I recently auditioned several singers for a cantor position at my church
and most of the singers either admitted to being nervous or displayed
attributes of nervousness. There was absolutely no reason to be
nervous because the people in the pews were not passing judgment on
them. Those people were there to worship God or accept any mental,
emotional or physical healing they could gleam from the liturgy. Fr.
Bill was going to make the ultimate decision but I suspect he was basing
most of his criteria on the phone interview.
Musically, there
were many things I was listening for such as tone, diction, pitch and
rhythm but, there were other factors which stood out for me more so. I
took note during the rehearsal if they were marking or doing an all out
performance. If they performed, was the actual singing of the music
during the Mass a carbon copy or newly alive in the moment? Was there a
synaesthesis between us? More on that later.
One singer who
impressed me greatly was a woman who looked out at the people quite
often and had a genuine smile on her face. Not the fake kind that voice
teachers teach. Just as you can hear a real smile over the phone, you
can hear a forced smile or masked smile on a singer, too. This is why
some mediocre folk singers can touch us more than a trained singer can.
The music comes from someplace deeper.
This woman, as she sang
the line "Here, a million wounded souls, are yearning just to touch you
and be healed." she fixed her gaze up and out over the heads of the
people. That caught my attention. Then on the line "See the face of
Christ revealed on every person standing by your side." she made a
sincere perusal of the congregation. It wasn't something
choreographed. I could see her look at individual people, too. To
quote Yoda, "The force is strong with this one." So, what is this
"force?"
When I accompany a musician on the piano, I can feel
them in my hands. Mozart once said that the hands and fingers must
never play together. Chords must never be struck in perfect timing.
The notes should be misaligned in time, that they are desynchronous.
One of my teachers taught me that a melodic line must not be played in
perfect metronomic slavishness. That you steal micro-beats from one
note but make it up in another. This is called entasis meaning
"tensioning." Any speech or song which is metronomically perfect can
lull our audience members' brains to shutdown. This can happen
immediately from the first few notes or words. Our ears and brain crave
micro irregularity of timing to remain alert and attentive.
I
*try* to do this in my playing and, when I encounter another musician
doing this, we gel together, like puzzle pieces fitting into one
another. Entasis is what I connect to synaesthesis. It is a paradox
when the voices or instruments are truly independent and seem complex
but to the listener and performer it is simple to feel, listen to and
follow. My friend Byron and I have this when we perform together. I
don't know if it is him or me but, I can feel his performing and
phrasing in my hands as I accompany him and without even looking at him,
I know when he is going to breath. I don't get that often with many
singers. They seem to sing without regard to me and I just follow
them. It is quite dull for me as an accompanist.
What does this
have to do with stage fright? It is actually what musicians need to
strive for in order to overcome fear. Some teachers will say that you
have to know your music so well or memorized that you won't be nervous
or, your preparation will overcome the nervousness. Some say that
practice makes perfect but we all know that in reality PERFECT practice
makes perfect. If you practice mistakes, no matter how much you
practice you will always make those mistakes. Even with perfect
practice, being nervous can undo much of our preparation. Natural
entasis and synaesthesis comes from a place deep within which can not be
touched by the "Id" or nerves.
So, what are nerves? They are
of our own creation. In the movie "Forbidden Planet," The Krell were a
race so advanced, that they created a machine which made their mere
thoughts into reality. It was the ultimate achievement in creation
until one of them thought the entire race out of existence, and so it
was. Stage fright is the same thing, if we give it power, it will take
total control over us. As the saying goes, give an inch - takes a foot.
So
how do we control it? Of course, preparation, perfect practice, being
physically warm, diet and rest; these things can ameliorate nerves.
Then there is avoiding the pitfalls of the Krell; not to give power to
nervousness in the first place. If one were to sing Amazing Grace at
the bed side of a dying parent, would they be nervous about their
performance? Most likely not. For, their offering comes from the
heart, from pain, from love, from com+passion (with+suffering), and
sacrifice. It will naturally be filled with entasis because their
guard will be down. It is within those thin spaces that entasis and
synaesthesis exist. You can't force it or train for it. It has to be
there and it comes from embracing the you you hide.
When that
cantor looked out at the congregation while singing those two lines, was
it choreographed? Did she make a mental or written notation to "look
out here?" My synaesthesis told me no. Of course, any musician or
stage performer who tries to force this entasis and synaesthesis between
performer and audience runs the risk of self grandeur and that is not
the same thing.
A performer needs to first realize that they
perform what the page reveals and they reveal what their spirit
possesses and what they are desirous to share. They are the conduit
between page, instrument and spirit. Spirit and sharing are both a gift
and only require that we accept them and give them freely. Anything
else will result in stage fright or metronomic performances.
When
we seek self grandeur, applause, perfection or don't know why we do
what we are doing, we run the risk of the Krellian fate or the self
fulfilling prophecy of nervousness for, the performance is then not
about them, it becomes about us and that scares us. Ask any battlefield
hero or fireman who runs into a burning building to save someone if
they were nervous and they will probably say no. They did what they had
to do to save a life. If what we do on stage is to share, to teach, to
inspire, to heal, to save or to comfort, we won't fail either. Every
singer should first feel their text for if they don't know what they are
singing about or feel the place where the text comes from, the audience
will know it. Then, entasis won't exist. Synaesthesis won't exist.
The audience will get bored. The singer will sense this and nerves will
creep in. It's then too late.
CPE Bach, in his Essay on the
"True Art of Playing Keyboard Instruments," suggested that one should
"endeavor to avoid everything mechanical and slavish. Play from the
soul, not like a trained bird."
No comments:
Post a Comment