PRACTICING PHILOSOPHY (lecture)
The following is
basically (with some edits) the lecture I gave at the Jamey Aebersold Summer
Workshop in
NOW WHAT?
The purpose of coming to a workshop like this is to learn, to improve in the pursuit of this particular music. If at the end of five days, you are not completely confused, something is wrong. If you are not slightly frustrated, something is really wrong….now what? The nature of the week is intense, more than what could ever be absorbed. This is not just learning facts and repeating them. This must be applied to your instrument. Without reinforcement it has no meaning. There are too many books in the music store that all say the same thing. The knowledge has been told, there are only so many ways to say the same thing.
You must try to see through the forest. Make a list on paper of the things you learned this week. This should be about ten or twenty pages, from very complex to very simple. Do this while it is fresh in your mind. Separate this list into categories-ranging from the five year plan to what you may be able to accomplish in a few concentrated hours in the next week or two so that they become natural, without having to think about it. Look at in an objective way; what can I get right now?
RITUAL
Some of the material demands rote practicing, day after day until it is part of you. Scales, learning tunes, transcribing, they are time consuming. The most important thing about practicing is ritual. All religions that try to inculcate someone into their beliefs have as a basic past of what they do entwined in ritual. There’s a reason for this, because when you do something enough times, it starts to take hold. If you are going to learn something new on your instrument, it must be done every day for a certain amount of time. I can’t tell you what the time is unless you came directly to me. That’s what your teacher’s job is, to prioritize and to tell you how long to work on a particular technique. Until it’s done every day, you are wasting time. When you cram for a test, you don’t remember anything after. It hasn’t been absorbed enough.
Be realistic, eight hours a day is probably not going to happen, not necessarily because of your desire, but life in general takes over. You have to look at your schedule realistically whether you are forty five years old or ten. If you’re serious about what you have to do, then you realistically have x amount of time. Not just holidays, not the weekend, not waiting till the house is empty. Ask yourself what you can realistically do Monday through Saturday with my life the way it is (Let’s be optimistic about it and say we have four to six hours a day.) If you can stick to at least two to three hours a day, for a minimum of six days a week, then you have a shot. (The other day go out in the woods!!) If you can stay with that you are on your way to good practicing. Some things take 6-9 months depending upon the difficulty of what you are trying to learn and your personal abilities in relation to that; but if it is just a new scale, then maybe a few weeks, etc. If you put your time in, it WILL happen.
ORGANIZING TIME
The next thing is quite important, about priorities-how to organize your time
with no distractions. The ideal scene: no one can hear you, not your mother,
not your brother, not your friend, not your lady---nobody should hear you
practicing. You can say “I don’t care” but the vibe is in the air and it
affects you. If you can’t be alone do the best you can. This is your time, it’s
a meditation. It’s work, it’s real work which means a lot of mental calories
and it has to be done without distraction.
OBJECTIVITY
One of my teachers (Charles
Lloyd) said to me (paraphrased): “You’re not being objective; you’re getting
TOO into it all the time. You’re over the top. You should be practicing but you
think you are performing. I’ll bet you stand in front of the mirror and see how
pretty you look with that shiny horn!” There’s no emotion about
practicing—objectivity, not subjectivity. There shouldn’t be: “Yes, this is
good; no, this is bad.” You should feel nothing! It’s practice-save the emotion
for the bandstand and when you want to impress someone. When you are practicing
there’s nobody there but “you and the night and the music” (great tune).
There’s no opinion about it. If you do it like that, you are going to gain a
lot from practicing. This is not fun-it’s work-just do it. Have fun when you go
out and play. When someone says you sound good, there will be a feeling of joy
and accomplishment that is real and right to feel. Not because your practice
went good or bad-be objective!
JOURNAL
Keep a practice journal; short
notes on what needs work, the metronome setting, etc. This will be great
reinforcement when you look back. And it will remind you of things you might’ve
forgotten. Ways to check your own progress-be you own teacher. The only thing a
teacher should do besides motivation is give you a program and check its
progress. It’s up to you to do it in a critical, objective fashion-every day
with a schedule and cognizant of your weaknesses and strengths. You all know
what your weakest points are. Be specific; is it time problems, what do you
mean-do you drag; do you rush; is it stilted or choppy, etc? You have to define
in your mind’s eye what the problem is so you can tackle it heads on. The
teacher can help direct exercises to help the SPECIFIC situation. Put this at
the top of your list—go for your weaknesses first. Forget the conditional
tense; what you can do now that will make you better in the short term,
followed by the long term.
