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Perceptive Listening Promotes Better Performing

Perceptive Listening Promotes Better Performing

by Gerald Klickstein | Jun 17, 2017 | creative process, music literature, Self-recording, The Musician's Way

“When musicians with scant listening experience try to play or sing repertoire from unfamiliar genres, they produce the musical equivalent of a clumsy accent.” -The Musician’s Way, p. 98 Most of us can recall hearing music that left us cold initially but that we...
Design Thinking for Audience Development

Design Thinking for Audience Development

by Gerald Klickstein | Mar 30, 2017 | creative process, Entrepreneurship, music careers, music performance

“Audiences differ as much as individuals do.” –The Musician’s Way, p. 209 For musicians, career sustainability hinges on audience development. When we continually attract new listeners, our revenues grow, and we gain the freedom to fully devote ourselves to our art....
Small Steps, Big Results

Small Steps, Big Results

by Gerald Klickstein | Mar 28, 2016 | creative process, music careers, music practice

“Vision is the art of seeing things invisible.” –Jonathan Swift The Musician’s Way, p. 310 We all know that musical excellence results from smart, steady practice over a span of years. Still, it isn’t always easy for us to practice deliberately day after day....
Artistic Growth During Repetitive Practice

Artistic Growth During Repetitive Practice

by Gerald Klickstein | Mar 20, 2016 | creative process, music practice, The Musician's Way

“Repetition inevitably begets habits.” –The Musician’s Way, p. 52 Over the course of our lives, we musicians do a lot of repeating. There’s standard repertoire that we perform for years, and we revisit exercises to keep our technical abilities strong. On top of...
The Creative Power of Problems

The Creative Power of Problems

by Gerald Klickstein | Feb 28, 2016 | creative process, music practice, The Musician's Way

“My biggest kick in music – playing or writing – is when I have a problem. Without a problem to solve, how much interest do you take in anything?” –Duke Ellington The Musician’s Way, p. 54 No matter how musically advanced we become, we encounter passages...
Forward Motion

Forward Motion

by Gerald Klickstein | Oct 5, 2015 | creative process, music performance, music practice

“There must always be a sense of progression or movement towards definite landmarks.” –Tobias Matthay, pianist The Musician’s Way, p. 23 Rhythm comes alive when it propels listeners through a phrase via what we musicians term “forward motion.” Aside from...
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