Dear friends, I'm sorry I've been away for so long. A recent piece for the book; I hope it has meaning for some of you. - MG
QUANTIFIABLE
Recently I was given the task of putting together a mechanism for
assessing the progress of my conducting students. It was not a suggestion; it was a mandate from my University. From the State of Ohio. I attended a nine-hour series of classes
on how to construct a curriculum map, on defining program outcomes, on action
verbs and Bloom’s Taxonomy. I
thought about everything we try to teach, and everything we hope our students
will learn. Everything that has to
be assimilated, from scores to skills; from how to shake a concertmaster’s hand
to how to read a painting of Caspar David Friedrich. I thought about how I learned the craft, and about how I
pieced together a career, how long it took; what one might call the “Last man
standing” method. I thought about
NASM (National Association of Schools of Music) guidelines, about everything
you have to KNOW, and everything you have to be able to DO. From the languages one must understand
and speak, to the physical gestures one must master to the point where they
look easy. About how we assimilate
style, and acquire taste. I told
the instructor of the class that such a program assessment for orchestral
conducting was not possible; she assured me that it was.
She
asked about our program requirements; I replied that there were few. She asked about assigned readings; I
told her there was only a “book club.”
She asked how I knew if my students read the books; I said that I didn’t.
She asked how I could determine if
someone knew a score; I said that I could tell just by watching them
conduct. She was left incredulous
at my unsystematic approach to teaching. But she was no less exasperated than I. The question I finally asked her was
this: “How do you quantify pain?”
According to the Buddhist tradition: “If you seek the great
Enlightenment, prepare to sweat hot beads.”
I
thought of a great quote from Bill Buford, one that I use frequently in my
teaching. He wrote about the
process of becoming a chef to the effect that one simply does and does and does
until one eventually knows more than others and learns the craft. I was never
taught specifically how to do my job.
I don’t have a degree in my field of expertise, nor do I have a
doctorate in anything. Yet I have
a career. I have studied music for
51 years and have worked in the field for 33, and ultimately I mastered my
craft. I have just done it longer
than anyone else and eventually learned a lot of scores, acquired a lot of
tools and picked up a lot of tricks. Never was I called on to quantify what I
learned or how I learned it. My
teacher, Gustav Meier, used to say, “You gotta KNOW!” I put it this way: “Si
sa, o non si sa.”
If
you want a conducting career, it also helps if you don’t really want worldly
possessions, or can cope with challenging steady relationships.
A spouse, a child, a car, a house. It helps is you pack light, as I tell our voice
students. It helps if you are
thick-skinned; if you are smart.
It helps if you don’t mind having the crap beaten out of you,
emotionally if not physically. It
helps if you understand the language of sound. If you know how to hold a knife and fork, this is useful. If you know all of the important
symphonic works in the key of E-Flat Major, that is a good thing. If you can do the diving board, toss
the pasta, save vertical space and know how to drift, there is hope for
you. If you understand Schenkerian
analysis and like the blues, don’t quit yet. If you appreciate Barnett Newman and Gerhard Richter, you
have a chance. If you understand
soccer and baseball, you will gain insight into orchestral thinking. If you can predict the future and read
a soprano’s mind, you might get through “Mi
chiamano Mimi.” If you know how to dress and speak three languages, you
might survive. If you know – and I
mean, KNOW – a few hundred scores, there may be a path forward. Above all, if you are curious, there IS
a way forward. Curiosity is the
key to learning. It too is not
quantifiable.
Back
to the assessment plan. The one
thing I couldn’t do is what I was asked to do, and yet I cobbled together a
map, a plan that someone from the outside could decipher and assess. Because ultimately that was my task –
to compile an assessment that itself could be assessed. Please note that we haven’t even used
the word “art” yet. And in some
vague sense, that is what my students want; they want to learn how to “make
art” with an orchestra. And of
course they want to get paid for it.
They see video of the up-and-comers, of the living masters, of the podium
legends. They don’t want to
conduct the pops concerts, the family series, “Tubby the Tuba.” They watch their YouTube, their Googles,
their Bings. And they think that
conducting has something to do with any of what they see online.
There
is nothing “sexy” about mastery of our craft, nor about our career path. People win competitions and positions;
I know neither how or why. There
is little that is quantifiable in terms of progress. One can test for various skills – sight-singing, score
reading, dictation, “drop the needle,” but there are simply too many intangibles. One cannot assess score study, for even
if one knows the score, it doesn’t mean that one understands the language. Meanwhile, to quantify actual
conducting denies a basic premise – I don’t want my students to look like I do
when they conduct, even if I want them to have craft tools to use when they
need them. You can’t quantify
gesture, particularly gesture that is unrelated to a specific musical event. And even if the orchestra plays
together, there is no way to account for taste or style.
We
can’t quantify taste. We can’t
quantify style. We can’t quantify
knowledge of a score. We can’t
quantify gesture. We can’t quantify the measure of a man or woman. Above all, we can’t quantify the
meaning of sound, or our grasp of it.
In Lao Tse’s words, the Tao that can be explained is not the eternal
Tao.
And
yet there is something to be said for assessing the mastery of certain skills,
of knowledge of history, be it cultural, artistic or political. If one knows not just the opus numbers
and the dates of Brahms’s oeuvre, but
the works themselves; if one has PLAYED or sung them, then that surely must
enhance one’s understanding of the composer. If one can read score at the piano well enough to decipher
Mahler 9, one can get one’s fingers dirty with the sounds, the harmonies, the
dissonances. If one knows what was
happening in the world when Bizet wrote Carmen
in 1875, if one can read and understand the French, if one has read the Merimée novella, one might understand why the work was so unique, so revolutionary. Why it failed at first, and why it is
beloved today. The more dots of
repertoire and craft one has, the more dots one can connect. And that IS
quantifiable. After which, as a
former student of mine memorably remarked, when all else is in place, art shows
up.
Mark Gibson, copyright 2014
Mark, this is wonderful! I've been thinking about much of this as well lately. And I suppose also, where is the field going? Where are the orchestras, choirs, conservatories and universities going? What will be different for our students, as opposed to our career arcs? What will be the same? How do we prepare them, not only to be good conductors, but for a world that doesn't exist yet?
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for this! I hope the book goes well--I'll look forward to reading it.
Richard