I can't count the times I've heard taiko people make a remark similar to "I wish I had (insert player or group name here)'s talent." Sure, it would be great to have more ability to make things easier for us in the long run, but there is something in struggling that often makes for a stronger player.
Consider that while the person with more talent might have had an easier start and gone farther faster, the person who took longer to get to the same point and struggled on the way had to learn how to make the best of their time. It may have taken the "struggler" twice as long to get there but they've likely had to understand their body more so than the person who cruised through without having to consider the details. In that understanding comes growth.
Consider that the person with more talent might not be as good at learning in workshops taught by other people, with other groups, or learning other skills. In not being challenged as much as they progress, I've seen talented people get really frustrated when all of a sudden, they're not "getting it". Those who have had trouble "getting it" over months and years and have struggled to do so already have a coping mechanism in place.
Consider that the person with more talent might not necessarily be a very good teacher, which is unfortunately something I have seen a lot of over the years. Someone naturally really good at what they do still needs to understand why they're good at it before they can impart those skills in others. Simply having the desire to isn't enough. A person who has struggled to understand someone else's concept (a.k.a. being taught) for a while may very well have a better time understanding how to then transmit their own.
In addition (and perhaps contrary to) that is the value in struggling to understand what an instructor is trying to teach you. If someone has something good to teach but you aren't getting it, the act of trying to figure out what the lesson is forces you to learn something. In that struggle, you have to figure out how to use the tools you're given and the possibilities. You may arrive at the wrong answer, but you've learned something in the process. The alternative to this is is the expectation to be spoon-fed information, to have the answers given to you, and simply do what you're told. In practice this sounds like the faster way to "learn" something, but like I've been saying all through this post, when you don't appreciate what the struggle gives you, you find yourself hitting frustration after frustration down the road because you haven't learned nearly what you thought you had.
I don't mean to imply that it's bad to have talent, that people with talent have issues, or that struggling inherently makes you a better person - of course not! Having talent is great but as shown above, can also be limiting when relied on too much.
Appreciating the art of the struggle isn't always easy but you can - and should - learn something from it, even if it's an art you'd rather not practice!
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Monday, January 21, 2013
Question Everything: Striking hard
In general, taiko are loud instruments. Big surface, big drumsticks, big motions...all leading to some big sounds!
Yes, there are dynamics in many songs where there are quieter notes on purpose, but when it's ok to play loud, do you ever think about how loud you're playing?
I see too many players default to striking as hard as they can, just short of brutalizing the drum. I can't tell if it's out of frustration/anger, lack of awareness, or what. It makes me wince. This mostly happens during solos, but also sometimes during the course of a song. It's like having someone screaming at me.
Over-hitting the drum is more than just bad technique or bad for the drum. It actually distorts the sound. There's no "body" to the strike, no warmth, no "oomph". It's just THWACK. And while THWACK can have a place in music - like the sforzando in Western music does - it's brutal to the ears after once or twice in taiko. A solo made up of strikes like that is downright offensive to the ears.
Hitting as hard as you can also prevents you from developing control: doro tsuku becomes doro doro at faster tempos, and/or your arms don't know how not to get tense during tricky rhythms. While this happens to all of us, it happens more sooner and more often to those who default to thwacking because they're not developing fine motor control over their movements.
Finally, if you can't hear yourself thwacking, then you're not listening to yourself and the relationship to those around you. It's just like getting off-tempo during a song and not noticing. You might be thinking "I'm giving it my all!" but what's coming out is "I'm totally unaware of my output!" If someone came up to you and started telling you about their day by screaming, how long do you think you'd enjoy that for?
So what's the solution? I recommend finding a way to get some time to play by yourself and experimenting with how hard you really need to hit to get a good sound. Listen for when you cross from "loud" to "harsh". Force yourself to practice with this concept in mind, for as long as it takes. If you really want this to sink in, have people listen to you and tell you when you're hitting too hard. You'll find that being that accountable will make you shape up very quickly.
If you're playing really loud because you want to be heard, you definitely will be - much like shouting through a megaphone into someone's face will get you heard. Make the taiko sing for you, not scream!
