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Universal Rhythms, Grounding, and Shaker

April 17, 2016 by kalani

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There are rhythms that appear throughout the world, in different countries and styles of music. Learning how to recognize and reproduce these rhythms is something that percussionists do as part of their craft. Playing rhythms and music requires that we learn how to create grooves, and that requires that we tune in to micro-timing and the feel of the music. Even playing the shaker can be a deeply musical act. Learn how to get started and make progress in this episode. Kalani also talks about the Therapeutic Drumming Course and World Drum Club at YouTube and Patreon. <P>

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Examples in this episode include music by:

  • Greg Ellis
  • Kim Atkinson
  • John Mayall
  • Poncho Sanchez

Leave your comments below and on the Kalani Music YouTube Channel.

Kalani LIVE is written and produced by Kalani as a free service to musicians around the world. Send your questions and comments using the contact form.

Filed Under: Community Drumming, Education, Study, Techniques, The Club, World Drum Club

Keys to Facilitation and Therapeutic Drumming

March 15, 2016 by kalani

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This episode focuses on a few keys to effectively facilitating a musical process for groups including; how to not be a dictator and overly controlling, how to support others, how to help a group process through the music you play, and more. Kalani introduces you to two co-presenters at the 2016 Therapeutic Drumming Course; Abbie Ehorn and Miranda Rondeau, and he gives you some music for ukulele and percussion.

How do we know it’s a Drum Circle?

Keys to effective facilitation.

Zun Zun – Caribbean Folk Song

http://kalanimusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Zun-Zun.mp3

Paranaue – Brazilian folk Song

http://kalanimusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Paranaue.mp3

Email Kalani for a copy of the music (office@kalanimusic.com)

Filed Under: Community Drumming, Techniques, World Drum Club Tagged With: beneficial drumming, facilitation, Group Drumming, therapeutic drumming, ukulele

Flute Harvest, Music, and Mindfulness

October 6, 2015 by kalani

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Kalani talks about Flute Harvest 2015, where students learn more than just how to play the native flute. This is a true musical retreat for the mind and spirit of flute enthusiasts of all types. Learn how to engage in three different musical mindfulness practices that will change the way you experience the world and deepen you life experience.

inclusion

Filed Under: Health, Techniques, World Drum Club

World Drumming Online Course: Spring 2015

January 20, 2015 by kalani

Join me this Spring for a Complete Guide to world Drumming.

This course is for students and teachers and provides 2 graduate continuing education credits. Many teachers use the credit earned in online courses to advance on their district pay scale, or to renew their licensure.

7595 A Complete Guide to World Drumming

Music educators are expected to teach more than just band instruments and music. World music is an important and requested genre at all points in music education, yet many educators feel they do not receive enough training and experience to successfully teach the various instruments and music styles that fall under this broad category. This course takes you through a musical tour of popular ‘world music’ instruments and genres with video and audio examples of popular percussion instruments, bands and real-world applications. No playing experience is required. Students will be evaluated on knowledge of instruments, rhythms and styles of music. This course serves as a primer for live world drumming training and an expansion to a current world drumming curriculum.

Find out more.

About the instructor.

World Drumming CourseKalani Das is a certified Orff-Schulwerk music educator, Board-Certified Music Therapist and professional musician who has played and recorded with talents such as; Barry Manilow, Yanni, Kenny Loggins, Rod Stuart, and others. He is a frequently requested clinician at MENC conferences and presents workshops and in- service programs for music educators in the US and abroad. Kalani is the author of over twelve books and numerous educational videos. He is the founder of the Developmental Community Music approach and currently provides music therapy services for adults with developmental disabilities and traumatic brain injuries. Specialties include: percussion, ukulele, native flute, and music improvisation.

Filed Under: Education, Techniques

Drumming for Therapeutic Outcomes

April 19, 2013 by kalani

Group Drumming - Drum Circle - World DrummingThere’s been a lot of talk about the health benefits of drumming. From studies in group drumming as a social tool to the science of brain rhythms, drumming has caught the eye of many who work in (or want to work in) health care settings.

This article looks at some of the current trends and applications and will help you filter through some of the information, and misinformation, that you might run into.

We’re going to look at three very small, yet important, words to help us understand how drumming (music) is being used in healthcare settings. The words are: WITH, IN, and AS.

