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Classical Music Performer, Composer or Conductor: #fermata focus, #legato breath control and #rubato creativity

3:16 PM in Flow Breathing, Musician's Life, Orchestra Auditions, Orchestral Playing, Performances, Practicing Tools and Techniques, Teaching Music, Technique, Tone by David H. Thomas

Whether performer, teacher, composer, conductor or lover of classical music, three basic principals come into play-

  1. #Fermata focuses patience. #Fermata sustains us under duress. #Fermata is the strength of determination. It is the optimistic energy passed from teacher to student, student to professional, evolving professional, to the professional learning to sustain or recover from injury, and all variations.
  2. #Legato sustains. #Legato is control of the breath, which affords control of the self and control of playing. #Legato Flow Breathing can control stress. #Legato feeds #Fermata patience as well.
  3. #Rubato sparks our creative fire; from composers to performers to teachers, #rubato expresses our higher selves, the part of us which makes our unique mark in our world and in the lives of others. #Rubato learns from the past to create the future.
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Organic Rhythm

2:02 PM in Practicing Tools and Techniques, Technique by David H. Thomas

I used to play in a woodwind quintet, the wind equivalent of a string quartet. It was a pretty decent group made up of successful freelancers from around town in Washington, DC.

During one rehearsal, we had trouble playing some passages together. The oboist complained we needed to practice with a metronome. I countered with the idea that we needed to feel the rhythm together, regardless of the metronome. We were both right. Metronomes help, but “live” rhythm is rarely ever metronomic. Like tuning, “scientific” correctness is not necessarily what sounds best. She never conceded my point.

I know a lot of musicians like her. Their goal is to play more or less like a machine: perfectly in tune with a tuner and in rhythm with the metronome. But music played like that puts me to sleep. Why have humans play at all when a computer program would be more efficient?

Great musicians can play a phrase of music with incredible rhythmic accuracy, and yet never quite match up with a metronome. Great chamber groups and even whole orchestras can do the same. It’s obviously a lot harder for the latter, but with years of experience and trust among players, a larger group can be free and stay together rhythmically.

One form of freedom is called “rubato”, which means “to steal or borrow” time from one part of the phrase to add to another. The total sum of time is the same as the metronomic phrase, but with much greater freedom. That kind of phrasing says keeps the listener interested with its unpredictable freedom. The player can then emphasize the natural tension and relaxation and explore the infinite possibilities with each repeated phrase or section of music.

Played by a great artist, a fairly conservative phrase of music, which may sound completely rhythmic to the listener, will still have subtle freedom. The allure of a great performance is how it floats and flirts with with stodgy rhythm without committing to any predictability.

In the case of chamber music, each player still has the freedom of a soloist, but has to interact conversationally with the other players.

A good orchestra will have a rigorous system of trust and hierarchy, starting with the conductors interpretation and freedom, trickling down through the various leaders of each section and on down to the lower ranks. Unfortunately, this means the lower ranks do have have much freedom at all, and have to be content following their leaders. But even in this case, each player has the responsibility to commit wholeheartedly to recreating the freedom and direction of phrasing set up by the conductor.

Knowing what rhythmic freedom to take and where to take it is the sign of a master musician. It can only be taught to a degree. The rest is experience, talent and intuition.

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