SELF REINFORCEMENT
Reward yourself by listening to
how you played six months ago. YOU ARE BETTER!! At least in those things you
were practicing. Anything you study will have to get better, unless you are brain
dead!! Especially if you are a novice, things change rapidly. Six months to a
year is great—you’ve got to be better and again it’s the glass half empty /half
full. Instead of “I’ll never be good enough; he is better; she is so good; I’m not…I
can’t, etc.,” you will feel positive for a change. Of course there are
some things you may not be able to accomplish now or ever maybe, but there are a lot you can. Look at the pictures of the great cats around you on the wall here in the hall. They are not there just for fun-these are guys who did what I am saying.
GENIUS OR WORK?
In my opinion the only pure
genius in music was Mozart. He was different from day one, he had it hooked up.
EVERYBODY ELSE WORKED THEIR ASS OFF!! EVERYBODY!! Bird worked, Trane worked,
Bill Evans worked, even Miles in his way worked-I can tell you that. Of course
each person has their own way of practicing and their own goals but it is not
about genius or incredible talent only (of course you have to have some degree
of that). It’s about commitment—I can do this, I can get better, I can be at
least as good as that guy over there. Everybody in this room can get better. If
you really wish to get better, whether you are a professional, an aspiring
student or play for a hobby. Whichever way, it is the same. Whatever level you
are on, it doesn’t matter; you can be better than you think if you put time in
and are serious about it. It’s how you organize your time that is crucial.
RELAX BUT PRACTICE, DON’T “PLAY”
There is nothing wrong with putting the ax down once in awhile. It’s cool and
necessary. When you go back it is fresh again. That’s a stage that can go on
for a few weeks even. Take it in stride. Maybe you are expecting too much and
being too critical. Maybe you are scattering your energy over many hours rather
than focusing. One good hour is better than four with ho focus. (Of course, if
this “slump” goes on too long, you have a motivation problem and maybe should
become a plumber!!)
I teach Doctoral students and ask them what they practiced yesterday. They say this or that book, patterns, etc., and then they just played. What do they mean by “played?” That isn’t practice, that’s playing. OK, once you get the basics down (scales, chords, licks, etc.) what do you do? More tunes? You see jazz is not like classical where the agenda is obvious: learn this piece until it is perfect and then on to the next. You got every marking of nuance to follow, tempos, everything. Learn what is on the page and then MAYBE you can be yourself in the interpretation—but of course only at the highest level. I envy these guys-they have it all mapped out. In the case of jazz, how do you measure how well you know your scales? Because they are played fast in your woodshed? Or because you can run them on a chord change in a tune? We don’t have the same discrete measurements that they have in classical so it is imperative that you are objective and use your time wisely. Be realistic and not so hard on yourself that you create a minefield. But of course be vigilant.
THE REAL DEAL-PRACTICING PLAYING
So how do you practice playing?
Well, you can’t-it is a misnomer. Sure, you can learn tunes and play through
the stuff, but you can’t practice the feeling of interacting and spontaneity
and all the things that go into a typical jazz performance. There is a period
to play and not to play. Sometimes I have guys who are always looking for
sessions to strut their stuff. But maybe
they should be doing heavy practicing instead of hanging out late. Get up at
RECOGNITION OF THE PROBLEM IS ALL
Analyzing is great. In fact,
half the problem is defining the problem. If you define it, you already have
most of the solution!! Let’ say you are practicing a pattern the same way over
and over again. Sit down and write five variations using space, different
articulations, augmentation, neighboring tones, syncopation, etc. Since the
caveman, we have been doing theme and variations even with three notes. Your
job is to make it interesting so you are not stuck into rote, mechanical responses.
Check it out: You come up against a problem which frustrates you. The fact that
you noticed it (or a teacher/peer pointed it out-either way) is half the
battle. Now, with objectivity and common sense you figure a way to improve the
situation. Not magic-not even inspiration-just perspiration!! This is the auto
didactic route; you are solving the problem yourself and gain confidence by
doing that repeatedly. It may not be the answer to life, but you did it YOURSELF
and that is crucial. Theme and variations—in twelve keys—damn, you are good for
three weeks!!
AWAY FROM THE WOODSHED
There are many things you can
do away from your instrument, even using the pitch pipe for ear training while
walking around. Or singing rhythms in eight bar phrases. Do ear training with
the radio. Most of all read about music and art. What made Beethoven tick or
Louis Armstrong or Picasso or Miles? There are insights ready to be grabbed if
you read and think about it. Their situation and yours are not as far apart as
it seems, given time and place differences. Read stuff that isn’t music. Get your
mind going-be able to analyze, dissect, organize and fantasize. In the end,
your message isn’t going to be what you know or think you know. It will be
about your life and experiences. So get busy.
Return to Dave Liebman's Main Page