WITH

Drumming can be used “with” just about any population, from children to older adults. When use ‘with’ a specific population, the drumming is usually part of a recreational program. The approach to drumming can take the form of: a drum circle (improvisation with social goals), a musical jam (improvisation with musical goals), a drum class (music lessons), or a performance (music presentation for an audience). What’s important to note, is that the drumming is an activity that is being offered to the group as a recreational experience, for fun. Drumming can be done WITH just about anyone. Even if the population has special needs, the drumming is still recreational, just as if the same people went bowling or to the movies. When people with special needs go bowling, we don’t call it “Bowling Therapy,” even when we make adjustments to accommodate their needs.

What you need to know about “WITH”

Just because people have special needs, does not mean that everything that someone does with them is a form of therapy. Someone who provides a drumming experience for persons with autism, for example, is providing a drumming experience, not therapy, unless they are themselves a therapist and the music is an integral part of their program (We’ll get to this in a moment). Drumming with any population does, however, often require specific knowledge of that population in order to provide quality service and avoid possible negative effects, such as reactions to loud noises, for example. WITH and FOR can be used interchangeably. You can also provide a recreational drumming experience FOR just about any population.

IN

Drumming can be used ‘in” all types of programs. People who are already in a therapy program, whether ongoing or temporarily, can often benefit from group music making and other forms of creative expression. In fact, music and art have a long history of being use in programs aimed at providing some degree of therapeutic value. In this case, the drumming is used to complement other components of the program. The program itself is often designed and run by a therapist or other healthcare professional. When used ‘IN’ a program, the drumming experience may still be recreational and/or educational. It is included in the program for a reason, such as to help participants get to know one another, to help people bond, or to help them find a way to express themselves without words. The healthcare professional uses the drumming in the program, as one of many components, to help his/her clients reach their goals. 

What you need to know about “IN”

Similarly to “WITH,” drumming done “IN” a program is also not itself a form of therapy. It may still take the form of any number of drumming types (drum circles, jams, classes, performance groups, etc.) and be mostly recreational in nature. The difference between “WITH” and “IN” is that in the case of “IN.”, the drumming experience is used, for a reason, as part of a treatment program. The person running the program does not need to be specially trained in music, but they are usually trained in some healthcare profession.

AS

Drumming can be used as a type of therapy. When any or all of the many aspects and components of drumming (techniques, rhythms, cultural components, sounds, etc.) are specifically and purposefully incorporated into a treatment program to help the client reach his/her goals, that drumming is used as a form of therapy. The application of musical instruments, the music itself, and the relationships that are formed within the musical experience, to reach specific non-musical therapeutic goals, defines the profession of Music Therapy.  Although music therapists are not the only people who might use music therapeutically, the profession is defined by the use of music and musical experiences, within a client-therapist relationship, to reach therapeutic goals. In the case of music therapy, the musical experience is not simply recreational (as it is in the “WITH” experience), nor is it simply one of many other components (as it is in the “IN” experience). In Music Therapy, the musical experience is the main tool the therapist uses to help the client.

What you need to know about “AS”

Music used AS therapy is not only most commonly provided by a music therapist (someone trained in both music and therapy), it is provided with the understanding that it is the therapist’s job to help the client reach specific therapeutic goals and objectives. This is similar to the job of the person who uses music “IN” a therapeutic program, and different than the person who does music “WITH” people with special needs. Because music is being used specifically as a tool (similar to the use of medicine or medical tools by a doctor to treat patients), special training and credentials are needed in order to provide this type of service.
For more about becoming, or working with, a music therapist, visit the American Music Therapy Association’s website: musictherapy.org.

What about Therapeutic Drumming or Drum Therapy?

Therapeutic Drumming is a term that has come into use in recent years. It appears to be used when people are referring to the use of drumming both WITH certain populations and IN certain programs. As we know from the above definitions, drumming that is used “WITH” populations and “IN” programs is largely recreational in nature and is therefore, not a form of therapy itself. Appropriate terms for this type of drumming can include “Beneficial Drumming” or “Beneficial Music Making.” Both these terms are accurate, useful, and are likely to reduce any possible confusion with drumming done as part of Music Therapy; however, it is not necessary to label this type of drumming anything other than simply, ‘drumming.’ The term Therapeutic Drumming is gaining acceptance as “Any type of drumming experience that is intentionally used to produce a positive shift in one’s physical, emotional, or cognitive state.”

“Drum Therapy” is another term that has been created to describe drumming that is done WITH certain populations that have special needs. Similar to Therapeutic Drumming, “Drum Therapy” appears to include both recreational and/or educational types of drumming experiences. Because “Drum Therapy”sounds so much like Music Therapy (Drumming is part of music, of course), it is advised that this term NOT be used and that Beneficial Drumming, or just ‘Drumming With’ be used instead (i.e., Drumming with persons with autism.)

