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Guitar goddess: classical guitarist Sharon Isbin talks about hiking the Rockies, nurturing talent at Juilliard, and playing J.S. Bach and Joan Baez. (music).


After classical guitarist Sharon Isbin came out in Out magazine in 1995, she didn't think people would be all that interested. She found out differently a week later at a concert in Atlanta.

"I remember walking out onstage, thinking, They know," Isbin says. "And what happened is that they wouldn't stop clapping. Everyone around me--the presenter of the concert, the record company, the radio station--was totally supportive and complimentary, and the only person having any trouble with this was me." That was eight years ago. "What's so strange is that it has never come up again in any of the many profiles I've done. So I can only deduce that when an artist in the classical world comes out, no one gives a damn."

If audiences give little regard to Isbin's sexuality these days, her music garners plenty of attention. Her last three albums earned Grammy nominations, and one of them--Dreams of a World, a collection based on folk music folk music: see folk song. released in 2000--made her the first classical guitarist in 28 years to receive the coveted award. Her latest, Sharon Isbin Plays Baroque Favorites for Guitar (Warner Classics), is a return to some music she loves. "What I really enjoy about baroque music is that it was the jazz of their day," she says. "Like a jazz musician, you improvise; you don't just read what's on the paper."

Isbin not only conceived of the record--which includes such jewels as Albinoni's "Adagio" and Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring"--she also art-directed the CD's lushly gorgeous cover, which she based on a photo of Greta Garbo she saw in The Girls: Sappho Sappho (săf`ō), fl. early 6th cent. B.C., greatest of the early Greek lyric poets (Plato calls her "the tenth Muse"), b. Mytilene on Lesbos. Facts about her life are scant. She was an aristocrat, who wrote poetry for her circle of friends, mostly but not exclusively women. She may have had a daughter. Goes to Hollywood. "I wasn't going to get all dolled up in 1940s chiffon," she quips, "but I wanted to capture the essence and the sensuality of that photo."

Isbin makes time for a formidable array of pursuits outside her concert schedule. She has headed the guitar department at Juilliard since 1989. Thanks to her long-running column for Acoustic Guitar magazine, she has become "sort of the Dear Abby of acoustic guitars." Then there's the Aspen Music Festival Aspen Music Festival, annual summer event, held in Aspen, Colo. A former silver-mining boomtown, Aspen fell into decline and was culturally revived by Walter Paepcke, who formed the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies. The Aspen Music Festival and Music School were founded under the auspices of the Institute in 1949. Artists from all over the world come to teach and to perform in recitals, concerts, and operas., where she heads the guitar department and makes use of each summer's nine-week festival to get outdoors. "If I'm not trekking through the jungles, the Rocky Mountains will suit me fine," she says. Having made an expedition to the Amazonian rain forest, she's speaking literally.

Isbin is also in a long-term relationship, although she won't elaborate beyond saying, "I'm fortunate to be able to make room in my life for that."

Typically, Isbin has chosen her next project worlds apart from the baroque. This October in San Francisco, she'll premiere "The Joan Baez Suite," a seven-movement arrangement of the folk singer's best-known songs.

"I've always loved folk music," says Isbin, who actually took up classical guitar as a 9-year-old only because her older brother turned down the opportunity. "I thought it couldn't be that bad because I loved folk guitar. Now, later in life, a lot of the music I'm doing is folk-inspired. I've come full circle."
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Author:Dalton, Joseph
Publication:The Advocate (The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine)
Date:Jun 24, 2003
Words:505
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