Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Writing Home: Reflection Papers and Journaling to Deepen Your Music

Charles Rosen, Frontiers of Meaning
N ow I’m supposed to write a paper reflecting on my playing and my learning process, which in turn are reflections of my literacy and adherence [or not] to the assignments. If I have to write this reflection paper of my reflecting on my reflections, I will ... do badness to something or someone. I have no idea what to write.”
  —  Anonymous.
If you’re in school, then chances are your assignments include writing one or more ‘reflection papers’ this semester. The task of writing an essay on your own experiences and applications and first-hand gleanings forces you to collect and distill and categorize: you critically evaluate your experiences and place them into context; the narrative form forces you to write about your own impressions and explain the context into which they fit. Quelle horreur!

Reflection papers aren’t a pedagogical punishment. Throughout your career, you can and should invest in improving your musicianship through regular journaling. This is in addition to whatever other activities you engage in for performance, composing, producing, engineering, arts marketing, artist management, presenting, teaching, listening—whatever you do musically. Writing ‘reflection papers’ is just one way for you to harvest and preserve the experiential learning that you do in those other activities. It’s a way to connect the work with the learning.

Why journal? (Why blog?) Mostly to keep yourself learning and growing, and to force yourself to clarify your thinking and revisit and retest your convictions—especially ones that may never’ve been fully thought-through in the first place. Consider it as a dimension of your training, just like practicing on your instrument(s)—it keeps your mind from getting old or rusty or atrophied. Use it or lose it!

W    hen I don’t practice for one day, my fingers know it; for two days, my friends know it; for three days, and the whole world knows it.”
  —  Ignacy Paderewski.
Journaling is about the shape and meaning we assign to our experiences. Our stories are about who we are, where we’ve come from, and where we think we’re headed and why. What you want to do is get ideas and explore ideas. You want to assemble evidence and counter-evidence, and critique the quality and strength of both.

How to go about it? I think it helps to have at least one or two examples as ‘benchmarks’ to serve as guides and reminders of the writing qualities you admire. For me, the epitome of writing that is at once erudite, elegant, and entertaining is pianist Charles Rosen. His little 1994 book ‘Frontiers of Meaning’ is, for me, iconic. Kyle Gann’s ‘Music Downtown’, emblematic of journalistic bravery. Alex Ross’s ‘The Rest Is Noise’ has a different tenor but serves to remind me of how wide our palette can be. Arnold Steinhardt’s ‘Indivisible by Four’, reminds me of grandfatherly patience and generosity in the life lived and the life written-about. You don’t have to write books as they have done. But our own writing will be better if we look frequently at how our favorite authors write.

The best book I know that specifically covers journaling and reflection papers as a practice for working artists is Buck’s. If you’re looking for practical guidance on how to go about writing a reflection paper (whether for your class assignment, or independently for your own professional growth), I recommend you pick up a copy. Check out the other books below, too.

Ultimately, critical analysis and interpretation aren’t detached acts; not value-neutral reportage. No, as a kind of psychological counterpart to Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle in physics, the acts of observing and journaling change the things you are observing and their relationships to each other. The personal change is the source of the value in writing reflection papers: the change enables further growth in your playing or composing or listening. Paradoxically, the infinite regress that Anonymous complained about above is actually the whole point of the exercise. Rather than ending in confusion, the process makes you figure things out; makes you figure out how you figured them out; makes you figure out how ‘figuring out’ works. A different dimension of professional practice. A different kind of rehearsal. Quelle horreur!

O  ur doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win by fearing to attempt.”
  —  William Shakespeare.



Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Chamber Music Social Networking: Contacting CMT

DSM
Since I began the CMT blog a little over a year ago quite a few people have posted comments asking to contact me. Usually the commenter includes her/his email and phone so that I can respond to the request. If the commenter prefers not to provide phone coordinates, sometimes the commenter indicates what country/timezone she/he is in, to give me some context or background to the comment, which I then reply to via private email.

But sometimes the commenter uses the name ‘Anonymous’ and doesn’t include any email address or telephone number or other contact information in the comment text. Omitting email or phone coordinates prevents my answering.

For privacy reasons, I prefer not to post my own identity and contact information on the CMT blog itself. Many commenters (mostly performers, composers, authors, presenters, agents, and journalists) also have requested that I not publish their comments on CMT, because they too wish the content and fact of their commenting to remain private. As a courtesy, I always comply with this request.

Anyhow, if you want to reach me, you must give me some way to contact you. Please put the information in the body of your comment text. I will respect your privacy, just as I hope you will respect mine. Josh Gindele, Miró String Quartet’s cellist and founder of ClassicalLounge.com, has a similar policy of strict protection of privacy of ClassicalLounge members. I think this approach makes sense, especially for busy performers.

It’s a pleasure to know that you found this blog. It pleases me that what I write has some interest for you. Over the past year, I’ve been lucky to have the chance to meet and interact with quite a few of you, both online and in person. Were it not for the web, none of that would’ve happened. Day job, family, travel, myriad other things would’ve prevented it.

You may like to know that CMT is recently receiving more than 1,000 non-bounce hits per day worldwide. While this is pretty small volume compared to Alex Ross’s TheRestIsNoise and other classical music blogs, it’s amazing volume when you consider the exotic topics and content that you find here on CMT.

 ClustrMap of CMT daily readers
Curiously, about 10% of the daily volume at CMT during the last three months is from those of you who are reading CMT on Apple iPhones—on Safari browsers with 396x320 resolution. Other mobile devices represent increasing proportions of the visits each month, too. For this reason, I have recently converted CMT from a CSS-heavy design to XML with a much brighter, simpler look and feel that renders better and quicker on mobile devices. The previous CSS version was ugly and hard to use on a mobile. So far, I have only checked CMT on an iPhone and on a Blackberry Curve. I hope these changes make for better usability, and easier browsing for you. If you have criticisms or complaints, please post a comment!

Incidentally, I’m continuing the practice of including a dozen or more links at the bottom of each CMT post. The motivation for these is to provide a repository of interesting materials that are germane to the topics in each post. The CMT blog repository enables me to keep track of these books and videos and articles and websites for my own future reference. My intent is more like ‘scrapbooking’ than any serious or academic pursuit. Based on the many out-clicks from these links, though, I now know that a substantial subset of CMT readers finds these links useful for their own purposes as well.

Also, the fact that you can perform searches against the blog and the links at the bottom of the posts has been noticed by many of you—this is evident in the CMT activity I monitor each month on SiteMeter and GoogleAnalytics. As you may have suspected, I like reading almost as much as I enjoy listening and playing and composing and writing about chamber music. Maybe you are one of the ones who visits the links and enjoys discovering (or being reminded of – ) the books and articles as much as I do.

Thank you for your interest in CMT. I look forward to hearing from you.

Best Wishes!



I t is useful to think of chamber music as a narrow deep area between the novel and film.”
  —  Lewis Baltz.


O  ne annoyance in iPhone Safari is that the URL bar scrolls off the top of the screen along with the rest of the page when you scroll down a web page. As a result, in order to enter a new URL, you’re required to scroll all the way back up before being able to enter a new address. To get to the URL bar quickly, tap the top bar with the time and battery life indicator. That takes you straight to the URL entry field.”
  —  DSM