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Title: | * * Computer Music, MIDI, and Related Topics * * |
Notice: | Conference has been write-locked. Use new version. |
Moderator: | DYPSS1::SCHAFER |
|
Created: | Thu Feb 20 1986 |
Last Modified: | Mon Aug 29 1994 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 2852 |
Total number of notes: | 33157 |
2793.0. "The Listening Book, Discovering Your Own Music" by LASSIE::SWARTZ () Wed Dec 18 1991 12:36
Several weeks while scouring the music section of
the Concord Bookshop I ran across a book titled: "The
Listening Book", subtitled "Discovering Your Own Music"
by W.A. Mathieu.
The book is wonderful. The author gives many insights
and suggestions /exercises into listening to sound.
I've already used some of his suggestions in my own
practice (keyboard).
From the back cover of the book:
"The Listening Book is about rediscovering the power
of listening as an instrument of self-discovery and
personal transformation. By exploring our capacity
for listening to sounds and for making music, we can
awaken and release our full creative powers. Mathieu
offers suggestions and encouragement on many aspects
of music-making, and provides playful exercies to help
readers appreciate the connection between sound, music
and everyday life.
W. A. Mathieu is a composer, musician, and teacher
whose career has included work with Second City, Duke
Ellington, the San Francisco Conservatory, Mills Col-
lege, and the Sufi Choir. He Has recorded several
solo piano albums, including Available Light (Windham
Hill)."
From a "chapter" titled "Mistakes"
"We ordinarily use mistakes to fuel self-denial, as
a proof of our incompetence. But since mistakes are
inevitable, try turning them instead to your best
advantage. Embrace your mistakes; accept the self who
makes them. This is the creative response, one that
allows music to find its true shape inside you.
Page 2
Mistakes are your best friends. They bring a message.
They tell you what to do next and light the way. They
come about because you have not understood something,
or have learned something incompletely. They tell you
that you are moving too fast, or looking in the wrong
direction.
Mistakes might be detailed instructions on how to take
apart and rewire physical motions, muscle by muscle. Or
they might show you where you have not heard clearly.
where you have to open up the music and listen again in
a new way. Examine a mistake as if you had found a rare
stone. Run over the edges of it with your tongue. Peer
inside the cracks of it. Hold it up to the sun, turning
it a little this way and that. When you have learned
what you can from it, toss it away casually, as if you
did'nt expect to see it again. If it shows up later,
be patient and polite, and make a new accomodation. A
mistake knows when it isn't needed, and eventually will
leave for good.
The goal is not to make music free of mistakes. The
goal is to be complete in learning, and to grow well."
The book is published by Shambhala Publications,
Inc. Horticultural Hall, 300 Massachusetts Avenue,
Boston, Massachusetts, 02115. ISBN: 0-87773-610-3.
Price $10.00.
Concord Bookshop
65 Main St
Concord. MA 01742
508-369-2405
Ed Swartz
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2793.1 | R. Murray Shafer | PIANST::JANZEN | Thomas MLO21-4/E10 223-5140 | Wed Dec 18 1991 13:09 | 11 |
| If you like that, read The Tuning of the World (have an autographed
copy) and EarCLeaning by
R. Murray Shafer. "Tuning" is partly about this topic, and mostly
about sound polution in the city etc. Ear Cleaning is right up
.0's alley.
Find a piece by Pauline Oliveros in an old Soundings called Sonic
Meditations.
Read John Cage. The attitude about mistakes is his, maybe I'll
find a 50-year-old quote from his books for you.
Tom
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2793.2 | | JANUS::CWALSH | The Man Who Knew Too Often | Thu Dec 19 1991 03:55 | 8 |
| >Mistakes are your best friends.
That's not what I heard from the man who failed me in my Grade 5 Flute exam. I
rather think his attitude tended towards "Mistakes are Nature's way of telling
you you're going to have to re-take this exam". :-)
Chris
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