Folk, Frameworks, and Fun, with David Row

New musicality video:

Today we’re joined by David Row of the Make Moments Matter website and podcast. David is an elementary music teacher in the US who specialises in the Orff method of music teaching. https://www.musical-u.com/learn/folk-frameworks-and-fun-with-david-row/

Orff is something we’ve mentioned a couple of times on the show before because it’s one of a few approaches that really puts musicality at the heart of music learning. And although these days it’s mostly used for early music education and David’s experience is predominantly with young children, we think you’ll find there’s plenty of interesting ideas here for the adult music learner too.

In this conversation we talk about:

– David’s two quite different experiences of learning music growing up, singing harmony in church and taking piano lessons, and what he learned from each

– Why David chose to study the Orff approach to music education even though he had already qualified and started working as a school music teacher

– The specific benefits of the Orff approach for children and for adults.
We found this one really enlightening – so whether you’ve wondered about Orff or never heard of it before we hope you’ll enjoy it too.

Listen to the episode: https://www.musical-u.com/learn/folk-frameworks-and-fun-with-david-row/

Links and Resources:

Make Moments Matter – https://makemomentsmatter.org/

Make Moments Matter podcast – https://makemomentsmatter.org/podcasts/

Interview with Casey McCann – http://musl.ink/pod32/

Interview with Jimmy Rotheram – http://musl.ink/pod70/

Elementaria: First Acquaintance with Orff-Schulwerk, by Gunild Keetman – https://www.amazon.ca/Elementaria-Acquaintance-Orff-Schulwerk-Gunild-Keetman/dp/0946535051/

David’s blogpost on Rhythm Syllable Systems – https://makemomentsmatter.org/classroom-ideas/rhythm-syllable-systems-what-to-use-and-why/

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

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Folk, Frameworks, and Fun, with David Row

Growing Into A Mighty Oak, with Andy Wasserman

Recently on the show we did an episode on something called the Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization (LCCOTO) with Andrew Bishko from our team. Andrew introduced me to this when he wrote a tutorial about the Lydian scale for our website, and in the process of putting that article together we came across a man called Andy Wasserman, one of just a handful of people in the world who is fully trained and certified to teach the Lydian Chromatic Concept.

So we were really keen to invite Andy onto the show to share a bit more about this – but as you’ll be hearing, Andy is actually a highly remarkable musician, composer and educator and we could have easily done a whole series of interviews with him!

Andy is a professional pianist, composer, arranger, performer and producer, in genres as diverse as Jazz, World Music (meaning West African, Asian, Middle East, Native American, Latin & Afro-Cuban, South American), Fusion, Funk, Hip-Hop, Electronica, Blues, New Age, and Gospel. You will have heard his music on TV and radio. And he’s had a fascinating journey to become the musician he is today.

We tried to reign ourselves in and focus on just a few topics, so in this conversation you’ll be hearing about:

  • The four music mentors that helped Andy become the musician he is today, and the specific impact each had
  • Andy’s view on talent and what we can learn from paying attention to the music that resonates with us
  • And of course the Lydian Chromatic Concept created by his mentor George Russell, renowned composer and recipient of the MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Grant. It’s a framework for understanding music, which Andy has spent decades helping to develop and teach.

It’s a bit of a mouthful of a name, but as you’ll hear the Lydian Chromatic Concept is, in a way, quite simple – in the sense of being fundamental and universal. It’s not something we could ask Andy to actually teach in a podcast episode like this but we talk in depth about what the Concept is, the way it can transform how you hear and play music, and how to go about learning more about it if you want to experience that transformation for yourself.

Listen to the episode:

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Links and Resources

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Transcript

Christopher: Welcome to the show, Andy. Thank you for joining us today.

Andy: Thank you for the honor and the privilege to be with you.

Christopher: You play a huge range of instruments and styles of of music, perhaps more than any other musician I know. I think I saw a video online of you sharing your collection of musical instruments. How many would you say you own or play at this point?

Andy: Well, the last time I counted, and this is including a lot of hand percussion, so I am counting each and every finger cymbal and tambourine and flute and whistle, including some huge, beautiful instruments like the Japanese koto and a wide selection of beautiful drums that I’m privileged to have. The number right now is over 140.

Christopher: Goodness me, and you can play all of these, presumably?

Andy: To certain degrees I have studied and learned about the culture that they’re connected to. For our listeners who haven’t visited my website in terms of my arts and education program, The World Music Experience, these are wind, string, and percussion instruments that represent not every culture of course but the cultures that I have gravitated to over the years and so it’s learning about the instrument, the materials, how to play them from people from other cultures as well as how to maintain them, how to play authentic music and not just jam on them and that’s taken me over 40 years so it’s been a lifelong process that actually started and was inspired by growing up in an extremely diverse and multicultural community in Manhattan where people from all around the world would open up their arms and their homes and even help me get the instruments without having to travel in order to bridge the gap between western music and non-western music.

Christopher: Well, it certainly comes across in your music publishing, your catalog of works. I think there are over 100 releases to your name and they span such a variety of musical styles. It’s clear you have explored in all directions and I’d love to know if you think back maybe to that time in Manhattan or even earlier, was it always obvious to people around you that you were going to grow up to be this incredible musician with an amazing library of musical works and the ability to play some of the instruments. Was that obvious when you were a child, do you think?

Andy: I don’t know about anyone else but to myself the answer is yes. When I was very young I was privileged to grow up in a home where my grandfather had bought my grandmother a beautiful grand piano so the resonance of a full-sized, you know, beautiful instrument was right there at my fingertips and I heard a sound I have come now to learn a lot more about them. In fact I set out in my life even as a chid to find out, what is this sound that I hear?

It’s not like a sound I heard in my head, you might say but it was a feeling, it was what I now call a resonance and as a little child I used to reach up to the keys before I could even be big enough to sit at the piano and I would press the keys and feel connected to some type of mysterious language that I was communicating to something that was invisible, because, let’s face it, sound is technically invisible. It’s something that we can’t see or taste but we can hear it and these vibrations moved me and at a very early age I started to realize that it’s the music in us that hears the music so I was immediately drawn towards the inner life of, “What is this music that’s already in me?” and for our listeners I would encourage you to be open to this idea because it’s not necessarily discussed all of the time but if you think about it the music that we love, the music that we’ve always listened to, the reason we’ve chosen instruments because we love their sound like a violinist who says, “I just had to play the violin because I love the sound of the violin,” it’s because, I like to phrase it, it’s the music in us that hears that music so I immediately went searching for that which I sometimes refer to as the universal sound and then upon learning about rhythm I realized that we’re all on this beautiful treasure hunt and we’re looking for what the pirates used to call the treasure chest. I like to say it’s the treasure in our chest which is the drum that’s beating all the time so the feeling of my heart beat, the rhythm of the body, the rhythm in life, that sound of the music in us. I realized I have talent on loan to me and I’m going to devote the rest of my life towards paying back everything I can to work as hard as I can to develop this talent that is on loan to me and then my life just unfolded with everything that you describe.

Christopher: Amazing. I’d like to dwell on this for just a moment if we may because talent is a topic that comes up quite a lot on this podcast and we find that a lot of people, both the very established and successful and capable musicians and those who are doing it purely as a hobby and maybe don’t think all that much of their musical abilities, tend to view that word with a bit of skepticism just because it often does more harm than good, the idea that, you know, you need talent or you can only do what your talent allows you to and I’d love to hear your perspective because you mentioned a couple of things there that you felt you had been blessed with a talent that you had this ability that you would spend your life trying to cultivate and maximize but you also talked in terms of us all having music inside us and all having that ability to connect with, as you put it, the universal sound so how do you think about this topc of talent?

Andy: Well, that’s a great question, Christopher, and I do have a very strong feeling. It can’t be proven by science and some people may be skeptical because we’re all filled was self-doubt. Part of that propels us to work very hard, you know, to strive to become better at our musical skills but I believe, and I’ve been teaching now for over 35 years, that every single person is already a musical master. They just don’t know it and so I’m keen on mentoring because I have had, I tell people when they say, “What’s your claim to fame?” I say, “My claim to fame is that I have had the great, great, humbling opportunity to have had not one, two, three but four very powerful mentors in my life and I say a mentor more than an instructor as an instructor can tell you what to do but a mentor tells you what to be, who to be, who you are and that’s where the talent lies, not necessarily in what to do, because that’s more of a skill that can be practiced and worked on and frankly we run into limitations based on our physicality of the instrument and our hands or our voice, etcetera but those can be overcome. But the question of what to be and who you are, my mentors showed me that I am already a musical master, I just don’t know it and I’d like to give, if you don’t mind, a short analogy which I think people can relate to which is one of my favorite ones when my students look at me and go, “You’ve got to me kidding. I’m already a musical master and I — you’re right. I don’t know it and I don’t think it’s possible,” and I like to use the analogy of an acorn and an oak tree and that is that as a little baby acorn I find my mentor that’s like a towering, beautiful oak tree that offers shade to us striving musicians out on the path and they’re looking at this acorn and they know that everything that is an oak tree is already completely, fully formed within that acorn.

The only thing is the acorn has to go through a period of transformation to obliterate its acornness. It can’t identify and stay on the acorn level, which I would say that’s people who say, “Well I don’t have the talent,” that’s because they’re only looking at their acorn-hood, so to speak, but when a mentor can say, “You are an oak tree and nobody can deny that within an acorn is an oak tree. All it has to do is fall beneath the ground and grown roots and then a little stalk and that stalk can turn into a huge tree trunk with branches and guess what? End up giving birth to thousands of other acorns over time.”

So if people would look at themselves as already having the potentiality, as another way of saying, it for all the ultimate talent that is on loan to all of us, I mean, especially with Youtube and the internet I think, to quote the great jazz trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, it’s obvious that no one has a monopoly on talent. There is so much musical talent everywhere and I’d like to encourage all of our listeners and all the members at Musical U that you are all masters of music and through finding a mentor and the other processes that your website offers at your school that maybe people can find out how to go from an acorn into the oak tree that’s already within them.

Christopher: Wonderful. I love that analogy. I think that’s a beautiful way of looking at it and I think it very neatly helps people reconcile the idea of the talent they admire and they’re inspired by and maybe a little intimidated by, with the idea that they could have just as much talent brewing inside themselves, just waiting to be unleashed.

If it’s not too simplistic, I’m sure we can’t boil a lifetime down to a short segment of a podcast but I’d love to hear, if you wouldn’t mind, a little bit about those four mentors and maybe the transformation each of them helped you through in terms of who you were before and after working with them.

Andy: Well, thank you so much for asking that because these people deserve not to be forgotten. They were, and none of them are currently alive anymore, but they were some of the greatest musicians and innovators and teachers. I sought them out instead of looking to have some type of brilliant career for myself. I thought, “If I can find and be accepted by some of the greatest musicians on the planet and those oak trees will nurture and nourish my acorn-hood to transform into hopefully something like them. That would be the greatest thing that I could do.”

So I was lucky growing up in Manhattan. There was a school called The Metropolitan Music School near Central Park and I’d like to say, because I noticed on your website that you encourage a tremendous amount of ear training and listening skills. In order to sign up for lessons with my first mentor, her name was Ann Bacon Dodge, and for those people that know some very wonderful books that were written in the early part of the 20th century by my teacher’s husband, Roger Pryor Dodge, my teacher was named Anne Bacon Dodge and Roger Pryor Dodge was a historian, a jazz historian so she knew an awful lot about that but in order to sign up for lessons with her they made me go every Saturday for three hours and do music dictation and ear training. Of course this is prior to computers so everything was done with an instructor and I had to study ear training, listening skills and music theory just in order to take private lessons and that was extremely helpful. So she created the foundation and taught me about the blues, about playing Bach two-part inventions and set a foundation for me as a pianist, that’s my favorite instrument and my lifelong main work because it takes all of that and the next great opportunity I had was Dwike Mitchell, that’s D-W-I-K-E, an unusual first name.

Actually the longest running jazz ensemble, which was a duo in the history of jazz was Dwike Mitchell and has partner in musicality, Willie Ruff, who is actually pretty famous because he’s been a professor at Yale for most of his life teaching jazz and they toured the world as the Mitchell-Ruff Duo where Dwike played the piano and Willie Ruff would switch between bass and French horn.

Dwike Mitchell and I had a relationship that lasted 30 years and he’s the one that really allowed me to understand everything orchestrally that can be expressed on piano and I will say that it’s very difficult to learn about music without learning about yourself and you start seeing things in your own character, your personality, hang-ups or things that have affected you in your life emotionally in any kind of negative way. Those really have to be removed in order to feel free, especially in jazz, to feel free enough to express the joy and the sadness and everything as you improvise and create new music every day so he also helped me as a young person to grow and to learn about myself and help me overcome things that I needed to do as I grew into a more mature adult.

That was followed by him saying oneday, he used to call me his son, his musical child. He said, “Son, you have to go to school now, not just lessons with me,” so I sought out George Russell, the innovative band leader, composer and creator of the Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization and luckily was accepted full-time as a student, undergraduate level at the New England Conservatory of Music and I ended up becoming so close to George that he certified me as a teacher. I would take over his classes when he’d go on tour. I would help him with his seminars and then worked for 20 years amongst the staff of other dedicated people and students of his as an editorial assistant for the current edition of his treatise, “The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization, the Art and Science of Tonal Gravity.” There is no way to even begin to tell you how he affected my life on every level, especially opening up my ears to sounds and the language of music, which now I refer to as relating to the hypothesis called linguistic relativity which basically says that new languages that you learn or the inherent language that you grow up speaking has a definitive effect in your consciousness, how you view the universe, how you relate to your life and so when you learn a new language like the Lydian Chromatic Concept it actually alters your entire perspective through linguistic relativity to everything that you perceive and, again, this was a lot of internal growth, that music that’s inside of you and then finally I realized that the heart and the heart of most, what we now call World or World Beat music is rhythmically based, but there is also a code, I call it the timekeeper’s code where the beats themselves speak and it’s a living language of rhythm and through amazing amount of luck I became very close to Papa Ladji Camara who is considered to be in the history books the very first west-African drummer in the 1940’s and 50’s to take the djembe drum that everybody now all around the world is familiar with the djembe, the most popular west-African drum. He was the first one credited to taking it around the world when he toured with Les Ballets Africains de Keita Fodéba and so Papa Ladji was already an aged person but still teaching and I ended up working with him and living with him and he’s the one that taught me the roots of west-African drumming and when you put all of those things together it’s inspiration that to this day fuels every note that I play, everything I feel about music in my heart and for sure propels my dedication to wanting to pass it on to my students and anyone that I can possibly help.

Christopher: Wow, thank you. I’ll admit when I was preparing for this interview I was simultaneously super-excited and a little bit overwhelmed because you have had an incredible journey so far and I feel like we could do at least an hour-long podcast episode on each of those phases of your musical development and really dig into what you learned and how it worked and I would love to spend a day with you and so I had to challenge myself to try and narrow it down a little because we could explore in so many interesting directions and one thing you touched on there jumped out, which is the Lydian Chromatic Concept and we recently did a couple of podcast episodes which touched on this one with a member of our team, Andrew Bishko, and then a follow-up episode providing a very brief introduction and as we said at the time, this was really just scratching the surface of what is a very substantial and fascinating thing but we’ve already received some feedback suggesting that this was one of the most interesting and mind-blowing episodes we’ve done on the podcasts so far and so I felt like that was perhaps the most important thing to touch on in today’s episode with you and really draw from your amazing experience so if you wouldn’t mind I’d love if we could talk a little bit about the Lydian Chromatic Concept which, as you say, you learned from George Russell, its originator.

