Newsletter
Home: 2006 |
2005
Members Main
______________________________________________________________
Inspiration Wanted - Apply Within!
By
Chris Standring
|
"Deep down we all know what our strengths and weaknesses
are".
One of the biggest stumbling blocks for music students
is knowing what to practice. In the early years students
listened to their teachers and did what they told them
to do, which is still of course perfectly valid. But the
real turning point that sets a student on their own path
is the ability to self motivate and take the reins
without the aid of a mentor.
This usually happens around the time that the student
falls in love with music. When a student starts out,
they usually practice out of fear. Fear that they might
be told off because their teacher will scold them for
NOT practicing. So much later, when the student has some
basic playing facility behind them, music all of a
sudden becomes fascinating to them. This is when the
craving to pick up the instrument starts to happen.
|
|
|
As the student continues
to explore on his or her own, there are doubtless times
when road blocks appear. I've always thought that
improving happens in peaks and plateaus, where the
plateaus of seeming UN-improvement seem to last forever!
This of course is never the case because the plateaus
are the times when the information is being absorbed
which is so necessary.
However, it is during these plateaus that the student
often gets stuck. Personally, I have always got through
these troublesome times because I have always paid close
attention to a little inner voice that would always tap
me on the shoulder and say "You know you have a
weakness when you play over diminished chords", or "Your
sight reading in the 8th position needs a little work
when you play in the key of Ab". And so on.
This little voice never went away over the years. She's
still there today, tapping me on the shoulder every few
weeks, making sure I am not resting on my laurels. But I
have found that if I am committed to improving and
really open to working on whatever I need to work on, I
will always get the advice I need.
|
|
I think deep down we all
know what our strengths and weaknesses are as players at
any level. Therefore as we continue to grow and develop
as musicians, we must always pay very close attention to
our weaknesses and work on them. They usually stare us
in the face. The trouble is, it is very easy to ignore
what is usually obvious to us.
One thing I have found is that, unless I am really open
to learning and in the mode of wanting to improve, that
little inner voice tends to go away. She's not tapping
me on the shoulder telling me what I need to work on
unless I really want to know.
|
|
|
So I guess what I am trying
to say here is ask yourself questions! What is
your real commitment to music and what are your
weaknesses? If you truly want to be a great player then
you simply need to focus on your weaknesses.
Now as time goes on, and you cover the playing field
regarding technique, harmony and melodic vocabulary,
then that inner voice directs you to more and more
specific things. She might say "You sound unsure when
you play over that G7(#5) bit in the bridge of Stella By
Starlight", or "Blowing in 3/4 time isn't really
quite together yet is it? - let's work on that".
Now, I also find these days that my inner voice offers
me inspirational things to practice. She might say, "You
know when you played that augmented idea at the 10th
fret over D7 - that's cool - work on that!" or "When
you played that 2 5 lick but with open strings - yeah -
develop that - that's interesting!". I get this all
the time these days, giving me fuel to work on my
things rather than other players' ideas. This is what
intrigues me today.
|
|
Self improvement as a player
seems to be a never ending quest for inspiration and
ideas and I find the best source these days comes from
within. |
|
|
|
About The
Author:
|
Back to Top
______________________________________________________________
|