Germany

Ich Liebe Luneberg

These first few days in Luneberg have been fun, but exhausting. The jet lag is still very much real, and I still haven’t gotten over the preposterous idea that all of my friends in Colorado are 8 hours behind me. Today, I got up, ate breakfast, ran, showered, went to morning class, ate lunch, then went to afternoon class before most of them had even woken up at CC. Baffling.

Luneberg is quite a cute town, with it’s cobblestone streets essentially free of cars, lined with leather shoe shops, bakeries, and cafes, and topped with beautiful Christmas markets. Today, our professor treated us to “Gluhwein” which is a traditional warm, spiced wine served in the Christmas markets – delicious.

We are living in a hostel with students also taking classes at Leuphana University, which is two blocks away. We actually don’t see these students often, except for the occasional meal. We have all three meals provided at our hostel, but the food admittedly is not very good.

For this week, we’ll attend class in the morning and afternoon in the music department building at Leuphana. Both our professors are simultaneously teaching seminars to the German students here, so they are very booked. The campus is pretty lively, with lots of well-dressed (and attractive) Europeans students donning big, fluffy scarves, dark, sleek jackets, and of course leather boots. It’s very cold and cloudy here (we have yet to see the sun…) so people move quickly, only to stop at the little student espresso cart. Meanwhile, Germans recklessly driving their Volkswagens will cut through campus and the adjoining streets.

Our classes on Johann Sebastian Bach are part history-based, part music-theory based. We’re starting in Luneberg because it was very important to Bach’s musical development. He moved to Luneberg at 14 years old, having heard about openings for student singers in St. Michael’s choir from his teacher in Ohrdruf. There, he attended school, sang in St. Michael’s soprano section, and learned about organ construction and repair. In nearby towns, Celle and Hamburg, he also leaarned different musical styles – French keyboad and opera, respectively. Thus far, we’ve been learning about Bach’s influences such as Josquin, Shutz, and Jacquet de la Guerre, and we’ve theoretically examined Bach’s Menuet I and II and Passacaglia. The theory part of the class is tricky for me, but I’m getting there.

With 5 more days in Luneberg, we have plenty more to explore and Gluhwein to drink. Now, we just need the sun to come out!

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