Andy: Well, thank you so much and I would like the members of Musical U and whoever is tuning in to this podcast to know that it speaks volumes about the integrity of your organization, Christopher, that you will allow this beautiful knowledge to be shared and be open, you know, to adding this to the other elements of music theory that you’re trying to share to enhance your members’ and listeners’ skill. So thank you so much for being open to the Lydian Chromatic Concept. I just want you to know that I appreciate that and I know that if George was alive today, he passed away at age 86 in 2009 so he’s not here but he would also thank you for recognizing that there is great value, especially for musicians today.

What I would like to allow people to feel a little more comfortable about the the concept and rest assured about something that is usually not brought out because people see it immediately as something that might be so different and perhaps diametrically opposed to traditional western music theory and through my own personal experience I can 100% guarantee that what I’m about to tell you is the truth because I saw George Russell sitting at a desk laboring for decades to have his system of music be very inclusiive of already existing western music and even bend the rules a little bit so that people coming to the Lydian Chromatic Concept with already existing knowledge from traditional western music theory lessons and all of the ramifications of melody, harmony, texture, rhythm and specifically, of course, most people know that jazz improvisers including Miles Davis and John Coltrane changed the direction of jazz in towards the modal period as it’s known and illustrated by the album, “Kind of Blue,” having being turned on to in the camaraderie of their circle of incredible culture, mostly in New York in the 1950’s and early 60’s through George Russell and the Lydian Chromatic Concept and the improvisers since then that have come to George, he was very well aware that we can’t say, “Forget everything you learned,” or “It’s irrelevant,” or the worst thing to say, which is the opportunity of what the concept says, which is “This is bad or wrong,” so the first thing that I would like to illumiate for people because it also might be new is that George did, first of all, was stand back and say, “What is the music itself telling us about its own self-organized unity?” and when he posed that question, which is an extremely deep question and shows you what an amazing human being he was, he realized that just like physics and physicists who study the physical universe, most everyone agrees, especially those people that have learned from Albert Einstein, that gravity is a force that we are all subject to just like the fact that you and I are now conducting an interview not like Mary Poppins where we’re floating to the ceiling, having tea but we’re actually sitting on the ground and gravity is pulling us toward the center of the earth.
So once George realized that music is physics, it’s like waves, it’s particles, it’s vibrations, that gravity had to be recognized as perhaps, and he ended up proving it to a great degree, the prime moving force of how music itself, not what we do with it, but how music itself is expressing itself, its actions.

So he calls it tonal gravity and when one looks at the existence of tonal gravity immediately there is a verticality straight up and down like if you have a circle with a map, north, south axis and once you have that there automatically is a horizontal axis that would be a line going from east to west.

Now, western music theory in conjunction and relativity to the verticality of the Lydian scale, which I know your other podcasts have already described why they’re like a ladder of fifths and that’s what makes them vertical with having one single do, that is a perfect explanation for chord-scale unity that allows people to understand the origin of every chord in a parent scale but that horizontal axis is just as important and that is the resolving tendency in the nature of the major scale which most people define as a structure of two tetrachords, like in the key of C. C, D, E, F is called a tetrachord, whole step, whole step, half, and then you go up a whole step to G and then you have a second tetrachord, G, A, B, C and that’s one of the reasons that ou feel the sense of two do’s and a sense of resolution. It’s perfect for that and the reason that those as a cross in the center of a circle, the reason that those are so perfect in describing all of music so you have the Lydian Chromatic Concept’s attention to verticality mixed with western music’s perfection of resolution evidenced by the major scale and the Lydian scale, it mirrors life because when we’re in the now, when we’re not trying to achieve anything or we’re not goal-oriented in life we’re actually in a vertical state of consciousness and when we have to go anywhere or do anything or create a task we’re in a part of our daily lives constantly in a state of goal orientation and the tension and the release of the goal orientation and then the relaxation and unity of being in the now is music showing us that it’s actually a mirror of life and so the first thing that I want to, you know, summarize based on what I just said is for all you listeners, please know that the Lydian Chromatic Concept is completely open and shows how beautifully traditional western music theory fits within the discovery of tonal gravity and the verticality and the chord scale alliance that is shown so beautifully by George Russell’s concept.

Christopher: Fantastic. I’m so glad you started with that because I know a lot of our listeners’ heads are exploding right now with some of the concepts you introduced there so I think in a moment we’ll break some of that down a little more but you mentioned earlier, you know the prevalence of teaching material online. We live in an age of Google and Youtube and I’m sure some of our listeners have had this experience where you’re looking around online for interesting music things and you stumble across someone who says they’ve got the secret to music and how it works and they’ve invented their own music theory and, you know, in some cases they’ve just taken a subset of music theory and put their own labels on it, their own names, and declared it to be new and in fact it’s just new names on old things and in other cases they’ve discovered some way of explaining things that worked for a very small subset of music but actually when you look at it you realize, no, it’s quite focused and isolated and doesn’t really generalize.

I think, you know, it would be easy if someone has stumbled across a mention of the Lydian Chromatic Concept online for them to be a bit skeptical because it does make some bold claims about its universal application and how powerful it can be and I think, you know as we’ve touched on, it obviously comes from an incredible pedigree from George Russell himself and I think anyone listening to you just describe it will understand that this is not a strange and kind of flimsy alternative to music theory, this is genuinely something that has been very carefully developed and worked on and thought through and, as you put it, compliments and extends what we think of as traditional music theory and it’s not reinventing the wheel, as it were.

Andy: Yes. Well George himself described the Lydian Chromatic Concept as being radical in the sense that once he saw that there was a center of tonal gravity and the possibility of a unified tonal gravity field, which, I hope this isn’t a stretch because most people feel comfortable with multiplying 12 times 12 but maybe not thought about the fact that every key of which an equal temper tuning which is what the Lydian Chromatic Concept is working within. It does not work with scale systems from other parts of the world or earlier in history. It is based on the overtone of the fifth and our tuning system of being able to play any song in any key has to do with, you know, the equal temper tuning so we are limiting it to that but that in equal temper tuning we have 12 notes that can all act as a do, like you play a song in the key of C or G flat or D flat, etcetera and you have 12 possible tones which are also those same 12 tones, not a totally different subset of reordering them for the so-called 12-tone chromatic scale. So if you multiply 12 times 12 you actually realize that there is a limit, as incredible as it might seem to try to master it of 144 possible intervals of, and here’s the key word, close-to-distant relationship to the center.

Now, why is that a little bit different and hard for people to wrap their minds around relative to western music theory? Because in western music theory we think, number one, of and taught through the history of theory itself consonant and dissonant and George was saying if we ask what the music itself is telling us we have to try to be more objective because that viewpoint is quite objective a viewpoint and consonant and dissonant tends to be a little bit more subjective. What one person hears as consonant another person may hear as dissonant and for sure there’s dissonant music that people love to listen to that other people say, “I got a headache within the first ten seconds,” so George says that instead of saying what’s right or wrong, consonant or dissonant, we have close-to-distant relationship where we have ingoing, semi-ingoing, semi-outgoing and outgoing levels of tonal gravity and what he says is that he’s created this map that doesn’t tell you where to go but it shows you all of the possible places so that, getting back to what we said earlier is, it’s critical for every musician, no matter whether they’re a hobbyist or they’re just learning or they’ve been playing forever, to go inside themselves and say, “Why do I play music? What does music mean to me? What is my sound? What is the music in me?” all of those type of esoteric, inner questions and then realize that you could look at a map, for example, I’m comfortable with the United States where I live and some people would say if you want to go from New York City to San Fransisco from the east coast to the west coast there’s an interstate called Route 80 that goes all across the country.

Well, if that’s the way you want to get there, go, but what happens if you have a relative in Atlanta, Georgia and then you want to go to the Glacier National Park in Montana and then you want to go, actually, back in the opposite direction because you want to hear some blues in Chicago and you have this meandering way to actually get to San Fransisco. If that’s what your expressing, the Lydian Chromatic Concept will show you musically how to navigate through that without making any judgements and showing you based on the criteria of what you hear, and that can never be taken from the forefront, that if you don’t hear it first you’re going to be a little bit more lost because you’re going to be relying more on your intellect than this mystical, magical experience that we call sound and how we tend to feel it more in our heart and, you know, our inner self. So I hope that that’s helpful and that makes sense.

Christopher: It does and I feel like you were anticipating the questions that were popping into my head, there. I guess that comes from, you know, decades of working with this concept and teaching it to people but something that’s come up on the podcast a few times before is that a lot of musicians struggle with music theory partly because they don’t see the point of it to a large extent. You know, it can seem interesting from an intellectual perspective and, okay, it’s good to know how music works but for a lot of musicians it seems like a by-the-way thing and they don’t really see the usefulness of music theory and, you know we’ve talked on the podcast before about how if you approach it from a different perspective, music theory is intensely useful and empowering by allowing you to do the things in music you instinctively want to do and I wonder if you could talk a little bit more about what you touched on there which is that the Lydian Chromatic Concept, too, can be this enabling force. Maybe you could give some examples of what it allows musicians to do in practical terms that they maybe wouldn’t be able to do without that understanding.

Andy: Well, an excellent question and I would like to, again, represent this through the way that George said it himself. He drew a line between what may sound a little bit harsh, but it’s not, a mechanical approach to art in general which you might say is a musician who learns songs and a repertoire, reads notes, and doesn’t really understand what the music itself is saying as a language and then a musician who is playing not in a mechanical way where the music theory becomes much more important. What George felt and I’ve studied in my work of music from around the world and especially jazz as an improvisational art form that the way that I like to phrase it, Christopher, is, music is an ancient language that I’m convinced in my study of music history, especially non-western cultures, that people used to understand. They would understand a story for every beat that every west-African tribe would play and the way that it was the inflection of those micro-rhythms and specific timings.

Most of us who have studied music of the classic European style know that if you play Mozart and you don’t phrase it correctly between what’s legato and what’s staccato you change the sound of every one of those beautiful phrases because the phrasing is so important so if you go really deep into the fact that music itself is a language that we used to understand then you’d have to say in modern times, especially due to noise pollution, being bombarded by all the media, yes, a life of haste, we’re all moving very fast, there’s a lot of noise in the world.

That part of our brain, because it is a language center in our brain, actually has gone dormant and so most of us don’t really understand specifically what I’m talking about about the language of music. That’s why I believe it’s so important to learn any and all theories and, like I said, the Lydian Chromatic Concept compliments in its verticality the horizontal nature of western music theory where you recognize tonal gravity and the scales that come from a vertical sense of a scale with one do, the Lydian scale, and the horizontal nature of the major scale, however anybody wants to approach it.

The advantage to learning music theory and why it’s so important is that you understand more about what you’re playing so that if yo udo want to change it up, if you do want to interpret it on a deeper level, if you do want to improvise, if you do want to what I call spontaneous composition, meaning, you’re not sitting down to write a composition that’s going to be re-created and frozen in time and played the same way all the time but you’re just sitting down to play the majority of students who come to me, some of them very advanced, some of them music teachers and professional musicians who want to take private lessons with me on the Lydian Chromatic Concept, I hear them play and I’m like, “Wow. You are amazing. Now, can you just make up something on the spot on your instrument and just play something?” and they’re, like, “I’ve never done that. I don’t know how to do that. I can’t do that.” I say, wait a second. Aren’t we improvising this conversation verbally, speaking?” They say, “Yes.” I say, “You don’t know what I’m about to ask you or say but you hear it and then using the language that we’re speaking in English, you answer back.”

We’re born improvisers, all of us, and every day you wake up. Sometimes you’re happy sometimes you’re sad, sometimes you’re inspired and you’re walking down the street by a gorgeous flower or a cloud in the sky, sometimes you feel upset about something that happens in life. Every day these new experiences you’re improvising through life.” Well, without the knowledge, Christopher, of the inherent language of music, also called music theory, you don’t really understand what it is that you’re doing and that’s what George was trying to say is that to get away from a more mechanical approach of just being an instrumentalist as incredible as that is and important and a lot of people that’s enough because that takes so much work on its own but if you’re going to try to explore more within as well as spontaneity, composition, creativity and I’d like to point out, which I think is very important, analysis.

If you really love the music of Steely Dan and you want to take a song like Asia, which, believe it or not, George Russell as my first assignment said, “I want you to analyze the entire chord progression, the scale structure and the melodic formation in the song, “Aja”, by Steely Dan.” I was, like, “Wow, I thought you would pick something by Miles or Coltrane,” so he he was open to all styles of music, but let’s say you love the song, “Asia,” by Steely Dan. Wouldn’t you love to know so much about music theory and everything it had to offer that you would be able to analyze and then say, “Oh, now I have a greater understanding of what it is that resonates so deeply and that I find so beautiful and engaging by this artist or this particular song.”

Christopher: Fantastic. You painted such an inspiring and vivid picture there, I think, of how understanding the Lydian Chromatic Concept could transform your experience of music and suddenly I’m very excited to learn more and as I mentioned in our previous episode this is all quite new to me and it’s something I find deeply fascinating and appealing. Could you share a little bit about what it looks like to learn the Lydian Chromatic Concept and maybe what our listeners could consider next if they’re feeling inspired and eager to know more?

Andy: Well, thank you, Christopher. The work that went into the fourth and final edition, The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organization, the Art and Science of Tonal Gravity, which is quite a title, was so immense. Everyone works so hard and almost everyone, on, you know, the books that they write and the CDs and the music that they create and, you know, I wish the world at large that was not artistic would have a greater appreciation, especially today, of how important it is for us to reward all artists in every field and every discipline, music and every other, dance and graphic arts and literature, etcetera. I think we all know through the making of the DVDs when we see what these movie makers go through but all of us go through that and what George Russell and myself and the other editorial assistants went through including George Russell’s wife and now widow, Alice Norbury Russell, went through to get this fourth and final edition out there because a lot of people still get a lot of mileage and use from the first couple of additions starting in 1953 but George realized that he had to flesh this out over decades and really work even harder, like I said before, on showing people how you incorporate traditional western music theory along with the Lydian Chromatic Concept. So I would encourage people to go to the only place around the world where you can legally get as an outlet for this book which is a hard-cover book so it is pricey but its value is, it’s invaluable and that’s at Amazon.com and you would just type in Lydian Chromatic Concept and you’ll see a few sellers but I would like people to know the Concept Publishing is George Russell’s own company still run by his estate and Alice Russell and so be sure to order it from, directly from Concept Publishing which is for sale on Amazon.

There is a website called the lydianchromaticconcept.com and it has a forum that, I am not one of the forum moderators, but there are wonderful people who for years have been moderating and don’t anybody be afraid or intimidated as a newbie to just show up and say, Hey I don’t know anything about this,” or “I want to learn about it,” and you’ll see a lot of information. I’m sure people are familiar with forums and it is free. You don’t have to pay for a membership. You can just create, to my knowledge, just create a user name and log on to the forum, which you’ll see at that website.

I would encourage people to listen to George Russell’s music. Please keep in mind his music is not the Lydian Chromatic Concept. He had, like many of us, we would say we wear many hats. When he put on his Lydian Chromatic Concept, which, by the way, we just call the Concept for short, so when he put on the Concept hat that would be one side of his creative force.

