Banjo – Not Cramming for a Performance (Musicians)(Psychology)(Pain)(Strain)(Injuries)(Posture)(Alexander Technique)(Albuquerque)

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Located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A. (MOVEMENT THERAPY)
THERE IS A NEGATIVE SIDE TO GETTING READY FOR A PERFORMANCE – CRAMMING!
What do I mean by cramming? It means as the performance gets closer and closer the banjo player practices with greater intensity and FURY.
Before I talk about the negative side, let me talk about the benefits of getting ready for a performance.
The odds are a banjo player would not learn and refine the music of a two hour concert, if the concert didn’t exist. So, the banjo player would not practice with the intention of raising the performance level of two hours’ worth of music to the highest level, if this music wasn’t to be performed.
Here’s the negative side of the banjo player getting ready for the performance. It’s called END-GAINING in the Alexander Technique. This means as the banjo player is getting a concert ready, the banjo player is only focused on how well the music sounds and on memorizing the music, so there won’t be memory slips, and errors are minimized during the concert.
What tends to happen using this end-gaining process of getting ready for a concert, is the banjo player does not take care of him or herself, as he or she puts in hour after hour striving for perfection.
Another way of saying this is the banjo player goes unconscious as the banjo player is furiously getting ready for the concert. Furiously is a very interesting word. Why? It is a word with both negative and positive connotations for the performing artist.
The positive connotation means that the banjo player is working with incredible focus and putting in the hours, truly committed to playing well. The negative side is the banjo player is doing whatever it takes to guarantee a fine performance, no matter how much discomfort and wear and tear the banjo player is causing the body the mind.
It is clear when physical damage is being done when the banjo player is preparing for a concert. IF THE BANJO PLAYER IS HURTING PHYSICALLY CONSTANTLY GETTING READY, THEN THE BANJO PLAYER IS SACRIFICING HIS OR HER BODY FOR THE AUDIENCE.
IF THE BANJO PLAYER IS SACRIFICING HIS OR HER BODY FOR THE PERFORMANCE, THEN THE BANJO PLAYER HAS MADE A MENTAL DECISION THAT IT IS WORTH IT FOR THE ART FORM. This is the wear and tear to the banjo player’s mind itself.
Is this necessary?
To discover the answer to this question means the banjo player has to decide if putting in the practice time before a performance demands focus and intensity done with fury!
When the banjo player is getting ready for a concert, if the performer fuses focus and intensity with fury, he or she is hunkering down physically and mentally to get the music ready.
This is a fancy way of saying the banjo player has decided to go unconscious, and do whatever it takes, pay any physical and emotional price to GET THROUGH THE CONCERT. This means a deal is struck with the banjo player’s own self, that after the concert he or she will ease up and maybe get ready a different kinder way for the next time.
This deal with oneself is how the banjo player can sustain the heavy price emotional and physical price being paid. The other usually unstated deal with the banjo player’s self, is that the admiration of the audience is worth the pain to get ready.
What I’ve just described is CRAMMING FOR A CONCERT.
Obviously, from what I’ve just written, you can tell that I don’t think this is the best way to get ready for playing a concert, to bring two hours’ worth of music to the highest level you’re capable of. In fact cramming for a concert guarantees you won’t play at your highest level – technically, emotionally, and energetically.
I want to clarify what I mean by cramming to prepare a concert. Cramming for a performance USUALLY means you aren’t giving yourself enough time to get ready, so you practice with a fury and VENGEANCE to get the music ready.
But what if you give yourself enough time to get ready for the concert? Can you even with enough time, enough months before the concert, still cram for the performance? Absolutely! If you prepare with constant fear and pressuring yourself months in advance, then YOU’RE CRAMMING FOR MONTHS.
It’s time to ask the question after all I’ve just written, “What is cramming for a performance, does it work, and why is it done?”
Let me start with, “Why is it done?” There are two reasons. It is done because it what you’ve always done. (Almost all of the students in the music conservatories I went to crammed fearfully for their performances.)
Second, when you go unconscious with furious practice for hours each day, you stave off feelings of panic of messing up the concert for weeks or months.
Does this work? It usually does, if you put aside the physical and emotional price you pay. It’s like winning a race. Even if you hurt your knee and hobble across the finish line first, you’re still the winner, even though you’re shortening your running career.
What if you put in the hours getting ready for the concert, and did NOT cram? What if you placed all of your focus and intensity on interpretation and memorizing and taking care of your mind and body? What if you told yourself, having given yourself enough time to prepare, that you will play as many hours a day necessary to get the concert ready?
Then you get to practice at peace and place your banjo technique and emotional wellbeing first. In other words, you do not tense up or hunker down, or use “fear of failure” to motivate yourself, or sacrifice your body and technique for the result.
IF YOU GIVE YOURSELF ENOUGH TIME TO GET READY FOR A CONCERT, THEN CRAMMING, WHICH IS GETTING READY WITH FURIOUS FEAR, IS NOT NECESSARY.
IF YOU MAKE “THE GETTING READY FOR THE CONCERT” THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF THE CONCERT, THEN YOU HAVE REALLY DONE SOMETHING EXTRAORDINARILY LOVING, AND THIS WILL BE EXPERIENCED BY THE AUDIENCE.

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Ethan Kind

AUTHOR, TRAINER "When you change old habitual movement patterns with the Alexander Technique, whether in playing a musical instrument, running, weightlifting, walking, or typing at a computer, you create an ease of body use that moves you consistently into the zone." - Ethan Kind Ethan Kind writes and is published extensively on all of the above activities. He teaches musicians, athletes, and computer operators how to stop hurting themselves, by showing them how to use their bodies with ease and coordination. He brings a unique perspective to his work, having been a musician and athlete all of his life. After training for three years at the American Center for the Alexander Technique (New York, NY), Ethan received Professional Certification credentials.