Art Stays With You

Last night I attended TED Live in Cinemas – the opening session of TED2016, simulcast to my local movie theatre. I was inspired, uplifted, encouraged, and challenged by the entire group of presenters: from 10-year-old author Ishita Katyal, to Google X head Astro Teller, from geneticist Ricardo Sabatini (my son’s favorite) to TV […]

Every Performance is a Milestone

Milestones aren’t destinations. The ancient Romans built them so travelers would know how far they had come, and how far still to go to their goal. When you treat a concert as a destination, you are ignoring the real destination (yearlong goals of artistry, knowledge, teamwork). So I ask my students to think of concerts as […]

Three Leadership Strategies

Nate Silver, the celebrated statistics maven, is above all a brilliant pattern-noticer. As his site has evolved into an organization with employees he is managing, he’s broken down the code for leadership into three strategies. You have three fundamental strategies you can use as a manager, right? Let’s say you think […]

Priorities

Yesterday I published my post late by several hours. I like to be posted by six, and have been a little late all week thanks to not having the opportunity to write before the morning. Yesterday, I didn’t write because my six-year-old asked to play a game. At 6. A. M. As […]

I Practice in Public

In college, I loved the soundproofing in the practice rooms, because I wanted to make mistakes only in front of myself. (I didn’t really want to do that, even…) The last week or so has found me working on Mozart’s Twinkle Twinkle Variations, just for fun. I have found myself generally practicing […]

Lessons From My Mom

There are few people as lucky as I in the parent lottery – and one of my goals as an educator is to teach the lessons I learned in my home. With that in mind, here are three lessons I learned from my mom. Give as much as you can. Whether it was […]

Knowing is Not Enough

Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must do. – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe I try to read that quote every year to my students before a performance where they have the potential to raise their personal and group bars. This year, that was District Solo & […]

Who Invented Music?

Yesterday my son asked, “Who invented math?” I explained that math isn’t invented – it’s discovered. Having 2+2=4 is a symbolic representation of something real in the world: say, picking apples. The symbols were invented and evolved over time in various cultures, but the core of mathematics is true whether you can represent it or not. Pi […]