My book Self-Discipline Superpower is sparking some interesting conversations. Thank you to those who have added to that conversation.
I’ve been thinking…
There seems to be a connection between self-discipline and authentic (real, personal, true, etc.) jazz playing. I’ve been talking a lot recently (for years, actually) about the difference between playing notes and playing music.
Jazz has become a worship of the mechanics to play high, fast, and loud, and not enough on playing the authentic imagined musical lines we hear in our head. I blame those schools that teach jazz in the traditional mechanized manner of math and science, and also the proliferation of online teaching focused more on the visual than what we hear. Eyes over ears.
In my Jazz Master interviews, I like to ask about the role of courage in being artistically authentic. And I think equally important is the self-discipline that can focus you to find and then be true to that inner musical voice.
It’s so tempting to imitate others, and at our early stages of musical development, imitation plays an important role. But as we mature and get to know ourselves much better, we develop our own musical voice.
I think self-discipline gives us a tool that keeps us true to that inner musical voice, which is especially hard precisely because it WILL be different from others.
Mankind has been around for a quarter-million years and throughout 99.99% of that time, our survival depended on not standing out from the group or tribe. Going out on a limb or expressing one’s individuality was life-threatening.
Self-discipline (and courage) can help you choose to break from that evolutionary urge and refuse to succumb to the temptation of sounding like others or like you are told you are supposed to sound. After all, this is jazz.
When someone shares with me that they wish they could tell better and more interesting stories with their improvisation, my first reaction is that they are trying to tell those stories through imitating the voice they hear in other musicians–the way they’re told to sound. That’s actually hard to do.
Unless you are a really good actor, it’s hard to tell in words an interesting story if you are trying to impersonate a famous person’s speaking style. Quick, tell a cool story sounding like SpongeBob. Your emphasis will be on the speech mannerisms rather than the content.
I’m not offering this advice to beginning jazz players or people just starting on their instrument. I’m talking to you if you have developed a certain level of technical proficiency on your instrument and have listened to enough jazz to at least know the fundamental language.
You can’t tell a good spoken story if you don’t have a sufficient vocabulary.
Try this experiment:
Click on the image below to go to my Soundcloud playlist containing a variety of cool backing tracks containing very simple harmonic movement.