The
received wisdom is wrong and expensive.
The
received wisdom states that to be a good musician you need go to Music College,
learning what someone tells you is right. Learn what others do in such a way
that you sound like them. In the past that is not how the great players
learned, they did refer to other players by studying recordings and working
it out for themselves, and that is an important difference.
If you work music
out from a recording, you often get it slightly wrong and in that way one
starts to sound like yourself, and not like somebody else. Think of Jimi
Hendrix, he was a consummate guitar player who took from all styles and other
peoples playing, however, when Hendrix played an idea taken from someone it
always sounded like Jimi.
Now I’m not
saying that a modern approach doesn’t work technically, but there is an
unintended consequence to the way that we learned in the past, we do not make
the type of mistakes that create our personality within the music if we learn
by rote.
Our
education system has created a clone factory that might be fine if you want to
play in the tribute band, playing exactly like Jimmy Page or Steve Vai, but the
drawback to this is these people still exist and therefore you are only a copy,
and like any impersonator you can never be better than the original. If you
take their ideas and deconstruct them, then reassemble you are able, with your
own skills, abilities and personality, to create something that is for want of
a better word, unique!
Teaching within a
framework of a lesson plan is restricting and uncreative.
It is difficult
to teach creativity because it’s so hard to define, whereas teaching something
note for note is easy to measure and therefore mark. So the system itself
causes a distortion in our approach, and this is as true for other subjects as
it is for music.
Saying to a bunch
of musicians ‘I’m going to give you five little tricks and tips which will
transform the way you play and it will only take me half an hour’ doesn’t make
for a good two year college course, and would be almost impossible to mark.
However, from a transformative point of view that is the quickest route and the
most effective way of teaching.
I have said it is
important to have lessons BUT
My last point is
the real killer, many music tutors think that teaching is showing a pupil what
they (the teacher) can do, it isn’t, it’s finding out where the student is on
their journey and helping them to achieve their potential. This I think is the
mark of really good teaching, and you can see this in your own work if you are
producing different types of musical personalities from your pupils.
If you find
that your pupils are becoming bass players, guitarists, singers, songwriters,
actors or music therapists you are a good teacher. All of these people are
expressing their desires and their abilities and not trying to copy yours; you
have no control over what they become.
Finally, how much
is a college course now? £10K per year? What you need is time to practice and
people to play along with and then the contacts………….
Vic
www.bluescampuk.co.uk
www.vichylandcoach.com
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