Archive for the ‘art’ Category

quotes

Friday, April 17th, 2009

“The joy of playing music,

whether written or improvised,

is not possible when one still has to struggle with amterial.

The goal should be complete mastery….

so that one can focus on other issues,

such as inspiration,

and that’s where the important music is made.

Kenny Werner

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A mistake is not hitting a wrong note,

rather it is losing the flow of the music.

If you are with that flow, the wrong note finds the next note

and could even turn out to be the best thing you play all night

Bob Mover

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Don’t let what you’ve practiced

dictate the way you play

Play what you hear,

not what you’ve memorized

Joe Lovano saxophonist

——————–

Improvisation is the courage to move

from one note to the next. It’s that simple.

once you conquer that basic fear,

when you are able to make that leap

from one note to the next without thinking

or preparing for it, then you areimprovising.

Bobby McFerrin vocalist

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First you find the logical way,

and whn you find it, avoid it,

and let your inner self break through

and guide you

Will Marion Cook’s composer

——————————–

Every  musician in the world has some limitations….

but the wise players are those

who play waht they ca master.

Due Ellington

——————————–

If you start judging what you

are writing or playing,

that puts another part of your brai in the

process, and it stops the crativity.

Jim McNeely

———————————

I try to become an observer, rather than thinking what should come next.

Tim Hagans

————————————-

Many people train from a mind set

of trying to get better as fast as possible.

The irony of that is…people skip some basic

issues that they should spend years on.

They think they are saving time, but in fact

they are dooming themselves to a certain

level which they’ll never get out of.

Kenny Werner

———————-

Creativity — Kenny Werner

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Kenny Werner’s Effortless Mastery

The 4 steps is a method of practicing “letting go of the need to control the music.”

Kenny is fond of saying: let music, don’t make music.

This then results in being able to play without consciously thinking about the chords and notes, trusting that if the necessary preparatory study had been accomplished, the notes will take care of themselves.

4 steps:

1.  Find a centered and calm place within yourself, call ‘space’.

  • watch your breath flow in and out can aid in experiencing this state of mind.
  • slowly come into contact with the piano without consciously controlling the exp
  • allow any sound or the lack of sound to manifest itself without you having to make it happen
  • don’t be surprised if no sound or only strange noises come out
  • be aware of your ego’s need to do something to produce the sound
  • purpose of this exercise is to play without your conscious mind controlling the exp
  • a way to visualize the exp is to pretend that the subconscious mind or a higher power is taking control over the act of making music, using you as an empty vessel.

2.  Build on the state of mind experience in step 1.

  • play freely while maintaining the feeling that you are not the one controlling the act of making music
  • do not let the conscious mind take over and begin categorizing and analyzing what you are playing
  • you are trying to play freely
  • if you can only play whole notes without thinking or striving, then that’s what should be allowed to manifest itself.

3.  Play a tune while maintaining the feeling of freedom, detachment, and effortlessness experienced in steps 1 and 2.

  • you may find that you are playing more simply than you normally would but the music will probably sound fresher and less cliched.

4. If you discover that you can’t successfully negotiate all of the chord changes or the tempo of the tune without striving and forcing, anlayze your harmonic and rhythmic weaknesses and formulate one or two exercises that, once mastered,will help you correct these inherent problems.

Practice these exercises or patterns using the principals of the Learning Diamond, until you have trained your body to negotiate the demands of the tune.

Learning Diamond

Practice of a song can be viewed as having 4 parameters:

1.  Play with total effortlessness

2. Play in a fast tempo

3. Play the complete selection

4. Play the correct notes

Imagine each of these aspects as corners of diamond, with effortlessness being at the top of the diamond.

1.  Effortlessness implies the absence of physical tension or mental striving. Everything played from this is second nature, requiring no conscious control. Of the 4 corners of the diamond, this is one corner that should never be abandoned.

2.  If you can’t play a selection up-tempo without sacrificing effortlessness, slow it down until you find a tempo at which you are comfortable. Gradually increase the tempo seeing how far you can push it while maintaining a feeling of relaxed detachment. Be attentive to any physical tension and mental anxiety as you increase the tempo.

3.  An alternative to slow down the tempo, practice at a fast tempo but only play a small portion of the music. If only 2 notes you can play effortlessness, start with that.  Gradually add more notes. If problem occurs in the middle of the passage, begin at that point and gradually piece the entire passage together, maintaining a feeling of effortlessness.

4.  To gain a sense of what it feels like to play the entire song effortlessly and up-tempo, allow yourself to play wrong notes. Keep your fingers moving in time. Do not sacrifice the other 3 corners of the learning diamond.  You may find your conscious mind unwilling to accept the wrong notes ou hear, but remember how great wrong notes sound when Miles Davis plays them.

Additional thoughts:

1. When practicing or performing, keep your thoughts still and your body relaxed.

2. To quiet your thoughts when performing, helpful to concentrate on something outside of yourself, such as another person or an object or to place attention on maintaining a relaxed feeling in your body.

3.  When practicing or improvising, imagine that you are not the one playing but a ‘silent witness’ to the event.

4.  music is a reflection of your personal growth and the development of your consciousness.

Music and Life

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Music is an art form.

I believe that there is a direct parallel between life and art.

The more we understand an art form, the more we understand ourselves. This learning process never stops and it serves as a catalyst to teach us about life.

Piano skills can be continually developed over a lifetime.

All it requires is a sufficient love of the music to provide the drive, perseverance, and self examination necessary to continue to grow as a creative being.

As one matures, the desire for quick achievement and recognition tends to fade as one realizes that the real goal of this study is the joy that comes from the process of learning and growth.

Teaching — a natural outgrowth of one’s own experiences as a msuician.