How To Be A Good Musician – Looking At It At A Different Level
Practice
Acting professional – people have to like you if you want work
Be early
Don’t miss notes
Play it right the first sight-reading, in every way, including playing musically and including playing every note, dynamic, and articulation on the page
Always listen to where the conductor is starting
Remember where you started so that when you have to start there again, you do
Always be ready and start WHEN the conductor starts
Get along with your ensemble
Have and demonstrate good time
Have a good ear for intonation
Have a good ear for hearing and being able to recreate(play) tones and melodies (and harmonies even)
Be able to improvise good-sounding things
Compose and arrange
Have a good ear for blend, balance, orchestration, timbre, etc.
Musical ensemble with everyone else – be able to play together (morph) WITH the other players WELL
Being able to lead (for instance if you’re playing first on a chorale)
Be able to conduct well
“Just pick up on what they’re doing musically and follow what they’re doing”
General: be able to read what other people are doing musically
Understanding the emotions of the other players while playing – by watching, listening, sensing what does or doesn’t radiate off of them
Clear communication between members of the group
Understanding each other as people: so you understand how to get along with each other: understanding how each person acts and feels in certain situations, understanding how I-T-T-T-FL-BL (Idea – Timing – Tact – Tone – Facial Language – Body Language: the idea you communicate, the time at which you express it, the language you use to express this idea, the tone you use to say these words, and your facial language and your body language) affects their emotions, understanding what kind of buttons not to push
Strictly brass quintet:
You want to be an impressive brass quintet? You’d better have the capacity to play LOUD, intense, and brassy EVERY TIME you see a Forte or Fortissimo (as appropriate).
You’d better have the ability to play with intensity described even at piano when appropriate (such as the Mouret Rondeau).
Any chamber music:
You’d better also have the ability to play as delicately and smoothly as a string quartet on legato piano things
You’d better have the ability to play as sensitively as a string quartet or voice on anything legato.
IMPORTANT: All 5 of you had better be feeling the music in your heart, body, and soul completely, and with that, you’d better also be connected in one, like you all have one heart and you are all feeling the exact same emotions at any given time, but at the same time, it’s like you’re creating this beautiful counterpoint of feelings and musical lines coming from each of your individual hearts whenever this is applicable.
Music: being able to communicate the ideas that you want to communicate
What I said about Musician X:
Concept: not so much of “knowing a piece”, but developing your musicianship to hear a piece and very quickly develop good musical ideas on it
Discussion of the phrase, listening for intonation, blend, time, phrasing, air, etc., wanting to shape the lines more, do more with the lines, shape the phrases more, play more musically
Higher level, what conductors like Barenboim, Giulini, and Dudamel do
Solo playing: you have something to say, and you SAY it.
Also exists when developing skills: skill which BRINGS about some insights you actually had not thought of before.
However it’s also (more often) you have a musical/sound idea in your head and what you want is to make that which is in your head (musical idea) a reality
Being a soloist: HAVE something to say: don’t hold back. Even if you’re not the greatest player (which you should be, don’t get me wrong), you HAVE something to say, you KNOW what you want to say, and you SAY it, without holding back.
Playing music: truthful “von haftiug”
(Play where the conductor asks you to start. Even if you think they mean a different place. (If they make a mistake, the ensemble will play in the wrong place, and the conductor will correct themselves. The conductor wants the ensemble to follow what they say. If they said the wrong place, that’s fine: at least the ensemble started where the conductor asked them to)).
(Concertos: follow the soloist more than the conductor)