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4 - Understanding the psychology of performance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Eric Clarke
Affiliation:
Professor of Music, University of Sheffield
John Rink
Affiliation:
Royal Holloway, University of London
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Summary

Introduction: what performers do

Musical performance at its highest level demands a remarkable combination of physical and mental skills. It is not uncommon for concert pianists to play at speeds of ten or more notes per second in both hands simultaneously, in complex and constantly changing spatial patterns on the keyboard, and with distinct patterns of rhythm, dynamics and articulation. Equally, a performer has to have an awareness and understanding of the immediate and larger-scale structure of the music itself, an expressive ‘strategy’ with which to bring the music to life, and the resilience to withstand the physical demands and psychological stresses of public performance. Abilities such as these do not develop overnight, and by the time the best performers have reached the age of twenty-one, they are likely to have spent over 10,000 hours practising their instrument, quite apart from the time devoted to other aspects of formal music education and the more informal components of what can be termed ‘musical enculturation’. The message of even these simple observations is that musical performance represents a striking human achievement and is the result of a massive investment of time and effort.

What, then, do performers do? At one level the answer to this question is obvious: they produce physical realisations of musical ideas whether these ‘ideas’ have been recorded in a written notation, passed on aurally (as in a non-literate culture) or invented on the spur of the moment (as in free improvisation).

Type
Chapter
Information
Musical Performance
A Guide to Understanding
, pp. 59 - 72
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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References

Chaffin, Roger, Gabriela Imreh and Mary Crawford, Practicing Perfection: Memory and Piano Performance (Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum, 2002)
Clarke, Eric and Jane Davidson, ‘The body in performance’, in Wyndham Thomas (ed.), Composition, Performance, Reception: Studies in the Creative Process in Music (Aldershot: Ashgate, 1998), 74–92
Davidson, Jane W., ‘The social in musical performance’, in David J. Hargreaves and Adrian C. North (eds.), The Social Psychology of Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 209–28
Dunsby, Jonathan, Performing Music: Shared Concerns (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995)
Gabrielsson, Alf, ‘The performance of music’, in Diana Deutsch (ed.), The Psychology of Music, 2nd edn (San Diego and London: Academic Press, 1999), 501–602
Palmer, Caroline, ‘Music performance’, Annual Review of Psychology, 48 (1997), 115–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rink, John (ed.), The Practice of Performance: Studies in Musical Interpretation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995)
Wilson, Glenn D., ‘Performance anxiety’, in David J. Hargreaves and Adrian C. North (eds.), The Social Psychology of Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 229–48

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