commentary

The Healing Effect of Group Drumming

As someone who has performed in many percussion ensemble situations over the years, I can only begin to describe the feelings of peace and empowerment that group drumming sessions can create. It really is something you have to experience for yourself to fully understand.

For those who want to read all about the scientific bases describing the healing power of group drumming, take a deep dive into this recent study sponsored by the Royal College of Music in London and published by Public Library of Science.

Here are a key excerpt to consider:

This study demonstrates that group drumming leads to enhanced psychological states, specifically less depression and greater social resilience, across six weeks compared with a control group, extending the findings of our preliminary study.

What the Super Bowl 41 Halftime Show Tells Us About Greatness

It’s Super Bowl Sunday, and I must admit I am a bit ambivalent about the game when neither the Steelers nor Eagles are involved - unless there is some compelling storyline that should be followed. Another reason to tune in is for the halftime show, which for quite awhile was THE marquee live performance event of the year. Only the titans of the music industry get invited to play the halftime show: Bruce Springsteen, U2, Prince, Tom Petty, The Who, Beyonce, The Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, and the list goes on and on.

But of those performances, on the biggest stage in the world, some were pretty good, some were terrible, and occasionally one or two performances were transcendent. Of the dozens of Super Bowls and halftime shows I’ve seen, only one stands out as truly great - Prince’s performance in the driving rain at Dolphin Stadium in Miami at Super Bowl 41 in 2007. That band and that performance - in my humble opinion - will live forever.

I won’t recount all of the circumstances, because those have been ably documented elsewhere (the documentary below does a pretty good job of setting the stage).

What is really notable about Prince’s performance here is that it tells us something significant about live performance. Great performances are few and far between, unless you are at the top of your craft and in complete command of your ensemble, your instrument and the audience. A transcendent performance, like Prince in a driving rainstorm at Super Bowl 41, is a rare thing indeed.

It is the rarity of this level of performance is that makes it special. You can remember standing there looking at the TV, watching it unfold and being transfixed by it all. If this kind of thing happened everyday, you would soon stop appreciating it and move on to the next thing.

There is a trend among concert promoters and bands these days to relive, recreate and repackage the past. You can sell tickets to just about any tribute band performance nowadays, no matter how atrocious the musicianship or presentation is. There are many pretenders out there.

If you have read this far, you do care about these things. If you are a student of mine, current or former, and have read this far, you know by now I want YOU to be a great one in your own way. Be a great one, and be original. Demand that of yourself overtime you pick up the sticks or mallets. This is what propels the art form forward.

Why Music Education Matters to Me…

Why Music Education Matters to Me…

The first percussion students I taught were at Upper Darby High School in 1990. Since then - twenty nine years ago - I’ve worked with a lot of young people to perfect their musical skills and watched them go on to college/university and do great things later in life.

There is a core set of capabilities that students develop when they apply themselves to their practice and their pursuit of musical excellence. These are not just capabilities that young people develop, I’ve witnessed this in adult students also. Most importantly, and this goes without saying, these skills directly translate to all other phases of life.

Creativity in Decline?

Creativity in Decline?

There can be no reasonable dispute that creativity is an integral part of innovation and of entrepreneurship. One of the problems with thinking about creativity as a life skill is that creativity is difficult to quantify and measure. More on that in a minute.

The “traditional” advice that kids should study hard in school, get good grades so that they can “get a good job” misses a very large point. I use the quotation marks to show some disdain for traditional thinking. Traditional thinking is a good way to get suck in a rut and put yourself far away from your goals if you aren’t careful.

Here is the point that the traditional advice misses: the effort of the students is only one aspect of the development of creativity.

Book Review: Creative Quest, by Questlove

Book Review: Creative Quest, by Questlove

Perhaps one of the most prolific creators of today is Amir K. Thompson, who is better known as Questlove to the millions of people who see him lead The Roots every weeknight on the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon.  For most performers, The Tonight Show gig would be the capstone achievement in a career. Not so here. The Tonight Show gig is really only one of a handful of Questlove’s simultaneous creative pursuits that seemingly defy human capacity.  How does he do all those projects, and do them all at such a high level?  

The mind reels when you consider that in addition to co-leading The Roots with Tariq Trotter, Questlove: 1) teaches at New York University; 2) has published multiple books, and several of those of those books (including Creative Quest) have landed on the New York Times Best Seller List, which I’d argue is still the gold standard of legitimacy (or at least commercial viability - more on that later); 3) gigs extensively as a DJ and 4) runs The Roots Picnic, an annual summer music festival in Philadelphia that is hugely popular.  This list is non-exhaustive, and omits the radio show, the podcast and quite a few other things, but you get the picture.