Recently, after two years of music lessons with a private
instructor, two years learning on my own, then two years with a different
instructor, I found myself in a practice rut. Although my passion for making
and listening to music felt no weaker, I was lacking motivation and drive. I
stopped my lessons again and started looking for something to get me back on
track. As my readers know, I delved into Practice-opedia, and that was very helpful
in giving me new ideas and “tricks” to get back at the piano, but it didn’t
actually help me to make any music. It was about then that Jim Robitaille, the author of a book called Sound Origins contacted me to offered to give me a copy of his book. He asked me to review it on Amazon, too, but there were no strings attached. I'm always happy when a fellow musician wants to share music or musings with me, and the timing
couldn’t have been better, so of course, I agreed to read his book.
Jim Robitaille is a noted musical scholar and
accomplished musician. In addition to performing with a plethora of jazz
musicians, he’s also a teacher and composer. In this book, however, he does not
make any attempt to improve your chops or give you a pep talk. Instead, he
covers, in a very personal way, what it means to make music. By that I do not
mean he defends its value or tries to convince readers of the worth of the
endeavor of making music. Sound Origins is more about thinking of music on a
different level and incorporating that into one’s own musicianship. I think the
best way of thinking about it is, it’s harnessing the forces and energy in the
universe that make music, rather than beating a song out of a Steinway or Les
Paul.
Indeed, a good example of this is Mr. Robitaille’s take
the cross pollination of art forms. He discusses at some length, and again with
many personal examples, how poetry, painting, conversation, even science
fiction and random noise, can become driving influences in the creation and
composition of music. There are lots of meaty explorations like that in this
short book. If anything, I would say one of the weaknesses is that the author
makes a brief suggestion and then leaves it at that, without delving much into
what the expectations for a given thought activity (or whatever) might be and
where it might lead. Part of this may be simply wanting to leave it to the
reader’s imagination and motivation, part of it may be not wanting to limit the
reader, but I think the author probably had more thoughts to share, and I think
those would have made the book more interesting.
The electronic version of the book that I received had
several examples of songs with the sheet music in the book. This did a lot to
emphasize and illustrate some of the points the author made. This is an easy
read, and although it is a short book, I believe any serious musician will take
away something of value from this book. Especially if you find yourself where I
did, wanting to make music but having “forgotten” how to even be musical, Sound
Origins is a great place to start over from.
I truly commend Mr. Robitaille on his insight and effort to put such difficult
subject matter into words. And, I thank him for sharing his book with me and the readers of Late To Jazz.
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