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Hitz Academy Blog

A blog about performing music, teaching music and the business of music.

Jeff Nelsen Master Class Quotes from George Mason University

Andrew Hitz

Jeff Nelsen is simply put one of the most inspirational people I’ve ever been around in my life.  His always positive attitude is both genuine and predictable.  And he is an absolutely phenomenal horn player.  His website, jeffnelsen.com, is a wonderful resource for any musician.  We were honored to have Jeff play one of the horn books for the Boston Brass recording of the Stan Kenton Christmas Carols.  He is a very special player, teacher, and person. Jeff was just in Washington DC playing 2nd horn to his dear friend and mentor Marty Hackleman in the National Symphony Orchestra.  I believe my good friend Tom Cupples, 2nd trumpet in the NSO, summed up Jeff the best after a performance of Ein Heldenleben: “Jeff is amazing. Just being in the same room as him makes me a better musician.”

We were very fortunate to have Jeff come to George Mason and give a master class about performance and life in general.  I learned a ton from the class and have used many of the quotes below in my lessons already.  As usual, I have highlighted the ones that really speak to me the most.  I will admit to having a difficult time not highlighting them all.

I hope you enjoy these as much as I do!

PS Jeff is working on a book documenting his entire Fearless approach.  Keep your eyes on his website for details.
 

  • "Success not only comes to those who want it the most but those who want it the most often."
     
  • "There is a difference between simple and easy."
     
  • "Simplify things as much as possible and then work on them."
     
  • "You are engaged in performance when what you are doing matters."
     
  • "Fearless performance is not necessarily the lack of fear but the realization there are things more important than fear."
     
  • "(Shows picture of 16 month old) Have any of you ever been his age? When we are young we are afraid of good things like hot pots and traffic but we develop the rest along the way."
     
  • "You have to become a master variable controller."
     
  • "It's about isolating variables, changing one thing, and asking was that better?"
     
  • "The only physical difference between practice and performance is the actual walk on stage."
     
  • "The first mental difference is choosing 'this time means more.'”
     
  • His teacher: "There are no bad days. There are only days where to takes greater effort to play your best."
     
  • "If you approach every performance with your best, you don't leave room to try better."
     
  • "Most people don't aim too high and miss. Most people aim to low and hit."
     
  • "We can practice walking onstage."
     
  • "Saying 'On stage you must play your best' - problem is that making sure implies you might not."
     
  • "You can't control perception, you can only control presentation."
     
  • "In the sacred arena of the performance place, get over it. It's too late to control it."
     
  • "We're responsible any time we get nervous."
     
  • "No one can make me feel anything without my consent."
     
  • "We learn fear."
     
  • "If we can learn fear, we can learn love-full performance."
     
  • "Our level of nerves is inversely proportionate to our level of preparation."
     
  • "Make what you are doing the only thing that matters."
     
  • "There are three things that your audience and an audition panel are looking for: mastery, meaning, and autonomy."
     
  • "An audition committee is checking to see if your rhythm is autonomous."
     
  • "TV is getting great. We have to give the audience an experience."
     
  • "Don't call it a warm up. Make a great routine that touches what you need to do and the bonus is that you're warmed up."
     
  • "Musician is product. Technician is process."
     
  • "We're really trying to learn how to transcend the technician."
     
  • "I've missed 100% of the notes I've told myself not to miss."
     
  • "Make it about the solution. It's not about what not to do."
     
  • "Assign yourself practicing work for the next day."
     
  • "If you can't sleep, get up and write down what you can't sleep about."
     
  • "Tell your story to your audience."
     
  • "On a scale of 1-10 how much music did you just make with a 1 being regurgitating all the ink on the page? If it's a 6...OK, out of that 6 out of 10 how much of that did you get to the audience?"
     
  • "You should listen to your performance through the ears of your audience."
     
  • "Don't ask. Tell."
     
  • "The great performers of the world walk on stage and say 'I think this.'”
     
  • "Walk on stage to be seen."
     