Whether an experience is a form of therapy is not determined by the activity itself, but by the application of the activity, the relationship between the people (client-therapist), and the training and qualifications of the person leading the experience. To help make this point clear, consider “Talk Therapy,” which is a service provided by a licensed psychotherapist or psychologist. It would be unthinkable, and also unethical, to promote yourself as a talk therapist (or a provider of ‘therapeutic talking’), simply because you are ‘talking’ with people, even if they get some benefit from talking to you. Don’t make the mistake of thinking that someone is providing a healthcare service just because they appear to be leading a certain type of experience. There’s a lot more to any profession than meets the eye and most healthcare services require some form of training and certification. Creating a term that ‘sounds like’ an established healthcare service can be confusing to both clients and businesses and could even be unethical.

I’m a facilitator, but I don’t have special training in healthcare. Is it OK to offer drumming to people with special needs?

Absolutely! People who live inside institutional settings, or who have limited access to creative and social experiences need those experiences as much, if not more, than the rest of us. Find out about volunteer opportunities in your area and offer your services to as many people as you can. The world needs more music making. When you do visit a facility, do some research on the population beforehand and try to talk to someone at the facility to learn about their community. When facilitating drumming for any population, make sure that you have staff members present in case a client needs attention or you have a question about how to best serve a client. You don’t need to call what you do a form of therapy for it to provide real value. We all know that music making can help people feel better. The term “Drumming” is enough.

Summary

Now you know that there’s a difference between services where drumming is done WITH people, IN a program, or AS therapy. You know that there is a difference between recreational drumming that is done with people with special needs, drumming that is part of a therapeutic program led by a therapist, and drumming that is used by a music therapist. And you know how to define and talk about the kind of drumming experiences that you can offer in a way that is both accurate and ethical.

Filed Under: Community Drumming, Education, Health, Music Therapy, Techniques Tagged With: beneficial drumming, drum circles, drum therapy, therapeutic drumming

The Rhythms of Life

June 2, 2012 by kalani

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Kalani discusses how basic life rhythms relate to several aspects of health and how those rhythms align with and relate to musical experiences. You’ll learn about the different rhythms of the body and get some ideas as to how to structure musical experiences to support and facilitate positive physical and emotional changes that lead to greater health for groups. You’ll also learn how to use ‘the rhythms of life’ to support your own health goals.

Rhythms are part of every-day living and many of the body’s natural rhythms can be used within musical experiences to facilitate positive health changes. This is accomplished through designing and facilitating structured experiences that align with and modulate the bodies natural rhythms in ways that are intentional and desirable. Two primary areas of focus include the rhythms of walking and the rhythms of breathing. Both of these areas relate to �our general physical health and can be developed to affect emotional and spiritual health.

Kalani LIVE 4

Filed Under: Community Drumming, Facilitation, Health, Techniques, World Drum Club Tagged With: dr. andrew weil, drumming, health, health services, kalimba, mark holdaway, medicine, michael thiele, music techniques, Music Therapy, psychology, rhythm, slit drum, sounds true

Using POPS to Teach and Learn Rhythms

May 24, 2012 by kalani

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Discussion of the POPS approach to teaching and learning rhythm patterns. POPS stands for ‘Pattern Over Pulse Sequence’ and is a methodical way to help students (and yourself) learn and play new rhythms. The same concept may be applied to melodic material, but this episode focuses on rhythm.

Kalani LIVE 3

 

Filed Under: Community Drumming, Facilitation, Techniques, World Drum Club

8 Tips for Playing in Rhythm

May 17, 2011 by kalani

I often get questions from teacher, therapists, and music facilitators that have to do with helping their students, clients, and participants entrain to a pulse, otherwise called keeping a beat! With the recent rise in popularity of group drumming and drums as classroom, clinical, and recreational instruments, the need for strategies and techniques that help a group of participants find and keep that beat is on the rise. As it turns out, just having drums doesn’t endow someone with the ability to align with a beat. Who knew?

If you find yourself wondering how you can help your participants feel and align with a pulse, here are a few tips to help you do just that.

