The Definition of Maturity
Andrew Hitz
“Maturing is realizing how many things don’t require your comment.”
-Rachel Wolchin
Great advice for a business as small as the music business.
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A blog about performing music, teaching music and the business of music.
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“Maturing is realizing how many things don’t require your comment.”
-Rachel Wolchin
Great advice for a business as small as the music business.
“Confidence doesn’t come out of nowhere. It’s a result of hours and days and weeks and years of constant work and dedication.”
—Roger Staubach
Whether an athlete or a musician, confidence is a byproduct of knowing deep down that you've done absolutely everything you could to be prepared for whatever task is in front of you.
"The difference between something good and something great is attention to detail."
-Charles R. Swindoll
Teaching. Conducting. Performing. Public speaking. This applies to everything we do.
"If we over-train via the literature like method and etude books, we're going to know more than we need to know in order to be able to cover the parts that are put in front of us."
-Sam Pilafian
The above quote was taken from Sam's fantastic interview in A Band Director's Guide to Everything Tuba: A Collection of Interviews with the Experts. It is a good reminder to us all that we have to encounter everything we'd ever need to do on stage (and then some!) in the practice room in order to be truly prepared.
The best bands perform full run throughs of pieces and entire programs when they are mentally and physically exhausted, yet hold themselves to the same high standards. The people most prepared to win an audition have played the excerpts during their preparations in every possible order including the worst ones for their chops.
Anyone who makes performing look easy has a secret. It is easy compared to what they made themselves do in the practice room.
Music is your own experience, your thoughts, your wisdom. If you don’t live it, it won’t come out of your horn.
-Charlie Parker
This is why I insist that my students "have a life" separate from their horns. You can't play a song about getting your heart broken if you've never had a broken heart. You can't convey being scared or giddy if you've never experienced those things yourself.
If what's coming out of your bell is not your experience, your thoughts, and your wisdom, chances are you won't be compensated too much for it.
"How expressive can you be in the moment? Take that moment and be a superstar."
-Jeff Scott from Imami Winds while coaching a chamber group
This advice goes for anyone in a chamber music setting at all times, not just the melody. The best chamber groups in the world have each member seizing every moment and being a superstar at all times.
"Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated simple, awesomely simple, that’s creativity."
-Charles Mingus
Great words to live by for any artist.
This is a good thing for me to remember in the new year. It is hard to weed out what is unnecessary or distracting for a student when I am using a lot of words.
One of my New Year's resolutions is to say more with fewer words when I'm teaching.
"People have short attention spans, Google Generation. On the long notes I'm going to insist that you keep us with you."
-David Zerkel
Long notes are just as vital to the musical story you are trying to tell as the short ones. There is a way to play long notes such that not only your audience but also the people playing along with you know exactly where you are headed musically, where you are coming from musically, and exactly when that note is going to end.
Keep us (the audience and your fellow performers) with you on the long notes at all costs.
Here is the final installment of quotes from David Zerkel's recent master class for my students at George Mason University. His wisdom immediately permeated my teaching and practicing. Good stuff!
Click here for Part 1 and Part 2.
Enjoy!