Dealing with Performance Anxiety | Bill Kanengiser Interview

Музыка

Grammy-award-winning classical guitarist, William Kanengiser, discusses the delicate topic of performance anxiety. He describes how for some it can be incapacitating and for others with "ice-water-in-their-veins," it's no big deal. Being a wellness advocate at USC, Bill presents some tips and his own perspective when it comes to performing and dealing with the stress that comes with it.
Watch the full lesson on tonebase:
➡️ www.tonebase.co/tonebase-guit...
---
tonebase gives you instant access to knowledge from the world's greatest classical guitarists, performers, and educators. Learn more by visiting tonebase.co/guitar
Facebook - / tonebaseteam
Instagram - / tonebaseteam
Blog - www.tonebase.co/guitar/blog
Questions? Contact us: team@tonebase.co

Пікірлер: 24

  • @pascalsolal
    @pascalsolal2 жыл бұрын

    I agree with everything you say. We must stop this obsession of perfection, and accept the mistakes we make. They're part of what we are. Part of life. And anyway, each performance is an experience, an adventure. That's what makes music alive.

  • @alexbougiemusic
    @alexbougiemusic2 жыл бұрын

    I can also never say a Pepe quote without the voice. Never could, never will.

  • @jcpractices
    @jcpractices2 жыл бұрын

    This is wonderful and encouraging, thank you Bill

  • @gabriel222
    @gabriel2222 жыл бұрын

    Love listening to Bill. I learn so much.

  • @Ernesto020879
    @Ernesto0208792 жыл бұрын

    Just great!!! Thanks for sharing.

  • @bzeliotis
    @bzeliotis Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Yes using the adrenalin and allowing it to flow in a creative manner is the best advice and in my own experience too. I loved your quote. Pepe is a genius, (I don't use this word lightly), but not many people realize that. Everything he says is not just for effect, or to sound good and clever, but has the backing of decades of his experience as a performer, his committed practice and also the lifelong instruction that he received from his musical family.

  • @cactusowo1835
    @cactusowo1835 Жыл бұрын

    I needed this video!

  • @SingleMalt77005
    @SingleMalt77005 Жыл бұрын

    Pepe's attitude reminds me of a comment non-classical acoustic fingerstyle player Pat Donohue sometimes says to his audience when the takes the stage. It goes something like "I am Pat Donahue and thanks for coming tonight. I can tell you are nervous because you are wondering whether I'll like you."

  • @WulfinLieske
    @WulfinLieske Жыл бұрын

    True insights, William - bravo. Authentic quoting Pepe, by the way. All the best from Cologne Wulfin

  • @baddogmintz
    @baddogmintz Жыл бұрын

    Once upon a time -- circa 1980 -- in a master class I asked Manuel Barrueco how he dealt with stage fright. He said: "Two things: preparation and experience." So simple, you didn't need to take notes. OK, that didn't seem to help Chopin. But it can help a lot of people very much. Sometimes you will be terrified for a good reason: you are not as prepared as you could and should be! That is a nightmare! If you have a good objective basis to be scared, you're gonna be scared. Why should it be otherwise? So I think one simple approach that CAN work for some of us -- though not everyone -- is to keep practicing, keep learning to practice, and keep getting back in the saddle. Again and again and again. Sorry for talking so much -- I have two or three things to say verbosely.

  • @tobiasnilsson8934
    @tobiasnilsson89342 жыл бұрын

    Intersting! Worth reflecting on! Performance anxiety may really need to be curbed! That our thoughts affects is clear! But a certain measure of perfection is needed. The guitar is a challenging antiety intrument. What is enough? Thanks a lot for an intersting lecture! //Tobias

  • @AndorSolymos
    @AndorSolymos Жыл бұрын

    Pepe is wonderful. Brilliant imitation. 😂❤

  • @MusicDarraghONeill
    @MusicDarraghONeill3 ай бұрын

    Wonderful Pepe impersonation 😅 Great information. 👍

  • @drewseibert4878
    @drewseibert48783 ай бұрын

    Brilliant reframing

  • @BonafideToolJunkie
    @BonafideToolJunkie Жыл бұрын

    I'm not a performer, purely a hobbyist at song writing on classical guitar. When I write a beautiful song that I'm proud of, I will not share that song with a family member who I know to be a cynic. Because now I'm playing to prove myself to him, rather than the enjoyment of a good melody. That's bad juju. And he feels it's his job to critique and diminsh my efforts. Play for people who will marvel at what you've created. This will encourage you to share even more of your artistic endeavors.

  • @baddogmintz
    @baddogmintz Жыл бұрын

    At first I was a bit skeptical of the story about how Pepe Romero welcomes all the physical manifestations of intense pre-performance anxiety. Not that I disbelieved it, but rather that it seemed a little crazy. However, just this evening I reflected on it and understood it a little better, at least in my own way: the more nervous you are before a performance, the more fabulous the dopamine reward when it goes well despite your nerves. I was a respectable classical guitarist who quit around age 30, as so many do, needing a better way to pay the bills (btw I met Kanengeiser when he and I were both young, but I wouldn't expect him to remember). I went through the full spectrum of performance anxiety, from nearly paralyzed and really sucking to completely comfortable and going into the zone. Then 30 years went by. Then I returned to the guitar -- but studying jazz rather than classical, because at this (st)age all I want to do is have fun rather than get into anything formal and worrying about my nails again. Started singing jazz standards, accompanying myself with the guitar. Started performing at an open mic, and to my horror -- I got nervous! Why?? It seemed silly. The stakes are so low. Why care so much? Well, whatever the cause, I beat it by going back again and again. It took four tries to get comfortable and now it's all good -- but! But now the dopamine high from a well-received performance is much shorter and less intense when there's less adrenalin going in. So, driving home tonight, I thought: ah. Maybe that is what Pepe is getting at.

  • @00vTv00

    @00vTv00

    4 ай бұрын

    Pepe Romero is full of himself, he exaggerates shamelessly, he can read notes but is a musical dunce, and his repertoire has barely changed in 50 years.

  • @TheHallsofMusic
    @TheHallsofMusic2 жыл бұрын

    Where I can I find this course on musician wellness? I am working at this a great deal these days. Just finished the Artist Way. It was helpful.

  • @donnaz6069

    @donnaz6069

    8 ай бұрын

    Don Greene’s book , “Performance Success” was a great help to me.

  • @lorerecru
    @lorerecru2 жыл бұрын

    What's the name of the piece that sounds at the end of the video?

  • @liaveranikaputu

    @liaveranikaputu

    2 жыл бұрын

    it is Fantasia on theme from La Traviata (Francisco Tarrega/Julio Arcas)

  • @myklkay
    @myklkay Жыл бұрын

    You have one shot, that everybody will judge : all the work you did before doesn't count because they don't know it, they did not see it, they don't care about it. If you screw up, people who don't know you will say "he's not very good" : but the stage fright made you screw up, not your lack of work. And when your reputation, carrier and income depends on it, the pressure is overwhelming.... In your practise room, you can do it again and only you judge yourself : no teacher, no colleagues no audience.

  • @baddogmintz
    @baddogmintz Жыл бұрын

    Performance is for people who want attention and like an adrenalin buzz. That doesn't mean we aren't also motivated by a high-minded, selfless desire to make art and share the joy with our audience and give them pleasure. Also, making music (or art, or dancing, or writing) is a quintessentially human thing. We are hypersocial; we tell stories. Somebody's gotta do it.

Келесі