It's interesting reading this, particularly in terms of the specialisation - musicians not improvising and not composing; I come from a background of having learned much of the guitar by ear, improvising and working out much of the material I learned to play. This enabled me to learn a number of important skills, but my reading is TERRIBLE. I started trying to do it when I had been playing maybe a year or two - my main teacher knew it was an important skill - but I never got on with it and it's always been something I've shied away from; Just about every year I will try to improve the situation, but it's still "The cat sat on the mat", in terms of my reading level - massively behind my playing level, and I find it really mentally demanding to read when playing, and I think this comes from not persevering with it early enough.
Many of the musicians I play with come from the other side of this - they are excellent readers (some unbelievably so), but they can't improvise in many cases, and a great deal of them aren't happy playing unless everything is written out for them; many can't simply learn a riff or parts and the overall structure of the song, and then know when to come in; I've had to score some horn section parts with hundreds of bars of rest for them to count before coming in - something I initially thought they were taking the mickey with - and without this they are just as stuck as me trying to read.
Different schools of music stress different skills, when really all of them should be practiced, as mentioned in the article; while my reading is still BAD, what I have learned has made me a more rounded musician, and also helped me understand what I'm doing from a different angle; in the same way having played lots of styles of guitar-based music means I am much more rounded and capable than if I'd just stuck to one style. However, the author's voice is not one I've heard much in music education; it's still fairly ghetto-ised.
Reading is hard and it takes a lot of time - years - to get good at it.
The trouble (not the right word, but bear with me...) is that improvisers assume reading is easier than it is. In fact it's exactly like learning a new language from scratch. Even if you can already play you can expect to spend at least a couple of years getting to minimal fluency, and much longer to being able to sight read mid-level standard rep with any confidence.
Oddly, improvisation is the same. You have to work at it for a long time to get competent.
But I agree with the general point. We've tried to put classical music inside a glass case to keep it pure. Historically, that was never what the music was about, and it's tragic that we no longer teach classical musicians to improvise as well as perform.
This is true in many fields. In part due to education or culture, but also because people need compartmentalize things. For instance, as an illustrator it is harder to sell your services if you are able to work in different styles. And yet this is what makes you more rounded and more resilient as a professional in the face of change.
I imagine the same applies to a person who can code in different languages. A client will likely prefer the best in any given field. Someone who masters a single, proven way over someone who tries new ways or different techniques. And you can hone that single skill all your life. But as a practitioner, it might not be the best strategy. What do you do when your speciality becomes out of trend or obsolete? In the end, whichever school you pick, only the results matter.
So true, almost every musician I've met assigns themselves to one or the other camp. Apparently it's very difficult to cross the chasm on this. I've tried to cross from reading to playing by-ear by forcing myself to perform without any score (admittedly simple tunes) and it's been a difficult transition but I think it can be done with lots of practice.
The other direction is probably harder because it feels constraining rather than liberating.
I've definitely found it true for myself. My biggest strides as a musician have come from times outside traditional study, where I've just taken an interest in another facet of music. Whether it's recording, reading, listening, transcribing, improvising or just trying to become more technically proficient at my instrument, I always find it helps my playing and understanding as a whole.
Try Leavitt's Modern Method for Guitar! I'm totally in the same boat, and forcing myself to "slow down" and play really simple songs well in standard notation has helped my confidence a ton. It's totally reasonable to self-study the book if you're already fluent playing the guitar.
This hits home for me as a musician myself. I have often lamented overly prescriptive scores, for example something from Eric Whitacre. Granted, they are often intended for high school choirs where you have an inexperienced director directing inexperienced singers, so the composer is trying to exert some (needed?) quality control over the end product. But a good director, or even better a good singer, doesn't need every single phrase punctuated by a crescendo and decrescendo, for example. It's patronizing.
Similarly, in a given song you may find an ascending line marked/not marked with a decrescendo. What this means is simply "fight the natural tendency to get louder as you approach a higher tessitura." Sometimes this is marked and sometimes it's not. If it's not marked, a bad singer will plow through thoughtlessly (or worse, misinterpret and get even louder as if it were a great big cadence). If it is marked a bad singer might take it too literally.
Experience, critical thinking and good, well-rounded musicianship can help you make these performance decisions. But those skills and qualities are becoming rarer. Not just in the field of music, either.
I grew up with classical piano training (though I was never all that good at it), and a few years after moving to China started taking lessons in the guqin (古琴[1]). The main challenge there (apart from the fact that the instrument puts most people to sleep) is that the traditional tabulature simply doesn't give you that much to go on -- the earliest "sheet music" doesn't even indicate rhythm.
Not only that, but the contours of each piece are really only meant to be a guideline for playing: there is tempo and rhythm, but it's meant to be very flexible, subject to the mood and expression of the player. The most difficult thing in the beginning was letting go of strict time signatures, and allowing in some elastic silence. My Hanon-trained figures kept wanting to keep the beat, and they told me I sounded like a robot playing...
While many Jazz standards can loosely be written on a paper napkin, "perfectionism" exists when a band leader insists on using particular scales or harmonies for improv, or a specific swing feel.
This is where sight reading, academic, musicians tend to struggle (considerably).
My wife who played 4th part viola in an orchestra told me yesterday that Mozart was always the most joy to play - because every part of the score is actually a nice little melody, and that this is pretty unique to Mozart. Maybe that's related to him also being a virtuoso?
Mozart is such a pleasure to play, he really is a perfect composer, andnclearly a hyperactive mind - when you're paying it the 100th time you're smiling because of all the little details - he invents countless little melodies, and all very satisfying. From an outside perspective people might not understand because his sounds kinda like generic classical music, if you don't listen carefully.
The Beatles' recorded music is chock full of little mistakes, as anyone who's tried to learn their music by ear can tell you. Their backup vocals are often quite imperfect. Yet the songs as a whole are irresistible.
This is why I still enjoy listening to recordings from the earlier half of the 20th century, despite the reduced sound quality. Musicians seemed a lot more adventurous back then. Today, many of the top performers sound very similar.
Many of the musicians I play with come from the other side of this - they are excellent readers (some unbelievably so), but they can't improvise in many cases, and a great deal of them aren't happy playing unless everything is written out for them; many can't simply learn a riff or parts and the overall structure of the song, and then know when to come in; I've had to score some horn section parts with hundreds of bars of rest for them to count before coming in - something I initially thought they were taking the mickey with - and without this they are just as stuck as me trying to read.
Different schools of music stress different skills, when really all of them should be practiced, as mentioned in the article; while my reading is still BAD, what I have learned has made me a more rounded musician, and also helped me understand what I'm doing from a different angle; in the same way having played lots of styles of guitar-based music means I am much more rounded and capable than if I'd just stuck to one style. However, the author's voice is not one I've heard much in music education; it's still fairly ghetto-ised.