When he was a band leader and composer and musician and a lot of people don’t know that in the 1940’s he’s credited with, along with Dizzy Gillespie, he was with Dizzy Gillespie’s band, played this, the very first mixture of traditional jazz with Afro-Cuban called “Cubana Be, Cubana Bop.” So before George created the Lydian Chromatic Concept he was already acknowledged as a phenomenal arranger and composer by the greats of the 40’s like Dizzy Gillespie but if you listen to George’s own compositions — and it doesn’t mean that what you hear is what you’re going to create with a Lydian Chromatic Concept the proof of that is just listen to my music. My music doesn’t sound anything like George’s music and I’ve been working with the concept now since 1979 and every single day it gives me new inspiration and new ideas. I call it the Fountain of Youth. That’s one of the reasons that to me its value is proven because if after all that time it’s still feeding new ideas every single day, every note, every song then there has to be value to it but if you listen to George’s music, which is mostly for a large ensembles, you will certainly get an idea of other things, and amazing things, particular pieces like “African Game” and these are compositions,” Listen to the Silence,” “Electronic Sonata for Souls,” “Love by Nature,” an amazing title for peace, right Christopher, as well as a piece that he played for me at a lesson that I had and it was like a nuclear explosion going on in my head when I first heard it after he had just gotten back form mastering it at the recording studio. It’s called “Vertical Form” and then, of course, if you have been inspired by the modal movement of jazz from “Kind of Blue” on and pianists like Bill Evans who was a student of George and the Lydian Chromatic Concept, listen to their music and through listening with the ideas of vertical and horizontal of Lydian scales and major scales of other things that have to do with the close to distant relationships, your ear will tune you in to an awful lot and that’s just as important if not more than learning the nuts and bolts when you actually, you know, study it. There is also some information on my website and George Russell.com has a lot of information about him so that’s the best that I can do and perhaps in the future, Christopher, you know, we can open up more of the actual information about the Lydian Chromatic Concept to your members and you listeners as Musical U sees fit.

Christopher: Perfect. Thank you. Well, yes, I would love to tempt you to come and give a master class for Musical U in the future because this is a topic that I know our members would be really excited to learn more about.

Thank you for giving those suggestions of where people can learn more. We will put links directly to each of those reources in the show notes for this episodes and all that remains is to say a big thank you, Andy. You’ve shared so generously today about your own life and the mentors you’ve had and about the Lydian Chromatic Concept and it’s just been a real pleasure to talk with you. So thank you.

Andy: Well, thank you, Christopher, and a shout out to everyone on your staff as well as the members who are lucky to be a part of everything that you’re working on because I can see that just like what George Russell, Dwike Mitchell, Papa Ladji Camara, all of the great musicians of the world have dedicated themselves to which is integrity and excellence and all we can do is just stay humble and strive with the best of our ability and with the joy that music brings and this world certainly can use the joy of beauty and truth that is inherent in the message of music and have fun while we’re doing it. I always remind my students that’s why we call it playing music and all of this stuff and I hope it didn’t seem too heavy or weighty or philosophical but it all leads to the internal process that should be a source of tremendous joy, rejuvenation and excitement to have fun playing and sharing music, especially jamming and I wish everyone the best of luck in their musical endeavors and thanks again for the honor to share this time with you.

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10 Tips for Conquering Stage Fright

You stand offstage – it could be at a grand performance hall, a church, maybe a coffee shop. Stage fright makes your hands shake nervously, like you are on a frozen tundra without gloves. You practiced weeks, months, maybe even years for this moment, a single moment in time when you expose your heart and soul to dozens, hundreds, thousands of strangers sitting in the dark.

As the lights go on, the applause becomes deafening. You make your way to the stage, get your guitar or piano or microphone ready. The music starts, the rhythm 1-2-3-4… but your brain, it blanks out. All that comes out is an out of tune twang or cough or an embarrassingly wrong chord.

What do you do? What can you do?

How can you prevent this moment from happening, or happening ever again?

Anxiety, cold feet, nervousness – they affect even the most seasoned performer. Let’s take some time and talk about some musical performance tips to help you avoid anxiety – because that anxiety shouldn’t stop you from putting yourself out there and sharing your talents with enthusiastic, curious audiences.

“One of the things I love about music is live performance.” – Yo-Yo Ma, World-Class Cellist

Tip 1: Be Mentally Prepared

Anxious violinistNovice musicians often do not realize the importance of what is currently being labeled as “mental toughness”. This describes the ability to work past nervousness, anxiety, and things just not going right, to create an amazing performance for your fans. There is often excitement and raw energy, but when that mic doesn’t work or the drummer shows up fifteen minutes after the first beat, or you find that the audience size is way bigger or way smaller than anticipated – that is when mental toughness can save you.

You can’t anticipate everything that might go wrong, but you can mentally prepare yourself for various undesirable situations.

So when the sound guy shrugs his or her shoulders when all that comes out of the speakers is a deafening screech, or your hall gets hit by lightning so all the electricity goes off (true story!), you can close your eyes, count to ten, calm down, and implement plan B – or chuck all your plans and play an acoustic set.

Tip 2: Practice

This might seem like a no-brainer, but there are countless musicians that rely only on their talent to make it through live performances. You know these guys: they have perfect pitch and pick up songs after only a few listens.

The problem?

When it comes down to a live performance, there are things like mental preparation, experience, and muscle memory that are necessary for a great show. And these things only come through cold, hard practice.

Good practice habits are more than jamming out with a friend or your favorite band on iTunes. Grab a metronome, sheet music, your instrument, and prepare for many hours of note-picking practice. You will be glad that you did (and so will your fans!).

“The real test of a musician is live performance. It’s one thing to spend a long time learning how to play well in the studio, but to do it in front of people is what keeps me coming back to touring.” – Neil Peart, Drummer for Rush

Tip 3: Visualize the Performance

Somedays, you might be too tired to sing another note or play another tune. That’s fine. You can take this time to visualize your performance. This can be done with your instrument, in the venue, or even in your shower. Here’s how:

  1. Close your eyes
  2. Take a deep breath
  3. “See” the venue in your imagination
  4. Mouth the words or airplay the notes
  5. Play over the entire set in your mind
  6. Imagine each note being played perfectly and musically

This simple exercise can help you overcome stage fright and cold feet, especially if the venue in which you’ll be performing is an unfamiliar one. Visualization of this kind is very powerful – there’s a reason this trick is favoured by many professional athletes!

Tip 4: Sleeping, Eating, and Self-Care

Sleeping musicianMany musicians are used to balancing work and school with midnight rehearsals and weeks of concerts and performances.

However, we musicians are not well-known for taking care of ourselves. Between lack of sleep, pushing our bodies and minds to the extreme, skipping meals or just noshing on gratuitous amounts of fast food, and even substance abuse, it is not surprising that many musicians burn out and feel extreme anxiety and nervousness when it comes to performing.

So be sure to take care of the basics: get a good night’s sleep the night before the performance, feed yourself well, and stay hydrated!

Tip 5: The Importance of the Warm Up

No Olympic athlete would start a marathon or sprint without warming up. Why? Your body and mind need time to prepare.

For musicians that depend on good health to sing, or on strength and dexterity to perform, it is important that you take the time to do a good warm up.

For singers, this can be something as simple as singing scales with various syllables and doing deep breathing exercises. Pianists and string players might practice scales while a drummer can jam out on rudiments and complex solos and beats. Every musician has warm-ups unique to their instruments – you want to do these warm-ups at least an hour before the concert to give your body or voice time to rest. And remember, this is just the warm-up, not the marathon. So save the bulk of your energy for the actual gig.

Tip 6: Get It Together – Yesterday

I’m a percussionist. What that means is that I have to show up at least an hour before dress rehearsal to set up my equipment, whether it’s a drum set, congas, or a full multi-percussion set-up. Even if you aren’t setting up twenty drums for the first set, you still need to get there early to make sure that everything is in place.

There’s preparation with every instrument, and you need to plan accordingly. Write up a quick checklist with things like:

  • Do I have my instrument(s)?
  • Do I have my music?
  • Do I have a music stand?
  • Do I have the right type of chair?
  • Do I need a page-turner?
  • Do I need to do a sound check?
  • Is the sound system set up and sounding good?
  • Do I have snacks/water?
  • Does everyone know where to meet?
  • Do I have the right address for the venue?
  • Do I have my music merch, albums, t-shirts, business cards, camera equipment, etc.?
  • Is this going to be recorded?
  • Have I reached out to all my fans about this performance?
  • Am I dressed properly?
  • Do I have a spare pick, bow, sticks, mic, cables?
  • Who is my go-to person on this gig?

Make up this checklist a few days before the concert. Double check it and make sure you have everything to go the day before. This way, on the day of the performance, you just need to focus on playing, not worrying about logistics, as Gina Luciani explains:

Tip 7: Double-Check Logistics

Speaking of logistics, be sure to double check everything before you play. For example, I once played a gig where the xylophone collapsed during a solo. Thankfully, a fellow percussionist caught the instrument and held up the xylophone while I finished the performance – but I should have double-checked the stand during rehearsal.

In a cantata I played once, one of the lead singers tripped into the orchestra pit, hitting the gong. She had to be transported to the hospital. A little bit of lighting at the edge of the stage might have prevented this (If you’re wondering, she was fine, and so was the gong!).

Logistics covers a wide array of issues, so make sure that everything is in order. Once you’ve made that list from Tip #6, check it twice, so you can avoid an on-stage mental meltdown à la Mariah Carey:

Tip 8: Be Early

If it sounds like that I’m being repetitive, well, there’s a reason for that. You can’t expect to run onto the band stage three minutes before beat one and expect that everything will run smoothly. Depending on the venue and the complexity and length of your performance, you might need to be there anywhere from an hour to several hours beforehand.

This is the time to check logistics, warm-up, check on your fellow musicians, go through your music, do a sound check, and cover any other last-minute issues. This gives you time to drink some water, eat a light snack, and relax before the performance.

And most importantly, this gives you that moment for mental clarity before the big moment.

Tip 9: Positive Self-Talk

Positive thinkingMusicians have a tendency to be extremely negative when they mess up. The antidote? Positive self-talk.

Avoid belittling yourself by saying “I can’t do this” every time you make a mistake.

Instead, tell yourself “I will have a great concert” or “the fans can’t wait to hear me tonight” or “I am ready”.

This works as a feedback loop – the more you think positive thoughts, the more you start to believe it, and the more your brain will do this on its own.

Tip 10: Deep Breathing

If you find that you are nervous, take the time to close your eyes, take a deep breath, and just relax. This gives your body a moment to recoup from the excitement that accompanies a live gig. Sometimes drinking a bottle of water, and just slowly meditating while doing so, can be enough to calm your nerves.

Achieving a state of mental calm can include specific breathing exercises, specialized therapy, and shifting your focus away from your anxiety:

Still shaky? Go back over some of the earlier tips like visualizing the performance and positive self-talk. Believe it or not, taking a few minutes to just be will help you rock it in performance.

But what happens if you DO mess up?

I’d be lying if I told you that you will never mess up during a concert. There will be a day when the stars don’t align perfectly, and you botch a line or play the wrong beat or come in too late. But that’s okay. That’s part of the process.

“It’s your response to failure that will determine your destiny.” – Sabrina Peña Young, Award-winning Composer and TED Speaker

Are you going to be the kind of musician that gets angry at the sound person, throws their guitar, and leaves the stage and your fans? Or are you going to be the kind of performer that can handle a mistake with grace and a laugh, and can move on?

Remember, there are people out there who paid tickets to see you. They are your fans. They want you to succeed. And if something goes wrong, they are more than willing to forgive you, if you can forgive yourself.

So when you make a mistake, try to:

  • Move on with the music as if nothing happened if possible
  • If it’s unavoidable, acknowledge the mistake and start the song over
  • Laugh it off good-naturedly
  • If you absolutely cannot continue, call for a break, and then come back ready to rock on

You never want to abandon the gig and your fans, no matter what happens. You can risk losing your fans, upsetting the people that have worked hard to make the concert happen, and possibly tarnishing your reputation. So be gracious, be cool, and just move on.

Quelling Those Nerves

Now you are equipped with tips for avoiding cold feet and anxiety the next time you have a concert – time to put it into action! Print up this short list below and keep it on a card on or on your phone:

  • Be mentally prepared
  • Practice
  • Visualize the performance
  • Eat, sleep and self-care
  • Prepare days before
  • Double check logistics
  • Get to the performance site early
  • Warm up
  • Positive Self-Talk
  • Deep breathing
  • If you mess it up, move on!

Review it every time you are about to play a gig and share it with your friends. And the next time you have a live performance, you will be surprised at how your nerves seem much, much more manageable.

The nerves are unlikely to ever go away fully – but this is not at all a bad thing. After all, that tinge of nervousness makes you eager to go out there and play your heart out.

Planning for a performance is a ritual – think about all the ways in which you can make this ritual as healthy, productive, and calming as possible.

The post 10 Tips for Conquering Stage Fright appeared first on Musical U.

About Frequencies in Music

New musicality video:

In this episode, we introduce you to frequencies in music, discuss why they’re important, and give you a simple primer on the fascinating science behind them. http://musicalitypodcast.com/87

Links and Resources

Interview with Allan Hubert-Wright – http://musl.ink/pod86/

Interview with Jeremy Fisher – http://musl.ink/pod76/

About the Word “Tone” – https://www.musical-u.com/learn/about-the-word-tone/

About the Word “Tone”, Part Two – https://www.musical-u.com/learn/about-the-word-tone-part-two/

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

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About Frequencies in Music

Moods of Modes, The Orff Approach, Session Drumming, and Multi-Instrumentalism

Traditional music education usually focusses on mastering one instrument – knowing the fingering, the technique, the embouchure, and the theory behind it.

Though being a piano virtuoso or a clarinet wizard certainly comes with its slew of benefits, the multi-instrumental approach can be massively beneficial to your musicality – and provide a plethora of advantages that single-instrumentalists won’t necessarily experience.

This week, we take you through a few of the many ways you can expose yourself to multiple instruments, and why it’s well-worth the effort.

First, a music educator discusses the benefits of the Orff Approach, an interactive music learning method where students are encouraged to explore their musicality by trying each instrument, on the Musicality Podcast. We interview a session drummer who has had the opportunity to grow her musicality by collaborating with all kinds of instrumentalists across a variety of genres. And on this week’s teaching episode of our podcast, we delve right into the topic of multi-instrumentalism itself – and how skills and knowledge can carry over from instrument to instrument to grow your musicality in unbelievable ways.

Finally, we introduce you to a set of fascinating, expressive scales called modes, perfect for trying out on that second (or third, or fourth) instrument you’re learning, to start expressing yourself musically as early on as possible.

Moods of Modes

After you master your major, minor, and pentatonic scales, you might start to wonder what else the world of scales has to offer you.

Musical modesEnter modes, otherwise known as the flavours of major and minor. These scales don’t simply exude happiness and sadness – rather, they evoke more complex emotions and moods, with certain modes sounding mysterious, optimistic, foreboding, bright, calm, hopeful, and bittersweet.

Best of all, they’re all easily derived from the major scale you know and love – as you’ll learn in The Many Moods of Musical Modes, one simple trick will take you from the bright and happy Ionian mode all the way through to the chilling Locrian mode – and every mood in between.

Once you learn the theory behind the music modes, time to take this new knowledge and apply it to your instrument. Desi from Guitar Music Theory shows you how to put the modes to use with a jam track that will have you playing in Dorian in no time at all.

As we learned, modes can be separated into major and minor. Hugh from Online Bass Guitar teaches how the major scale modes are derived, and shares tricks for quickly producing different modes within the major scale.

We’ll round off this exploration into the fascinating world of modes with Deft Digits’ lesson showing you how to put all of these modes onto the guitar fretboard. Once you have mastered playing the notes in these positions, have fun experimenting with the different timbre you get by moving all around the neck.

