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The War on Music

We have to realize that not everyone out there loves music. NTTAWWT! (Sorry, just wanted to use one of those cool texting acronyms: "not that there's anything wrong with that".) But every now and then I run into what I have come to realize is a "traditional witticism", that is to say, an easily available, because requiring no creativity, kind of joke. For example, many years ago I recall reading a Dagwood and Blondie cartoon where Dagwood is in his living room, picks up a ukulele and starts to strum on it. A complete stranger passing by, comes into the house, takes the ukulele and smashes it, then walks out. In the last panel, Dagwood is just standing there. I can't find that one, but here is another one on the same theme:

Click to enlarge
This traditional witticism about how awful and annoying it is when someone decides to learn a musical instrument continues right to the present day as this article demonstrates. Underneath a photo of someone carrying an electric guitar the text reads:

The Electric Guitar

In the hands of a master, the guitar is an amazing mixture of music, sex and fire-breathing dragons. In the hands of the kid down the street with an amp and a fuzz box, it’s an endless loop of the first three notes of a Limp Bizkit song. Who knew you could make Limp Bizkit sound worse? Are you learning to play the guitar? That’s awesome! Buy headphones.
 You see? In the hands of a professional, the guitar is wonderful, but in the hands of an ordinary person, the kid down the street, say, it is a horror. Sure, there is some truth to this, but don't you think that this particular thread in the fabric of our culture is what discourages young people and their children from learning a musical instrument? And is this a good thing? Isn't learning to play a musical instrument one of the best ways for children to learn the virtues of patience and discipline? Not to mention awaken their aesthetic sense?

UPDATE: And, coincidentally, I ran across this link to a study of the benefits of "active engagement in music." Here is an interesting quote:
Now Ms. Parbery-Clark and her colleagues can look at recordings of the brain’s electrical detection of sounds, and they can see the musically trained brains producing different — and stronger — responses. “Now I have more proof, tangible proof, music is really doing something,” she told me. “One of my lab mates can look at the computer and say, ‘Oh, you’re recording from a musician!’ ”
 There are other ways to tell. In my first year German language class, the first time we were in the language lab, trying to imitate the sounds of the German language on a tape, the instructor, who was clicking around listening in to the students work, stopped when she got to me and said: "oh, you're the music student!" Each year there were always one or two music majors in her class and she could easily tell who they were because they picked up the German accent quickly.

More Basic Materials of Music

Lots of people seem to have read my previous post, even though no-one left a comment, so I'm going to do a followup. I'm not going to give an online course in reading music, music theory or playing guitar. There are lots of those available already. What I can do is point you to the ones that seem the most useful. I just looked at some of what's out there and most of them are not very good. They are either clumsily written, excessively trippy or dull. But if you want a good, thorough approach you might have to put up with a bit of dull! Here is a pretty good place to start:

http://www.wikihow.com/Read-Music

Teoria is a more serious site that has various tutorials. Here is the one on reading music:

http://www.teoria.com/tutorials/reading/index.php

They also have sound examples, which is a big help. Though their metronome doesn't seem to have a very good rhythmic sense! Or maybe it is just my internet connection.

Here is an online course that includes both reading and music theory:

http://www.musictheory.net/lessons

Here is a blog on music theory:

http://musictheoryblog.blogspot.mx/

I'm not making guarantees about these sites as I just took a brief tour of them, but all of these look pretty good.

I'm wondering if perhaps we might be on the verge of a new era in teaching music. Services like Skype might allow students to learn from teachers that are geographically remote. But in the meantime, I have to recommend that you find a real, live teacher. There are free online courses, but most of them put me to sleep!

http://www.classic-guitar.com/lesson1.html

That is way too 'talky'. I think it is best to just start playing, put the fingers on the guitar, adjust the position. After a bit, show how notes look like written down, etc, etc. But don't load the student down with a bunch of philosophy and precepts that can have no real traction for them yet.

Here are a couple of pretty good teachers in action:



Despite the guitar's Spanish heritage, English is the international language of guitar masterclasses--even in Spain!

Learning Music as an Adult

Currently I have the smallest group of students that I have ever had since I started teaching. What is the collective noun for 'students'? Stable? Coterie? Herd? Covey? In any case, my very tiny group now includes two adult beginners, one of whom is a retired psychologist and the other a retired electrician. In over thirty years of teaching I have had many young beginners and older beginners: seven years old to seventy. So you could say I have practical knowledge about the subject.

Am I a good teacher? Judging by results, I seem to be doing ok. A friend emailed me to mention that an adult friend of his had tried to take up the guitar, but gave up after one or two unsatisfying lessons. That can happen. My response was, try a different teacher. Of the two adults I am currently teaching, one just started a few months ago. By the end of the first lesson, he was reading simple notation. By the end of the first month he had learned to play a simple piece of music and by a couple of weeks later he had performed it in public. I schedule "guitar nights" every now and then specifically to give students a chance to play for others. Why did he progress so fast? I arrange things so that should happen. If you choose the right sort of things to start with, in the right order, you can progress pretty fast. Later on, things may slow down from time to time as some things just take a long time to absorb. But the initial progress is extremely important to give the student encouragement and excitement. My other adult student has been with me for several years and not only is he playing a lot of concert music (at the last guitar night he played the Alborada by Tarrega, a quite virtuosic little piece, and a fantasia by Francesco da Milano, with good contrapuntal sense), but he has just completed working his way through Aldwell and Schachter's 600 page textbook on harmony. He also composes.

