1.18.2005

Feedback

Feedback can be described as the delivery of criticism tempered with praise, most often couched in good manners. Another kind of feedback can be described as the amplified signal from speakers or monitors being picked up again by microphones and then being re-amplified, causing unpleasant squealing, screeching, or ringing. Although these 2 kinds of feedback are quite different in nature, their effects are most often the same.

It has come to my attention as of late that there are times when I'm not hitting the mark musically. Of course, one is always one's own worst critic. But there is safety in keeping that shame a secret, and hoping that no one else notices -- or at the very least, hoping that the compassion of others will help bridge the gap between one's aspirations and reality. But when the voice inside one's head is heard on the outside, too, it takes on a new, horrible visage.

It's shocking to me how certain tasks have the ability to translate the crux of your inner life so accurately and broadcast them out to the world. Boxing is such. Are you distracted? Hiding behind your defenses? Overly aggressive? Do you think too much? Pow, pow, pow. Same with knitting: if you're too wound up inside, you end up making a row full of knots. And so it is with music.

However, unlike boxing or knitting -- tasks that were effectively thrust upon me aganst my will, yet have taken on a certain charm over time -- music is my natural path. It's my joy and pain and the metaphor for everything. Despite such lofty declarations, though, it's also just another kind of work, and work requires work. You can't have a dog and expect that because you love it so much, it will know how to behave. It has to be trained.

So off I go to puppy school.

Woof.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi E ~ Great post! First of all, just want to say that I can't pin point your weak spot, so don't think there are a lot of people out there not telling you about an obvious booger hanging out of your musical nose or something. Music is subjective and it is a path, and as such I don't see perfection getting involved in the equation. There are a lot of Very Popular Musicians that also have Critical Cred that could use More Chops In My Humble Opinion, and as long as you're striving to be better, you're generally ahead of most people as far as I can tell. All the best with your current talent disciplining regime! xoxo ~ Liza.