The Orff Approach

We talk about Kodály a lot inside Musical U, and for good reason – it’s an approach to learning music that physically and mentally engages the student, allowing them to best internalize the music while also enjoying their learning.

David Row interviewIts close cousin, the Orff Approach, employs a similar M.O.: engage the student with movement, multi-instrumentalism, and singing. Students are encouraged to try every instrument and every musical part, and then decide what captures their attention most, so they may explore it further. No matter what they choose to focus on, musical creativity is encouraged as the ultimate goal.

In Folk, Frameworks, and Fun, with David Row, one music teacher talks about this hands-on learning approach, the benefits it yields for students, and the beauty of a music learning framework that emphasizes creativity, improvisation, and engagement.

David talked about how the Orff Approach incorporates body movement to give a very natural feeling to your musicality. How can you incorporate this into your musicianship? Roger from Music is Elementary gives a lesson on body percussion that combines multiple elements into one fun exercise.

I love how David talked about becoming a musician for life, and how music can continue to be a part of who you are. One of the fantastic things about music is the ability to pass along this passion to the next generation. It’s not just about lessons and formal instruction – there are numerous simple ways that you can become a more musical family, as Nancy Salwen explains.

As music students begin playing an instrument, it’s not uncommon that the first instrument that they play won’t quite fit their needs. That doesn’t mean that the musician isn’t capable – just that they haven’t found the right instrument yet! Christine from Suzuki Triangle shares 8 truths about learning an instrument, with insights about practicing, progress, commitment, and more.

Session Drumming

The life and career of a session musician is a fascinating one – how else would you be able to travel the world on tour with established bands and appear on award-winning records, playing the instrument that you’ve spent your life mastering?

Emily Dolan Davies interviewIn Taking Control, with Emily Dolan Davies, Musical U interviews session drummer Emily Dolan Davies on her career beginnings and the incredible experiences that followed – from sharing a stage with Bono to opening her very own drum recording studio, where she records drums for musicians all over the world, contributing her talents to their tracks.

Emily has made quite the name for herself as a session drummer. Being a session musician is pretty exciting work, as you are always playing in different styles of music with different musicians. Kollab shares some quick tips to help you along the way to becoming a session vocalist.

While Emily is certainly an in-demand drummer, she is able to maintain a normal lifestyle by focusing on her music during work hours. The image of the all-night musician burning the midnight oil in the practice room is personified in pop culture. However, Jason Haaheim explains why the “hustle” and drilling yourself into exhaustion can have detrimental effects to your musical growth.

Emily dialed in her rhythmic precision by taking the extra step of recording her sessions. She was able to learn a great deal from listening to her own playing, which has greatly impacted her musicality. Dimitris from The Metalearners shares his knowledge on how recording your practice sessions can help you learn, and how you can start.

Multi-Instrumentalism

What’s the right time to start learning another instrument?

Multi-instrumentalismMany may think that it’s necessary to achieve mastery of one instrument before even thinking of picking up another.

However, as we discuss in our podcast episode About Playing Multiple Instruments, taking the plunge and learning a second (or third, or fourth!) instrument can do wonders for your existing musicality by complementing the instruments you already play and helping you make connections in melody, rhythm, harmony, and music theory within your learning.

To put it another way – each instrument you add to your arsenal gives you a brand new perspective on music and musicality!

One of the incredible benefits of learning multiple instruments is that your musical knowledge is transferable from one instrument to another. However, to get the mechanics of that new instrument under your fingers, you’ll need a bit of patience and practice. Ryan Carraher discusses how to practice with purpose, a skill that will serve you well during this process.

It’s easy to catch on to the passion that Christopher and Andrew have for the many instruments that they’ve played over the years. What about musicians that have learned to play two instruments… at the same time? The harmonica and guitar go together perfectly, as we have heard throughout the years from legends like Neil Young and Bob Dylan. David Thorpe dives into the art of learning these instruments in tandem.

What are some of the other benefits to being a dual (or multi) instrumentalist? David Summer doubles on two instruments that you don’t often associate with one another, the trumpet and the flute. Learn how he has achieved this dual instrumentalism, and the impact that it’s had on his musical growth.

More Instruments, More Musicality

By exposing yourself to multiple instruments, whether by learning a new one or collaborating with those who play different instruments, you can gain skills and make connections that will improve your playing on your primary instrument, allow you to better understand the theory behind what you’re playing, and equip you well for band and orchestra settings.

Think of it as the ultimate musicality challenge – take what you’ve learned from your primary instrument, combine it with the knowledge and skills needed for your new instrument, and put yourself to the test!

The post Moods of Modes, The Orff Approach, Session Drumming, and Multi-Instrumentalism appeared first on Musical U.

About Playing Multiple Instruments

In this episode Christopher and Andrew talk about the musicality of playing multiple instruments. How becoming more musical makes it easy to pick up a second (or third, or fourth!) instrument – and how playing more than one instrument can help you become more musical.

Listen to the episode:

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Transcript

Christopher: Today we’re going to be talking about the musicality of playing multiple instruments.

This episode is going to be of the informal chattier ones we’ve been doing lately where it’s not just me carefully reading from something I’ve prepared in advance. It’s just me hopping on a call with a team member and us chatting through a topic. We had some fantastic feedback of appreciation after the last one I did with Andrew from our team, so I have invited Andrew back to talk with me about this topic today.

You may remember Andrew from such previous episodes as The Musicality of Sitting on a Rock with Andrew Bishko and about the Lydian Chromatic Concept. I’ve asked Andrew to join me on the show today because he, like myself, plays a bunch of different instruments.

I wanted to tackle this topic after our interview with David Row, where he was talking about the Orff approach, having every kid play essentially every instrument. You’re not expected to just master the xylophone at age five. You get the chance to play each and every instrument that’s contributing to a song.
I know in my own experience talking to musicians, a lot of us think we have to stick to one instrument and master it, and if we don’t do that, we’re not focusing and we should feel bad about that. I also know that when I was growing up, for the first few years, I assumed it was really hard to learn a second instrument. I think I had in mind this grade exam thing, or I guess it was it was the GCSE system in the UK where you have your primary instrument and you need to get to such and such a grade on that instrument, and then you have your secondary instrument, and you need to get to such and such a grade, maybe at the same level.
Anyway, I had in mind this was a really serious thing to play a second instrument, but I bumbled my way into playing several instruments. They kind of stack up. I think I started out on cello, then I learned clarinet, then I learned saxophone and guitar and piano and I was doing a lot of singing, and got to university and played bass and harmonica and on and on.

Andrew, from what I remember talking to you, a similar story. You’ve accumulated instruments over the years, and I know some of them are definitely more of a focus for you than others, but was it the same for you that once you realized you could pick up another instrument, you couldn’t stop?

Andrew: Yes. It was slow for me, but I don’t think it has to be. For the longest time, flute was my main instrument. I took piano and knew a little bit of piano, but that was it. After playing for so long and realizing that I could pick up a saxophone and the fingerings were the same, it was just mind blowing, “Wow, this is so similar. I can play this thing right out of the box.” I had to work on my embouchure and things like that, but there was so much less of a learning curve because I already played flute.

Christopher: Yes. I think that’s the first thing that we were both keen to share in this episode was it’s not as hard as you might imagine to pick up a second instrument and learn a third and a fourth. This isn’t something reserved for the talented few, and I think it comes down to a few different things. You touched on one there, which is that sometimes instruments are quite similar to one another.

For me, I mentioned I went from clarinet to saxophone. I got tricked into playing clarinet. I only ever wanted to play sax, but I was told I had to play clarinet first. Like you said, the fingerings, there’s some commonality there and they’re both reed wind instruments or wind and brass, anyway. You can swap from one to the other a lot more easily than just starting completely afresh.

It’s not just that. It’s not just guitarists switching to bass and that kind of thing. I think what I was keen to convey in this episode is that a lot of what we talk about on the show is common across instruments, what we refer to as musicality or an instinct for music and the understanding of music when you hear it and play it.

That’s pretty much the same, whatever instrument you play. To get concrete, if we’re talking about a one four five chord progression, as we often do on the show, that’s going to be the same, whatever instrument you play. I can pick up a bass and play one, five, six, four, for example, that classic progression. That’s a one, five, six, four on the bass, but I can also pick up my guitar, and I’m not needing any extra knowledge in my head really apart from a few guitar chord shapes, and I can play that one, five, six, four on guitar.

I’m sure anyone listening to this podcast can hear the commonality between those two, and that’s another thing, that your ears, the way we’re developing our ears to hear that that’s a one, five, six, four, is the same whatever instrument happens to be playing it. That for me was a major insight.

I don’t know where that came up for you, Andrew, in your musical journey. For me, it came up far too late, this realization that the theory I had studied and my instinct for music, and rhythm is another example, too, where once you’re good at rhythm on one instrument, it’s not a huge leap to make it to another, and that it gives you such a head start, right?

Andrew: Absolutely. For me, the way I was taught piano, I wasn’t really taught theory together with piano, so it never made any sense to me and it was always difficult for me. The flute being a melody instrument, it was much more straightforward, but by having that time when I put all that focus on melody and phrasing, that came back around.

There was a point in which I started playing piano more. It was actually because I was teaching and I started realizing how important the theory was and how important understanding chords were. I understood what they were abstractly, and I’d done a little bit of jazz stuff on flute, but I didn’t really fully apply them. Usually, I’d learn just enough to get my ears going and then I’d let go of it.

When I started playing more piano and teaching more about chords, I started having all kinds of realizations about playing the flute and about being able to do things and improvise with chord tones and things like that.

The other benefit, conversely, is when I went back, when I started playing keyboard instruments, like the piano and the accordion, I had that sensitivity to phrasing and dynamics that you get from playing a melody instrument, like saxophone or flute, and putting that into the equation where my playing was a lot less mechanical and more nuanced.

Christopher: Yes, and I think that’s the other thing that we really wanted to share on this episode. It’s easier than you think to play multiple instruments if you’ve been approaching your main instrument with this kind of musicality mindset. It’s also that each instrument gives you a really different perspective.

Andrew, you were pointing out to me that in our recent interview with Andy Wasserman, he was talking about this idea of linguistic relativity, where your mother tongue essentially influences how you learn other languages. I’ve experienced this so much where every instrument I pick up teaches me something new about what to listen for in music and it stretches the way you approach other instruments, too. It’s like being able to see things with fresh eyes again and again.

Andrew: That linguistic relativity is so true. I remember when I moved to Italy and I was a camp counselor, so I really didn’t have any choice but to just dive into speaking Italian all the time, and I started thinking a whole lot more about food than I ever did because that’s more of the Italian mindset.

It’s the same thing with instruments. When I started playing accordion, it really tickled my brain, because the left hand of the accordion is organized according to the circle of fifths. It’s different than the piano, different than the flute or a melody instrument. It has that organization that mirrors this fundamental musical theory, and it puts it right under your fingers.

For example, here on my left hand of the accordion, I have this row is playing the bass notes, and here’s major chords here. If I go, that’s a one, four, five, one. All these buttons are right next to each other, where at a piano, you have to move around to get that. Those buttons are right next to each other. Plus, I can use one button and play a whole chord, which is sweet.

Here’s my minor chords, my seventh chords. I could play a whole thing.

That helped me internalize the circle of fifths in a whole new way and then conversely, when I go to play a scale on there, you’re all over the place with your buttons. We don’t have a visual thing here, but you’re just everywhere. To do that, which somehow tickles me into a new understanding of how tones relate to each other in this non-linear way, and it’s because of that system of the Stradella bass on the accordion.

Christopher: Yes, that’s really interesting. For me, I think one of the eye-opening things was harmonica, and specifically, the blues harmonica, the diatonic harmonica, because I think up until that point, I’d played all instruments that have basically the full chromatic range available to you, your piano keyboard or your guitar fret board or your clarinet or saxophone fingering, and certainly the human voice, even wackier.

For the first time, I was presented with this thing where I could only play notes from the major scale. On a harmonica, your main hole’s in the middle. If I demo here, that’s your major scale right there. You actually have to work quite hard to get away from those notes.

What I found, and what kind of blew my mind a little bit because this is back before I discovered ear training was a thing, I discovered that I could figure things out by ear. I think this was maybe the first time I’d ever really been able to do it, and it was because I wasn’t overwhelmed by all notes being possible. I could pick up my harmonica and pretty quickly figure out a simple melody by ear.

That constraint unlocked a new ability in me, and it’s just the nature of the instrument. Certain instruments are going to push you in a certain direction or pull you in a certain direction. I think once you realize that and you once you experience it, you can see how much you might be missing out on if you just focus in on one instrument.

Andrew: What blew me away when learning harmonica was that I could make a note on my inhale as well as my exhale, which just gave me a whole new sense of breathing and what you could do with the breath. The most expressive notes are with the inhale. It really boggled my mind to play harmonica. It seems so simple, but after playing all these chromatic instruments, it was this totally new thing.

I had students pick up the harmonica and without any preconceived notions, it’s easier for them. It’s interesting. Really, I have an easier time with certain instruments being intuitive than being analytical. Harmonica is one of those.

Christopher: For sure. You mentioned that expressive thing. I think I had played guitar for a few years before picking up the harmonica, and on guitar, you can do what’s called a string bend. If I play this note, but then I want to bend up the pitch, I want to increase the pitch a bit, I can do this.

You hear that a lot in blues music. I don’t know if I can demo here with wires trailing all over the place, but I’ll give it a shot. You can play something. I had experienced the string bending, pitch bending thing was possible, but I never really got a feel for it, to be honest. The harmonica, like you say, there’s inhale notes. You can bend them, so on harmonica, you can do:

I threw in a trill there, which confused things a little.

Andrew: Sounds great.

Christopher: The point is I was instinctively starting to bend those.

You can almost not help but do that on a harmonica, and you do it instinctively and you phrase and shape your melodies in a different way because that’s accessible to you. That was something I could then take back to guitar, and likewise, the trills I’d never really done on guitar or piano, I’d done them when the music told me to in the sheet music, but on harmonica, again, that little easy rocking back and forth between notes is just so core to it.

I went back to piano, and I had that instinct to want to do a little trill here. I went back to guitar and I had the instinct to want to do a little pitch bend there. And so it is really fascinating how it develops your ear and your instinct for what’s possible, and then you can apply that to the next instrument or the next musical situation you’re in.

Andrew: That’s so true. Another thing I was thinking is different instruments take on different roles. I know a lot of times when we play piano, most of the time we’re playing solo. You have the opportunity to play the bass and the chords and the harmony and the melody, playing it all in one shot, but when you play a melody instrument, you’re really focusing on that role.

When you play a bass instrument, it’s a whole different thing. I’ve just been learning how to play the Mexican guitarron, which is the big acoustic bass, and it’s given me such a different perspective on the music where I can really feel the bass, so even when I’m not playing it in the group because I don’t know if I’ll ever be to a point where I can play it in a band, but when I listen to the music, I hear the bass now and when I’m playing my melodies, I’m interacting with that bass.

So many times in an ensemble, when we play with other people, we get focused on our part. We’re just going to play our part, and it’s almost like we have to tune everybody else out to focus on our part, but when you play all the instruments and when you play instruments in different roles, whether you play a chordal instrument, a bass instrument, or a melody instrument or a solo instrument or accompaniment instrument, when you’ve been in both worlds and then you come back to playing in a group, your ability to interact is so much stronger and it’s so much more fun.

Christopher: 100%, yes. I think it’s both subconscious and conscious. Consciously, you can do something like I was just talking about, where you’ve come across how a trill can work, and you think, “Oh yeah, on piano, I can do this now,” but it’s also subconscious.

