Teaching

The Seductive Pull of End-Gaining

As the school year draws to a close, we all yearn to be successfully moving on, don’t we? As in, DONE! Off to the beach or whatever is next.

Alas, this yearning leaves us in danger of falling prey to… THE SEDUCTIVE PULL OF END-GAINING! (#theseductivepullofendgaining… you saw it here first).

Both teachers and students are looking for the quickest way to resolve any remaining issues—like, before exams! The quickest, easiest, most painless way to dispatch “the thing”. And I’m afraid this leaves us in bocca di lupo…but only in the literal sense: “in the mouth of the wolf”, the wolf being the dreaded END-GAINING!

(Those amazing, crazy Italians, they say in bocca di lupo to wish someone good luck…huh?)

But WHAT, pray tell, is “END-GAINING”?

End-gaining is a word coined by F. M. Alexander to describe going directly for a desired result, or “end”, without taking the necessary steps that would lead you there. Examples:

— Trying to play a fast passage at speed without studying it first;

— Listening to a recording to see “how a piece goes”;

— Telling your student “how a piece goes”;

— Learning a piece by X without listening to any other music by X;

— A teenager smoking to look “mature”;

— A politician against “green” policies because it’s “bad for the economy”.

— To close the list in style: an archetypical expample mentioned by an especially witty friend: “Ready! Fire! Aim!”

These may seem ridiculous, but believe me, not only have I seen all of them but I’ve done the first three or four, many times. A lovely and brilliant student once came to me and asked how to “get” the fast bits in the Reinecke “Undine” Sonata. I asked how she’d been practicing those passages, and she said “oh, I haven’t practiced them!”… and, well, a revelation was had by both parties! (She’s a judge now). This is an extreme example, but how many times have any of us just kept trying to play a fast passage using the same tactic, getting nowhere, and learning wrong notes to boot?

There are other, more subtle forms of end-gaining,  We want a beautiful sound; we want to be able to finesse dynamic changes; we want excellent “technique”…but we don’t want to simply experiment to see what works and what doesn’t, and then consciously move step by step toward mastery.

In fact, it is the overwhelming desire to do the thing that trips us up! We want to make a big diminuendo (crescendo, legato interval, sforzato attack, fast run…) and go into all sorts of contortions in the hope that it happens. Only, many times, those very contortions—be they obvious or discreet—are themselves the impediment to our success.

I remember a day many years ago when I first had a glimmer of this: I was trying to do something rather unnatural on the flute, probably a big diminuendo on two slurred notes going up. A crescendo going up is far easier, far more natural.

I was tying myself up in knots, almost literally, when I finally stopped and considered what had to happen for the diminuendo to occur: air speed: faster, angle of air column: more horizontal, aperture of lips: narrower. A+B+C= success, as long as I also DIDN’T do (the famous DO NOTHING of Zen!) X, Y, or Z. Meaning, do nothing EXCEPT A+B+C. Worked like a charm. Still does. (This non-doing is a whole ‘nother can of worms…)

And it blew my mind!

All my desiring to be able to do that kind of diminuendo led me nowhere except contortion-ville. But ten minutes or so of close examination and another ten of testing brought me peace of mind ever after. Since that day, I have been fast friends even with Brahms, and even his 2nd Symphony—third octave La-Mi-Fa-Do…yikes!

Lemme repeat this: the things I did BECAUSE I wanted to reach a particular goal IMPEDED my reaching that goal. Because my focus was on the goal and not the steps by which I might reach the goal. The irony is that the end-gaining not only didn’t gain me the end I so desired, but it was slow! (Naturally, if you run quickly in the wrong direction, you don’t arrive sooner!) Whereas side-tracking to observe and experiment with the steps, the “means whereby”, turned out to be quick!

This is just one example, but in music—and life—we have endless desires that tempt us to end-gain. We want to look slimmer (more fit, healthier!) so we wear heels…and wreck our feet. We want to arrive earlier so we speed on the highway (and get a ticket or worse).

