I play the alto
sax. I started playing the saxophone
when I was 9 years old. If I've done my
math correctly I've played the sax for …
a really long time. There were
years when I never opened the case.
There were years when I practiced every day. I'm not an amazing musician, but I'm not bad
to listen to either.
I own an enviable
saxophone. I own a Selmer Mark VII, which to sax players is pretty cool. My parents bought it for me my senior year of
high school. In my mind though, it was a
gift from my dad. I had a Bundy
saxophone, which in simplistic terminology is a basic beginner horn. By my senior year, Mr Bundy was pretty beat
up, and I was beyond what it offered. I
was preparing to go to college and I promised my dad that if he bought me a new
horn I would play all four years of college.
The search began.
We didn't live in a
large city, and to try out saxophones of the caliber we were looking at, we had
to travel to the closest large city which was about an hour away. So we would drive into the city, go to the
music store and bring home an instrument for me to play for a week. Then we would drive back, and exchange that
sax for a different brand of equal quality.
We did that mulitple times. My
choices were finally narrowed down to the Selmer and a Buffet saxophone. The differences in the two were described
(according to my recollection) in that the Selmer was better for Jazz, and the
Buffet was better for concert play. I
basically played concert, though I was involved in our high school jazz
band. I wasn't proficient at jazz. The
whole making up what you are to play just by being given a key signature was a
bit beyond me. The Buffet seemed the more logical choice, as well as more
within my parents financial boundaries.
I don't remember
which horn I had been playing that final week.
I just knew my dad was going to the store alone. He was taking back the instrument I had been
playing and he would return with the instrument that I would get to keep. I don't remember the whole conversation, but
I do remember telling my dad my heart longed for the Selmer, but I liked the
Buffet as well, and I would be happy either way. I believed my dad would bring home the
Buffet.
But he brought home
the Selmer.
I've never felt so
spoiled in my life. It's the one gift
that always, I mean always, reminds me of the depth of love my parents, and
especially my dad has for me. I still
play that sax. I'm a member of our
woship team, and toodle away every other week.
I should practice more. The
reality is that I play for me. And my
dad, though he lives several states away and doesn't hear me play. That sax makes a sweet sound. Admittedly, with a more proficient player the
sound would be sweeter, but it couldn't ring out with anymore love.
Whenever I think
about my saxophone and my dad's love, I am always reminded that God loves me
even more; that he sacrificed greatly for me, even more than my own
father. Accepting God's love has never
been difficult because I was gifted a tremendous example. I am blessed beyond measure to be given an
earthly father that loved so deeply. May
the sweet songs I play on my saxophone be, forever, a gift of worship and
gratitude.
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