283 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
283 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
{"title": "Rehearsal Agenda for Jan. 3rd, 2017"}
|
|
+++
|
|
### Warm up, getting settled.
|
|
|
|
Start practice with the first band member starting some groove, or small piece.
|
|
As others come, they join, make up a part, check levels, etc.
|
|
|
|
### Quick summary of band goals.
|
|
|
|
The main band is optimized for experience musicians. There are some habits that
|
|
make it difficult for new members to jump in. For example:
|
|
|
|
* Song selection changes on short notice.
|
|
* Material is given on short notice and not always entirely accurate.
|
|
* There are lots of songs to learn.
|
|
|
|
We need new people rotating into the music ministry in order to keep it
|
|
healthy, but jumping directly into the primary band is not the an easy task. We
|
|
need a different format that gives intermediate players and new members a
|
|
chance to get up to speed with the music. That's what this band is intended to
|
|
be. We are not creating a new, separate band in the music program but a new
|
|
format to introduce new members and experiment with new practice methods.
|
|
|
|
This band is pursuing excellence through rigorous preparation. We will:
|
|
|
|
* Have songs chosen a month in advance,
|
|
* Have accurate material available from the beginning in the correct key,
|
|
* Prepare the song order in advance,
|
|
* Not make changes to the song selection or material,
|
|
* Have an agenda for each practice, and
|
|
* Emphasize personal practice for learning parts.
|
|
|
|
For band members we will have lead sheets with all the chord changes recorded
|
|
and any runs notated. For the vocalists we will have individual parts recorded.
|
|
For both we will have reference material. We want to make personal practice
|
|
time meaningful so we won't make changes that waste the time our members have
|
|
spent practicing.
|
|
|
|
Our goal for every song will be first to be able to play it as well as the
|
|
recording. Of course it will take time to develop that level, but that is the
|
|
goal. First we will learn the music as it was written, and play it as close as
|
|
possible to the original. Once we know the song inside and out we may begin to
|
|
play with it as a band, but our first goal is to duplicate the professional
|
|
sound.
|
|
|
|
Ultimately the goals of this band are:
|
|
|
|
* To develop a new culture of excellence through preparation at New Life,
|
|
* Give new members an entry point to the New Life music program,
|
|
* Create a place for people to learn new skills (or learn a new instrument),
|
|
and
|
|
* Prepare people to transition to regularly playing in the regular rotation.
|
|
|
|
### Choose new songs
|
|
|
|
### Short summary of my musical philosophy
|
|
|
|
There are lots of different approaches to music. I'm going to massively simplify
|
|
and distill down to two extremes. There are extremes, not actually what happens:
|
|
|
|
1. Musical performance is a highly coordinated effort and the goal is to create
|
|
a specific sound in concert. Replicating perfectly a pre-defined part is
|
|
ideal.
|
|
|
|
2. Musical performance is a form of self-expression and the goal is to
|
|
communicate the thoughts, feelings, and emotions of the musician.
|
|
Creating music that is honest about the feelings of the performer is ideal.
|
|
|
|
Classical, orchestral music is the stereotype of the first model. The individual
|
|
musicians subordinate their individual expression to the purpose and goal of the
|
|
broader band. You have a part to play and you do not deviate from that part.
|
|
|
|
Jazz is the stereotype of the second model where an emphasis is placed on the
|
|
improvisation of the members. Often the written music serves only as a
|
|
guideline or structural base for what the musicians will play.
|
|
|
|
Of course, these are simplifications. Actual musical performance lives in
|
|
between these extremes. In the orchestral setting obviously emotional playing is
|
|
crucial to the performance, but it's happening on the level of the group, not
|
|
the individual. And in jazz you still have structure, even if it is emergent:
|
|
not scripted. Any time you have more than one person playing you have to have
|
|
some sort of syncronization. There is a reason that you very rarely see large
|
|
groups of player all improvising at the same time. Look at big band jazz, for
|
|
example, and you see a lot of the same structure as the orchestra!
|
|
|
|
So where do we sit? Well, close to the middle, I think. We have music that we
|
|
are asked to play. But this is not just a performance. We are part of the
|
|
worship service so our playing is a personal expression to some extent. Music is
|
|
part of how I express myself to the Lord, how I worship Him. A lot of that
|
|
happens on the platform here.
|
|
|
|
But, we are also leading the congregation in worship. It is not purely about our
|
|
self-expression of praise to God, but also about creating an atmosphere that
|
|
makes it easy for members of the congregation to express their praise and
|
|
worship. We do this as a part of a larger team. I'm working together with the
|
|
other musicians, and with the praise singers.
