Posts tagged: musicians

Annoying and Alienating your Fellow Musicians

I ran across an article about musicians’ manners and had to pass it along, both for its good (anti-)advice and the humor behind it.

Our friends at Horn Matters (HM) posted a great article entitled How to Annoy and Alienate Colleagues in 11 Easy Steps. I’ve been reading Bruce Hembd’s wisdom since he ran the HornDog Blog several years ago. Bruce and his co-conspirator at HM, John Ericson, know that of which they speak…and while this article, like many on HM, are written with the full-time professional as their focus, much of this material applies in whole (or large part) to us as PTMs.

Yes, the linked article is funny…but it’s painfully so in some ways. I can attest that the same type of antics exist in the trumpet section of a community orchestra, a jazz ensemble, or an informal seisun at an Irish pub. Read it and enjoy it, by all means! But as they say, “Don’t let this happen to you!”  :-)

Be a good musician, be a good team player, and you’ll have a great time and get some great gigs. If you see yourself in any of these “11 steps”, mend your ways before it’s too late! You’ll have more fun, more opportunities, and more friends if you do.

Keep playing,
Mark

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Musicians…are smarter!

Another article has been making the rounds lately about musicians’ brains, and while it’s not “new news” – it was originally published a couple of years ago – it details a study that backs up various means of observation with rigorous science.

Our friends at ScienceDaily published a summary of a study conducted by Vanderbilt University researchers that details increased levels of activity within both sides of musicians’ brains, as compared to non-musicians, when performing complex problem-solving tasks. They also noted that musicians typically have higher IQs. Click here to read the full article, but here is my favorite part (among many favorites, I must add!):

“When we measured subjects’ prefrontal cortical activity while completing the alternate uses task, we found that trained musicians had greater activity in both sides of their frontal lobes. Because we equated musicians and non-musicians in terms of their performance, this finding was not simply due to the musicians inventing more uses; there seems to be a qualitative difference in how they think about this information.”

No doubt about it: learning and playing a musical instrument benefits you in several ways, not the least of which is giving your brain a good daily workout. Play on!

All the best,
Mark

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Christmas cartoon for musicians

If you’ve ever wondered what to get your kids (or your neighbor’s kids!) for Christmas, this cartoon might give you some good ideas. I’m reminded of the old Chinese proverb that says, “If thine enemy wrong thee, buy each of his children a drum.”  :-)  Hat tip to fellow trumpeter Doc D’Errico for the cartoon!

Brapp

Nevertheless, there are few gifts that give as much to all involved as a musical instrument. However you may (or may not) observe Christmas, we wish you peace.

All the best,
Mark

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Church Music Resources for Part-Time Musicians

When I received this review of the Lifeway Worship Project from long-time friend and PartTimeMusician.com contributor Steve Hamrick, I knew several of our readers would love to see it. If you play music in church on a regular basis, or even on special occasions, this could be a great help. Resources like this enable us prepare better, play better, and generally make life better for musician and listener alike.  :-)  Steve, thank you for passing this along!

Keep playing,
Mark

Bass In Church

Church Music Resources
A Review of the Lifeway Worship Project

Many of the readers of PartTimeMusician.com are involved with music in some church-related capacity.  Regardless of denomination and size of church, there are many challenges we all share in finding new, reasonably-priced musical resources for our church programs.  Serving as a worship minister for many years in the local church and for the past several years as a state music director for a major evangelical denomination has given me an opportunity to see the struggles of churches in finding things like new hymns, praise songs, instrumental accompaniments, accompaniment tracks, and new choir music.  While there are many publishing companies that provide quarterly resources through choral clubs, I haven’t found they are too helpful in providing music for congregational worship. And what if you serve in a small church with no pianist or organist, or perhaps the only one who plays is sick or on vacation?  What do you do then?

I would like to tell you about a product that I have used for over a year that has helped me more than any other single resource for congregational worship, the Lifeway Worship Project. I should say that this company does not pay me nor am I representing them in this article, although I have been privileged to visit their headquarters in Nashville and know many of those who have developed this product.

It must be a real challenge for church music publishers to provide music for such a varied audience.  Some churches sing hymns, others sing contemporary praise songs, many use a blended approach while yet others prefer a southern gospel or country style of music. Church music programs are often accompanied by a full orchestra; others, a praise band, organ, piano, guitar, or perhaps they have no accompanist at all. To provide a single resource to meet these vast needs would be a seemingly impossible task.

When the Lifeway Christian Resource Company was in the process of producing a new hymnal a couple of years ago, the realization came to surface that in our digital society, a hymn book was out of date before it could even be printed. As a result, they decided that alongside the new hymnal, they would produce an online resource in which they could add new songs and arrangements as necessary.  Lifeway took on an enormous task of developing an online and hard-copy product that included arrangements of all the 650 songs in the printed hymnal plus 250 additional new songs and optional arrangements.  Here’s where it gets interesting.