  1. Begin with the body.
    Rhythm and drumming ability starts with the body and one’s personal ability to plan, initiate, and execute fine and gross motor movements. Beginning with receptive methods to rhythmic development, such as dance, is an important first step in reaching new levels of rhythmic acuity. Begin with large movements, such as walking, moving the arms, and bending at the hips and knees. Gradually work towards fine motor skills over time.
  2. Begin with the voice.
    There’s a common saying that has been floating around drumming cultures for years: ‘If you can say it, you can play it.” While the origins of this saying are not clear, the message is. Begin with the voice and develop the capacity, through speech, to conceive of and produce rhythmic expressions. You can do this through re-creative, improvisational, and compositional experiences. Using the voice helps people connect to one of their “original” and “native” instruments and offers a way to practice rhythm making anywhere – anytime.
  3. Provide visual support.
    Using a visual, such as a scarf, ribbon, or other manipulative, to act as a kind of ‘visual metronome’ can help people synchronize with the pulse and even complex rhythms. Even having someone look at someone else playing a drum, such as a bass drum played with a mallet or stick, can help provide enough visual input to tip them over the edge and help them fall into the ‘beat bucket.’
  4. Use verbal cues.
    I’ve found it helpful to sit next to someone who is struggling to find the beat and provide verbal guidance in the form of “vocables,” non-word sounds that approximate drum sounds, such as ‘doum,’ and ‘pah.’ You can either do this yourself or have one of your stronger players provide some help to those who need it. Pairing students, clients, and participants has social benefits as well. Sometimes a little personal attention is just what someone needs. Care is taken to not single someone out or make them feel self-concious in that they are getting ‘help from the Teacher.’ Consider moving between players, giving verbal support when needed.
  5. Musicians Unite!
    Begin with unified, rather than differentiated rhythms. There is strength in unity and the more players that are on a specific pulse or pattern, the more weight it carries. This weight is like rhythmic gravity that has the potential to draw players into orbit around the beat (commonly described as entrainment). Once players build up some skill and confidence, add complementary rhythms and more differentiation.
  6. Combine Strategies.
    The more modalities you can align and support at the same time, the better. Most of us learn on many levels; auditory, visual, kinesthetic, interpersonal, etc.. The more of these you can use at once, the more likely you are to entrain to the beat. Consider ways to move through them as a Process, as in the Orff approach to music and movement education. Begin with a receptive method, such as listening to a steady beat while moving (walking or dancing). Add voices via a chant or song. Transfer the beat to body percussion. Invite players to ‘show’ the rhythm in different ways. Have them work in pairs or small groups (Pair strong and ‘challenged’ players).
  7. Songs Songs Songs.
    Using a song as a structure is a great way to stabilize the music and help participants enjoy playing together. Most people have an idea of how fast a song ‘should’ be sung and will tend to reproduce it at that tempo. If you’re trying to have people play drums without singing and dancing, keep in mind that this type of approach is a relatively new idea and and not something that is done in traditional ‘drumming cultures.’ Singing and dancing is traditionally thought of as another aspect of  drumming – not something separate from it. All types of “rhythm making’ work together to provide people with a holistic and musical experience. Rather than looking at the experience as a ‘drumming’ experience, think of it as a creative experience, where people use ALL of their abilities to reach deeply and fully into the music.

What about that “speeding up thing” that is common in groups?

8. Subdivide the Beat.
Speeding up is a result of reducing the space between the notes. In a way, it shows a kind of impatience in getting to the next note to be played. It’s common for players to want to play sooner than later and as a result the spaces between the notes get shorter and this is felt as ‘speeding up.’ Something you can try with your groups, is to have them ‘place something’ in the spaces between the notes. You do this by modeling speaking softly as you play, subdividing the beat with rhythmic speech, ‘nonsense’ vocal sounds, micro-movements, or creating instrumental sounds that can act as a kind of ‘rhythmic graph paper.’ Anything you can do to subdivide the beat will help you keep it steady. Why? Because it’s harder to remove the space from between the notes when that space is already small. When the tempo is very slow, people have a tendency to speed up, but when the pulse is felt as “fast” they don’t. They might even slow down. By feeling a ‘fast rhythm’ inside  a slow one, the rhythm has a better chance of finding balance.

Will any or all of these strategies and techniques work for your groups? There’s only one way to find out. When you do, let us know by telling us what happens.

For more musical resource, visit the Developmental Community Music website

What do you think of this article? Any other tips to share?