|
|
|
|
In many ways a worship team can be more free-flowing and improvisational than a
|
|
typical band, because it is this expression of worship. At the same time that
|
|
freedom of expression exists within the larger context of the church body. In 1
|
|
Corinthians Paul talked about the body of Christ:
|
|
|
|
> **12** Just as a body, though one, has many parts, but all its many parts
|
|
> form one body, so it is with Christ. **13** For we were all baptized by one
|
|
> Spirit so as to form one body—whether Jews or Gentiles, slave or free—and we
|
|
> were all given the one Spirit to drink. **14** Even so the body is not made up
|
|
> of one part but of many.
|
|
|
|
> **24b** God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that
|
|
> lacked it, **25** so that there should be no division in the body, but that
|
|
> its parts should have equal concern for each other. **26** If one part
|
|
> suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part
|
|
> rejoices with it.
|
|
|
|
This truth applies in the context of music as well!
|
|
|
|
*Purpose for this section: setup the motivation for growth. Frame the musician
|
|
as a thinking, feeling agent in the music-making process. All individually
|
|
responsible for the collective end-result.*
|
|
|
|
### Attitudes of the Musician
|
|
|
|
* Humility: we are all in service to the music.
|
|
* Curiosity
|
|
* Playfulness
|
|
* Tastefullness/Discernment
|
|
|
|
### Paying attention/levels of thinking.
|
|
|
|
There is this guy, Benjamin Bloom, who categorized educational goald into six levels of thinking:
|
|
|
|
1. gathering knowledge
|
|
2. comprehending and confirming
|
|
3. applying knowledge
|
|
4. analyzing: thinking about a whole in terms of it's various parts
|
|
5. synthesizing: putting parts together to form a whole, many parts into a new
|
|
whole
|
|
6. evaluating: making comparisons and judgements. What worked best?
|
|
|
|
I know a lot of what I'm sayin some of you already know. It's easy to zone out.
|
|
I know because I catch myself doing it all the time. Instead, let's pay active
|
|
attention, even to the things we know. Work your way up the levels. If you've
|
|
already mastered what I'm saying, be analyzing it, or evaluating it. Maybe you
|
|
have something to contribute.
|
|
|
|
### On Practice
|
|
|
|
*Discuss my views on "Natural Talent" vs practice & hard work.*
|
|
|
|
Effective practice:
|
|
|
|
* has well-defined, specific goals,
|
|
|
|
Aimless exploration has a place, and just playing for fun has a place. Those
|
|
are great, and I'm not saying you shouldn't do them. I probably spend just as
|
|
much time playing for fun as I do actually practising, because I like playing
|
|
music. But that's not practice. The point of practice is to improve something.
|
|
|
|
When we do sit down to practice, we should have a clear, measurable goal. For
|
|
example, I want to learn the chorus pattern from Glorious by Martha Munizzi.
|
|
Or I want to improve my sense of rythym. Good goal, how are you going to
|
|
measure it? I'm going to choose some rythmic pattern and play it along with a
|
|
metronome. I'll record myself and that's how I'll judge my progress.
|
|
|
|
* is focused,
|
|
|
|
Practice is not always fun. Y'all are all adults, so this is probably
|
|
something you have already learned. I learned to enjoy practice because I
|
|
enjoy the results. I try to choose things the practice that I like doing. But
|
|
even then, often I don't want to get started. Practice needs to be focused,
|
|
with effort.
|
|
|
|
* incorporates immediate feedback,
|
|
|
|
Again, the whole point of practice is specifically to improve something. The
|
|
time we spend practicing affects how we play. When I was in band in school we
|
|
had practice logs. You had to practice so long a week and get your parents to
|
|
sign off on your time. You would sometimes see these kids who would have a
|
|
full sheet, but still play horribly.
|
|
|
|
"Did you practice?"
|
|
|
|
"Yeah"
|
|
|
|
"How did you practice?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know, I just played the music."
|
|
|
|
What happened is they just mindlessly played through the music over and over,
|
|
not paying particular attention to how *well* they played it. They'd practiced
|
|
for hours playing it poorly, so of course when they performed they played it
|
|
poorly. When you are practicing, if you make a mistake, stop and immediately
|
|
correct it. This is why many teachers tell you to play it slow first until you
|
|
have it correctly, then speed up. You will play the way you practice, so make
|
|
sure you practice it correctly!
|
|
|
|
But this goes beyond just am I playing the right notes. This is where
|
|
tastefulness and discernment come into play. When I personally practice I am
|
|
constantly asking myself, "Do I like what I just played?" or put another way:
|
|
"If I was in the band recording this for a record, would I be proud of it?"