For me, it’s really visceral when I’ve learned a new instrument, then when I listen to music, I feel like I’m playing that instrument. I don’t know if that happens with you, but when I’ve been playing a lot of saxophone lately, I will hear the sax in a piece in a different way and almost parts of my body respond to it as if I’m playing.

Andrew: Yes, yes.

Christopher: That’s a really fun experience and it also I think just highlights how much of that inner instinct for music is being developed and carried across from instrument to instrument.

Andrew: One thing you mentioned earlier, you touched upon this several times about voice. A lot of people, when people think about learning another instrument, they’re not thinking about voices, but the voice is so key to playing an instrument. I know that for years, because of health issues when I was a child, I was physically unable to sing and never developed that.

When I started to get back into ear training, there was no choice. I had to sing, and I just realized how off I was in so many ways because I hadn’t developed that. The singing and the ear are so intimately connected, so that’s another thing, another instrument that is really valuable to add, no matter what you’re playing.

Christopher: Absolutely, yes, and I think I’ll point back to our previous podcast episodes, one on active listening, where we talk a lot about that thing of tuning into a certain instrument in music, and another one, I think it’s called Singing as a Tool. It’s about that value of using your voice to train your ears, whether or not you consider yourself a singer and whether or not you have any intention to perform as a singer. Learning to express yourself musically with your voice, it does wonders for your musical ear.

I said to you, Andrew, before we hit record that this is a topic in which we’re in danger of going on all day, so I’ve got to round things off now, but I hope that everyone tuning in, if you haven’t played several instruments before, this will encourage you to give it a try.

You don’t need to take this super seriously and decide that this second instrument will be my second instrument and I will be very serious about it. It can be literally as fun as just borrowing an instrument from someone, going to a music shop and dabbling for a while. I hope we’ve painted a picture of how this transforms your brain, your ears, your musicality in really fun and interesting ways. Andrew, any parting pieces of wisdom?

Andrew: You hit it right there. I want to say it’s approaching with an idea of fun and realize it’s not going to take away from your primary instrument. That can be your major thing, but you learn so much and have so much more fun playing around with other instruments and taking really a child’s attitude. My children look at me and they say, “Oh, I’m going to play all the things that daddy does and more,” and they feel completely and totally comfortable and capable that they can do that. Why shouldn’t we feel that way as adults?

Christopher: Fantastic. That’s really great advice. Thanks so much, Andrew, for joining me for this one. Everyone stay tuned for our next episode and I have no idea what it will be, so I probably should not tease it. We’ll try that again. Fantastic. That’s really great advice. Thank you so much, Andrew, for joining me for this one.

Andrew: Very good. Thanks so much. We’ll see you.

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Taking Control, with Emily Dolan Davies

The life of a session musician is one steeped in musical richness – where else would you get the opportunity to tour the world with established musicians, play on albums spanning a variety of styles and sounds, and build a network of producers, songwriters, and fellow musicians – all in the same job description?

However, getting to the level of an established session musician is a journey involving endless hard work – making those connections, continuously honing your craft, and building a career that suits you. And that dreaded music industry gremlin – rejection – is almost sure to make an appearance along the way.

Just ask Emily Dolan Davies, an incredibly accomplished session musician that has worked and performed with the likes of Bryan Ferry, The Darkness, Tricky, Thompson Twins, Kim Wilde, and many more – but not before facing a series of setbacks and trying times, which inspired her to provide mentoring to aspiring session musicians and prepare them for the work ahead.

After an epiphany about her desired lifestyle and how to adapt her career to it, she stepped away from touring the world to set up her own remote drum recording studio, EmilyDrums, where she connects with musicians around the world, lends her incredible drumming to their music, hones her skills, and builds her resume and client base – sometimes in her pajamas!

Musical U sat down with Emily to talk about how she got her career off the ground, and then shifted gears to becoming an online session musician – and what an average day working from her home studio looks like, in her new chosen musical path.

Q: Hi Emily, and welcome to Musical U! What were your early musical experiences? How did you start drumming?

Emily Dolan Davies drumming age 11My earliest musical experiences were with my family when I was very young. My dad used to play guitar and always had different music on in the house, and my parents always encouraged us to try instruments, but none of them really grabbed me.

Then when I was 11, I was in school and a drum club started… I was the shyest person you could imagine, but I thought I’d give it a shot. I sat down and it all just kind of made sense to me. I couldn’t play! But I understood and it was the first time I felt I could be good at something.

 

Q: What kind of training did you have?

From age 11, I started having private lessons once a week (I still do when I can), was heading out to blues jams with my dad every week, and played with every band and musician possible inside of school. I then moved to bands and musicians outside of school, and played with as many different people as I could, while finishing my studies.

I agreed to sit my A-Levels with my parents so that if I ever lost a limb, I’d have something to fall back on. Once that was out of the way, I went straight into the real world, playing with as many bands and artists as I could (many of which weren’t paid), and joined cover bands – which was a great way to learn so many practical skills.

Q: That’s some incredible motivation – especially from someone in their teenage years! So from early on, you were collaborating and jamming with others. How did that all happen?

I definitely collaborated and jammed with many different people early on – when I started out, the way I would find people to play with was through Loot, a magazine with local ads. I joined my first proper band through this method when I was 15. The gigs I did with them allowed me to meet many other musicians whose bands I would also play with, meet more people, rinse and repeat. It felt like it was taking a long time back then, but thinking about it now, it happened quite fast!

Emily Dolan Davies Fashion Rockstar pose

Photo Credit: Tony Creaney

Q: So you met musical collaborators through a snowball effect, making connections and gaining experience. When did you feel like you had really “made it”?

I think the moment I really thought I’d “made it” was the first time I got paid for playing drums. I was 14 and got paid £20 to play in a blues jam house band, but then went straight back to not feeling like that the next day when I was sat in a history class.

I had another moment when I got called for my first ever studio session at 16, a session that wasn’t for a band I regularly played in. I thought that was it, I’d “made it” (again), this is my career taking off!

I was swiftly kicked off the session for not being good enough, which was the single most heartbreaking experience of my life, but I got back up, and learnt from it. Another “made it!” moment was joining my first professional touring band for a year, then leaving it and feeling that it all had gone down the pan again.

What I’ve ultimately realised is music is fluid, and as long as I’m making my living from playing the drums and I’m happy, then I’ve “made it”.

Emily Dolan Davies has made it

Photo credit: Tony Creaney

Q: So after a rollercoaster of “made it” moments followed by rough times and setbacks, you’ve found peace and happiness with your music career and accomplishments.

You’ve toured and recorded with so many fabulous musicians. Please share some of your favorite playing live experiences and stories.

I’ve been so lucky to have worked with some incredible artists that have given me some incredible memories! There are some that especially stick in my mind…

Emily Dolan Davies with rainbow hair

Photo Credit: Tony Creaney

My first professional touring experience was with The Hours when I was 20. The first show was at Sotheby’s in New York for Bono’s RED charity, and Bono himself got up on stage with us and played a couple of Beatles songs! It was surreal! I remember thinking, “Wow, is this what all professional gigs are like?!”

Another amazing memory was with Trip Hop artist Tricky. We were in Russia doing a huge free show for a crowd of 50,000 in a city square, and at a certain part of the show, he would get people on stage to start moshing with us all! There must’ve been 100 people on stage and the poor techs were trying to protect all the band members and their equipment. It was mad, but amazing!

Another surreal moment was playing in Geneva with Bryan Ferry and looking out into the audience and seeing Arsene Wenger. I used to be a huuuuuge Arsenal fan (still am, but don’t follow them as avidly), to the point that I wanted to play for them professionally! I was lucky enough to meet him after the show. I was a babbling idiot. He was a true gent.

Q: So after all those amazing live experiences, how did you begin doing online session drumming?

The online session drumming situation started after The Darkness and I had parted ways. I figured that no one would be calling me for tours because people would assume I was still with them. I realised how little control I had over my career and the work I got to do. So, I had a chance to sit down and think about the things I liked the most about drumming and life in general, and the things I came up with were:

  1. I love variety, playing and meeting lots of different people
  2. I love the idea able to be more in control of my career/income/headspace
  3. I love having my own space (I’m a real introvert at heart)
  4. I love being able to do things/services for people to help them and their music
  5. I love playing for the song!

And what came out of the other end of these thoughts was – online session drumming! And here I am two years later with my own remote recording studio with over 200 clients on my books!

Q: While drummers are known for their quirky personalities, I believe you’re the first one I’ve seen boast about working in her pajamas! Tell us more about your workday as an online session drummer.

Haha! Yeah, it’s gotta be one of the greatest things about my studio setup. No matter what time, day or night, I can pop in and lay down a track. I try to keep my days 9 A.M. – 6 P.M. so I can have some sort of a life, and sometimes there’s just no time to change into normal clothes, so I’ll opt for PJ’s or some strange concoction of purple harem pants, a pink tank top, orange hoodie and some big fluffy slippers, because, why not? It’s almost like a little rebellion in me too, because if I was in a commercial studio, I certainly wouldn’t be rocking up dressed like that!

As for my typical day, I’ll start with looking at any revisions people wanted from tracks I had recorded the day before, followed by one to three new tracks I have to record that day, and that takes up my morning up until lunch. I’ll then spend the afternoon doing other studio-related business stuff, answering emails, talking to artists/clients, doing taxes, social media, any number of things really – there always seems to be an endless list (just how I like it!)

Q: In addition to your work with big-name musicians, your online session drumming has brought you into contact with many up-and-coming artists. Who are some of your favorites, and why?

I’ve been introduced to some absolutely wonderful artists and human beings! There’s so many I could mention, but I’ll give you some that I’ve had the privilege of working with recently.

Jo Burt is possibly one of my favourite songwriters on the planet and I’ve had the honour of recording 2 albums with him from my studio so far.

Nathan Timothy is a London-based songwriter with an awesome charity that brings songwriting workshops to underprivileged kids.

John Holden was one of the first people I ever recorded at my studio, and has some really great and interesting music with great lyrics.

There are so many others too, but I’ll stop myself there for now.

Q: What a privilege to connect and work with so many talented musicians around the world!

You also teach other drummers to hone their session chops. Tell us more about that.

Yes, so harking back to one of the times I thought I’d “made it” when I was 16, but got chucked off the session… It was so bad that I almost gave up drums, but I ended up learning a lot from the experience and it’s definitely got me to where I am today.

As a result of this experience, I wanted to set up a “safe space” where drummers that wanted to do the session drummer thing could come and experience what would be expected of them in a real-life situation, and give them a supportive environment so they don’t have to go through the heartache I did.

Q: That type of career mentorship is so valuable in this industry. One of your clients described you as “one of the tightest-playing drummers I’ve ever worked with”. As a music education company, we’re always interested in advice we can share with our audience – what tips do you have for our readers in achieving rhythmic precision?

I think the single most useful piece of advice I was ever given was from the awesome drummer Billy Ward. He said to record yourself and listen back. So that’s what I would do, with a cheapo little mini tape recorder. I would record myself playing to records, with other musicians live or just to a click, listen back (cringey as hell at first), and then make small adjustments until I liked what I heard – well to degree, seeing as all of us musicians are hypercritical of ourselves!

Q: You’ve built a fascinating and diverse career around your passion. What advice would you give drummers (and aspiring musicians in general) in moving forward into pro territory?

I’d say put yourself out there, play with as many people as you can, be nice, be kind, work hard, and always do the best job you can with everything you do.

Emily Dolan Davies with drums

Solid advice – for session musicians and anyone generally looking to build a career in the industry, and for both professionals and hobbyists alike!

Emily, thank you so much for sharing your insights and experience with your career. We wish you all the best, and please keep us posted on your future work!

Navigating “Pro” Territory

Though she’s had the privilege of working with many huge names in music and getting on-the-job experiences that many only dream of, this wasn’t luck – it was her work ethic, thirst for collaboration, and enthusiasm that allowed Emily to build a name for herself in the competitive world of session work.

Her words of advice to all musicians are well-worth repeating: seek out your opportunities, collaborate and network with as many people as you can, and be professional – by consistently working hard and being kind to those you work with.

By listing her deepest desires, Emily took control of her career, put herself on the (drum) throne, and is now living the life of her dreams. Go ahead, make your own list – and keep jamming through the ups and downs till you make it happen!

The post Taking Control, with Emily Dolan Davies appeared first on Musical U.

Singing and Science: Busting Myths with Allan Hubert-Wright

New musicality video:

Today we’re joined by Allan Hubert-Wright, the founder of Le Chanteur Moderne, one of the most respected voice training institutes in France, and one which is remarkable for using modern voice science to help singers and singing teachers be more effective by leveraging what we actually know about the human voice. http://musicalitypodcast.com/86

He is also the director of the voice department at the prestigious IFPRO performing arts school in Paris and conducts ongoing research into vocal function.

We recently had the chance to see Allan give a presentation, and we came away determined to have him on the show, because he shares the kinds of thing that can save years of frustration, confusion and wasted effort. So whether you don’t sing at all yet, you’re at the beginning of learning to sing, or you’ve been singing for years, you’re going to want to pay attention!

In this conversation we talk about:

– Why being told he was a bad singer as a child didn’t hold him back

– How he helped one singer finally find her own authentic voice after years of imitating various singers and styles

– And we bust three big myths in singing: about breathing and support, about what to eat and drink, and about how to correctly produce vowel sounds.

This conversation was such a pleasure and we know it’s going to be an enlightening one for any of you listening who sing or who would like to – but find some of the teaching a bit confusing.

Listen to the episode: http://musicalitypodcast.com/86

Links and Resources

Le Chanteur Moderne – http://www.chanteurmoderne.com/

Le Chanteur Moderne on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/lechanteurmoderne

Singing and Teaching Singing: An Holistic Approach to Classical Voice, by Janice Chapman – https://www.amazon.ca/Singing-Teaching-Holistic-Approach-Classical/dp/1597564265

Vocology, by Ingo Titze – https://www.amazon.com/Vocology-Science-Practice-Voice-Habilitation/dp/0983477116

Principles of Voice Production, by Ingo Titze – https://www.amazon.ca/Principles-Voice-Production-Ingo-Titze/dp/013717893X

Let us know what you think! Email: hello@musicalitypodcast.com

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Singing and Science: Busting Myths with Allan Hubert-Wright

Folk, Frameworks, and Fun, with David Row

Today we’re joined by David Row (r-aoo) of the Make Moments Matter website and podcast. David is an elementary music teacher in the US who specialises in the Orff method of music teaching.

Orff is something we’ve mentioned a couple of times on the show before because it’s one of a few approaches that really puts musicality at the heart of music learning. And although these days it’s mostly used for early music education and David’s experience is predominantly with young children, we think you’ll find there’s plenty of interesting ideas here for the adult music learner too.

In this conversation we talk about:

  • David’s two quite different experiences of learning music growing up, singing harmony in church and taking piano lessons, and what he learned from each
  • Why David chose to study the Orff approach to music education even though he had already qualified and started working as a school music teacher
  • The specific benefits of the Orff approach for children and for adults.

We found this one really enlightening – so whether you’ve wondered about Orff or never heard of it before we hope you’ll enjoy it too.

Listen to the episode:

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Transcript

Christopher: Welcome to the show, David. Thank you for joining us today.

David: Thanks so much for having me.

Christopher: So you specialize in early music education, and I would love to know a little bit about what your own early music education looked like. Were you taught with the Orff Method that you now use in your own teaching?