Yes, there are dynamics in many songs where there are quieter notes on purpose, but when it's ok to play loud, do you ever think about how loud you're playing?
I see too many players default to striking as hard as they can, just short of brutalizing the drum. I can't tell if it's out of frustration/anger, lack of awareness, or what. It makes me wince. This mostly happens during solos, but also sometimes during the course of a song. It's like having someone screaming at me.
Over-hitting the drum is more than just bad technique or bad for the drum. It actually distorts the sound. There's no "body" to the strike, no warmth, no "oomph". It's just THWACK. And while THWACK can have a place in music - like the sforzando in Western music does - it's brutal to the ears after once or twice in taiko. A solo made up of strikes like that is downright offensive to the ears.
Hitting as hard as you can also prevents you from developing control: doro tsuku becomes doro doro at faster tempos, and/or your arms don't know how not to get tense during tricky rhythms. While this happens to all of us, it happens more sooner and more often to those who default to thwacking because they're not developing fine motor control over their movements.
Finally, if you can't hear yourself thwacking, then you're not listening to yourself and the relationship to those around you. It's just like getting off-tempo during a song and not noticing. You might be thinking "I'm giving it my all!" but what's coming out is "I'm totally unaware of my output!" If someone came up to you and started telling you about their day by screaming, how long do you think you'd enjoy that for?
So what's the solution? I recommend finding a way to get some time to play by yourself and experimenting with how hard you really need to hit to get a good sound. Listen for when you cross from "loud" to "harsh". Force yourself to practice with this concept in mind, for as long as it takes. If you really want this to sink in, have people listen to you and tell you when you're hitting too hard. You'll find that being that accountable will make you shape up very quickly.
If you're playing really loud because you want to be heard, you definitely will be - much like shouting through a megaphone into someone's face will get you heard. Make the taiko sing for you, not scream!
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Making it difficult.
There was an article in the Economist recently about how Jack White, former front singer for the White Stripes, purposefully makes things difficult for himself. He uses cheap guitars that may not hold their shape or tuning, or positions instruments far apart from each other so that he has to run across between them while performing. For him, when music gets too easy, it becomes harder to make it sing.
Taking "the easy way" is something we all do at one time or another, but it can also lead to things like:
Having some "easy" things gives us balance. The danger is when you actively choose "easy" as your preferred path.
When you've played a song a hundred, thousand, or even fifty thousand times, it's REALLY easy to not give it your all. Maybe you don't want to sweat, maybe it's a performance where you don't have to try hard, maybe you know no one's watching you...but what kind of product are you making? How is that making you any better? Do it enough and it becomes a habit, and soon it's your default mode: bland.
When you spoon-feed students too much, you don't let them think for themselves. They don't discover, they expect. They don't confront challenges, they wait. After a while, they lose the patience/ability to think for themselves, which limits their growth. There's also a relation to the bland product above, because where's the motivation to push for themselves unless they're being explicitly made to?
This "easy" can also seep into decision making. I talk about risk a lot, but it needn't go that far. Maybe you can squeeze one more song/drill run-through before practice ends...or is it "easier" to just end early? If song X takes a few extra minutes to sign up for but song Y is "easier", which one do you tend to want to play? The solo you do in song Z every time is pretty easy for you to do now, but how much is it also holding you back?
I definitely make things difficult for myself. Sometimes to the point where people in the group have told me to not do something, because it's distracting/too weird/doesn't fit in. And there are a few things I know I do "easy", like one particular song where I have a set solo - and have for about a year now.
A slide is fun and doesn't take a lot of effort - but it's a short ride and when it's over, you're at the bottom. The ladder requires effort but it lasts a long time and you rise higher and higher...
Taking "the easy way" is something we all do at one time or another, but it can also lead to things like:
- A bland product.
- Stagnant progress.
- Students who can't think for themselves.
Having some "easy" things gives us balance. The danger is when you actively choose "easy" as your preferred path.
When you've played a song a hundred, thousand, or even fifty thousand times, it's REALLY easy to not give it your all. Maybe you don't want to sweat, maybe it's a performance where you don't have to try hard, maybe you know no one's watching you...but what kind of product are you making? How is that making you any better? Do it enough and it becomes a habit, and soon it's your default mode: bland.
