Forks-born cellist slated to perform in Port Townsend on Sunday

PORT TOWNSEND — As a little girl in Forks during the early 1980s, Serena Tideman found inspiration in the Hoh Rain Forest, Tchaikovsky and MTV.

Tideman, now an internationally known cellist and composer who lives in Port Townsend, will give a “Baroque folk” concert at The Upstage, 923 Washington St., on Sunday afternoon — alongside friends she met when traveling through San Francisco.

The performance will start at 3 p.m.; admission is $8 or $4 for seniors and patrons 20 and younger.

These friends are Foxtails Brigade, an “amazing and unique band,” Tideman said, that mixes Baroque chamber music with a pop sound.

“I convinced them to come to Port Townsend and said there will be a really warm audience here,” she added.

Tideman was born in Forks, then studied cello from age 9 forward.

She fell in love with the instrument because, she said, “it had such a rich, warm, melancholy” sound.

“Perhaps unconsciously, it reminded me of the forest, too, because it is like the soul of a tree.”

Her Forks girlhood fed Tideman’s soul: “I feel much of my creativity stems from . . . playing outside in wild nature as a small child,” she said.

At home, her family had few records, “but we did have ‘Swan Lake’ by Tchaikovsky, and that was my favorite.”

Another thing she remembers from Forks: watching MTV. Those were the cable channel’s early days, and Tideman adored the videos and dancing around her living room to Cyndi Lauper and Michael Jackson.

While Tideman was still in elementary school, her family moved to Seattle — where she encountered her grandmother’s cello.

She was advised not to touch it, which made her desire to do so someday even more intense.

At age 8, she learned to play her first instrument: the ukulele in her school’s music room.

Her first cello teacher came soon after: Eric Jensen, an inventor of one the first electric cellos.

Jensen had a Ph.D. in cello from Yale and an eclectic musical repertoire.

“He was a big influence on me,” Tideman recalled.

“His decision to allow me to play fiddle tunes and jazz tunes like Scott Joplin in my first years of playing gave me a really great foundation.”

As a teenager, Tideman studied chamber music at the Marrowstone Music Festival and the Olympic Music Festival near Quilcene.

“My teachers there were amazing,” she said.

“I particularly connected with Jennifer Culp, who later became the cellist for the Kronos Quartet, and the late Eleonore Schoenfeld, who helped lead the music department at USC, and Tsyoshi Tsutsumi, who probably saved my life and future career because he taught me how to play without tension,” she added.

“Tsutsumi gave me a master class that was much like the lesson of ‘The Karate Kid’: how everything can be accomplished through circles, rather than forcing it to happen.”

Tideman has since performed around the United States, Europe and Hong Kong. She has released two albums, “Secret Musik” in July and “Kalakala: Songs From a Parallel Universe,” which was recorded on the Kalakala ferry, in January of this year.

Both are available via Tideman’s website, www.SerendipityMusik.com.

She’s at work on a new album now and promises to play some of her newest songs Sunday at

The Upstage.

At this point in her career, Tideman said, she revels in “exploring new colors and techniques on the cello but not being so bound by experimentalism as to neglect harmony and melody.”

But her greatest joy as a musician “is to express something intangible about the essential nature of the universe in a sensual, tangible way.”

________

Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-417-3550 or at diane.urbani@

peninsuladailynews.com.

More in Life

ISSUES OF FAITH: Music for our ears and a song in our hearts

WHILE I LOVE blue skies, sunshine and summertime, I do very much… Continue reading

The Rev. Pam Douglas-Smith.
Speaker set at Unity in Port Townsend for weekend service

The Rev. Pam Douglas-Smith will present “Deep Peace Abides”… Continue reading

Rev. Dr. Clancy Blakemore
Weekend program scheduled for Unity in the Olympics

The Rev. Clancy Blakemore will present “Exploring Cause and… Continue reading

Heather Vickery
OUUF speaker slated for Sunday

Heather Vickery will present “Joy is the Secret of… Continue reading

ISSUES OF FAITH: Liberalism in Judaism

“If there is among you a poor person, one of your kin,… Continue reading

Thanksgiving meals slated on Peninsula

Thanksgiving meals are being offered across the Peninsula next week. PORT ANGELES… Continue reading

A GROWING CONCERN: Don those decorations like a pro

LAST WEEK, WE discussed how this is the ideal time of year… Continue reading

Some of the many dogs rescued by Fox-Bell Farm Humane Society. Be sure to visit its Facebook page. (Submitted photo)
HORSEPLAY: Robot repairs and Fox-Bell news

NO HORSING AROUND for me this month as I’ve undergone a successful… Continue reading

The Community Chorus of Port Townsend and East Jefferson County and RainShadow Chorale combine, with orchestra, to sing Handel’s “Messiah” Nov. 22 and 23. Both concerts are at 3 p.m. at Chimacum High School. (David Conklin)
Chorus set to perform Handel’s ‘Messiah’ at Chimacum venue

CHIMACUM —The Community Chorus of Port Townsend and East Jefferson County and… Continue reading

Julie Lobato
Weekend program scheduled for Unity in the Olympics

The Rev. Julie Lobato will present “Soaring in Sacred… Continue reading

Joseph Bednarik
Sunday program set for OUUF

Joseph Bednarik will present “The Room Quiets and Then…”… Continue reading

Holy Trinity farewells interim pastors

The Rev. Gail Wheatley and The Rev. Beth Orling,… Continue reading