|
|
How does it compare to the original artists? Does it sound good? Is it good?
|
|
This requires that you have good musical taste and discernment!
|
|
|
|
It's also very subjective, and I've found that there is a difference between
|
|
how things *feel* while you're playing, and how they *sound* as a listener.
|
|
So, one of your best practice aids is a small audio recorder. Record yourself
|
|
as you practice, then play it back and listen to yourself critically. Be mean!
|
|
This requires courage! You have to be able to say, "OK, that sucked, but I'll
|
|
get better." Don't quit playing. It can be easy to get drowned in all the
|
|
things you did wrong, but if you can learn to ignore how far you have to go
|
|
and focus on what--specifically--you can improve, then you are in a good
|
|
place. Comes back to humility.
|
|
|
|
Here are some of the kinds of things that I have noticed in my own playing
|
|
when doing this:
|
|
|
|
* My timing is off.
|
|
* I'm wrong on some of the notes in that run.
|
|
* It doesn't feel like it does when Y plays it. He sounds so smooth, my run
|
|
sounds jerky/stilted/not grooving.
|
|
* I'm not getting the dynamics quite right.
|
|
* He's playing some other stuff I missed when I first learned this. I need to
|
|
go back and re-listen again now that I know the line better to pick up
|
|
those subtle differences
|
|
* They're voicing this chord a little different than I am.
|
|
* The tone of his bass is different and sounds better in this situation. What
|
|
is it about that tone and how do I replicate that? Is he playing that part
|
|
higher on the neck?
|
|
|
|
Then you identify how to fix that, and work on it. This is where a teacher, or
|
|
others can help. I'm happy to offer ideas about how to practice things
|
|
|
|
The key is, you need to get immediate feedback and address it. Working with a
|
|
teacher is great because they can offer feedback based on their greater
|
|
experience, but to maximize the effectiveness of your practice you need to be
|
|
evaluating yourself as you practice.
|
|
|
|
* pushes the boundaries of your comfort zone.
|
|
|
|
If you are practicing something that you are already really good at then you
|
|
are not improving. The point of practice is to improve something. That means
|
|
you have to work on something that needs improvement.
|
|
|
|
Howver, it is possible to overreach. You need to work something that is far
|
|
enough outside your comfort zone that you have to strecth, but not so far that
|
|
you can't reach it at all. We want to fail, but be able to learn from the
|
|
failures.
|
|
|
|
You can and should adjust the difficulty of your practice on your own to find
|
|
the sweet spot. Too easy and you don't progress. Too hard and it's no fun,
|
|
it's frustrating, you burn out, and you don't progress.
|
|
|
|
Learn to simplify. For example, if I'm learning a new song on drums, first I
|
|
may try to get the basic pattern and stick to basic fills. Then when I can
|
|
easily keep the tempo steady and navigate the fills without drifting from the
|
|
tempo, I'll learn the accents that the drummer who recorded it added. Then I'll
|
|
work on the specific fills they used.
|
|
|
|
Or on bass, first I'll learn the basic bass line based on the chord
|
|
progression. Then I'll listen for alterations the original bassist added. Then
|
|
I'll work on unison runs they do. Then I'll listen for ornamentation that the
|
|
original bassist added and try to learn that.
|
|
|
|
If I'm learning a run or a hard passage, I'll slow it down to where I can play
|
|
it comfortably. Then I'll bump it up 5bpm at a time until it's hard but
|
|
doable. Then I'll practice that, correctly. If it's too fast for me to play
|
|
correctly, I'll slow down until it is easy at the slower tempo and possible at
|
|
the faster tempo. Keep going until it is easy at the original tempo. Now I
|
|
have the lick, and more generally, I've added all the patterns from that lick
|
|
to my muscle memory. I can re-use the lick, or parts of the lick in other
|
|
places. Maybe I'll even practice that.
|
|
|
|
Practicing time: practice with a click. Set the click to 1-2-3-4. Practice
|
|
your rythym. Now put the click at half the tempo, and make it only 1 and 3. Do
|
|
it again. Same tempo, but put the click on 2 and 4 now. Do it again. Half the
|
|
click again, only on 1. Again, only on 2, then only on 3, then only on 4. Take
|
|
these excercises and vary the tempo. How slow can you go (in small increments)
|
|
and still keep the tempo steady? How fast? It's not about showing off to
|
|
yourself, it's about pushing your boundaries. If you feel like you have really
|
|
solid time, push yourself more. Can you put the click on just the 8th after 1
|
|
and 3? Move it around on other 8ths. 16ths? What if you combine these with
|
|
other excercises?
|