can I Keep From Singing had an interesting evolution, beginning as a hymn tune. This haunting melody from the late 1800s can be found in two different meters, both included in my arrangement. Eva Cassidy, Enya, Judy Collins, and Bruce Springsteen have also recorded this song. Wondrous Love and Simple Gifts are also early American hymn tunes that have found popularity outside of the church. I love how the words to each fits the music perfectly.

5) Westphalia Waltz began, according to some, as a Polish waltz, became wildly popular in Texas and eventually returned to Poland and Germany through American musicians. It's sweetly gentle and soothing at the same time.

6) I Would Love You All the Day, better known as Over the Hills and Far Away, was popular enough in its day in England that D'Urfey included it in several of his collections of music and poetry, (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1706). Also very popular in America, especially the early American west, there are several different lyrics set to the tune. My favorite, from John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728) includes these lyrics:

And I would love you all the day,
Every night would kiss and play,
If with me you'd fondly stray
Over the hills and far away

D'Urfey included a more traditional folk lyric to the tune. New words were added when the tune was used as the underscore for the PBS TV series, Sharpe(1993-2008). There are two slightly differing versions of this tune, both of which are included in this arrangement.

7-10) Silberjahr-Ländler were my husband's 25th anniversary gift to me. I've always thought Wagner's birthday gift to his wife (1870) was one of the most wonderful gifts ever. The Siegfried Idyll is my favorite of Wagner's compositions. His presentation must have been magical as he hired a group of friends to wake her with a performance which took place on the stairs of their villa. When Dan presented these delightful pieces to me on our anniversary I was surprised beyond words. Each time I perform these dances, my joy is renewed as I see the delight and wonder in my audiences at their first hearing. I'm often asked to repeat them on subsequent visits. What I have-- that Cosima didn't-- is the ability to hear this music any time I wish. What a shame that that most wives have to settle for some store bought trinket on their anniversary! One very astute man told me, during a recent recital that I'll never need another annversary gift. He's absolutely correct.
Silberjahr-Ländler Nr.1 Silberjahr-Ländler Nr. 2 Silberjahr-Ländler Nr. 3 Silberjahr-Ländler Nr. 4

11-15) Greensleeves, my mom's favorite request, is probably the oldest English tune we have on record. Saltarello, Italiana and Siciliana were used by Respighi in his Ancient Airs and Dances. The versions here were taken from the original lute music. The Pavane is here just because I like it, stately, slow and organized, it's a pleasant form.

16) I love the music of Vaughan Williams, especially his Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus. I learned, while studying this music, that the variants are settings of five of his favorite tunes to which the text 'Dives and Lazarus' was set. My setting includes three favorite variants, all under the name Kingsfold, the name Vaughan Williams gave to the variant that he used in a hymn setting.

17-18) I just really like some of these ancient songs. The haunting melodies, La Rosa Enflorece(Traditional Sephardic) and The Snow It Melts the Soonest, are so easy to listen to over and over that I never tire of them. Sometimes the most simple of compositions are the most delightful.

19) Promises, whether made bride to groom, parent to child, or God to His people never change, yet never look the same from day to day. While not stated in every measure, the foundation of this piece, an ascending a-minor scale, never changes. Like a promise faithfully fulfilled, each iteration of the melody is a new interpretation of the promise. This is dedicated to Ron Price, my friend and mentor from Healing Harps.

20-21) Laua Fako Utley kindly gave me copies of her compositions, Contemplation and Peace and I fell in love with them. She has graciously allowed me to include them on this CD, in my own arrangements. She uses them when playing in a local hospital and I've found them useful in my hospice work as well as for weddings, church, and background music.

22-23) What collection of soothing music would be complete without lullabies? Hush a Bye and All the Pretty Little Horses are two of my favorites, and if you pay attention, you'll hear brief quotes from two others. We think of lullabies as children's music, but in Europe, lullabies are commonly heard during the Christmas season. There's no reason not to enjoy them at all stages of life. There are so many beautiful lullabies!

24) The Irish Fantasia is my setting of Danny Boy, included for my father, for whom I learned it years ago. It is placed last on the CD in memory of Mary Jo, who always played it last as a signal for her husband to help load up her harp. Appropriate as well for Dad, who was often waiting for me to finish performing so he could move the harp home again. It wasn't until I left home for college that I realised I was going to have to move the harp myself.

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Music

Pleasantries & Diversions
2010
Solo harp music in a classical style drawing tunes from the Renaissance, early America and original compositions fill nearly 70 minutes of music on this CD. Included are melodies used by Vaughan-Williams, Respighi, Copland, Enya, Eva Cassidy, and Sting.
MP3: $9.99
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