Alexander Technique Articles:
How can the Technique be applied to music and playing an
instrument?
Some musicians find a way of managing
themselves that ensures they will always be able to play wonderful
music, with no strain to themselves. That is not the story for
everybody.
Again, it’s down to stimulus and reaction.
Music is an enormous stimulus that we may or may not react
to. Even just standing looking at the instrument or thinking
of the music, is enough to agitate and over-excite a musician.
The habits we enact in non-music related parts of our lives
are, in the vast majority of cases, hugely exaggerated when
music or an instrument enter the equation.
Musicians frequently refuse to play on defective instruments,
but can be completely oblivious as to the defective, distorted
way they are applying themselves. Pupils find it revelatory
to discover how frequently (several times a bar) they want
to completely distort the basic relationship of their body,
just because they are about to produce a particular note.
Instead of a musician being in the necessary overall state
that is required to produce a note that demands skill, accuracy
and precision, the musician at the vital moment suddenly makes
an undetected involuntary jerky movement in themselves. Even
a slight jerky action is enough to affect the quality of the
note.
The musician hears there is something undesirable about the
note and tries again. Without eliminating the jerky reaction
to producing or changing a note, which the musician may or
may not be aware of, that note is never going to sound right.
A musician will never produce a satisfactory start to a note,
a legato phrase, or have the necessary stamina, if their way
of doing things involves jerky movements and defective co-ordination
of themselves. I very much doubt that any instrumental or
singing teacher would recommend this as helpful to the music,
or if any pupil would deliberately build this into their technique,
yet this is frequently what develops. Practising in this blind
way will only reinforce the habits, making life more difficult
for the musician, and guaranteeing they can no longer play
as well as they once could. If this carries on unchecked this
becomes the way of playing. It is very scary for a musician
to realise that what comes out is not predictable. The musician
starts to live in a state of anxiety.
“What can you do about the next
note while you are playing this one?”
- Pablo Casals.
In Alexander work we learn the difference between “thinking”
and “doing”. Every musician I have ever worked
with admits that “think ahead” is stressed as
an essential part of playing fluently. However, most of us
mistake “think ahead” for “do ahead”.
Convinced we are only thinking of the next note, in reality
we have started physically preparing it. Shifts, chords, bow
changes, breaths and words are all anticipated, resulting
in the note or rest we are actually playing suffering from
our attention wandering, and the muscles starting their over-excitable
patterns which can lead to discomfort and tension. (In Alexander
work this anticipation is called end gaining.) This
preparatory reaction causes physical distortions and a change
in the focus of the musician at the precise moment that they
need to be working at their optimum efficiency.
Musicians hear this in the music, and may spend hours practising
to eliminate these blemishes, with varying degrees of success
if there is no real mechanism in place to discover the source
of the problem. Frequently a musician is misled into believing
they should prepare ahead more! All they are doing are reinforcing
habits of end gaining and mind wandering.
As Pablo Casals asked Vivien Mackie in her cello lessons “What
can you do about the next note while you are playing this
one?” Her answer of course was “nothing”.
That to me sums up what we can learn from Alexander Technique
in its application to music.
For further reading I suggest:
“Just Play Naturally” by Vivien Mackie.
This is a delightful account of ‘her Cello study with
Pablo Casals in the 1950’s and her discovery of the
resonance between his teaching and the principles of the Alexander
Technique’.
|