Archive for December, 2009

We Are A-Mused

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

I’ve long held the belief that music is essential to life. Music gives life; gives love; connects us with spirit. I don’t even want to imagine a life without music. Music is in life – everyone’s life, whether we are consciously aware of it or not.

Inspiration of Muses

gr-muses.jpgThe English word music comes from the Latin musica and the Greek mousike, meaning an art presided over by the Muses. The Muses are nine sister Goddesses in Greek mythology directing song and poetry and the arts and sciences. The Muses inspire.

Inspiration, from the Latin inspirare is to breathe; also drawing air into the lungs; divine influence. Ah! When breathing in, I am inspired! Not only am I receiving life-sustaining oxygen, but I am influenced by the divine. I feel the spirit!

Spirit is from the Latin, spiritus, meaning breath. What has this trip through the dictionary revealed thus far? Music is art presided over by a Muse. Muses inspire. Inspiration is breathe and spirit.

Breathe in and out; we live. We become influenced by Spirit. Let’s look at another word that also means to breathe in: inhale. This is from the Latin inhalo, literally meaning in breath. Halo is from the Greek halos which is a round floor, the sun’s disk, and also a luminous ring. Hmmmm… Inhale the Spirit, become a Saint?

Hale is derived from the Anglo-Saxon hál meaning whole, sound, healthy, holy. Sound is from the Old English soun and the Latin sonus – a sound; that which is heard.

Sound of Music

gaia-earth1.jpg“I breathe but air and out comes beautiful music.” It is obvious how this is true for wind instrumentalists and vocalists. And it is also true of string players and percussionists.

The air around us is Gaia’s breath, the breath of the earth. Drawing a bow across a cello string causes it to vibrate, moving the air around it at a high enough frequency to create pitch and tone. In a similar fashion, striking the skin or membrane of a drum head causes the air around the head to vibrate and give rise to pitch. In this way, we can think of strings and percussive instruments as breathing the music.

Music! It is the breath and spirit all around us. Breathe in. Breathe out. Receive inspiration. Breathe out music.

Music For The Soul

Before my mother-in-law left this morning to return to her home in Southern Oregon, we sat down to breathe in and breathe out some beautiful music together. I offer you our rendition of the German carol, Stille Nacht; music from our souls to yours.


Read the next edition of Musician’s Motivator January 13, 2010.

What Makes A Memory?

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

What Makes A Memory?

Once Upon A Time…

Once upon a time there lived an instrumental music teacher who had recently joined and sung in a choral group for the first time in her musical life. It was an exciting time for her! She enjoyed learning a new instrument (voice) and the experience of making music with one’s own body. Also new was the memorization of all the concert music. That part was not so exciting and caused some small distress.

Memorize, Too?

Oh, sure, I’ve sung before – just not in an organized group setting. I sing along with songs on the radio or my iPod. I’ve even memorized songs not realizing I was doing so. I memorize songs easily enough. Like many of you, I know all the lyrics to Don McLean’s American Pie and Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody – without the karaoke screen prompts!

Singing with Aurora Chorus this term, I am required to memorize 16 songs that we will perform in the Dec. 20 concert. Yes, that is a lot of music, but some of the songs have simple repeated parts. Thank goodness!

Orishas of the CandombleOn the other hand, this being a choral group, the songs all have words, something I’ve never had to contend with when playing band and orchestra music. What’s more, of these 16 songs, four of them are in a language other than English. I am also singing in Yorùbá, the language of Candomblé (Brazil); in Mbuti, from the rain forests of New Guinea; in Spanish; and in Georgian, (Republic of Georgia).

That’s What I’m Talking About!

You might expect that the songs in these foreign languages would be more challenging to memorize. Not true! One of my favorite songs and the one that has been the most fun to learn, is A jí kí ire ni Èsù, the song in Yorùbá. The melody is engaging. The 4-part voices weave among one another in an intricate rhythmic dance. The harmonies, too, are exciting with minor 7ths and 9ths over major triads, voiced in a such a way that the tonic of the chord sounds like a color tone! It’s a great song and our concert opener.

On the other hand, one of the hardest songs for me to memorize is in English, Song of Stars. It employs ever-changing time signatures, moving from 6/8 to 7/8 to 3/8 and back to 7/8. The tessitura, or vocal range of the song, for the second soprano part is a bit high for me. Yes, I can sing those notes when I am properly warmed up. It’s just not the most comfortable range for me – so far. The text is a prayer of the Algonquin people.

No Meaning

Pleiades star clusterPerhaps the reason I had difficulty learning this song is that it had no meaning for me. In the beginning, I was just singing words, working on getting the rhythm correct and my entrances down. What if I read the words without the music and tried to understand what I was singing?

That helped a little bit. But the truth was, I just didn’t like the song very much. Do you remember what I reported in the previous edition of Musician’s Motivator? You retain new information better and remember it more strongly when you attach strong emotions to the subject matter, in essence, when you care about what you are studying. Well, I decided to find something to like about this song. And quickly, since the concert was just two weeks away!

telescopeI found it! I sat and listened to the song, as if for the first time, without any judgments about the lyric or the time signatures or tessitura.

I am an amateur astronomer, a devotee and enthusiastic pursuer of all things astronomical. I have relished the night sky since I was a young child. Then, I wanted to grow up to be an astronaut and explore outer space.

This song is about STARS! It even sounds like stars, with open voicings and an arpeggiated piano playing octaves and fifths. The opening piano arpeggios are tight clusters of root, fourth, fifth, and major seventh. Try that in any key on your piano. Doesn’t it sound like the stars twinkling overhead?

…And She Lived Happily Ever After.

The instrumental music teacher loved singing as much as playing her wind instruments. She sang in the concert, enjoying all the songs, and lived happily ever after.

Now the song has meaning for me and is easy to memorize. Lesson? Remember to bring Beginner’s Mind to my learning. ;-)

Are you learning something new? Struggling with a difficult subject in school? Finding something to like about the subject will make the learning more solid and you will retain more. And bringing your Beginner’s Mind to the table will help you be open to the learning along the way.

Share your learning discoveries on my blog or send me an email: meg@meggrace.com.

Some Quotes About Memory

What we learn with pleasure we never forget. – Alfred Mercier
The heart that truly loves never forgets. – Proverb
The true art of memory is the art of attention. – Samuel Johnson


Read the next edition of Musician’s Motivator Dec. 24, 2009.