David: No. I grew up in a very small town in rural Nebraska in the middle of the United States. And we learned sort of a different way. I mean, I think my music teacher growing up just did what she thought was best. She didn’t really have any training in early childhood music education. And so she just sort of crafted together whatever she thought was best from her own tradition. So it was very interesting going to school for formal music education to figure out, “Oh, this is the right way, or a right way to teach,” and how that’s differed so much from my own background. Because I learned a lot in school, but I also learned a lot about being a musician at church, and singing with my family, and taking piano lessons at a young age. I think as I was growing up, I got music education in a lot of different ways from a lot of different places, and all of those sort of came together to make me the musician I am today.

Christopher: Terrific. Paint a picture of what did it look like. What was that experience of learning music like for you?

David: Well, like I said, it was a lot of different things. So it was singing in the car with my family and having music on at home and making music with my family at home. It was taking piano lessons, which was a more formal aspect, and learning how to read music. I think probably the biggest influence was when I was at church. I went to a small Mennonite church, and we sang, every week, four part hymns acapella. That’s intimidating for anybody walking in when you hear this really beautiful music, and if you don’t feel like you’re trained to be a part of that, it’s a little scary, because, what do I sing? Do I sing the men’s part? Or I sing the melody, or what?

And as I was growing up, it was a lot of watching along in the hymn book and seeing people, hearing the music and seeing what was on the page and following that. And as I was young, I could pick out the melody part. And then I would stand next to [Roxy Schlagel 00:02:31] and she would sing the melody part and I would sing along with her. And then I would stand next to [Shirley Kempf 00:02:37], and she would sing the melody part, and I’d sing with her. And then as I grew up and as my voice changed, I would stand next to an alto and I would sing her part and follow along, and then a tenor, and then played with baritone but then came back to tenor.

It was learning how to sing by following along and standing next to people in my community who sang that part and represented that part. To be a part of a community that sang like that really helped me to learn to do that myself and to be able to read, and follow along, and join in, and know what my part was doing. It was just being in that community that taught me how to make music the way that I do.

Christopher: Interesting. And outside of that choir, what were you getting up to musically?

David: I started in second grade, so that would be age eight or so, to play piano. I basically had to read music and play right away. It was not an approach where you did improvisation or anything early on, it was you’re reading, and you’re playing, so I had some of that. At school, we also were integrating reading music and reading lines along where there were chords and things going on. I was getting the sight reading and sight singing and church, I was getting sight reading and playing, and piano, I was getting a little bit of playing and creating at school, so it all sort of melded together. But a lot of it was the sight reading at an early age and making that, that was a big part of my upbringing, even though as a teacher now, I don’t know that I would intentionally make that happen, but that was what happened for me.

Christopher: And church music’s something that’s come up several times with guests on the podcast, and I think it can be such a tremendous environment for enjoying the process of learning music and creating music. And it sounds like you really enjoyed that choir singing. Was your piano learning as joyful?

David: No. Not at first. I was excited at first about playing piano because it was an instrument. My mom and my band teacher, who I would later be in band with, both lied to me basically, and said, “If you want to be a percussionist, you have to have at least four years of piano,” which is not true. Even at my own school, I don’t know anyone else who took piano who was a percussionist, so that was a fun lie. But they got me to play piano. I struggles definitely for years, and my mom would have to pay me to practice. I would get like a quarter for a half hour of practice, which is hilarious. But it felt like a chore. And then at some point it stopped feeling like a chore. I think that I hit a place where I was at a level where I understood enough, and that I could maybe play what was given to me, but then also move along and find my own things, and felt like I had enough that I could go and sight read other things, or play other music that was also interesting.

And that in and of itself was exciting, that I was able to take a little bit more control. And after that, the piano, I was able to play what was given to me, and play other things, and it just became a lot more exciting. I would spend hours at a time practicing and playing. But for a long time, it was not that. My parents joke later that when I got a scholarship to college for music, that all of those hours of giving me quarters at a time paid off, because they got their investment back. But for a long time, it was not fun. I don’t know exactly when the switch flipped that it changed, but it was just I think lots of hours of doing it, and sort of slugging through the stuff that did not seem fun at the time, but provided a framework for me to be able to be successful later.

Christopher: Do you think that’s inevitable? Do you think that slog is required for the eventual payoff? Is that how music learning has to be?

David: No, but I think for some people it’ll feel that way. There are some people I feel like who are maybe more naturally inclined, or feel a little bit more at ease in the learning process. And there are some people who do not. I have 1,200 students at my school, and I know that for some of them, they love coming to music, that it is easy for them, that they just like the process, and other students do not. I understand that, and I feel for them, and so my job, seeing that from the outside, is to say, “What can I do to scaffold in? How can I make this exciting> How can I help them see the steps so that they take more ownership early on?”

I think for anything, there’s going to be a level of this is not fun, for a while. If you’re a runner, running is not fun at first. You have to build up that muscle and you have to get used to the process. My nephew is learning to try new foods, and at first, you don’t like them. They say it takes like seven or eight times trying a food to decide whether or not you like it, and to acclimate to it. I think with all things, there’s a level of this is not fun, for a while. There might be fun things about it, but if you abandon the difficult parts, that’s too bad. I feel like that difficulty helps you gain a lot, and learn al to.

Christopher: I’m glad I asked. I have to admit, I was half expecting you to give an easy answer of, “No, I was taught in the wrong way, if music is taught in a creative way, it’s super fun and easy all the time.” But no, I appreciate your honesty there that there is hard work involved in learning a skill, and some days are not going to be fun, some exercises aren’t going to be fun. And hopefully you design it in a way that it keeps the student engaged, whether that student is a five year old or yourself. But at the same time, you do have to keep your eye on the prize, and expect that the payoff will come.

David: Yeah, and I think talking to young music educators, they have this idea that it’s going to be unicorns and butterflies, and everyone’s going to love singing. That’s not true. As a music teacher, you go in thinking that’s the easy part. Some kids just don’t like singing, or they’re not comfortable with it. Or they’re learning English, and so in your class, singing is an extension of that difficult process of learning English, so they don’t want to do that because they’re afraid they’re going to mess up. Even the most basic things, you go in thinking, “This is going to be so much fun and so easy,” and it’s not always. For the more difficult things like improvisation, or composition, that is an extension of the difficulty. I think keeping your head that yes, there are some really fun bits, but there are some process to it, and that’s good to know going in.

Christopher: I want to come back and talk more about your approach to teaching. But first, I wanted to pick up on something you mentioned there ads part of the eventual payoff of all of those paid piano lessons, or paid piano practice sessions, which was sight reading music. You said once your sight reading got to a certain level, it kind of opened up music that you could pick up and play. Tell us about that, because sight reading is so often a huge barrier for people. It feels like an insurmountable thing to go from carefully figuring things out note by note, to just sitting down with sheet music and magically paying it.

David: Right. Again, I think that it’s a process. And as a music teacher now, I can look at the end steps and I can say along the way, “Here are the ways we can break down, and here’s what you should do first, and here’s what you should do next.” I think that’s true for any process. I was in jazz band in high school and there was a time where the teacher said, “David, why don’t you play a solo on the piano?” And I was petrified. I know that there were other people that would be like, “Alright, let’s do it,” but I was so scared because I didn’t have the scaffolding that it took. And so in the same way that in improvisation you have to learn something, and then build on that, and build on that, sight reading’s the same way. In my classroom, we start by just reading icons.

In the youngest grades, six, and seven, and eight year olds, we read icons and see how they’re grouped with one icon, or two together. You’re sort of seeing groupings of sound, and then you move on and read actual notation. What do you call them, crotchets? Wavers? Quarter noted, eighth notes, all of those different …. We use different terminology, but it’s reading those actual icons, those notes. And reading them in basic patterns, then reading them in longer patterns, and then finding patterns, “This has four bars of this, and then four bars of this,” and then eventually, you move on to reading the notes on a staff, and reading a melody, and going up and down. In my classroom, that’s sort of how it works. I think for someone who’s sight reading, and they’re doing it on their own at home, it’s the same sort of process of how can you take on little bit and figure that out, and then move on and do it in increments?

When I was singing in church, it was listening to my part and following along with the music to see, “When it goes up, Dave Schlagel goes up when he’s singing tenor,” or “When this goes down, he goes down.” That first process for me was just watching and listening, and then sort of joining in a little bit, or in parts, or in the chorus, that I knew I’d get right. It’s those incremental things of, “I can feel success with these four bars,” and then I’ll try on the next. And then I could put those eight bars together. It’s building from one thing that you know you’re successful with to another, to another. But along the way you have to keep stretching. “I will try this first this time,” or “I can try this chorus,” or ” I can try this rhythm that feels difficult slowly, and then quickly.”

With all musical things, it’s finding what’s that you can do just a little bit first, and then add on, and then add on. I think a lot of people jump to, at least with my students, I know that when they go home and do things, if they don’t have that process in their head, they try and sing along with the radio or jump into something that maybe is much too difficult, but they don’t realize that. They try and then then they fail, and they’re like, “Well, I’m going to stop.” If you can figure out how to break it down, that makes the whole process a lot easier. Instead of just jumping in saying, “I’m going to sing this song, I’m going to play this part,” that’s a lot. But if you can find a smaller process, that males everything a lot easier.

Christopher: That’s fantastic advice. We see that in a couple of big areas with our students musically. One is playing by ear, where people come in thinking it’s all or nothing, and so they hear a song on the radio, they sit down on the piano and try to play it, and they try and play all of the notes, everything. And of course, it’s incredibly difficult, and you have to explain it’s about building blocks, let’s pick out a very small piece of this that you can figure out by ear. And the other is singing, where as you say, I think the great failing of a lot of singing teaching is assuming people can sing and then throwing songs at them. And if you can’t sing, if you’re struggling with [inaudible 00:14:38], that’s a huge leap, in fact.

A lot of the people who come to us, we’re putting in place those foundation steps. Can you sing one note in tune? Can you move from one note to another? And now let’s try some very simple songs. If you try to leap to what you eventually want to be able to do, of course you trip, and stumble, and fall. I love that advice and I think you’re right. It’s so easy once you’re out of the careful guidance of a teacher, to lose sight of that fact. You want to do this, so you leap straight in and try and do it, and you forget that you need to give yourself those little stepping stones a long the way.

David: Yeah. As a music teacher, I can say it took me a while as a music teacher to say, “I can see the steps,” and then lead my students through them. Even music teachers who are listening to this might say, “I’m just leading them through songs.” My music teacher in elementary would probably say, “We’re just going to do it, and we’re going to sing together.” And that ended up working for some of us, but even music teachers have to look and say, “What are the steps? What are some building blocks? What are some things that we can break down?”

If you’re teaching yourself at home, you’re right. It’s finding the places where you can feel successful, or finding the places where you can break it down, so that you can then build on that and become successful. In education we call that scaffolding, where you go from one thing to the next, to the next, to the next. And as you’re successful, those scaffolds help you be more successful the next step too. You learn one thing and you become good at it, and you use that as you implement it into the next step and become better, and better, and better.

Christopher: Excellent. We have touched on a couple of times your approach to teaching. And you clearly have a very structured, mindful approach to the way you impart skills to your students. And that hasn’t come from nowhere. You use a particular methodology and approach, and I’d love to hear when did Orff come into the picture for you and what was it like for you to learn that as an aspiring music teacher?

David: I went to college as just a music performance major. And I decided about halfway through that I wanted to be a teacher, but the way certification and everything works in the United States, you have to have so many years, and so many courses to be able to be certified to teach music. And I had sort of missed the boat. I was just a little bit late. If I had started over, it would have added a year or two years to my college, and I didn’t want to do that. And so I finished, and I studied abroad in Australia, and I did all these great things in my undergrad, and then went on to my master’s degree where I studied music education. It was a process along the way of all these different experiences led up to me wanting to be a music teacher and get certified. And I went and I did it for a year. I was teaching kindergarten through 5th grade, which is about six through 12 year olds. I felt pretty good about it.

I had a lot of great training as a … I had a voice degree and I had a music education degree, and I had all these experiences. And then I went to an Orff Schulwerk workshop. In the Unites States there are local organizations of local, we call them Orff chapters. In my area, there was a chapter where a bunch of music teachers who had this training would get together once every month, or two months, and would bring in a clinician and would go through topics and songs. I went to one of these workshops, and after all these experiences, I was like, “This is the thing.” It sort of seemed to pull everything together. All these different threads in my life that I had experienced, it was sort of saying, “Yes, you’re right, you did have that great experience, and this is what we call it. And this is how we use it.”

It was sort of like you’re doing a puzzle and you’re feeling around and putting everything together. This was like stepping back and looking at the picture and going, “Oh, that’s how you put it together. That’s what that thing was. That blob is actually a car, or whatever.” Going to that workshop opened my eyes to say like, “This is another way to do it, and here’s a more formal approach to it.” That led to going to more workshops, and then we have what we call levels training. The national organization of Orff Schulwerk teachers, the American Orff Schulwerk Association, puts on Summer courses where you can go for two weeks at a time and take training. I did that, and that led to more training. Now I’m officially Orff certified. I’ve done all the trainings, I’ve done all the things, and I feel a lot better as a music teacher.

I look back on that first year and think, “What did I do? How did I make it through?” I just did what I thought was best, and I think now I’m a little bit more informed as I go into that, to know what is the right next step with my students.

Christopher: I think some listeners might be surprised to hear that you didn’t feel that way before discovering Orff. You had trained as a music teacher, you’d been teaching for a year, but the way you describe it, it’s like Orff gave you the tools, and the structures, and the mental models to feel like you knew what you were doing in the classroom. I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but that sounds like it. Why did you not have that before, if you had been qualified as a music instructor?

David: Well, in music education there are a lot of views about how to teach, and what to teach. And the way I was certified was I was certified kindergarten through 12th grade. That’s al of our educational levels save college. That’s a lot to learn, so even in my education at college, I was officially qualified, but I had a little bit of a lot of different things. I had a little bit of instrument methods, and I had a little bit of choral methods, and I had a little bit of elementary methods. And so even though I had all this training in theory, and on paper, I didn’t have all the experiences I needed, and I didn’t have the in depth learning that I really needed. Like I said, I grew up in a situation in my school that was not …

My teacher wasn’t an Orff teacher, wasn’t a Kodály teacher, or a Dalcroze teacher. She didn’t really have specific training like that. My personal experiences weren’t really as focused as maybe someone else’s were, so when I had that experience of seeing focused elementary music education in a full process with the Orff approach, it really did feel like I’m now getting that training that I’ve always wanted, even though I had a lot of great training. It’d be like an artist who’s had a ton of great experiences, but if you’re going to do just expressionist full time, that experience with modernism and all these other things is great, and it informs what you do, but learning the expressionism way, it really would help you do that better later on, if that makes sense. It’s just focusing from that world of music to be one specific track.

Christopher: That makes perfect sense. It reminds me too of a previous guest on the show, Jimmy Rotherham, who has had great success bringing Kodály into his school in the UK. He is really campaigning now for early music education to be recognized as its own thing. Because here, you get your teaching qualification in music, and like you described, it’s kind of all music to all ages, and actually when you focus in on just that age group, it’s quite a different animal, or at least it can be, in a useful way. Tell us what characterizes Orff or what were you learning, or discovering, or putting frameworks around that was so different to how you might have approached it before.

David: I guess my elevator speech of what is Orff Schulwerk, I would say Orff Schulwerk is an active music making approach. And it combines singing, and playing, and movement in a holistic experience where creativity is of the utmost importance. And so to be in an Orff experience, as an Orff teacher, you are encouraging creativity, you are encouraging students to move, and to sing, and play instruments, and to explore. And then showing students a way, or guiding students in a way so that they’re taking that exploration and formalizing it. For instance, with some of my students, it’s giving them an instrument, and letting them play around, and find all the different ways you can make a sound with that instrument, and maybe playing it the wrong way, like playing on the handle or playing somewhere else, or playing on the floor.