  • “You are far too smart to be the only thing standing in your way.” - Jennifer Freeman
     
  • "In the 10 second walk on stage there's not much of a chance to make things better but there are lots of chances to make things worse."
     
  • "Every phrase is the only phrase."
     
  • His Mom: "If you're listening and the audience is listening, who's singing? - Critique later."
     
  • "Phil Meyers says that he went into his first few auditions trying to hide his weaknesses and it didn't work out. Then he tried to show them his strengths."
     
  • Phil: “I don't go out there trying to sound my best. I go out there trying to sound like me.”
     
  • "100% positive means taking the 'I liked' out of 'I liked how I played bar 6 well.'"
     
  • "Must be 100% responsible for how you play as well."
     
  • "If you make excuses, you make the performance space safe for failure."
     
  • "Everything, unless it hits you in the head, can not affect you unless you let it."
     
  • "You're right. There are people judging you and there are things to lose. You're right. Unless you want to do your best. Then you are wrong."
     
  • "Competing lowers your goal. Just try to be the absolute best you can be."
     
  • “If you do not have a website, you are invisible.” - David Cutler
     
  • "Choosing to doubt and choosing to fear will get in your way. And it is a choice."
     
  • "The word execute is a big part of performance."
     
  • "I'm happy because I think I am."

Monday YouTube Fix: Yo-Yo Ma, Bobby McFerrin, Mark O'Connor & Edgar Meyer

Andrew Hitz

I guess this clip is predictably awesome.  I don't care what these four musicians are playing, if they are playing together it is going to be special.  Even 'Hush Little Baby'! As people who are at the absolute top of their profession, all four of these guys are used to being the center of musical attention.  Yet in this clip, each one is both contributing and not even remotely over-stepping their role within the ensemble.  This is unheralded yet imperative quality in any musician.

This is such a simple version of an incredibly simple tune yet there is something very special about it.  Oh to have been in the audience for this performance.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GczSTQ2nv94]

Monday YouTube Fix: Eli Newberger and Jimmy Mazzy

Andrew Hitz

Dr. Eli Newberger is one of my tuba heroes.  I got to see him perform around the Boston area quite a bit as a kid.  The most amazing thing about Eli is that he is a world renowned pediatrician who simply plays the tuba for fun in his spare time.  Considering the fact that I've yet to hear any jazz tuba player who plays better than him I'd say that is pretty impressive. And he's as nice a human being as you'll ever meet.  The video quality is a little bit rough but it is absolutely worth the click. Such amazing phrasing, pacing and technical facility does not come around every day.  Amazing! A mighty fine rendition of the George Gershwin classic Summertime.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=783QnFBFSE0]

Monday YouTube Fix: Leo Kottke

Andrew Hitz

The best kind of virtuosity is the seemingly effortless kind.  I know better, but he sure makes what he's doing sound easy.  Sometimes I can't even make the first page of the Arban's book sound this effortless. I've got to go practice...

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnQTC5ICGik]

Going to the Source

Andrew Hitz

No matter which instrument we play, we are all trying to imitate the same thing: the human voice. While it is imperative that we all listen to great examples of people playing our own instrument, it is equally important to listen to great vocalists.  Whether it is a classical singer like Dawn Upshaw or a more pop oriented singer like Lisa Hannigan, analyzing their performances is like a master class.  Everything just sounds so natural.  There is so much there to emulate.

Making music sound natural is the key to everything. In fact, the folks in this business who make tubas or clarinets sound as natural as the Upshaws and Hannigans of this world almost always end up making a lot of money doing it.

Monday YouTube Fix: Wynton Marsalis Septet

Andrew Hitz

The finest jazz performance I've ever seen featured this amazing septet.  I was still a high school student and that night filled me with inspiration and aspirations.  It's a pretty cool story of how I ended up at the gig as well. Back in 1992 I was having a lesson at Boston University with my private teacher, Julian Dixon, and Wynton and his septet happened to be rehearsing there that night.  My teacher knew him from when they were kids and graciously interrupted their rehearsal to introduce me.  Wynton then asked me if I had any interest in seeing them play the next night at the Regatta Bar in Cambridge.  I of course said yes.