When you spoon-feed students too much, you don't let them think for themselves. They don't discover, they expect. They don't confront challenges, they wait. After a while, they lose the patience/ability to think for themselves, which limits their growth. There's also a relation to the bland product above, because where's the motivation to push for themselves unless they're being explicitly made to?
This "easy" can also seep into decision making. I talk about risk a lot, but it needn't go that far. Maybe you can squeeze one more song/drill run-through before practice ends...or is it "easier" to just end early? If song X takes a few extra minutes to sign up for but song Y is "easier", which one do you tend to want to play? The solo you do in song Z every time is pretty easy for you to do now, but how much is it also holding you back?
I definitely make things difficult for myself. Sometimes to the point where people in the group have told me to not do something, because it's distracting/too weird/doesn't fit in. And there are a few things I know I do "easy", like one particular song where I have a set solo - and have for about a year now.
A slide is fun and doesn't take a lot of effort - but it's a short ride and when it's over, you're at the bottom. The ladder requires effort but it lasts a long time and you rise higher and higher...
Monday, January 14, 2013
Comparisons
It's pretty natural to compare yourself to other people in your group.The problem begins when those comparisons limit your development.
I heard of someone who was auditioning for a group with a few other candidates. I'll call this person Zed. When Zed was told their skills weren't good enough, their explanation was that they had gotten to a level that was better than the others and so Zed felt he/she was "safe". Three problems:
Maybe with a group that's more competitive than this one, the strategy wouldn't have been as bad, but if you're going to use it you better be damned well sure you really are better in what counts.
The even bigger problem is what that attitude/strategy brings with it. Who wants someone in their group who's only going to practice to get "good enough" at something? Who's ever going to inspire someone by doing "just enough"? What sort of work ethic does that person bring to a group?
It's one thing to be strapped for time and only be able to do "good enough". It's another thing to not be able to achieve more than "just enough" due to a lack of ability. But when it's your intention from the start, you're basically telling yourself (and everyone around you) that you don't care, that it's not important to do more.
So ask yourself - when you compare yourselves to others, do you limit your goals based on those benchmarks? Is that all you want to be?
Be more, if not for your group then for yourself!
I heard of someone who was auditioning for a group with a few other candidates. I'll call this person Zed. When Zed was told their skills weren't good enough, their explanation was that they had gotten to a level that was better than the others and so Zed felt he/she was "safe". Three problems:
- Zed's evaluation of being "better" than the others was based on personal opinion and not necessarily true.
- The others didn't make it into the group, so even if Zed was better by a little bit, it still wasn't enough.
- Zed's attitude of only trying hard enough to do better than the others was a huge red flag for the evaluators.
Maybe with a group that's more competitive than this one, the strategy wouldn't have been as bad, but if you're going to use it you better be damned well sure you really are better in what counts.
The even bigger problem is what that attitude/strategy brings with it. Who wants someone in their group who's only going to practice to get "good enough" at something? Who's ever going to inspire someone by doing "just enough"? What sort of work ethic does that person bring to a group?
It's one thing to be strapped for time and only be able to do "good enough". It's another thing to not be able to achieve more than "just enough" due to a lack of ability. But when it's your intention from the start, you're basically telling yourself (and everyone around you) that you don't care, that it's not important to do more.
So ask yourself - when you compare yourselves to others, do you limit your goals based on those benchmarks? Is that all you want to be?
Be more, if not for your group then for yourself!
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Sounds like taiko
If you were to close your eyes and listen to your own solo, would it sound musical?
Does your solo have phrasing? Does it groove? Or is it a series of unconnected notes? In the heat of the moment what you play may sound great in your head, but sometimes you need to really listen to what you play.
A person's ki may sell a solo, sure. But ultimately, taiko is a musical form and that's what you're doing - music.
Think of a live concert (even if you've never been to one). The feel of the audience all grooving to the same beat is infectious, but the key term there is beat. If there's no clear rhythm to lock into and follow along, there's no grooving to be done.
I'm pretty sure all of you listen to music, right? Even if you have weird songs that don't have repetitive patterns and rhythms, I'll bet 95% of what you listen to does. So why should your solo be any different from the music you like?