And then showing the “right way” or showing them another way, and then showing them how they can make patterns, and showing them how they can put that together, and maybe doing that while they’re moving, or doing that with a partner. It’s sort of guiding them after exploring, and trying, and playing with the instrument, it’s exploring how can you do more with that? What else can you do? And sort of leading them to a more formalized approach. But it all starts with that creativity and trying. And then alter on when you’re asking them to improvise, they’ve had all those experiences of trying new things, and exploring, and it leads pretty naturally into that.

Christopher: That’s so interesting. And what you said before about how there are so many different opinions and approaches to how teaching to be done sticks in my head, because I think we’re in an age where there are a lot of conflicting views about what education should look like ff it’s not the kind of industrial age model of developing factory workers. I just want to underscore a point you made there, which is that this is not let’s entertain the children with music for half an hour. You mentioned a couple of other traditional approaches, Dalcroze, and Kodály, and I think all three are notable because they aren’t just more enjoyable, they are provably more effective. You’re talking about developing child musicians who feel comfortable improvising, and creating, and understanding the music they play.

This isn’t a cop out, easy, fun option, this is genuinely a really effective way to teach some substantial musical skills. I wonder if you could share a little bit about how you see those three approaches, comparing and contrasting, because I know that you can easily get into religious arguments online if you mention one against the other. I’d love to hear how you think of the three and how they compare.

David: I would say, I have the most experience with Orff and Kodály. Dalcroze in the United States is still developing, so I have a theoretical approach. I have the understanding that I gained in college of what Dalcroze is, and I’ve seen a few Dalcroze presenters. I’m not sure I’m really qualified to speak about that. But as far as Kodály and Orff go, I think that they really are hand in hand. They’re a different approach to get to the same sort of objective. I think that they’re both great approaches and I would love to do Kodály training, just to see how they compare and contrast ina very specific way. But I think at their heart, Kodály and Orff approaches are just a way to guide students to feel more comfortable making music. While Orff does that through exploration, and through improvisation, and creation, and imitation, all of those things are basic to what we do. Kodály is a little different in that there’s a lot more singing, there’s a lot more singing.

Where an Orff teacher might take a song and develop it, and add things, and expand the universe of that song, a Kodály teacher might take a song and then bring in a related song, and then a related song. Instead of teaching a concept by teaching how to play that same thing on an instrument, or to do it with body percussion, or to sing it, a Kodály person might say, “We’re going to do it in this song. And then we’re going to do that same concept in this song. And then that same concept in this other song.” It’s just a different way to get at the same goal. But Ultimately, I think that we want our students to be creative, and to be literate, and we want them to be able to participate actively in the music making process. I think there is a little bit more of a push on literacy in the Kodály world.

Not that Orff teachers don’t teach literacy, but I think that we focus maybe a little bit more on the improvisatory side, and movement, and exploration, whereas Kodály folks do a little bit more of a formalized choir, or formalized singing, or just singing in general, and also music literacy. It’s just slightly different focuses, but the heart is still always the same. It’s getting students to participate and to feel comfortable that they have the skills later on to participate in whatever they want to. I think another approach that wold be interesting for listeners, or anyone out there, is the work of John Feierabend. In the United States, he himself was trained as a Kodály teacher, and has sort of taken all of that training and added sort of an American twist to it. Because Kodály is very based in Europe, originally from Hungary and all of that, and so Feierabend takes all of the Kodály training and adds a little bit, and then also Americanizes it.

So instead of take maybe a So Mi approach to singing songs, which is what Kodály did because of the folk songs in Hungary, Feierabend does a Do Re Mi approach, which is just … That’s getting into the weeds a little bit, but it’s just taking a slightly different view of things and then building on that. Again, he is very similar to Kodály and Orff in that he says, “I want people to, in 30 years, be able to sing their children to sleep, or to tap their toe along with music, or to join in in any musical way that they want.” And I think all of the musical approaches ultimately want that. Yes, it would be great if you could read music, but we want you to be able to participate in your own way when you’re older and you leave our classroom.

Christopher: Wonderful. That’s such a different mindset than, “I want to pass my grade five theory so that I can take my grade six saxophone exam next year and get a distinction.” Isn’t it? Which unfortunately, I think is the experience a lot of learners have in music.

David: And I think it’s true here too. I think a high school musician, a high school band teacher would say, “We’re striving for all state,” or, “We want you to go be a music major.” But as someone who teaches all the students, I don’t get just the students who have signed up for saxophone, or clarinet, or whatever. I teach all those students, so my goal ultimately is years down the road when you don’t have a recorder in your hand, or don’t have a xylophone at your disposal, can you still participate in music? I hope so.

I hope that you can feel that you can pick up a guitar and at least have the understanding of the process of how to try and explore that. Or you can join in your church choir, or you can sing lullabies to your kid. Those are my ultimate goals because you will not probably have a cabasa in your home in 20 years. And you won’t use it in the same way you did in my class room, but if you take those skills you learned and you could feel like you could be a part of that process, then that’s really valuable.

Christopher: Yeah. I think there are two reasons I find Kodály, Orff, and Dalcroze so fascinating in the context of what we do at Musical U and the way we try to help adult musicians. The first is what you just said, that inclusivity. It’s not, “Let’s pick out the one kid in the class who can play amazing trumpet and make sure he reaches his absolute maximum potential and ignore the rest.” It’s, “Let’s get everyone to a point where they can feel some ownership of the musical experience, and participate, and collaborate.” And the other reason is I feel like even when we focus on that one kid in the class, we’re not doing them a good service. We focus so much in the instrument technique, and ticking boxes, that even that one kid doesn’t really feel like a true musician a lot of the time.

And I know a lot of listeners to this podcast may have been that musical kid in school who, “musical,” but actually now as an adult feels like they don’t have that instinct for music. They can’t maybe tap their foot a long with a song. And that to me, is a areal failing and opportunity to improve our way of doing music education in the UK, and I think in the US too. I was saying to you before we hit record that I am really encouraged and excited to see that there is a greater prevalence of these approaches in the US school system. Maybe not to the extent we’d like, but a lot more so than in the UK, where it’s really few and far between where the kids actually get this chance to experience the creative way of learning music.

David: Yeah, and it’s fun, especially speaking as an Orff Schulwerk teacher, you were saying about all the students in a classroom … The way we teach in an Orff Schulwerk classroom is that all students learn all parts. Any student should be able to sit down at the xylophone and play part of that song, or any student should be able to take on a specific part of the lesson. Students can be interchangeable, you can do different parts, so that each student can say, “Well, I’ve done all five of the part of this song, I didn’t really like this part or this part. I didn’t feel as good about that. But I did do it, and I like this other part too.” And I think that’s interesting because learners are so different. Some people learn just in different ways, or feel naturally inclined to certain things, and it’s good to know I feel good a bout this specific thing, but I also have experience on these other things.

Even if you’re like, “I am most comfortable playing guitar,” “Okay, great. Can you also sing? Can you also keep a rhythm?” Those things are valuable too. In an Orff classroom, you take part ina ll of it, and then maybe you’re placed in a part that you’re more comfortable for a performance, or a sharing session, but you get to experience it all. And so that’s sort of a fun thing that it’s great to encourage, that even if it doesn’t feel most comfortable, try it. You might be good at it. It might take a couple times, then you’ll feel great about it. It’s that experience that I think is really interesting.

Christopher: Fantastic. I don’t want to go off on a rant here, but there are two things that drive me crazy when it comes to children’s music education. The first is when a kid is told they can’t sing, and for the rest of their life, they spend their life thinking they’re not a singer. And the second is when a kid is forced to study one particular instrument, they don’t enjoy it, they don’t feel they’re good at it, and again, they spend the rest of their life thinking, “I was rubbish at piano, I’m not musical,” when actually, maybe if you’d handed that kid a xylophone, or a trumpet, or something else, they would have tapped into a different part of their musical being. I love the idea that is fundamental to Orff that every kid gets to experience and try everything. It’s not that they need to be equally good at everything, it’s just that they get the opportunity to see where are their natural inclinations, what do they enjoy, where do they fit in.

David: Yeah. And another thing that’s sort of interesting that is specific to the Orff Schulwerk world, is that we put a big emphasis on movement. Creative movement, folk dance, expressive movement. And that’s not something you find everywhere. And a lot of people would say, “Why are you including that, that’s not music. That’s movement, that’s dance,” or whatever. But the way it developed in Orff Schulwerk, and with Carl Orff and his contemporaries, was that music and movement were inextricable linked. In their school in Germany, so many years ago, the musicians would improvise for the dancers to create a dance. Or the dancers would improvise to the musicians. And they found that there were all of these very important links, that music and movement are tied together. For a lot of kids in my classroom today, movement is scary. The singing part is, they might feel uncomfortable, but movement, that scares them. But the more that they can see how they’re connected, the more that they can do a little bit of all of those things, the more comfortable they feel.

And especially in the American culture, I can say we are not always very comfortable with our bodies, or very comfortable moving, or very comfortable doing that. And so to experience that early on in elementary music, and to see how you can be a part of music, and dance, and make all that sync together, that’s really encouraging for later on in their life when … Being in music class might help you have a better body image, or feel more comfortable with movement, or feel more comfortable in a space with other people. That’s a fun little eccentricity about Orff that’s different from the other approaches, that is also so cool when you see it in a holistic approach all together.

Christopher: Yeah, it’s funny. You label it as an eccentricity, which it is from the traditional viewpoint of music means singing or playing an instrument. But hearing the way you just described it, of course there should be a part of learning to be musical, because what great musician wouldn’t be able to dance in a musical way? It should be part and parcel of that instinct for music.

David: Yeah, and even if you look at a great orchestra, a violin, or a flute, or no matter what instrument you’re looking at, they don’t just sit there and just play very strictly. They’re moving and they’re expressing as they play. And even just that little movement is a part of music and movement being linked together. You can’t really have one without the other. As someone who grew up with maybe a little bit more of we’re singing and standing in choir, that felt foreign to me at first. But the more you experience it, the more you’re like, “Yes, they are linked together.” They are together, there are a lot of ways that they connect.

Christopher: You mentioned folk dance there, and we’ve been talking quite a lot about singing, and songs. I think folk music, and folk songs in particular, is something else that’s come into the Kodály and the Orff approaches. You gave a wonderful explanation in your podcast about why it’s folk music, and why you’re not teaching your class with the latest pop hit from the radio. Maybe you could just share a little bit about that. Why is folk music part of the Orff approach?

David: Folk music is a big part of the Orff approach and the Kodály approach, I think because it represents our history and dour culture. These songs have been popular for hundreds of years with a broad spectrum of people. And a part of that is because there’s something a bout that music that is inherently very good. People like singing it, there’s something that makes them just very popular, and singable, or usable, and so that music has persisted. People create music all the time, but not every song will last. And for some reason these songs, for hundreds of years have lasted, and have bene picked up by teachers, and singers, and movers all around the world. I tend to go back to folk music because it does connect my students, and connect me, with generations before us who were also in the same area, or maybe not.

Folk music in America is great to connect with because it helps connect us to our heritage, and to specific historical things. If you’re singing about the Erie Canal, or you’re singing about westward expansion, or cowboys, or whatever, those are all American elements that you can then teach students history and culture as you’re teaching the music. But also you’re connecting with that personal history. Or when I teach my students a Maori song from New Zealand, or when I teach them a song from Ghana, it helps them see a window into that culture and those people. And I think that’s really valuable. Not only just singing music that has persisted because it’s so good, but also teaching them music that has a historical and cultural context, because that makes them more global citizens, it makes them understand their own culture better, and it makes them see past their eight year old worldview. Or me, my 32 year old worldview. It helps me see into a much bigger world.

I think folk music is great. It’s public domain for the most part, so you can for sure use it. But also because it’s just stood the test of time and it is so important to so many people around the world.

Christopher: That’s a terrific explanation. And that point about standing the test of time, there’s a power there. I was listening to one of your episodes where you were presenting the song Looby Loo, which to my English memory is loop-ti-loo. And anyway, sorry, I listened to the episode and I enjoyed it. Later in the day, I was with my daughter and she was acting a bit loopy, I said she was loopy and then I launched into, “Here we go loop-ti-loo, here we go loop-ti-li,” and anyway, ever since then, for several weeks, any time I mention the world loopy, she’s like, “Sing loopy song, sing loopy song.” And clearly that has stuck in her head from one rendition. And it just shows you, not every song you hear on the radio is like that. And these songs may be 100, 200 years old, but there’s something about them that connects deeply with us. And I think when you look at it like that, it makes perfect sense that this would be the vehicle for learning the fundamental skills of music, doesn’t it?

David: And the great thing about it, for me as a teacher is to say, if I’m teaching a song where I’m teaching 16th notes, I don’t know what the English version of that is, is it-

Christopher: Semiquavers.

David: Semiquavers, yeah. If I’m teaching that song, or that concept, I can find songs where that is a feature. In the song, Chicken on a Fence Post, “Chicken on a fence post, can’t dance Josie,” that’s an American song that is really fun for kids to learn. There’s a really fun dance that goes with it. They love that song, they love learning that song. And then later I can go back in that song and say, “Hey, in that song, did you notice we sang a lot of words very quickly?” And then you can lead them to notation, and you can teach that concept based on that song. And a lot of the times, that’s what I will do, is I’ll take a song that has a specific element. Maybe a held tone, or maybe a larger vocal range, or a specific dance, and I pull that out to teach that specific concept. But it’s based on a song that the kids love because they just like the song.

And then you can say, “Here’s a thing you can like about it, is this specific musical thing.” And so folk songs are great, and they’re catchy, and lead you in other places too.

Christopher: Terrific. I think we’ve touched on a lot of different reasons people should be aware of Orff, and interested in Orff, but in a recent series of podcast episodes you were asking Orff practitioners if you could tell school music teachers one reason why they should explore Orff Schulwerk, what would it be. And I’d love to hear your answer to that. Maybe thinking about an adult musician, and then a child learner. What would be one reason the Orff approach is worth a closer look?

David: I think it’s a great approach for a couple different reasons. If you are a music educator teaching children, and at first that’s not what Orff was doing. Orff was teaching adults. Orff, it was really interesting, his history, and the history of that approach. But the Orff Schulwerk approach was used to teach adults and also children. If you’re in any way going to be a formalized music educator, I think it’s a great way to give you information and processes you can use to teach other people. The training, or the experience with Orff Schulwerk helps you see what are different parts of singing, or parts of music making that you can then encourage and use later on. It helps you see the process, and encourages you to be creative in that process. As opposed to maybe another approach that is more formalized, or more structured, or strict about how you do things, Orff lets you explore, and create, and improvise. And I think that’s a really wonderful skill and it’s a beautiful thing about Orff Schulwerk.

If you’re an adult learner and you’re interested in it, I think some of those same things apply. Learning more about Orff Schulwerk teaches you a little about how we all make music and learn music. And no matter what approach you’re coming from, or what culture, or musical background you’re coming from, there are a lot of common things that we all sort of do. Orff helps you see that, and helps you understand this is a process I could take, or this is something I already do very well and could build upon. It would help even someone who has no formal training. Looking into Orff would help you see what are avenues of things I could do next? Even if I just learn about improvisation, how can I take those skills and apply that to guitar, or to piano, or whatever? It gives you some of those ideas of we’ve thought about it, and here’s what we’ve learned.