Filed Under: Education, Techniques

Techniques of Empathy

January 29, 2011 by kalani

Empathy has been described as the ability to imagine yourself in someone else’s position, to walk in their shoes, and to imagine what it might be like to be them, to feel what they feel. In his book, A Whole New Mind, author Daniel Pink makes the case that the ability to empathize is not only a skill that helps us comfort those in distress, create stronger business relationships, build-self esteem, and allows a parent bond with their child, he sees it among other much needed ‘high-concept – high-touch’ aptitudes that are essential for professional success and personal fulfillment (Pink, 2006). Because emotions are expressed non-verbally, often through making sounds, moving, and experiencing changes in our vital signs, the medium of music making, with vocal expression, movement, and connection to such vital functions as breathing, makes it a powerful tool for the empathetic process to take place.

Matching

Definition: Playing that corresponds to, and is harmonious with, the music.

Description

Matching includes using a similar degree of rhythmic complexity, dynamic intensity, and melodic and harmonic structure as the music you hear. Matching does not need to imitate or echo the music, only ‘fit’ with it. Matching is what we do most commonly during a jam session, playing your own part, but relating it to what you hear. Another term that one could use to describe this technique is “complementing,” also sometimes referred to in musician circles as comping.

Beyond the Music

Friends, partners and peers all match. People who form groups and organizations do so because they have matching interests or traits they share with others. Salespeople use matching techniques, such as mimicking vocal tone, language, and body posture to make connections with potential customers. The next time you’re talking to someone face-to-face, deepen interpersonal connections by matching their general timbre, dynamics, and rhythm.

Experience: Matching

Player 1 initiates musical play. Player 2 listens, then matches the musical qualities, including volume, timbre, rhythmic density and structure (pulse, meter, accents, etc.), tonality, melodic contour, harmonic structuring, etc.

Just for fun: Perform as described above; however, focus on matching only one category (i.e., rhythm) while allowing other aspects of the music to be differentiated.

Mirroring, Synchronizing, Shadowing, Doubling

Definition: Producing a detailed reproduction of the music as it is being played.

Description

This technique is widely differentiated with regards to its name. In the book, Defining Music Therapy (Bruscia 1987), the author defines the act of “synchronizing” as ‘doing what the client is doing at the same time;’ however this can include various levels of synchrony, from all musical elements to just one, such as rhythm. It may also include “cross-modal synchrony” whereby the music of one player is expressed as movement in another, used to support, stabilize or strengthen another’s response. Wigram (2004) uses “mirroring” to include both the music and body language (behavior). The Music for People term is “shadowing,” which is also a common term used in movement activities where someone stands behind someone else and copies their movements, like a shadow. In the world of music arranging, parts that are the same are often called ‘doubled.’ The person using this technique must be ready to anticipate the movements of his partner through visual cues and using his musical intuition. This technique holds strong potential as a tool for creating empathy; however, care is to be taken so as not to appear as if you are mimicking or mocking your partner. Your training and experience will guide you in this regard. Mirroring is an empathetic technique that shows a great degree of synchronicity between players. It is also the foundation for other techniques, such as supporting, amplifying and matching.

Beyond the Music
Putting yourself in someone else’s shoes means experiencing the world the way they do, seeing what they see, hearing what they hear, feeling what they feel. When we job-shadow someone, we get to see what their life is like, the ‘good’ and ‘bad.’ Companies have people job shadow to train people on their way up, but they also have the ‘higher-ups’ work along side their employees to get a feeling for what it’s like to be them – to gain an empathetic understanding. When we move like someone else, we discover ‘how’ they move, which helps us appreciate how they might experience the world. Psychotherapist and workshop leader, Carolyn Braddock, has her clients move like (mirror) important people in their lives as part of a therapeutic process, to get in touch with and bring out thoughts, feelings, and emotions.

Experience: Mirroring

Unimodal: Player 1 initiates music, playing either slowly or with repetition. Player 2 makes his best effort to play exactly what player A plays as he plays it, matching the rhythm, pitch, timbre and dynamics. If this poses a great challenge, reduce the number of elements you are mirroring.

Crossmodal: Player 1 initiates instrumental music and player 2 synchronizes with it using a different modality, such as through speech or movement.

As the number of musical elements to be mirrored increases, this technique becomes more challenging. Dynamics, timbre, and rhythm are generally much easier to manage than melody and harmony. For this reason, you may wish to begin with one player on or both players using un-pitched instruments, such as most percussion instruments.

Tagging

Definition: Mirroring a portion of the music.

