To me, Performance is part of our technique regardless of musical style.
For those of us who experience it, managing performance anxiety or stage fright is a critical part of our practice. More than one accomplished player I know has confrimed it and I've experience it severely in my musical life. I believe there are techniques for it just like the other musical aspects. There were a couple clear moments of improvement for me late in life and far apart.
"it's not about me"
The first came when I had to sing in front of people and conduct other musicians. What got me through was realizing that it wasn't about me personally, but about a musical job to do and I had a particular role in it to make the music and ritual happen.
"nobody's gonna die"
In reading the writings of Kenny Werner, Kip Rosser, and William Benzon, it's been helpful to be reminded: keep perspective, a wrong note does not kill anybody; ultimately there are no wrong notes; music is a primary and universal human pattern; we are all musicians, it so happens certain of us are playing at the moment; the theremin is not impossible to play; the collective act of musicking, including both players and listeners, forms an additional cognitive structure that informs the player's performance.
"so lucky to be here, it can't get worse"
After making it through a massive storm that prevented several scheduled artists and a good friend from appearing, and after many unimaginable technical issues that extended even into performance, it turned out to be the most relaxed performance I've ever given. I just felt so lucky to even have made it there with everyone, that nothing worse could happen, and even if the power went out or I fell on my ass, we'd all still have a good time and a great story to tell.
Just some more thoughts on how we do it.
For those of us who experience it, managing performance anxiety or stage fright is a critical part of our practice. More than one accomplished player I know has confrimed it and I've experience it severely in my musical life. I believe there are techniques for it just like the other musical aspects. There were a couple clear moments of improvement for me late in life and far apart.
"it's not about me"
The first came when I had to sing in front of people and conduct other musicians. What got me through was realizing that it wasn't about me personally, but about a musical job to do and I had a particular role in it to make the music and ritual happen.
"nobody's gonna die"
In reading the writings of Kenny Werner, Kip Rosser, and William Benzon, it's been helpful to be reminded: keep perspective, a wrong note does not kill anybody; ultimately there are no wrong notes; music is a primary and universal human pattern; we are all musicians, it so happens certain of us are playing at the moment; the theremin is not impossible to play; the collective act of musicking, including both players and listeners, forms an additional cognitive structure that informs the player's performance.
"so lucky to be here, it can't get worse"
After making it through a massive storm that prevented several scheduled artists and a good friend from appearing, and after many unimaginable technical issues that extended even into performance, it turned out to be the most relaxed performance I've ever given. I just felt so lucky to even have made it there with everyone, that nothing worse could happen, and even if the power went out or I fell on my ass, we'd all still have a good time and a great story to tell.
Just some more thoughts on how we do it.