THE ALEXANDER TECHNIQUE
AND THE MUSICIAN

         

‘The brain becomes
used to thinking in a certain way, it works in
a groove, and when set
in action, slides along
the familiar, well-known path; but when once it is lifted out of the groove,
it is astonishing how easily it may be
directed.’

F. M. ALEXANDER

 

Performers and musicians of all types from Yehudi Menuhin to Sting have found the Alexander Technique a valuable tool. The Alexander Technique is a method for unlearning rather than learning, a recipe for non-doing or taking away, rather than doing or adding to a performance, so that an Alexander Teacher does not need to know how to sing, to play the flute or the violin in order to help a pupil improve his musical performance.

Between the thought of doing something and the transmitting of the thought into action there is a gap, and this gap can maybe best understood under the starters orders of - on your mark, get set, go. The Alexander Technique starts by observing the gap, the "get set", because the quality of our set pattern strongly influences the go, or to put it another way our response to stimuli, and also it affects the result of what we do.

For example if we have the intension to sit down on a chair and our set pattern is free from obstacles which prevent us from doing so in the most efficient and stress free manner, if someone takes away the chair which we thought was there, we will just keep going until we achieve the result of sitting on the floor, and from the outside this will appear so easy to do that any observer must think that to sit on the floor had been our intension all along.

Alexander gave his students information about the "get set" directly through the kinaesthetic sense by the use of his hands. His technique allows them to see the harmful patterns contained in their habitual "get set", and the use of a teachers hands subsequently guides them through a new experience of less interference with performance and with a more successful outcome and with much less effort than they have previously known.

The unique use of the hands only to be found in this technique is much more helpful than words for developing new more effective set patterns. For example if someone says to the student, "careful there is no chair" this is likely to lead to a tensing of the muscles while the student thinks of the uncomfortable landing they might have had. If someone says straighten your back, bend your knees, keep your head free and poised on top of the spine, direct your movement with your eyes and don’t look for the chair, don’t suck in air allow the breath to be natural, expand the right rib cage when you breath, it is likely to lead to a much more anxious "get set" pattern and aggravate habits of tension and inappropriate use rather than improve them. Worst of all, even though aggravated and exaggerated by all the instructions, the student will still be unconscious about the nature of his harmful set pattern, so much he has had to concentrate on what he has to remember to do and not to do.

If an Alexander Teacher had eight arms he might be able to allow all this to happen in one go, but having been blessed with only two like the rest of us, it may take a series of lessons to develop a new set for sitting down, but when one thinks of the number of times one does it in a day and how inappropriate tensions in this simple act can affect performance there is much to unlearn in order to find ones inner balance and free oneself from harmful habits even before one starts to sing or takes up ones musical instrument.

To feel nervous before a performance maybe considered "normal" but surely we would feel happier, more confident, more relaxed, perform better and feel less drained of energy after the performance if a way could be found not to feel nervous but to feel in control of the moment and not to have a set pattern which invades our lives for several hours or maybe even days or weeks before we have to perform in front of the examiner or the audience. Here too the Alexander Technique can help free us from our habitual feelings, not by addressing them directly but by allowing them to fall away like so much unnecessary baggage once our "get set" means exactly what it is, and nothing else which we have added to our "get set" without realising it and which has so much influence upon our performance.

Link:
Noemi Racine - Canada: AT Teacher and violonist:
www.noemiracine.com

 
       
  © Athanase Vettas   Webmaster