The Inner Game of Music, the breakout hit that became a standard primer in the music world, has taught thousands of musicians—professionals and amateurs alike—how to overcome self-consciousness and stage fright and to recapture a youthful, almost effortless capacity to learn. Now, in his follow-up book, The Mastery of Music, Barry Green turns his expert hand to the artistic qualities that make an extraordinary musician. Culling advice from dozens of interviews with legends including Joshua Bell, Dave Brubeck, Jeffrey Kahane, Bobby McFerrin, Christopher Parkening, Doc Severinsen, Frederica von Stade, the Harlem Boys Choir, and the Turtle Island String Quartet, he reveals that it’s not enough to have a cerebral and emotional connection to the notes. Green hows how musical excellence, exhibited by true virtuosos, requires a mastery of ten unique qualities of the soul and the human spirit, such as confidence, passion, discipline, creativity, and relaxed concentration, and he discusses specific ways in which all musicians, composers, and conductors can take their skills to higher levels. He carefully incorporates all instruments and techniques in his rejuvenating discussions, inspiring the stifled student to have fun again and the over-rehearsed performer to rediscover the joy of passionate expression. Essential reading for every musician, The Mastery of Music strikes a beautiful new chord.
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Barry Green served as principal bassist of the Cincinnati Symphony for twenty-eight years. Currently the principal bassist with the California Symphony and the Sun Valley Summer Symphony and active as a bass soloist and teacher, he teaches bass at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and for the young bassist program of the San Francisco Symphony Education Department.
Green has been performing for young audiences in schools in the Bay Area, as well as performing bass workshops and concerts on tour. He is also the author of The Inner Game of Music with W. Timothy Gallwey and has written seven Inner Game of Music workbooks for keyboard, voice, instruments, and ensembles. He conducts Inner Game seminars throughout the world. He lives with his wife in Oakland, California.
For information on Green’s personal appearances and publications, please contact his website at www.innergameofmusic.com and www.themasteryofmusic.com.
"The Inner Game of Music, the breakout hit that became a standard primer in the music world, has taught thousands of musicians--professionals and amateurs alike--how to overcome self-consciousness and stage fright and to recapture a youthful, almost effortless capacity to learn. Now, in his follow-up book, "The Mastery of Music, Barry Green turns his expert hand to the artistic qualities that make an extraordinary musician. Culling advice from dozens of interviews with legends including Joshua Bell, Dave Brubeck, Jeffrey Kahane, Bobby McFerrin, Christopher Parkening, Doc Severinsen, Frederica von Stade, the Harlem Boys Choir, and the Turtle Island String Quartet, he reveals that it's not enough to have a cerebral and emotional connection to the notes. Green hows how musical excellence, exhibited by true virtuosos, requires a mastery of ten unique qualities of the soul and the human spirit, such as confidence, passion, discipline, creativity, and relaxed concentration, and he discusses specific ways in which all musicians, composers, and conductors can take their skills to higher levels. He carefully incorporates all instruments and techniques in his rejuvenating discussions, inspiring the stifled student to have fun again and the over-rehearsed performer to rediscover the joy of passionate expression. Essential reading for every musician, "The Mastery of Music strikes a beautiful new chord.
one
COMMUNICATION: THE SILENT RHYTHM
(Duos, Chamber Ensembles, Popular Combos, and Conductors)
Most of the time we feel separate from one another: we call ourselves "individuals," and we know that even our disagreements are proof that each one of us is indeed a very different person. Something happens, though, when you see eye to eye with someone, and discover rich layers of agreement on the details that other people "never quite understood"--or when your body appears able to dance flawlessly with another person, with no fumbling awkwardness, just two bodies together seemingly following the same rhythm, the same lilt and sway.
At times like these, we rejoice in finding a "perfect match," a "soul mate," a "twin."
In this chapter, I am going to make the bold assumption that this feeling of togetherness--not togetherness as in some rigid lock step, but togetherness as in dance--is vitally important in music making, and that when a duo or combo or orchestra finds this dance, being moved as one, it communicates it to the audience, and a whole concert hall full of individuals delights in being moved as one.
Soloists, chamber musicians, jazz musicians, and symphony orchestras often have to communicate with one another without speaking--and I'm not just thinking of the notes. How will a soloist come out of the cadenza and make a seamless entrance with the orchestra? How will the ensemble stay perfectly together during a subito (sudden) tempo change? Jazz musicians have to communicate spontaneously as they improvise, so that two people thinking new musical thoughts at the same time can think harmoniously. And conductors and ensemble players must convey a composer's ideas and feelings to an audience with cohesion and clarity--even though the ideas come wrapped in the feelings, and the feelings in the ideas, none of which are expressed in words. All this must be expressed seamlessly by a hundred individuals breathing and bowing and striking and plucking dozens of different pieces of ebony, ivory, catgut, horsehair, iron, copper, brass, and taut animal skin!
