Posts by Ethan Kind
Tenor Saxophone – Believed Lies that Limit Your Potential (Musicians)(Psychology)(Pain)(Strain)(Injuries)(Posture)(Alexander Technique)(Albuquerque)
This ebook, An Alexander Technique Approach to Tenor Saxophone Technique, is published on this website in a PDF format. It is very detailed and practical, and it will give you the physical tools you need to take the limits off of your ability to create the accurate saxophone technique you want without sacrificing your body.
This ebook is also for sale on all AMAZON websites in a KINDLE format.
Located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.A. (MOVEMENT THERAPY)
All performing and beginning tenor saxophone players gather evidence to prove what they believe about how good they are and how good they can become.
What do I mean? If you believe you don’t have the talent to be an extraordinary tenor saxophone player, to perform the greatest literature written for your instrument, then you will demonstrate it in your saxophone playing. Every time you play a difficult piece, you will struggle to make it through the hard passages.
You will prove you are right about your limited abilities by struggling through your wonderful literature. Which comes first, the beliefs in your limited performing talent or the demonstration of your limited talent?
I believe the beliefs come first, and then you go about proving what you can’t do on the tenor saxophone, whether you’re 5-years-old or 60-years-old. The saxophone is simply the perfect vehicle to prove what your potential is or isn’t in the things you want to learn.
When you choose a tenor saxophone teacher who uses negative reinforcement to teach you the instrument and teaches you a saxophone technique that does not allow you to play this instrument with ease, then if you believe you have limited talent on the tenor saxophone, it will be effortless to prove it to yourself and the teacher.
When you believe you have limited talent, you have two choices, if you continue to play. The first choice is you don’t put in much practice time or effort, because you’ve given up on yourself before you start. The second choice is you prove to yourself and the world that you are going to do whatever it takes to become a fine tenor saxophone player DESPITE your lack of exceptional talent.
The world definitely loves number two. I’m not sure which the world admires most, the Mozarts or the overcomers. I think the world admires the overcomers, because there are a whole lot more strugglers out there than Mozarts. But is this true? Are most tenor saxophone players overcomers, lacking the potential to be extraordinarily facile players?
If you choose a tenor saxophone teacher who uses a love of music and positive reinforcement to teach you saxophone, tied to a tenor saxophone technique that uses Alexander Technique principles of good body use, then you are confronted with two choices. Either you accept and watch yourself become a wonderful tenor saxophone player making great music easily, effortlessly, and joyously, or you prove to yourself and the teacher you lack talent.
Why would a new tenor saxophone student, or a struggling saxophone player who had found a tenor saxophone teacher and/or Alexander Technique teacher who could make the saxophone easy, choose to prove there is no way they could play with great ease? Because, if you are the hero in your life by being an overcomer, then it is infinitely more important that you live always struggling, so that you can admire yourself for hanging in there, even though you believe you were dealt a poor hand of cards.
So, when you come to the tenor saxophone teacher and/or Alexander Technique teacher who can assist you in revamping your saxophone technique to teach you how easy the instrument can be or will be, and you’ve been an overcomer, then you will continue to take lessons, if you’re ready to give up having to struggle and overcome to feel good about yourself.