Lifewayworship.com decided to not only to make the SATB arrangements of the hymnal available online, but the following parts may be downloaded a la carte: extended piano accompaniment, organ, vocals, full orchestra, individual instrumental parts, lead sheets, praise band charts, chord charts, PowerPoint files, and even Finale™ parts.  If that wasn’t cool enough, with the finest session players in Nashville, Lifeway recorded MP3′s of every song in the project. Each song can be downloaded as a listening track, a split track (accompaniment on one side and vocals on the other), or a stereo accompaniment track, sometimes in multiple keys.  The hymns are recorded with full orchestra and the praise songs are recorded with praise band instrumentation.  The accompaniment tracks are extremely helpful for soloists, small groups, or choir.   The tracks make a great option for the church with no accompanist. Lifewayworship.com decided to price their products similar to the iTunes Store®.  With no monthly membership fees, downloads range from $.10 to $1.99 each.

Wait, there’s more.  Because every soloist and worship leader doesn’t always want to perform every verse, Lifewayworship.com allows you to make a Songmap of many of the songs in the project.  A songmap allows you to make your own arrangements of the hymns and praise tunes.  Do you think an arrangement has too much repetition? Just cut out the extra parts. Need it in a lower key? Most songs are available in several keys. What is amazing is that Songmap will provide you with an accompaniment track, printed music, and even orchestral parts exactly to your specifications for your arrangement.

Another neat feature of the Lifeway Worship Project is that it saves your downloads on their database. This means that when you download a song to your computer, you will also have it stored on-line where you may access your library at anytime from any computer as long as you have internet access. Of course, there are copyright restrictions by which you must abide.  Almost all the products you can download are also available as hard copies on DVD/CD. There are also some excellent video accompaniment tracks for praise songs and hymns.  The Lifeway Worship Project also produces moving and still backgrounds for media projection software.

You can listen to every song in the project by clicking on this link. Go to the middle of the page where there is a box labeled “Play the Lifeway Worship Project,” scroll to the song you want, and hit play. You can also hear snippets of any song from the main Lifewayworship.com when you type a song in the “find and buy” box. You can also preview pdf’s of every printed arrangement before you commit to purchase anything.  Another neat feature is that in the “find and buy” box, you may also type in a subject, scripture, or author and get results of your search.  You do not pay for anything until you check out so I encourage you to experiment within the site. There is also a basic free worship planning tool called Worshipmap, and an advance worship planning tool called WorshipmapPro which has a yearly subscription.  The Lifeway site sometimes is slow and accessing it from a fast internet connection is advised.

While you will not find every hymn or praise song from every denomination, you will find over 1000 songs written in terrific arrangements to use in your church.  Sign up yourself or your church for free and then give it a try.

Steve Hamrick is a regular reader of PartTimeMusician.com and currently serves as the director of Worship and Church Music for the Illinois Baptist State Association, Springfield, Illinois. He can be reached via email or at his website.

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YouTube for musicians: technique

This is the third in a series of articles about using YouTube to accomplish your goals as a musician. Many of these goals overlap, but today, we’ll try to keep our focus to using YouTube to learn technique.

There are numerous ways to learn new technique on your chosen instrument. Some things require a great deal of effort working with a good instructor to really learn and master. Others can be absorbed easily after just a short demonstration. In either case – and in all cases that fall between them – a good demonstration can really facilitate learning to do something new with your instrument…or just learning to do something better.

Itzhak PerlmanOur youngest performed Sarasate’s Zigeunerweisen with two area orchestras when she was 13 years old. Anyone who knows violin repertoire understands the difficulty associated with this piece, and our daughter worked very hard to learn it. Along the way, she spent a great deal of time observing the “masters” playing this piece…and one way she did that was via YouTube.

While this video could also fall under the “inspiration” category, Itzhak Perlman demonstrates a great deal of technique in it. Between Mr. Perlman, Jascha Heifetz, and others, we had sources-a-plenty to which to turn for visual and audible guidance, in addition to the excellent tutelage of our violin instructor, a professional violinist herself. But back to YouTube.

This video is instructive throughout, but if you want to preview why video/audio demonstrations can contribute so greatly to learning new technique, skip to 7:50 and watch to the end. Once you do that, you’ll probably want to watch it from the beginning to see what you missed in the build-up.  :-)

Getting a sound or technique into your “mind’s eye” can help you get there, provided you put in the work to learn and master it. YouTube is a great way to do that, offering opportunities to see and hear experts demonstrate what you’re trying to learn whenever it is convenient for you…and as many times as is necessary. Can it be done without YouTube? Of course. Can you build a highway using only hand tools? How much time do you have?  ;-)

Make use of this great tool to expand your horizons! It will only make you better.

Keep playing,
Mark

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