Poem in Honour of Matthew Dolmage

Matt Dolmage at his keyboard in Orillia

This poem is to honour Matthew Dolmage, who was born April 2, 1974 and who died February 21, 2004.

His mother Marilyn wrote it, and would like to recognize all the ways Matthew’s memory remains among the people and within the sanctuary of The Church of the Holy Trinity.

Matthew heard the birds in Bach.
So the piano trills in the Prelude in E flat minor
Make me smile on a February morning,
Remembering how Matthew loved bird music.

I think about the grayness outside
But imagine a peripheral flutter of feathers –
Despite the damp dark cold,
A surprise stirring of colour, warmth, life…

Matthew loved the spaces between sounds –
The resounding of one note, suspended.
How long will the interval last?
He laughed out loud at those surprises.

He enjoyed the connections among notes too.
Returning home, he would race to the piano
To replicate the chords he had heard
In car horns and as subway doors closed.

Matthew’s own musical compositions
Were complex and enigmatic.
He was lulled by loops of electronic rhythm
But thrilled to invent keyboard suspense and surprise.

You have to know and understand patterns
To rejoice so much when they change.
There can be ordered beauty to music, nature, love…
But with anomaly comes creativity and great delight.

Thank you to William Aide – piano virtuoso, gentle man, Matthew’s friend – who provided the Musical Meditation February 4, 2018 at the Church of the Holy Trinity, Toronto. You can watch a pianist’s hands, as Matthew loved to do, in this video – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WX69L3QJm4M.
And here is some of Matthew’s own music.

Share:

Facebook
Twitter
Email

One Response

On Key

Related Posts

Pentecost 14

This week we continue our Season of Creation with the Theme of: Air. We read from Genesis and The Gospel According to John. The Homily

Fran’s many gifts

We celebrated Fran’s life today. During the service there were many wonderful moments shared including a poem Fran wrote shortly after Ian’s death: This sweet

Pentecost 13

This week we celebrate the beginning of the Season of Creation. We read from Genesis, a Poem by Mary Oliver and the Gospel According to

Labour Day

This week we celebrate Labour Day at Holy Trinity. We read from Ursula K. Le Guin and the Gospel According to Luke. The Sermon is