The Real Power of Music
Transcription
The Real Power of Music
The Real Power of Music Almost 99% of the human body is composed of oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorus. I remember in school when they broke these down into different components like match sticks, etc. They also gave the net worth of the items. At the time, it was worth something like $1.57. (It's a good thing George Bailey had a life insurance policy, huh.) Musicians, especially guitarists, spend most of our time chasing down this $1.57 worth of items. Figuratively speaking, we spend 99% of our time chasing match sticks. We get the match sticks and put them under a microscope. We run them through a spectral analyzer. We learn all the scales, chords, and modes we can. We spend a fortune on lessons, books, and DVD's. However, in the end, we are just left with carbon, hydrogen, etc. The human being (music) eludes us. I think I can shed some light on why that is. I want to talk about the real power of music. Paul McCartney knows all about the power of music. That's why some estimates put his net worth at over one billion dollars. The real power of music isn't about playing faster, or mastering more playing techniques, or filling your head full of more musical knowledge than anybody else. The real power of music is about learning how to tap into the power that lies buried within music itself. Okay, at this point, you are probably extremely curious and maybe scratching your head at the same time. We should do a little preparatory work. I suggest a session in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber and playing about 100 games of Sudoku. Read this next quote. Think about it, and try to connect it to my illustration about music and the human body. Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, And I shall move the world. Archimedes Hopefully some of you have already seen it. Many of you are probably now scratching your head with both hands. The reason that our musical practice time is not more fruitful is because we don't practice our material in a good musical context. Every lever needs a fulcrum. A 'D' note is not just a 'D' note. It depends on what context it is being played in. What come before it? What comes after it? What scale is it being played in? What chord is it being played over? Where is being played at in the measure? How is the note being emphasized? Is it being played loud? Is it being held for a long time? These are just some questions you could ask. You can extend this line of thinking and apply it to any musical element. You can apply this to chords, scales, arpeggios, cross picking, you name it. How many of you are football fans? It doesn't matter. The success rate for college quarterbacks going into the National Football League is not all that great. These players often had stellar college careers. However, the pro game is different. For one thing, the game is much faster. Once a play begins, a quarterback has literally seconds to scan the entire playing field and process a lot of information on fast changing situations, and the various choices he can make with the football. It's dynamic. It's fluid. It's now. It's also something that has to be learned by doing (I'm sounding like Ed Harris doing a home store commercial). In those characteristics, music is very similar. (Thank goodness, when I'm practicing my guitar I don't have to worry about some monstrous gym rat running at me full speed trying (easily succeeding) to pulverize me out of my chair.) Music is ethereal. It occurs in time and space. It is dynamic. It is fluid. It is now. It must be created, or recreated, in order to be experienced. Okay, let me close by giving you some application suggestions. There is nothing wrong with musical exercises and musical knowledge. In fact, you should try to learn as much as you can. Just remember the primary focus. The primary focus isn't to lift weights in the training room. The focus is to lift weights in the training room (learn scales, practice chords, etc.) so you can score touchdowns (make music) on the field. Any time you are working on something in your musical practice time, try to quickly use these elements, or apply these elements in a musical setting.