Sec. Rice Takes Stage at Aspen Music Festival

Rice performs publicly and recalls her passion for music.

ByABC News
August 4, 2008, 10:19 AM

Aug. 4, 2008 -- This weekend, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice got a taste of her life that almost was.

Onstage at the Aspen Music Festival and School, Rice, once an aspiring concert pianist, performed in public for the first time since becoming America's top diplomat.

Playing in a quintet with current students at the festival, Rice performed a variety of a challenging selections, including one from German composer Johannes Brahms that Rice admitted she has struggled to learn for years. She also performed a piece by the Czech composer Antonin Dvorak.

Rice is an avid classical music fan (in addition to an admitted penchant for 1960s rock group Cream), and calls herself an "unabashed devotee" of Brahms. Rice says she still finds time to practice piano weekly and plays monthly with a chamber music group.

"I do keep up my piano," Rice told reporters in 2006. "It's very important to me."

It was after attending this same festival 36 years ago that Rice decided to abandon her dream of becoming a concert pianist.

As a 17-year-old sophomore at the University of Denver, Rice was a music major with big dreams, who had started learning to play the piano from her grandmother at the age of three.

"I could read music before I could read. And I was absolutely certain that I was going to end up playing at Carnegie Hall," Rice said onstage prior to her performance on Saturday.

Her first appearance at the Aspen Music Festival, however, quickly changed a young Condoleezza Rice's mind.

"After listening to some of the 11- and 12-year-olds play, who could play from sight everything it had taken me all year to learn, I thought, 'you know, you're going to end up playing at Nordstrom or a piano bar, but not Carnegie Hall,'" she said.

The experience convinced Rice to abandon her musical ambitions, but it also left her without a major.

Her parents, perhaps after spending so much money on piano lessons, were less than pleased with their daughter's new lack of direction.

Last fall, Rice recalled that encounter with her parents during a speech at the Cornerstone School in Washington D.C.: