Tuning The Air

Doing Nothing, While Doing Something

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tuning the air, 2008 rehearsal. press release photo: chris florkowski

Worked again with members of Seattle Circle on the Alexander Technique as they prepare for the recommencement of their performance of Tuning The Air this March. Jaxie, one participant, said it seemed to be about “Doing nothing, while doing something.” A simple summation, yet enough for a lifetime of work and, hopefully, play. These are musicians after all, and music is meant to be “played.” Yet, it should be true for everyone: if our work does not yield to play at some point, there is little purpose to anything we do, for to play is to be part of creation.

This season, the performance will include twelve guitar players in a big circle and, as usual, the audience in the center. That’s three more than in this photo and the new performance space is much bigger. For once, the word “awesome” does apply. Recommend marking a show date in your calendar now. You don’t need to buy a ticket in advance, just show up a little early, and there’s free parking.

Notes from that class in Curt Golden’s blog may give you a hint as to what they are up to this time.

The Well Known Hook

Today’s post comes from something I wrote in an email thread concerning the challenges a musician faces to be truly responsive in the moment, especially concerning improvisation. This all came out of a class that was part of the preparations for Tuning The Air’s upcoming season. I was presenting the Alexander Technique in the first hour, followed by two more hours from that day’s music instructors, Bob and Bill. A more detailed account of this can be found on Curt Golden’s blog.

I wrote, with a few edits:

…my take, though it is hardly original: in an attempt to make our local world safe, we want it to be fixed and reliable. Some things we can make (reasonably) reliable and thus predictable. For example, we might hang a key on the same hook so we will know where to find it. Or we might gain a reliable degree of proficiency in a skill so it is there when we need it. Hard not to see great survival value in this strategy. However, most things in our lives lie beyond our control and rather than understanding that and thus gain the ability to perceive their true nature, we fall back to attempting to make them safe. We hang the key on a well known hook when instead the key, in that moment, needs to be unlocking a door.


As a writer, I admit to being rather pleased that, “well known hook” and “key” fit in with the theme of barriers to creative musical improvisation.

final meeting, raft island guitar craft course, october 2009. Cases closed, they walk out. iphone photo: frank m sheldon
final meeting, raft island guitar craft course, october 2009. iphone photo: frank m sheldon

A Class in the Alexander Technique

I did a class in the Alexander Technique with the members of Tuning The Air , a guitar performance team, and was later asked by email to summarize. What follows is a quick take, but I’ve decided to post it without too much revision. I’ve left out all of the details of the activities of the class. Perhaps I will go into that another time if it seems useful. The term, “critical moment,” is one that F. M. Alexander used, and I have certainly not exhausted the depths of it meaning in what I have written below.
cases emptied in preparation for a performance last year. iphone photo: frank m sheldon
cases emptied in preparation for a performance last year. iphone photo: frank m sheldon

As to summing up myself, again, the heart of the matter is the "critical moment" that occurs just before we do something. In some ways, this means even
before we get ready to do something, as it is at this moment that the power of our habits tend to take over. Many times, perhaps, this may not seem as immediately significant as, say, the first note a musician plays before an audience. However, even the way we pick up a kitchen implement, although it might not have an obvious effect on how the carrot in the stew finally tastes (and some would dispute that!) does in some way effect our state, our field of awareness, and our sense of our life in that moment. This can have repercussion that can extend into every aspect of our life. So, in some way, everything is important.

The critical moment is where we have the chance to shift from our habit to a new way of doing something but not as simply a change in technique, but because the act comes from a completely different place from within ourselves. This new way may be unsteady at first, but the aim is to arrive at a better choice for the outcome of the act we are attempting. The aim is to come from a better place within ourselves. For instance, less unnecessary effort in playing a musical instrument almost always seems to result in a better quality of tone. I've heard this myself many times. It may also effect the musician’s sense of time, their sense of play with other musicians, perhaps even smooth the way for the creative force to enter. All of that is possible when we shift to another place in ourselves, a place of responsiveness that is possible when we are truly in the present, where we begin to become free from our past conditioning and worries of the future. Today we began to look at that. What better day.

As I mentioned in the class,
Alexander was willing to try things out, and even make mistakes, because he had the hope of directly experiencing what happened before, during and after the critical moment. After gathering enough experience, he would then take another step. Sometimes he even had to back step. I suspect that some version of this willingness to step outside the world we know is present with anyone who has become excellent at whatever they have applied themselves to, be it music, sports, writing, cooking, science, teaching…anything really. What Alexander brings to this is a way that any person can go about this: a map as it were. We do this by starting not directly with whatever action or skill we wish to improve, but with ourselves, that is to say, how we are when we attempt to act as that will influence not only the quality of that act, but the quality of our life. With commitment, this can become a true virtuous circle.

Alexander Technique with Tuning The Air

I'll be working as an Alexander Teacher again with Tuning The Air , a project that I helped begin in 2004. Their new season starts this spring, this Saturday is their first rehearsal, and I will be there.

preparing for a special performance of the orchestra of crafty guitarist. iphone photo: frank m sheldon
preparing for a special performance of the orchestra of crafty guitarist. iphone photo: frank m sheldon

Last October, I also worked on a one-week special Guitar Craft course on Raft Island where most of the TTA team was present. Part of that course was a performance before a live audience in Seattle at the facility where Tuning The Air does their weekly show. Along with another Alexander teacher, Sandra Bain Cushman visiting from Virginia, I was asked to work on the musicians while they played before the audience! I can only remember one other time during my twenty-four years with Guitar Craft that this has happened to me, and I found it highly satisfying to be “on stage” and part of the performance in my own small way. The players were sitting in a large circle much as they do during Guitar Craft courses. Many years ago, as well as individual sessions and AT focused classes, I discovered I could be useful on these course by going around during the guitar classes and using my hands carefully on the students as they practiced. Practically speaking, this usually meant working on the players while standing behind them. I always aimed for just one moment where something useful might occur: a little release of the neck, shoulders, or elbows, for instance, although sometimes it amounted to simply bringing awareness of unnecessary tension that was not yet ready to leave.

I have to say that during that performance in Seattle, I was especially moved to look across the circle of guitar players and see Sandra on the other side. She had been the first student in the
Alexander Teacher training course I use to run in Virginia back in the 80s, and she has turned out so well! Sandra has become very much a part of Guitar Craft, and I have a feeling we will work together again.

If you are in the Seattle area, Tuning The Air is a unique group performance that is well worth your time.