Saturday, 5 October 2013
Finding A Voice after all this freakin' time
Rhythmic - happy - simple - experimental - sociable - accessible - deep - mathematical - fun - humanistic - appreciative - knowledgable. I'll probably think of many more but those are my Freudian, off the top of my head ones.
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Symmetry in Music
Here's a question, "What characteristics are appropriate for a contemporary piece of music?" I know that anything goes, depending on time and circumstance, but I want to think through and identify what, in the context of today, can rightfully go into a new piece of music. For someone listening to a piece that I've written for the first time, I'd like them first to recognise it as new, that is, realise that it couldn't have been written in any earlier time, but also be responsive to what is in the music and feel comfortable with it.
Sunday, 4 August 2013
Performance Nerves
Every performer has to deal with nerves to one degree or another. There are a couple of myths that I've learnt about through experience. The first of these is that nerves reduce as you get older. The second is that the problem of nerves has a solution. Realising the first myth is simply a matter of experience and many performers find that, rather than abating, the opposite happens and nerves become worse with age. That's a simple fact; the second myth is more complex.
Monday, 22 July 2013
Music, Memory and the Mind
Eine Kleine LP Music |
On a more sublime level, memory plays a huge roll in making music. Not only for every rehearsal and concert do you have to remember to take music stand, music, instrument, loose change, route map, remember timing and what to wear (and, nota bene, hand your music in again after the show), but there is all that musical notation to remember, too. When reading a piece of music that has been well practised, the process is of using the written notations as memory prompts enabling recall of all that musical information from the unconscious mind.
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