Description

This technique involves momentarily synchronizing (mirroring) with the music you are noticing. It can be thought of as a partial mirroring. While mirroring fuses the music of two or more players, tagging joins them for brief moments at a time. This technique can have an empathetic effect that is similar to that of mirroring. It is not as intense as mirroring and the player has the option of tagging several players in a group, mirroring part of the music played by three different players, for example. Tagging lets someone know that you are hearing them because you are periodically aligning with their music.

Beyond the Music
A group of people who are traveling together represents multiple individuals, even though at times they may be engaged in the same activity. At other times, each individual might be engaged in a somewhat separate activity, such as when a group of tourists leave their bus to explore the local terrain. During this time, it sometimes helps to maintain a sense of connectedness to join different individuals at different times, checking in to let them know you’re there and circulating throughout the group. This type of momentary synchronization allows you to connect with others while still having an individualized experience.

Experience: Tagging

During partner or group play, listen for musical features such as trends and repeating elements. Join with a particular trend or rhythm for a moment, then move to something differentiated. A simple way to do this is to find a rhythmic ostinato, then play only a portion, such as the last two or three. As you tag a pattern, you also amplify it, thereby changing its effect.

Imitating, Echoing, Copying

Definition: Playing the same thing as someone else, after they play it.

 

Description

In the definition provided by Bruscia (1987), he describes this technique as echoing what someone plays. I prefer the term ‘echoing’ because it clarifies that you are playing after someone else and it is a common term used in music education, i.e., “Won’t you be my echo please?” Some may also use the term ‘copying.’ Echoing can happen within a rhythmic framework (phrases that are separated by a set number of beats) or it could be more free-form.

Beyond the Music

When we repeat what we hear, we are affirming the message. We are showing that we were listening. As we converse, we might repeat key terms and phrases that were spoken by our partner to show that we have heard them. Echoing is one of the primary ways we learn, often repeating things before we have any idea what they mean. When we are echoed, we might feel validated and honored. When done with the right intentions, imitation really is the highest form of flattery.

Experience: Imitating

Player 1 initiates a short phrase. Player 2 imitates it, making an effort to reproduce the music as accurately as possible. Begin with rhythm instruments, then move to simple melodies (2-3 notes), then to more complex melodies. It may be helpful to use musical givens, such as limiting to a few notes, playing stepwise melodies and/or imposing other constraints. As you become better at imitating, lift some of the filters to push out the edges of you musicality.

Quoting

Definition: Incorporating previously played material, in whole or part.

Description

Quoting is a kind of musical recycling, where bits of your partner’s music (or you own) appear in yours at a later time. These often take the form of melodic ideas, but they might also include specific rhythms, breaks, or expressive elements. In certain idioms, such as Jazz, it is not uncommon for an artist to ‘quote’ the melody of another tune during an improvisation.

 

Beyond the Music

Like imitation, quoting is a way of honoring someone else. Consider all the quotes in this book, many of them by people who have passed on, and yet their words live on through this text. How would you feel if someone used your words decades or even centuries after you spoke them? When we quote someone, we are saying “I think what you said was incredible! I’m glad to know you!”

Experience: Quoting

Play music with your partner, occasionally quoting something they previously played. A quote may become an ostinato for brief periods. This technique is useful for creating a sense of continuity because musical material is being repeated and recycled. It is also supports empathy because it shows that one player has listened to and remembers what the other player has expressed.

Vignette #1

Identify  the name of the technique associated with the each number.

Brian began experimenting on the woodblock. His rhythms were erratic without any specific patterns or cycles. Charles started playing the shaker in a similar way, experimenting without establishing any specific patterns or structure [1]. Andrea entered on a frame drum, playing what sounded like a rhythmic pattern. Cindy then entered on the cowbell, playing a simple beat under Andrea’s pattern [2]. Brian changed his playing to align with both Andrea and Cindy, playing a pattern that complemented theirs [3]. Brian began playing four-beat phrases, separated by four beats of rest. During the time that Brian was not playing, Charles would repeat whatever Brian had just played [4]. Brian eventually established a repeating four-beat pattern and Andrea mirrored pieces of it [5]. Cindy stopped playing her steady pattern and started playing like Brian did when he began, rather erratic [6]. Eventually everyone abandoned their rhythmic patterns and joined Cindy, playing rhythmic flourishes and eventually ending the same way they had begun [7].

This post is based on a portion from Kalani’s book, The Way Of Music – Creating Sound Connections in Music Therapy. (Sarsen Publishing)

The way of Music
The Way of Music

 

Filed Under: Improvisation, Music Therapy, Techniques Tagged With: belonging, empathetic techniques, empathy, improvisation, music techniques, musical connections

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