finding new ways to be a singer. they're probably old. they're new for me.
Thursday, 3 September 2009
Bobby Mcferrin documentary
"If you're in an African village, you're dancing and singing all the time but you're not performing, it's just a part of your day... I try not to think I'm performing."
"Music should be made in the moment and then left behind."
"Artists are the architects of heaven. Our job is to bring a little bit of heaven down to earth."
I've been singing all my life and performing since I was 11, with some professional work with Honeyroot and Oi Va Voi.
I've never loved anything more than camp fire jam sessions, mess-around vocal jamming in groups, and when I get lost in playing around musically on my own.
So how do you take away the safe casing of carefully rehearsed performance and offer instead a more raw kind of music? Can the quality of the campfire be brought into performance, or do I reject performance to a passive audience? How do you be a singer today if you want to keep music for pleasure not commerce, you no longer want to work within the limits of composition but you want your singing to be alive and part of something?
No comments:
Post a Comment