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Re: [xmca] For the musicians



So where is this TV? On the ceiling? Behind him? In the tent? Under his feet? On the back of his eyes?
:)
Andy

David Kellogg wrote:
I don't mean to throw cold water on the discussion, but if you observe the boy very carefully, you notice some rather odd things.
His audience (presumably mom and dad) are where the camera is. But for the most part he is not looking in the direction of the audience, even when they actually say things. For the most part, he is looking somewhere to the left of the camera. Sometimes he is looking there quite intently. So I think there is a TV monitor over there somewhere. He is probably watching a DVD of a professional performance of the symphony and he is imitating the conductor's movements, exaggerating theme here and there (e.g. when he falls off the podium). This would explain how he manages to anticipate the instruments, and it also explains why he consistently prompts (e.g.) the strings in a particular place, and why some of his movements appear to be his own, exuberant creations (as Ivan perceptively remarked) while others appear to be those from the outside). Now, I am not raising this observation (which I think is correct) as a spoiler, or a dampener, or a hater. To me, the only thing it really spoils is the idea that some musicality is inborn or inherent or culture-free (something I am always reminded of when Westerners who I grew up with cannot seem to learn to love Chinese opera the way I do). Schweder remarks somewhere that three year olds in Orissa are very much like three year olds in America, while five year olds in Orissa are much like adults in Orissa and really very little like five year olds in America. I think that this video shows that enculturation can be much more direct and immediate (and early and incomplete) than this statement supposes. I remember reading an article by a recruiter for the Julliard who was responsible for scouting out preschoolers of "innate musicality". After many years of trying to test for it and interview for it and so on she concluded that there was really no such thing: it's a matter of loving the music enough to put up with the grinding and somewhat mindless practice that mastering it entails. It's much more romantic to believe in innate musicality (and also slightly aristocratic, when you think about it), but there is really no scientific basis at all, not in this tape or any where else that I can see. It seems to me that understanding the video as an instance of what Vygotsky calls "imitation in a broad sense" (that is, imitation which involves an imitation of the ideal as well as the real, an understanding of the goal as well as an understanding of concrete actions that go into the goal) only enhances the remarkable sense we get from it (by making it understandable and reproducible and not just worthy of praise and envy). At the beginning of Vygotsky's essay on the prehistory of writing (Chapter Eight of Mind in Society) Vygotsky complains that when children learn to read and write we sometimes pretend that when we have taught them the alphabet, our job is done "Children are taught to trace out letters and make words out of them, but they are not taught written language." Interestingly, he continues his critique with a musical metaphor: "This situation recalls the development of a technical skill such as piano-playing: the pupil develops finger dexterity and learns to strike the keys while reading music, but he is in no way involved in the essence of the music himself." (1978: 105-106) I think Vygotsky would, like most people on this list (and certainly like Ivan) say that this is a kid who is deeply involved in the essence of the music. I notice that the daughter in law of the late great Carlo Maria Giulani says, in one of the many comments on the video, that the little boy's gestures suggests to her that the little boy might be a direct inheritor of her father in law's tradition. Actually, those words may be even truer than she supposes. David Kellogg Hankuk University of Foreign Studies --- On Tue, 10/25/11, mike cole <lchcmike@gmail.com> wrote:


From: mike cole <lchcmike@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [xmca] For the musicians
To: "eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity" <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Date: Tuesday, October 25, 2011, 6:04 AM


Its those same kinds of observations that evoke the idea of perezhivanie, I
suspect,
Steve.
mike

On Tue, Oct 25, 2011 at 4:30 AM, Carol Macdonald <carolmacdon@gmail.com>wrote:

Yes, Steve, that's exactly what he was doing, just like a conductor, and he
is THREE!  I have to say I have never sent a "topic" out and got so many
responses.
Carol

On 25 October 2011 12:59, Steve Gabosch <stevegabosch@me.com> wrote:

My personal experience of the video clip involved ways that watching the
boy conductor enhanced my experience of this music, which I am very fond
of.
  I found myself reading his motions and listening to the music through
his
ears and body, especially places where he was anticipating changes - for
example, the way he would increase the agitation of the baton and his
arms
as the music went from soft to loud in some of the great crescendo
moments,
seeming to push the music forward and to greater heights with his own
determination and enthusiasm.  A great reminder to listen to, appreciate
and
truly feel music - and of the power of anticipation.

- Steve



On Oct 24, 2011, at 4:21 PM, Helen Grimmett wrote:

Hi again,
I put this link on my facebook page and Gloria Quinones commented
"That's
what I call perezhivanie!" I'd love for you to explain what you meant by
that comment here Gloria - but it made me think not so much about the
perezhivanie of the little boy, but about our perezhivanie as we watched
it.
As a musician, my previous experiences certainly gave me a unique
interpretation of what was going on which would not necessarily be
appreciated or understood in the same way by somebody who has never been
conducted or tried to conduct an orchestra, yet their own experiences
and
expertise in other areas of life would no doubt lead to other equally
interesting and emotionally stirring responses and interpretations.

Whose perezhivanie were you referring to Gloria? The boy's or yours? I'd
love to hear about other people's perezhivanie (emotional experience) as
you
watched it and how it is informed by your previous experiences (with
music,
young children, videoing, having a runny nose in public, dropping
things,
being in hysterics, prodigies, performing etc, etc). What resonates with
you
and why? Maybe this might help us work out what we mean by perezhivanie?

Cheers,
Helen

On 24 October 2011 17:01, Helen Grimmett <helen.grimmett@monash.edu>
wrote:

Priceless! It would be fascinating to know the story behind it. I could
not
believe how well he knows the music, and his facial expressions in the
quieter, slower parts are just exquisite. Thanks for sharing Carol.

Cheers,
Helen


On 24 October 2011 15:30, Carol Macdonald <carolmacdon@gmail.com>
wrote:
This little boy is a savant: he actually know the whole movement.
  Watch
carefully and you will see he is not *following* the music, but
orchestrating it.  It doesn't say, but perhaps  his father is a
conductor.
Interesting, because there is not such a strong developmental
line/critical
period for music, as most composers are highly precocious.

Enjoy it, it made my day.  I hope it makes yours.

Carol
(P.S. He reminded us how old he is when he picked his nose!!!)


http://www.choralnet.org/view/**268945<
http://www.choralnet.org/view/268945>




--
Be mindful. Regret nothing.
Carol's motto.

*Visiting Lecturer
Wits School of Education
Research Fellow*
*Linguistics Dept: Unisa
*
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Helen Grimmett
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Be mindful. Regret nothing.
Carol's motto.

*Visiting Lecturer
Wits School of Education
Research Fellow*
*Linguistics Dept: Unisa
*
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