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The Twin Aims of Deliberate Practice

The Twin Aims of Deliberate Practice

by Gerald Klickstein | Aug 6, 2012 | creative process, music practice, performance anxiety, The Musician's Way

“Practice holds a place of honor in the life of a musician.” –The Musician’s Way, p. 4 All of us veteran musicians share the same twin aims when we practice: to polish our skills and prepare music for performances. We also know how to accomplish our goals efficiently....
Refining an Interpretation

Refining an Interpretation

by Gerald Klickstein | Jul 5, 2012 | creative process, music practice

“One should hunger after the whole concept, the whole mood, what the music stands for.” –William Pleeth, cellist The Musician’s Way, p. 71 When we approach an unfamiliar composition, I recommend that we map out a preliminary interpretation before we deal with...
Launching the First Phrase

Launching the First Phrase

by Gerald Klickstein | Jun 24, 2012 | music performance, music practice, stage presence

“You must start well, and you must end well. What is in the middle is not so important because no one is listening then.” –Maurice Chevalier, singer & actor The Musician’s Way, p. 180 I chuckle every time I read Chevalier’s words, but they...
The Primary Error Response

The Primary Error Response

by Gerald Klickstein | May 23, 2012 | music performance, music practice, performance anxiety, stage presence

“Display confident body language, come what may.” –The Musician’s Way, p. 194 Are you confident in your ability to deal with on-stage mistakes? I’ve found that rising musicians seldom practice handling errors, so they typically don’t manage them as gracefully as they...
Psychic Income

Psychic Income

by Gerald Klickstein | Apr 22, 2012 | creativity, motivation, music careers, music practice

“Meaning is what matters most in your day-to-day practice.” –The Musician’s Way, p. 312 Might there exist people who devote themselves to music solely for material gain? I doubt it. Rather, it’s the psychic income that we derive from our work that we most...
6 Ways to Ignite Synergy in a Group

6 Ways to Ignite Synergy in a Group

by Gerald Klickstein | Mar 11, 2012 | collaboration, creative process, music practice

“Make the most seemingly insignificant part feel good for the rest of the ensemble.” -Wynton Marsalis The Musician’s Way, p. 123 We musicians spend vast amounts of time practicing alone. But to make music collectively, we need skills beyond those we rely...
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