Monday, August 25, 2008

Notes from a Question/Answer with Midori

These are Gwen Gates's notes from the Q & A session we had with Midori. We thought they were worth sharing with everyone, as they are quite good notes!!


  • Chamber music preparation requires just as much dedication and detail as that of solo work.
  • Once you know about 75% of your own part, rehearse all together as often as possible.
  • In today's world, we often look for the fastest, most convenient way to get what we need or want. In music, we need to make discipline and patience, and hard work, a priority.
  • There isn't just one correct way to play a certain phrase.
  • "I would never ever say that classical music is dead. We're in a very precarious place, but we aren't dying." (Midori's words)
  • To inspire your students, be the example of what they should be.
  • You're more likely to have a larger influence if you develop a close relationship with your students.
  • What to look for in a score: patterns, the obvious (key, meter, etc?), themes.
  • Take it step-by-step; don't jump to conclusions.
  • Try to find something new in the music every time you read it.
  • Find the phrase, experiment with how to get the message across.
  • On finding inspiration (easily) - there's no real way. But listening is very important. Think about the composers' language.
  • You may experiment and fin that you're wrong, but then you are much wiser.
  • "What I learn from my students I also bring to my performance."
  • Balancing practicing: never ever take out warmups and exercises. You don't save any time either, it is unhealthy.
  • Being warmed up correctly is directly tied to your sound output.
  • Scales, trills, vibrato practice - makes playing easier.
  • Have a balance between the known and the unknown.
  • Solo piece - start from the beginning. Organize patterns and structural designs.
  • Pursuing career - stay with a good teacher, no matter where you want to go. Whatever degree you do, in music, there's always business, communication, writing, presentation.
  • "The real life of a musician isn't just about playing."
  • Classical style - balance clean and engagement
  • Her greatest obstacle - she is inspired, yet also scared, by how much she doesn't know, or ever will know.
  • Balance frustration with something to help the students own their success.

There were a few more, but nothing you can't find out by using Google :)

1 comment:

Brandon said...

Qwen takes such good notes... I'm envious.