Exams provoke other sets of desires: the student wants a good grade—which is out of his or her control. The teacher wants their students to do well—which is also out of his or her direct control.

The solution I suggest, for those who must play exams, is to keep on taking the steps along the way and consider the exam a recital, just one of many “snapshots” of your playing as you continue to develop musically.

Because once you finish taking exams and all the grading nonsense stops, hopefully, your development will continue. The fact that we’re never “done” is one of the great gifts of art to the artist; it pushes us, and art, forward.

To be truly “done”…is to die a tiny bit. To be momentarily “done”, however, definitely earns us a trip to the beach!

Coming up for air / Bravo Maria and Simão!

Oops, I've been so busy I haven't been blogging…but time to get back on the saddle, because there is a lot to write about!

To start off, just a sweet photo of two ESART students, Maria Paixão (entering 3rd year) and Simão Francisco (completed Masters in Teaching in 2017), together in Tomar. As Simão was Maria's teacher, at the Canto Firme School of Music, where he is Professor of Flute and also the Director (!), you can sense in the photo the special connection between students and teachers, and a love for music that is what makes me enjoy teaching so much. 

Shortly after this photo was taken, Maria won 1st Prize in the "Sons de Cabral" competition in Belmonte, and Simão was busy directing the flute ensemble and helping organize the 6th Summer Flute Academy in Tomar—congratulations for two jobs extremely well done!

ESART in Tomar—Maria Paixão and Simão Francisco

ESART in Tomar—Maria Paixão and Simão Francisco

Pedro de Alcantara @ 5th Summer Flute Academy!!

Consider yourself invited to attend our 5th (!) Summer Flute Academy— it promises to be the biggest, craziest and most fun EVER! Don't come to sit there watching, you'll be there to play, play, play, and also do a little listening and lots of trying out of new ideas!

There is really TOO MUCH planned to list it all in one go, so I'll just start in with one hot-off-the press bit of news: Pedro de Alcantara, one of the world's best-known teachers of the Alexander Technique and a wildly creative person, will be present! I'm very excited to announce this as it is not easy to get Pedro, based in Paris, "down" to Portugal, not for lack of interest, but only because he's often busy working in exotic places such as Australia or Japan! 

Pedro is Brazilian, trained in the US and the UK as a cellist, and has lived and worked in Paris for quite some time. He is the author of "Indirect Procedures", a book about the Alexander Technique for musicians published by Oxford University Press, has released several CDs, including improvisations, and is also a writer of novels. Check out his site and blog!

But mostly, he is a wonderful, insightful and unique person, who will bring his own ideas on music-making to all of us at the Academy! Thank you, Pedro, for fitting us into your schedule! "Expect nothing, anticipate anything."

Pedro de Alcantara, musician, writer, thinker, healer, creativity expert

Pedro de Alcantara, musician, writer, thinker, healer, creativity expert

ESART - Auditions Overflow with Talent!

It was an exciting, if long, day at ESART last Sunday! My wonderful colleague (and Powell player) Professor Stephanie Wagner and I listened to twenty candidates for the Bachelor's program (licenciatura) — this was a tie with last year's number, and the largest applicant group by instrument!

To the hopeful candidates performing for us, it is of course very stressful, but an important thing to know is that what any jury really wants to hear is GREAT PLAYING! We are "with you" out there on the stage, we've been there, too! Never think the jury just wants to toss people off the ship—it really is not like that!

And we were extremely pleased with the level of the young flutists! For someone who has been in Portugal for quite some time, you might say the level would have been unimaginable even 5-10 years back. Therefore, we congratulate the hard-working, dedicated teachers who have produced such fine young players!

Lastly, we thank all twenty flutists for making the effort to be there and putting out your best! Bravi tutti!!

ESART Classe de Flauta Transversal, 2016-17 (with fun filters!)

ESART Classe de Flauta Transversal, 2016-17 (with fun filters!)