Published: December 02, 2006 12:43 pm
The man behind the keys
Piano professor brings success with him to San
Marcos By Jeff
Walker Features Editor
San Marcos — When
Washington Garcia’s grandmother passed away, he inherited her
“baby grand” piano — the same one that she’d let him bang on
tirelessly as a young child. It was a fitting gift for a man
that’s accomplished more with 88 black and white keys than
most could imagine.
The Garcia family has always found
a connection through music. Some of Washington’s fondest
childhood moments were spent gathered around the piano with
his family, singing and dancing to old Ecuadorian folk songs.
Everyone — his mother, father, brother, sister, grandmother
and uncle — could play either the guitar, violin or piano,
though none could read music. They didn’t have to. The family
was blessed with fantastic ears, playing back anything they
heard on the radio after one listen.
By the age of
four, his grandmother had him up on the piano stool teaching
him to play notes with one finger. The music instantly
affected him. In fact, on the occasion that she’d strike up
the Ecuadorian National Anthem, Washington would run up and
down the hallway, extending his arms rigidly and marching like
a soldier. The family of musicians feared what this might mean
for Washington’s future.
“Everybody freaked out a
little bit, they all thought I was going to be the first
military member in the family,” Garcia said. “They didn’t know
that just showed how much the music meant to me. That’s why I
would act like a soldier, because the music moved me.”
And Garcia hasn’t stopped moving since.
He’s
played for presidents as a child, wooed a Juliard panel as a
teenager and even had a Grand piano flown from Quito to the
coastal city of Salinas for a one-night-only Washington Garcia
performance. But his latest stop is San Marcos, where he’s an
assistant professor of piano at Texas State University. His
ambitions are strong here — he aims to make Texas State a
destination school for piano students all over the world, but
do so in a way that it remains financially accessible to them.
He takes Texas State’s “Rising Star” mantra to
heart.
“I want to recruit and maintain quality students
that would take the name Texas State University all over the
world,” Garcia said. “I want to prepare them so that they can
represent us on the concert platform at the highest
level.”
Garcia’s own education started early. At the
age of five, he accompanied his sister to the National
Conservatory of Music in Ecuador, where she was already
registered as a student. Though he was just there to visit, he
took part in the classes anyway, and at the end of the year a
teacher called his mother.
“He told her that I was
really talented and that I should not repeat that year, that I
should start my education,” Garcia said. “I was then
officially enrolled at the International Conservatory of Music
in Quito.”
And the performances would follow. By the
age of six, Washington was invited to perform at a benefit
concert for children with disabilities — his first public
appearance.
“We were there, we raised money for the
kids, and that was a very fulfilling experience for me,”
Garcia said. “That’s something I’ve wanted to do throughout my
life — to serve the community in a particular way, rather than
to just fulfill personal goals.”
He won his first
national piano competition at the age of 10. When he received
his first paycheck for the win, he began to consider the piano
as an eventual full-time gig.
“That was the first time
something tickled me in the back of my mind to say ‘hmm...
what is this? Is this a career I could pursue?’” Garcia
said.
By the time he was 14, Garcia had been invited to
perform for the former president of Chile. A year later, he
debuted with the National Symphony Orchestra, and it was clear
that his life would be devoted to music.
Garcia’s
childhood was crammed full of auditions, practices and
accelerated academic studies. At one time in his childhood, he
was juggling high school classes, college courses, private
English lesson and private piano lessons. He would begin his
college studies at the age of 15 at The Conservatory, and by
the time he was 18, he had a bachelor’s degree to go with his
high school diploma.
“I didn’t have a normal life, per
se, in terms of the fact that I really had to organize my time
so I could do everything I wanted to do,” Garcia said. “I was
kind of early to graduate. It was very uncommon.”
He
made his first trip to the United States at the age of 15.
Garcia had an appointment with an advisor at the Juliard
School of Music in New York to check out the school. That
visit quickly turned into an audition.
“They were
having late auditions in August. I had a meeting to say ‘hi,’
but she said ‘you’re right here, we have your resume, would
you like to audition?’ I said ‘sure,’” Garcia said. “I had to
prepare an audition by myself in one week to audition at one
of the best music schools in the world. I showed up for the
audition, which was quite scary at the time.”
He met
with the director afterward and she told Garcia that he’d been
accepted and would be offered a full ride. Fifteen, though,
was a little too early. Garcia called his parents to let then
know what had happened.
“They very wisely told me that
it was very good, they were proud of me, but the best thing
would be for me to return to Ecuador to finish my education,”
Garcia said. “I just needed to grow up a little more before I
was ready to go alone into to a new country and into New
York.”
Three years later, Garcia would get his full
ride at a premier music university, but in Washington D.C. He
was one of two Latin American artists to be awarded a $25,000
fellowship by the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The
grant allowed him to come to the states for one year in order
to pursue studies with teachers, to perform concerts, to go to
music festivals and to attend master’s classes. Under the
suggestion of one of his private teachers, he chose the
Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins University at 18. The only
problem was that he was accepted into the bachelor’s
program.
“When I first went there, I went to classes
and everything I knew, I’d already done. I talked to the
director and said ‘I know this stuff. I finished my bachelor’s
in Ecuador,’” Garcia said.
Once he was placed in the
proper program, Garcia flourished. He earned a master’s degree
from Johns Hopkins at 20 and finished his doctorate degree at
age 25, the youngest ever for a Latin American
student.
While Garcia’s life has been full of anecdotes
and experiences, he doesn’t shy away from the hard times that
he’s faced. With every accomplishment, he says, there’s been
just as much struggle.
“My life has been full of
blessings, but each blessing has come with a great deal of
challenge,” Garcia said. “Leaving home at the age of 15 and
coming to a foreign country, it was difficult finding yourself
alone, having no family, having nobody to be there to give you
a hug and say everything is going to be okay. My first
birthday alone in the United States was quite hard. Coming
from a very strong family with a strong family nucleus, I miss
them very much.”
But his determination to be a
professional pianist keeps him here, and that outweighs any
obstacle. Besides, he plans to see his family for Christmas.
And there will be plenty of time then to gather around the
piano for a couple of tunes.
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