I think a great book out there is Elementaria by Gunild Keetman. She was a contemporary of Orff and helped build the Orff Schulwerk and is just really brilliant. And so the writings that she has about how they teach, and why they teach were fundamental to me as I thought about teaching other kids. But also one of the things I learned in Orff levels, was it was helping me become a better musician too. Reading her book and learning more about what she believed, and what she and Orff came up with together, helped me establish more of a worldview about how I should teach students music, and how I should interact with music myself.

Christopher: Gosh, well I think we may have gone beyond one reason, but that was a wonderful answer, thank you.

David: I’m sorry.

Christopher: You have a terrific website, Make Moments Matter, and I’d love if you could share where that project came from. And I have mentioned it’s a podcast as well. And you have a wonderful tagline, it’s “Sing, learn, laugh, grow.” Tell us, where did this come from?

David: When I first started teaching, I was in a school district with about 26 or 27 other music teachers where we met very frequently, and we collaborated, and we did a lot. And even in that district where I saw other music teachers maybe once every three weeks or so, I felt very isolated because in my area, I was the only music teacher in my building. And other teachers in my building who taught 3rd grade, well there were five 3rd grade teachers. So they could collaborate and see each other every day and say, “How are you teaching that concept?” Or, “How are you doing this thing?” Looking at it now, I was very lucky that I saw other music teachers at all in a formalized way. And even in that sort of blessed situation, I felt like an island.

And so I started blogging years ago to sort of reach out to other people across my city, and the country, and the world, and figure out how are you doing this? How can we collaborate? How can we figure this out together? And that led to sharing more ideas and sharing more topics. And it was so funny because in those years, and all the years I’ve done it, I am, sharing things but in my interactions with other music teachers, I am learning more about what it is I’m doing. It really is a bridge. It’s a way for me to connect to to other people, and other people to connect, and feel connected.

And if anyway they can read what I’ve written, or listen to the podcast, and feel like, “Yes, I do that too, ” or, “That makes sense to me,” that’s my ultimate goal. I want people to feel like we may be in different places, but we are all doing the same thing. And you should feel like you are not an island, because we are all in this together. That’s maybe what inspired me, but it’s the whole process has been so great to connect with people around the world, and to feel like a part of a community.

Christopher: And what can people find specifically on the website and in your podcast?

David: I come at music education with an elementary slant because that’s what I do every day. The podcast specifically, I’ve spent many of the episodes talking about different songs that I would use in my classroom, and how I would approach teaching those songs. Different elements, and things that I would add into a lesson. I also did a series of interviews with Orff Schulwerk master teachers from around my country. And talking with them about music education, and Orff Schulwerk in particular, and why that’s so important, and how they use that. Basically everything I do on the podcast and in the blog is about formalized music education, but also just tips and ideas on how you can go from one thing to the next.

In some posts it’ll be one specific song and all the things that lead to that, and others are more general. For instance, in one blog post I compare and contrast rhythm syllable systems, and how you can read and do that. And in another blog post I talk more generally about folk songs in general, and why you would teach that. But some are very specific. Here’s that song Chicken on a Fence Post, and here’s how I teach it. Depending on what you read or listen to, you might get a more generalized approach, or a more specific, but it’s all the same general idea of here are ways you can teach this thing.

Christopher: Very cool. And I think we have a theme on this podcast sometimes where I encourage the listener not to take things at face value. And the fact that you are writing for elementary music teachers does not mean there isn’t a ton of fascinating stuff in there for any musician. And so I’d like to just reiterate what we said before, that exploring how would an elementary Orff teacher present a song or a concept, can be hugely instructive and useful the self directed adult learner. I definitely encourage everyone listening, whether you’re a teacher or a musician yourself, to check the Make Moments Matter website, that’s at makemomentsmatter.org. And also David’s podcast, which as I’ve mentioned I’m a keen listener of myself. David, it’s been such a pleasure having you on the show today. Thank you again for joining us.

David: Well thank you so much for having me, it’s been my pleasure.

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The post Folk, Frameworks, and Fun, with David Row appeared first on Musical U.

The Many Moods of Musical Modes

Scales are incredible. A collection of notes played in ascending order has the ability to tell a story and convey a mood.

Some music theory courses and curricula would have you think that major and minor are the be-all and end-all of the world of scales. If you’d like your music to sound cheerful and bright, stick to the major scale. If you’re trying to write a melancholy number, minor scales are your best bet. Within the minor scale family, students often learn about the natural, harmonic, and melodic minor, and the distinctive moods each evoke (refer to Portland Piano Lab’s guide for a refresher).

But something gets left out.

Music Theory 101 and practical lessons often neglect to mention that there’s a whole other collection of scales that can evoke moods and atmospheres beyond the cheerful-morose binary.

These scales are called modes.

While some modes certainly sound more cheerful than others and can be divided into “major” and “minor” modes, they each lend a feeling to the music that is more subtle – certain modes can sound haunting, triumphant, mysterious, or jazzy. They can recall music indigenous to a certain part of the world. And, when used in certain ways, they can stir up a cauldron of conflicting moods.

Sound intriguing? It should! Human emotion is complex and multifaceted, so why shouldn’t we show that through the music we make?

In this guide to musical modes, we’ll give you a guided tour of the seven modes found in Western music, how to easily understand and relate them to one another so there’s no confusion, and how you can incorporate them into your improvisation, songwriting, and general understanding.

What is a Mode?

A mode is simply a scale derived from the major scale we all know and love – but we change which notes play which roles, and which are emphasized. This is achieved by changing our starting note.

Huh? Why should that make any difference? It’s the same notes, after all!

It turns out, the order in which you play notes is just as important as which notes you play. Bear with us – this will make sense in a minute!

The Major Scale

Let’s look at our beloved C major scale:

The tonic note, C, holds the scale together and ensures that the scale has a tonal center.

Look at the space between the notes, and you see a string of tones and semitones:

Now, what if we played the C major scale, but started and ended on D instead of C? We’d be using the same notes – all white keys on the piano – with only a minor adjustment.

It turns out, this “minor adjustment” totally changes the relationships the notes have to one another, and the sound of the scale. Take a listen:

Instead of a T-T-ST-T-T-T-ST pattern, we now have a T-ST-T-T-T-ST-T pattern. The C note is no longer the center of the scale’s tonal universe. Something’s changed. The scale degrees have been altered, as we can see if we write out the Dorian mode in C, using the characteristic T-ST-T-T-T-ST-T pattern:

The third and seventh degrees have been lowered, creating a whole new scale. Though Dorian in D uses all the same notes as the C major scale, there’s a huge difference in sound.

Moving the Tonic

If you can understand the concept of getting from the major scale to the Dorian mode, congratulations – you can now easily derive every other mode!

If you play a scale on each of the seven white keys on a keyboard, using only white keys ascending until you reach that same note, you derive the seven modes. Each mode has a distinctive tone-semitone pattern that is responsible for:

  • The relationships between the notes in each mode
  • The unique mood and character of each mode

Each mode is therefore derived from the major scale we know and love, and can be understood in relation to it. For an aural explanation of deriving each mode from the major scale, tune into Music Student 101’s excellent podcast episode on the topic.

There is another way of deriving each mode from the major scale by lowering certain scale degrees, as the Treble & Bass Project explains. However, for the purposes of this article, we will be going by the all-white-key approach for maximum clarity and understanding.

Let’s dive right in, moving the tonic one white key up each time, and examining how this shift in tonic affects the sound of each new scale we discover.

The Seven Modes of the Major Scale

Time to take a closer look at all seven members of this lovely family. Starting with an unlikely member…

The Ionian Mode

Otherwise known as the major scale.

You read that right! The major scale itself is a mode, and it’s alternately called the Ionian mode. Like all other modes, it has a distinctive tone-semitone pattern, as discussed above, and this pattern gives the mode its characteristic sound:

As goes almost without saying, the Ionian mode sounds bright and happy. Listen to Bach’s “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring”:

No doubt you’ve heard the piece before, but take a listen to the full composition anyway – both because Bach deserves it, and because with a thorough listen, several things become evident.

There is little tension and no moodiness present in the piece, and each phrase resolves nicely to the tonic of G – and sure enough, the piece is therefore written in G Ionian mode. The piece sounds pleasant, predictable enough, and quite “airy”. Fittingly enough, “Happy Birthday” is also in Ionian mode.

The Dorian Mode

Start on the note D instead of C, play your way up the piano using only white keys, return to D, and you’ve got yourself a Dorian mode. What do you hear?

Gone is the happy-go-lucky tone of the Ionian mode – it has shifted to something a little more serious. The Dorian mode is considered a minor mode, owing to the minor third interval between the first and third degree of the scale.

Remember how we praised the modes for their ability to communicate nuanced emotion? The Dorian mode is a fantastic example of this – it’s not all doom-and-gloom simply because it’s minor. The major sixth interval lends this mode a “brightness” that separates it from sounding the same as a natural minor scale – in fact, if we compare D Dorian to a D natural minor scale, we’ll see that the only difference is that raised sixth degree in the Dorian mode:

Just one of many incredible examples in which a single note changes the whole mood of a sequence!

The Dorian mode is often described as melancholy yet optimistic, and is therefore well-suited for its natural habitats: jazz, blues, and this classic Chris Isaak tune about bittersweet, unrequited love. Pay attention to how that raised sixth degree “bright spot” gives a hopeful feeling to an otherwise sad song:

The Phrygian Mode

Start on E, and play all the way up the piano’s white keys until you hit E again.

Your tone-semitone pattern has shifted again, to become ST-T-T-T-ST-T-T.

This is another minor mode, with the only difference between the Phrygian and the natural minor scale being the presence of a minor second interval in Phrygian:

You might listen to it and be reminded of Flamenco – and rightly so! This scale belongs right at home in that southern Spanish art form.

However, being a minor mode with a minor third interval, it has a dark side, too. Notice the minor second interval – this starts the scale off on a darker note than, say, Dorian, and makes this mode perfect for conveying tension, foreboding, and doom with heavy metal guitar solos:

The Lydian Mode

You know the drill by now: start on your F note, play up the white keys, and finish on F, for a pattern of T-T-T-ST-T-T-ST.

Wait, hold on… what is that floaty, mystical sound?

The Lydian mode is the strange, ethereal sibling of the mode family. You’re listening to something that sounds like the major scale, until that fourth note hits, and suddenly, you’re left floating in space:

There is little tension or direction in the Lydian mode, lending it a sense of perpetual rest and resolve – a welcome respite from the darker, more heavy Dorian and Phrygian modes.

Listen to Elliott Smith’s floaty, relaxed “Waltz #1”:

This mode is well-suited for adding an air of mystery, calm, and floatiness to your music, but can also convey a sense of wonder and grandiosity – so much that the scores of many cult classics like E.T., Jurassic Park, and Back to the Future use the Lydian mode. Just don’t look for this mode in thrillers and horror films – this one is a major mode!

The Mixolydian Mode

G to G on the white keys of the piano yields the Mixolydian mode, another close relative of the major scale – with the one difference being a flattened seventh degree (G major would have that sharpened F):

This flattened seventh degree is what gives the Mixolydian mode both its distinctive sound and its variety of uses in music. Most notably, because the flattened seventh exists in 7th, 9th, 11th, and 13th chords, the Mixolydian is beautifully suited to solo over many chord progressions that use these kinds of chords – think jazz, funk, and blues.

To hear the Mixolydian mode in action, we need look no further than the homogenous yet undeniably powerful and anthemic music of AC/DC, a band that takes blues and rips it wide open:

Though undeniably a major mode, the Mixolydian has an edge to it – making it something resembling the major scale’s bratty younger brother with a rebellious streak.

The Aeolian Mode

Prepare for a small serving of deja vu.

Start on A, play your way up as always, and end on A. What do you hear?

That’s right – we’ve arrived at the natural minor scale. Sort of like rediscovering a long-lost friend, no?

If you want pure, undiluted sadness, this is your scale. You’ll hear it in the mournful “Losing My Religion”:

This wistfulness is a great fit for blues, jazz, and downtempo ballads in the genres of rock, folk, country, and pop.

The Locrian Mode

This is the bogeyman of the musical modes – unsettling, odd, and by far the least-used of the seven.

Start on B, and play your way through to the B above it on white keys. You know you’ve done it right if you feel a sense of what-on-earth-did-I-just-play:

The presence of a tritone and a lack of perfect fifth make this sequence of notes incredibly dissonant and resistant to resolution.

It’s so unstable that our ear has difficulty hearing it as Locrian mode – instead, it is often instead perceived as a major, minor, or Mixolydian scale, depending on phrasing and notes used!

There’s a reason for this: in the modes we discussed above, the tonic typically gives the scale a place to “rest”, or feel natural. In the above example, however, you’ll notice that your ear puts up a great fight against hearing “B” as the tonic note.

This happens because of the presence of a tritone and a lack of a perfect fifth. This creates a root chord of B, D, and F – a diminished triad where the third and fifth are flattened, compared to a major triad. This diminished triad is inherently unstable.

So where do we find this chilling, unsettling minor scale?

Its creepy quality has long been exploited by heavy metal guitarists, who will build progressions on the Locrian scale (albeit usually with a perfect fifth above the root, which takes away some of the spook factor).

Björk, our favourite Queen of Avant-Garde, managed to use this strange, inaccessible mode to write a pop hit:

This is written in C Locrian. And it does resolve to C, as much as it can – though it does bend your ear into all sorts of shapes in the process!

Internalizing the Modes

Now that you have a rough idea of what each mode sounds like, it’s time to test it out for yourself.

Grab an instrument, preferably a polyphonic one. Piano works perfectly, guitar works well, and here’s a virtual piano you can play with your computer keyboard that is perfect if you don’t have an instrument well-suited for this exercise.

Step 1: Create Your Drone

With your left hand, hold down one non-sharpened, non-flattened note (a white key on the piano) so that it is a sustained, consistent sound – use the middle pedal on your piano, if you have one.

The note “D” is a great place to start!

Step 2: Improvise Overtop

With your right hand, improvise overtop of the drone with only the white keys. Congratulations – you have achieved modal improv!

How, you may ask?

Your left hand has established the tonic, and the sustained note serves as a consistent reminder of just where the gravity of your little improvisation lies. The notes you play with your right hand are understood by your brain in relation to the drone.

Step 3: Play Around With Drones

When you were improvising over your “D” note, you were actually improvising in Dorian! See how easy that was? Simply by sticking to the white keys and establishing a tonal center with your left-hand drone, you’ve created some song-worthy melodies.

Now, shift your drone to a different note, rinse, and repeat. This is an exercise that will keep you entertained and learning for hours, as you take note of the unique feel that each different tonal center lends to your composition. Have fun!

Diving Deeper into Modes

Now that you have a basic understanding of what each mode sounds like and you’ve gotten the chance to play around with them, you have the option of furthering your understanding by exploring more of the music theory behind modes, and by applying various learning tools you already know. Here are some ideas:

Modes and their Flavours

You’ll have noticed that each mode can be described as major or minor, depending on the presence of a major third or a minor third interval.

However, modes are more accurately described as flavours of major and minor – compare the floaty, calm feeling of the Lydian to the driven, positive character of the Mixolydian, or the Locrian’s chilling minor to the Aeolian’s melancholia.

Modes therefore function to add a very human dimension to the music you insert them into; working beyond happy and sad, and exploring some deeper, nuanced emotions. Which one best suits your mood?

As you begin to explore modes, use the modal improv trick to experiment with each one and get a sense of its sound. This will help you internalize it, recognize it in music, and eventually, put it to use in your own compositions!

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