Think musically, play musically. It may not happen right away, but when it does, it makes a HUGE difference!
Does your solo have phrasing? Does it groove? Or is it a series of unconnected notes? In the heat of the moment what you play may sound great in your head, but sometimes you need to really listen to what you play.
A person's ki may sell a solo, sure. But ultimately, taiko is a musical form and that's what you're doing - music.
Think of a live concert (even if you've never been to one). The feel of the audience all grooving to the same beat is infectious, but the key term there is beat. If there's no clear rhythm to lock into and follow along, there's no grooving to be done.
I'm pretty sure all of you listen to music, right? Even if you have weird songs that don't have repetitive patterns and rhythms, I'll bet 95% of what you listen to does. So why should your solo be any different from the music you like?
Think musically, play musically. It may not happen right away, but when it does, it makes a HUGE difference!
Monday, January 7, 2013
Humor.
Humor in taiko is one of those tricky things.No one wants to be a group of clowns, but then again no one wants to be bland. Some groups are pretty intense and don't use humor, other groups like levity and use it a lot.
A lot of humor I've seen is...almost there, but more on the painful side than the funny side. I get what people are trying to accomplish but it's either not been practiced enough or is really funny to the people doing it without the audience getting the joke.
If you're going to do something funny, you have to get outside eyes to watch and comment. Otherwise you really do risk creating something awkward, like when a comedian "dies on stage". And no matter how side-splittingly funny it might be to your entire group, if it's not funny to someone who doesn't have the right context, you run into the same problem.
I'm not against funny skits or silly sections in a show, but when it's not funny, it really is hard to watch. On the flip side, sometimes a little bit of humor has a huge impact! I've seen bad jokes told well, and corny sight gags warm up an audience.
Just remember, humor's not something that can be thought of as an after-thought without risking some "damage" to your product. Plan accordingly!
Thursday, January 3, 2013
Audience I.Q.
In a chapter from David Byrne’s “How
Music Works” he explains how he invited a famous Peking
Opera actor to observe a Talking Heads concert.
One piece of advice the actor gave was that you need to let the audience
know something is going to happen before it happens. When David questioned that advice, (why would
you want to ruin a surprise, for example) the gist of the answer was “audiences
are dumb”.
Now, this wasn’t meant to insult
the intelligence of the members so to speak, but that to state when you’re
trying to show the audience this really cool thing over HERE, half of them may
be looking over THERE instead. You see
this all the time with people filming taiko – they’ll record 2 minutes of
someone playing a straight beat in the back while an awesome solo is happening
five feet away.
This phenomenon happens a lot when people
make mistakes, too: someone drops their bachi on stage and later a friend or
family member says “I didn’t see that!
When did you drop it?” It’s not always a bad thing when they miss
something, but it tells you that there’s truth to the advice given above.
On the other hand, sometimes the
audience picks up what no one else caught or thinks about. We’ve been asked questions about the position
of our knot in our obi, certain drum angles, ethnicity and gender ratios, and other questions
that would be very hard to predict. When
we started using a different manufacture of taiko, several people noticed the
change in sound as well.
Let’s face it – often we are the
audience, watching a performance. We think we’re
catching it all but who really knows?
Ever have a friend (or a crowd of people) react in awe to something and you having to ask
“what? What happened?” It happens to us all.
Sometimes what
you plan in your head for a soloing move may not be seen by the audience, even
if they’re looking right at you.
Both subtle things and fancy things can easily
get lost no matter how much you’ve worked on something, no matter how cool you
think it is.
What the audience does tend to notice
is confidence. Confidence “sells”. The most practiced, the most comfortable
players have that kind of confidence, EVEN IF THEY’RE NOT THE MOST
SKILLED. I can’t stress that
enough! A simple pattern, delivered with
repetition by a confident player, will have more impact on the audience than
anything fancy or done with a frantic look.
That’s not to say they won’t get bored after 30 seconds of a confident don don don
don don don don… Is an audience’s
ability to hone in on confidence easily a good thing? Does it mean they're "smarter" because of that ability or "dumber" because they're drawn to it?
To sum up? The audience is dumber than you expect, but smarter than you
realize.
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