With
a Knuckle and a Belt
It’s been my pleasure and good fortune to attend a music camp or
some form of summer musical event since my first year at the National Music Camp at Interlochen, Michigan in 1954. These music camps were fewer then, but today
they seem to exist in almost every village or every college or university
campus. This is a good thing, a wonderful thing; at this time in our turbulent
world we need to connect with our creative aspects more than ever before.
I just arrived back to my home in Oaxaca, Mexico and awaking at
3:am jet lagged and energized. It’s dangerous to speak in superlatives in today's world, they seem abundant in just about everything but in my thoughts at this
moment Italian Brass Week resonates as a superb event. The venues of all the
concerts and events in this historical magical city of Firenze are certainly
without compare. One such event that must be noted was an antiphonal concert with
over 100 players in three different locations: from the Pontevecchio, 4
Gondolas anchored in the middle of the Arno River and from the bank of the
Arno River. The players on the Pontevecchio and from the riverbank were largely
students and the players on the 4 gondolas were mostly the Italian Brass Week
faculty.
The faculty for this year’s Italian Brass Week was comprised of
some of the best young (younger than I) palyers and theachers we have. I deeply appreciate them for
what they have taught me. As in all the summer music events I’ve enjoyed since
my 1954 Interlochen experience I have returned much more enlightened. However,
we cannot ignore time or history.
I remember so well performing at what I considered a high level
and being aware that there was a growing number of younger players who were
surpassing me in both tuba skills and musicality. It was clearly time to turn
my attention to teaching; this was a new direction that freed me from the
encumbrances of tuba performance and opened the door to a wider view. Da Vinci
said it’s the student’s duty to surpass the teacher. I have seen and enjoyed
many times that da Vinci was right.
But there is another serious dimension to address. We cannot
escape history or ignore the future. As in performance, new ideas, methods and
techniques in teaching are rapidly emerging. An aging teacher cannot continue
functioning in a period from a time that has past. The knowledge and thoughts
of the new generation of teachers, maestros and senseis are the key to moving
ahead. We have a choice here: we either incorporate the new thoughts and ideas
and add them to our greater experience or stubbornly hold to our inevitable
obsolescence. It needs to be mentioned that much of the ‘old school’
pedagogical methods are harmful to our students. The time of the knuckle and
the belt have past.
Hopefully aging brings knowledge and wisdom with it. Da Vinci is
right again, the new generation of teachers have become the mentors of their
Maestros.
Roger Bobo, Oaxaca, Mexico, July 23, 2017