Last night, my mind was slightly blown while listening to Beethoven’s “Tempest” Sonata. The piece plainly exhibited example after example of the World Building and Sleight of Hand magic I teach in the Wizarding School. It was a masterclass in how to obtain musical excellence. And here’s the best part . . . Beethoven’s music […]
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Get Better at Counterpoint with This One Centuries-Old Trick
FACT: In classical music, chord progressions are a byproduct of contrapuntal gestures. As a Paris Conservatory professor once said, “Harmony is a fairy tale told about counterpoint.” This is no “chicken or egg” question. For more than 500 years, beginning with medieval chant, European musicians thought in terms of melodic lines. It wasn’t until 1722 […]
Continue readingHow You Can Jumpstart Your Composing This Summer!
For most of us, summer is peak composing season. School’s out! Teaching’s done for the year! And (finally) the pandemic is easing up! You may be all geared up to launch into your next choral commission, write the piece for your festival, or even finally produce that chiptune track—but with everything going on, you probably […]
Continue readingWhat Tolkien’s World Building Can Teach Composers
Among fantasy stories, J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings is renowned for the depth of its world building. Just to write the trilogy, Tolkien created extensive backstories, poems, maps, and even entire languages, including their calligraphies. Tolkien’s world is so thorough that, even when he doesn’t share the backstory in a given passage, it still […]
Continue readingDo the Work of Inspiration
Inspiration is the ideal starting point and goal of all music. That is why it’s the composer’s greatest scapegoat: You may feel that inspiration is fleeting and unreliable—that it comes on its own time and in its own way. You may think that inspiration is just a feeling—something you can’t always conjure with thoughts or […]
Continue readingWhat I Learned from Quitting Music
I’d had it with music. Composing was too hard, too frustrating. I couldn’t figure out how to get the sounds I heard into my head onto the paper. Worse—I wasn’t even sure if I should put those sounds to paper. So I became an editor. Or rather, I added the editing minor to my undergrad […]
Continue readingHow Chess Captures the Essence of Why Composing Is Hard
When I was in elementary school, my siblings and I went to the chess club at our local library. (This was back when playing chess would make you a “nerd.” Or, at least, back when I might have cared about being called a nerd.) Chess club solidified my hazy idea of what all the pieces […]
Continue readingMy Biggest Musical Embarrassment
I was mortified. I had been invited to conduct my Calvin and Hobbes–inspired piece, “Go Exploring,” during a reading session of a visiting ensemble. The musicians were struggling with the music I had written in general and with a certain 7/8 bar in particular. They had been rehearsing the piece without a conductor, and then […]
Continue readingHave You Fallen into the “Technique Trap”?
As musicians, we learn a lot of technique in school. It’s what we’re graded on. It’s often what we value in others or ourselves. It can be easy to think that technique is the be-all, end-all. At the very least, focusing on technique feels comfortable. It’s what we’re used to. It feels like something we […]
Continue readingAre You Hiding Beneath “Better”?
Some musicians constantly buy new gear, because they think it’ll make them a better musician. Others constantly try to develop new skills, because they think theirs are not good enough. And it’s true. Yours could probably use some growth. Yet new gear and improved skills are just a security blanket. Every day— Someone who orchestrates […]
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