Friday, October 25, 2013

On the Why and How of Practicing Music

There always seems to be a discussion happening about the benefits of music and the arts. Evidence seems to indicate that people who learn a musical instrument hone creative, collaborative, and technical abilities that are useful and desirable in all of life. These benefits are in addition to the most obvious reasons to participate in music or the arts...we enjoy it and find it beautiful!

I am providing two links to writers who each contribute some interesting thoughts to the ongoing conversation. In the first, Joanne Lipman writes for the New York Times to address the question of how much music training has contributed to the success of well-known people in our society. Among the qualities Joanne notes these people improved through music training are "collaboration, creativity, discipline and the capacity to reconcile conflicting ideas".

Is Music the Key to Success?

The second writer is concert pianist Stephen Hough. His blog provides us with an insight into how a professional musician approaches practicing and preparing for a performance. Parents of Suzuki students may find an idea or perhaps just a refreshed perspective about practicing in this blog.

The Practice of Practicing

Do you have any thoughts or tips about practicing to share? Please leave a comment below!

Friday, October 11, 2013

Composer Spotlight: Gilbert and Sullivan

Sir W.S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan are famous for their comic operas. A comic opera is a drama that is sung and is funny and light-hearted, and usually has a happy ending. It is a type of operetta

Gilbert and Sullivan lived in England. They worked together from 1871-1896 and wrote fourteen comic operas together. Sir Gilbert wrote the words, or libretto, for the operas. Sir Sullivan composed the music. Three of their most famous operas are H.M.S. Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance and The Mikado

The characters in the comic operas are exaggerated and their actions can be very silly, which is one thing that makes the shows fun to watch. In H.M.S. Pinafore, Gilbert and Sullivan made fun of the English Navy. Here is the song about the captain (who thinks a lot of himself). He sings about how great he is, but the sailors question him on some things, like whether he ever gets seasick. 



In The Pirates of Penzance, one character is a "Major-General". A Major-General is supposed to know about the military, but they made this character funny by making him know a lot about many things in general and not the military! In college you can "major" in a subject which you study. The Major-General has "majored" in lots of subjects, but not the one he should know about! 

Here is the song "I am the very Model of a Modern Major-General" from The Pirates of Penzance. This song is quite difficult to sing because there are so many words.