Attentional Fitness Training for Musicians
Athletes and musicians -- and anyone else who has committed effort over time toward the development of a specific skill -- tend to have some advantages when it comes to these strategies. But what if there were exercises and drills to add to the mix that could systematically support the development of concentration, clarity, and equanimity in the context of rehearsal and performance?
Silence Lets Your Mind Just Be Free to Run Around
"I think that the reason they want to have music in a funeral home is that the silence lets our mind just be free to run around with whatever thoughts that we have. And if somebody's in a funeral home, they're very likely to be having sad thoughts."
~ David Young
Inside and Outside
"Take a few minutes now to just listen to and become aware of your surroundings."
~ Adyashanti
Soothed by the Bell
Why is the sound of a mindfulness bell such a great warm up for any attentional fitness workout?
Listen to Music, Hear Your Thoughts
By default, most of us have developed a stunning and sophisticated repertoire for blocking out the world around us. We allocate the bulk of our attention inwardly toward the stories playing out in our minds.
Feeling Emotion Conveyed by a Performer
“The brain processes musical nuance in many ways, it turns out. Edward W. Large, a music scientist at Florida Atlantic University, scanned the brains of people with and without experience playing music as they listened to two versions of a Chopin étude: one recorded by a pianist, the other stripped down to a literal version of what Chopin wrote, without human-induced variations in timing and dynamics.”