So it is with considerable experience in realm of adult study of music, the guitar in particular, that I read the piece in today's Wall Street Journal. In case that link goes away, let me quote some relevant bits:
Can old dogs learn new tricks? Developmental psychologists have long said no. The so-called "critical periods" theory of learning says that if you want to learn something, start early in life... For years, the strongest evidence for youth as a once-in-a-lifetime period of learning seemed to come from animals. Take barn owls. Shortly after hatching, owl chicks calibrate their eyes with their ears. In a classic study, the Stanford biologist Eric Knudsen put prisms in front of owls' eyes, disrupting their normal capacity to link what they saw with what they heard. Young owls easily learned to compensate for the distortion, whereas old owls could not... My own dream had always been to learn a musical instrument, but every attempt, from grade school onward, had ended in failure. A few summers ago, at the age of 38, I decided to take one last shot.
To my surprise, there was scarcely any scientific literature on whether adults could really pick up an instrument late in life. The problem wasn't a lack of scientific interest in adult musical education. It was a lack of subjects.
To learn a musical instrument, you need to put in a lot of work—10,000 hours is a number that is often cited—and to do a proper study, you'd need a reasonably large sample of adult novices with sufficient commitment. Nobody had studied the outcomes of adults who put in 10,000 hours because so few adults were willing and able to invest that kind of time... First, and most important, take small steps and don't expect overnight success. It's not realistic to expect to develop professional-level skills instantaneously. Whether you want to paint, cook, pick up a sport or learn anything else, your brain will need a heavy dose of rewiring.
Musical instruments, for example, require the brain to coordinate eyes, ears and hands (in some cases, feet as well). Most of us know enough to make allowances when we hear a child play at their first recital, or paint their first painting, but we forget to cut ourselves the same slack. One reason that children sometimes outperform adults is that they don't worry nearly as much about how good they are and how they look; they just get to it.Also, remember the folk wisdom of generations: Practice every day, no matter what. Because you're taking small steps, you need to take a lot of them. Learning a skill depends on building new memories, and studies show that we learn new information most efficiently if we spread our practice out rather than trying to cram it all into a short period (like before a test).And practice strategically, always targeting your weakest skills. Studies show that with everything from chess to typing to soccer to music, deliberate practice aimed at remedying weaknesses is a better predictor of expertise than raw number of hours... It's also crucial to find a teacher who understands how you learn. The best guitarist in town may have once jammed with Carlos Santana, but that doesn't mean he can explain what you need to know, in terms you will understand. [my emphases]
 Let me see if I can adequately get across how much of this utterly enrages me! But before that, I have to say that there is quite a bit of truth here. It is the unexamined assumptions that are so awful. The first is the truly absurd assumption that scientists, specifically "developmental psychologists" and "biologists" are the first  place you go to find out something about learning music. Good god, why? Musicians have been teaching music forever; don't you think they have figured it out? This constant genuflecting to science as being the highest source of wisdom, even in the arts, is absurd beyond belief. Owls? Oh, please! And then the mindless reciting of the "10,000 hours" crap. When he does cite some real truths about learning music, he demeans them by calling it "folk wisdom". "Studies show" is a phrase that I have learned over the years to be extremely suspicious of. What most studies show, in my experience, is that when scientists try to figure out things artistic two things happen: either they are completely wrong, or they "discover" something we have known for a very long time.

The sentence "it's also crucial to find a teacher who understands how you learn" conceals another treacherous misunderstanding. No, it is not crucial to find a teacher who understands how you learn; it is crucial to find a teacher who understands how music works and what helps people--in general--learn. Yes, students are all different, in the sense that they have different sensitivities and capacities and obstacles, but how you handle this doesn't vary greatly from student to student. It really doesn't.

I don't think I have read a single article in the mainstream media this year about music that was not completely misleading. But that is why I started this blog!

How about some guitar music to end the year? Many years ago I had the pleasure of having Manuel Barrueco for a house guest for a few days. Not only a wonderful guitarist (one of the most precise and expressive there is), but a very keen and perceptive mind and a great sense of humor.


Oscar Ghiglia is not so well known as a performer, but here is a small sample. He is, however, one of the great guitar teachers. I spent two summers working with him in his master class at Banff, Alberta in the 1980s. A widely-read, cultured man, and one with with a special gift for the metaphor that reveals the musical expression.


Leo Brouwer is best known as a composer, but he is also a remarkable and unique guitarist. I think his best playing was on an album of Scarlatti sonatas:


Incidentally, when Manuel Barrueco was staying with me I played part of the album for him. He wasn't as taken with it as I was, but then he plays a lot of Scarlatti himself--quite differently!

Enjoy these less known guitarists and my best wishes to all my readers in the new year.
 
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