Not only did Wynton put me on the guest list +1 but he convinced them to let both of us into this 18 and over show by telling them that we were his friends.  A ve3ry nice gesture but not the impressive part of the story.

They were playing two separately ticketed shows that night.  My buddy and I went to the earlier of the two.  As soon as the early show ended he invited us up and struck up a conversation with us both as the rest of the place was forced to leave.  He then spent an entire hour personally introducing us to five of the other six guys in the band.  I actually had real conversations with Marcus Roberts, Wycliffe Gordon, etc. and that was in large part because Wynton stood there with us the entire time as if we were his relatives or something.

He finally graciously excused himself to get just a few minutes to be "off the clock" before the second gig.  I know how precious the alone time can be when being pulled in 85 directions at once on the road.  He went WAY out of his way to make that evening both inspiring and special for me and my buddy.  In fact, I've used it as a guide for when there's some young kid who just wants to hang around backstage and I'm having one of those days where I just need some time to myself.  I just try to think back to that night, get over myself, and give the kid all the time I have.

Thank you Wynton for taking the time share your gift with me as a high school student.  That night still inspires me to this day.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yuz6pejyddg]

Style Over Technical Facility

Andrew Hitz

Kenny G is an amazing saxophone player and I say that with no sarcasm whatsoever. As a saxophone operator he is very accomplished.

But for my taste, he doesn’t push any stylistic boundaries and in terms of interpretation "plays it safe" on just about everything.

At the opposite end of that spectrum for me is singer/songwriter Tom Waits.

Every time I hear his music (even at midnight in a Tokyo 7-11 once!) he makes me think about what I'm bringing to the table musically. He gets me away from thinking about lip trills and towards thinking about storytelling.

It is no surprise that Rex Martin introduced me to the music of Tom Waits since there are few better storytellers on any instrument in the brass world.

If you primarily listen to people on your instrument with great technical facility but who don't push the boundaries of style and interpretation your musical output will reflect that.

(This post was inspired by listening to the Tom Waits album Swordfishtrombones on headphones at 30,000 feet.)


Monday YouTube Fix: Oren Marshall

Andrew Hitz

Oren came to Northwestern with the Phillip Jones Brass Ensemble when I was a student there in the mid-90's.  He gave a master class that was awesome and really inspired me with his visit.  He has since performed and recorded with Radiohead which officially makes him one of my heroes!

I love his effortless playing in this clip.  He is a true virtuoso.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=r2VG_sOfA4Q]

Monday YouTube Fix: Chicago Symphony Orchestra with Sir Georg Solti

Andrew Hitz

What is there left to say about this low brass section that hasn't already been said.  What a wonderful set of circumstances that led to these four guys all being alive at the same time in addition to playing in the same section.  Below are 5 clips of Berlioz's 'Romeo and Juliet' from an unidentified Chicago Symphony concert. The first clip in particular is as good an example as we have of this low brass section in action on video.  They truly sound like one person is playing all 4 trombones and the tuba.  They were the epitome of a low brass section.  True teamwork in action.

Arnold Jacobs is and always will be one of my heroes on the tuba.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=KBEGlLqfFZA#!]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bPoJaqgF1ZE&feature=related]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJN9KzS4g_0&feature=related]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sL5DQrM5llA&feature=related]

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hp7R69BrK2w&feature=related]

Monday YouTube Fix: Freddie Hubbard

Andrew Hitz

This clip of 'Straight Life' live is from the 1975 DownBeat Awards and features an incredible lineup: Freddie Hubbard, trumpet; Chick Corea, keys; Stanley Clarke, bass; Lenny White, drums; Airto, percussion. Too bad you don't find too much music like this on television anymore.

Enjoy!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CwY9hup3eIw]