Musicians are not the only ones who communicate like this--far from it! The operating rooms of the world would be far less able to cope with heart failures and blunt-instrument traumas if surgeons, nurses, and medical technicians weren't also performing their own intricate choreography in the heat of an emergency. But again, the musical metaphor seems to hold well: we say they are dancing to a choreography, moving to a common rhythm, working in harmony with one another.
When conductor Leonard Bernstein takes the stage, it is as if his baton is charged with lightning, and he can light up whole sections of the orchestra with his smallest gesture. Jazz bassist Ray Brown establishes a rhythmical groove when he plays with his trio, and brings his colleagues and audience there with him. Yo-Yo Ma casts a hypnotic spell over his audiences when he plays his cello--and when he plays with a piano accompanist or different musical partner, it is as though the two of them somehow miraculously blend into one musician performing in twin bodies.
It strikes us as magical, beyond coincidence, almost supernatural even, when highly individual musicians merge into a perfect synchronized whole, as though they are all parts of a greater body, as though music itself has the beat and is passing through them. How do they do it? What is this glue that can bind the voices of a hundred artists and the silent motions of their conductor into one profoundly moving communication?
It's easy enough to say that skilled musicians have "talent," that playing together in this way is just a skill they've acquired--but that's like explaining the drowsiness that opium causes by saying the drug contains a "dormitive principle"; it names the effect in question without telling us any more about it than we already knew. Some people say great conductors can communicate this way because they have charisma--but is that any different? And meanwhile, those who prefer more mundane explanations shrug their shoulders and say it's all a matter of discipline, of practice, of rehearsal.
Oddly enough, there are more sophisticated ways of talking about this kind of blending of many into one. We speak of great moments of unity as "transcendent" moments, such as the spellbinding oratory of Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech and the rhythmic cadences of black gospel preaching from which it derived. The great psychologist Carl Jung coined the term "synchronicity" to describe seemingly coincidental happenings which are bound together by what he called an "acausal connecting principle"--something other than the law of cause and effect! And words from the religious traditions of humankind like "inspiration," "spirit," "chi," and "prana" can also give us a clue that something as lofty as devotion to a higher goal, or as simple as awareness of one's breath, may be involved when people connect or merge in their communications.
There is one word, though, which to my mind tells us more than all the rest about what is happening when great artists succeed in this kind of nonverbal communication: entrainment.
ENTRAINMENT
Researchers have come close to explaining what happens when musicians merge their musical energies in this kind of nonverbal, rhythmic union: they call it a form of entrainment. The word was first used to describe the uncanny effect you'd get if you kept a roomful of old grandfather clocks ticking away. In 1665, Dutch scientist Christian Huygens first noticed that two pendulum clocks, mounted side by side on a wall, would swing together in precise rhythm; in fact, they would hold their mutual beat far beyond their maker's capacity to match them in mechanical accuracy. Author George Leonard says that this phenomenon is universal. In his book The Silent Pulse, Leonard explains:
Whenever two or more oscillators in the same field are pulsing at nearly the same time, they tend to "lock in" so that they are pulsing at exactly the same time. The reason, simply stated, is that nature seeks the most efficient energy state--and it takes less energy to pulse in cooperation than in opposition.
Musicians know about entrainment and other vibratory phenomena because instruments sometimes "talk" to each other in just this kind of way--you can make a vocal or instrumental sound in rehearsal that will vibrate or rattle the snare on a snare drum clear on the other side of the room. And if parchment and metal wire can do it, why not people?
The key to this kind of communication is something way beyond following a cue, or just doing what someone says. Perhaps the idea of entrainment can help us describe this kind of group communication with a rhythm or musical ideal, an actual energy shared between us. This is the key that allows great artists to play together in perfect synchronization.
When musicians entrain, they merge and synchronize their actions. These synchronized actions in turn have the potential to reach and entrain the audience as well. And when that happens, as the final crash is heard or last long note fades at the end of a piece, the audience is one, as you can tell from the stunned silence--and thunderous applause.
Just as the pendulums of a dozen clocks can entrain each other to a common beat, a dozen violinists playing the same part find it is far more difficult to play "against" one another than it is to relax and play with the beat. And yet each musician must be sensitive to the pulse if all are to play together.
Extensive research by Dr. William S. Condon of Boston University School of Medicine provides scientific support to this principle....
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