[Harp-L] Zen Harmonica and Music Teaching Concept
One concept I teach has to do with - not playing. Do you have the ability to
stand on stage and "not play" with total relaxation? Can you free yourself
from the "mental lip lock" you have on your instrument?
I witness so many beginning , intermediate and even "big shot" harmonica
players seem so disassociated from the music around them when they are not
actively playing the harmonica (at gigs or at jams). They seem almost distracted
as they fiddle with their amp or can't seem to find a comfortable place to
stand. My theory is that they are in their heads worrying about how to recreate
that memorized solo that they've been practicing all week when it's their
time to play, or they have their finger in their ear so they can hear themselves
and are trying out ideas off mic, or any number of fidgets that keeps them
from actually enjoying the music and groove happening all around them.
When in a state of "not playing" on stage, relax, let the arms hang at your
sides, and consciously (at first) force yourself to become an active listener
who really enjoys what is going on musically. Start to find the groove in the
music and attach it to your personal one. Subtly sway or move to the music.
Pay attention to who is soloing and listen to their ideas. Pay attention to
how the rhythm section is locked (or not locked) in. Listen to the bass line.
Check out how and if the rhythm instrument supports or is ignoring the
vocal/soloists. Don't feel compelled to fill in every open space between other's
ideas or vocals.
Get out of your own mind set of worrying about what you will do when it is
your time to play. This is truly wasted time and energy. Don't buy into the
philosophy of needing to play SOMETHING just because you are on stage. When
solos are being handed out and it's your turn, don't JUMP into playing. Believe
it or not, you can even let a few measure go by before you have to make a
musical statement. As a matter of fact, by "not playing" for a moment when you
are nodded at, it helps clear the air and your mind from what went on before.
Even if you are skipped over during a jam tune, don't get emotionally tied to
the "I just gotta get a solo in", unless you enjoy being driven by personal
anger. There is always the next song, the next jam, the next gig, the next
opportunity.
All of this is geared to introducing the student/player into the realm of
"dig the music all around me" rather than "dig me - see how I play the music"
and to eliminate a personal attachment to any outcome.
This is imply another exercise in taming the ego rather than being driven by
it. Believe me, the ego doesn't want to be relegated to second class citizen
and sometimes fights you violently for control. Much to the ego's dismay, the
truth is that you are not your ego. In so many people, the ego is so loud
and constantly chattering in your mind that you don't even have a chance to
discover who you are.
The Iceman
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