Rick Denney wrote:MaryAnn wrote:...and frankly my dear I don't see the difference. It appears to be a matter of attitude rather than ability.
Maybe you aren't seeing enough. Some people have an aptitude for certain kinds of arithmetic transformations and abstractions in real time, and others don't. Those who pick up instruments that require lots of those transformations, such as horn, who have no aptitude for it often end up playing other instruments or quitting music performance altogether.
I agree completely that horn players need a mental flexibility that players of other instruments generally do not. However, I'm not talking about someone taking up horn; I'm talking about someone who plays BBb tuba bass clef being totally unwilling to write in fingerings for a while until they "get" the clef. Not 47 clefs, just one, over time.
Rick Denney wrote:It took me quite a long time to learn F tuba. It was not just a matter of "picking it up", and it was a solid year before I was comfortable with the instrument. I had to treat it like a different instrument altogether before I could make headway--if I tried to make a transformation of what I already knew, I could not keep up with the music. It was difficult enough for me that while I'm proud that I actually accomplished it, I feel little motivation to go through it again.
Some of us are just slow about some things.
I have a piece in brass band right now that is requiring F tuba; also my quintet just asked me to play the F because they like the sound better than the C. I am falling all over myself with fingerings, leaving notes out, having "brain gaps" because I haven't played F tuba in so long. My mind sees "tuba part" and it thinks "C fingerings." But....I'm willing to keep scrambling, and maybe (again!) write in some fingerings for a while or on certain parts, or (gasp!) practice those parts until I'm not brain-gapping any more. Then....maybe if I play F exclusively for a while, I'll have exactly the same problem with C tuba. I think I'm talking more about effort than ability, really. Some people, the ones I'm complaining about, are unwilling to put in *any* effort to learn something new. I just don't understand the mindset.
Rick Denney wrote:On the other hand, there are abstractions I can see clearly that absolutely baffle other people, and I have learned not to think them stupid or lazy because they can't keep up on those topics without a lot of extra work.
I'm sorry if I came across as implying that people are lazy or stupid; I just don't understand a mindset that wants everything to be the way it always was, and which doesn't want to learn anything. I do notice that the two horn players on the tubenet have more or less the same attitude about it, which does play into what you said about innate abilities.
Rick Denney wrote:It's a little like skinny people thinking fat people are too lazy to exercise and eat well (which, by extension, is like saying that skinny people are skinny because they are not too lazy to exercise and eat well, and we all know skinny people who eat horribly and sit on the couch all day). Sometimes it's true but not always. It's easy to be complacent about our gifts, but we should admire rather than complain about those who, despite NOT having those gifts, work very hard to achieve some level of ability, usually doing so in addition to the work they do where they really are gifted (and thus able to support themselves doing it).
I seem to have hit a nerve here. Perhaps I am too arrogant about some things. (being one of those skinny people who does not have to work at it, but who does have to spend a considerable portion of my income simply to stay functional because of the inability of allopathic medicine do do anything but make me worse over time. I would love to be both fatter and more robust at the same time.)
Rick Denney wrote:Perhaps the definition of "gifted" is the built-in desire and motivation to devote the learning time, but if that is true, I have this feeling that the vast majority of folks put in that time young in life when learning new abstractions is easier. Those people I know who say that it's all about clefs and if we would just understand clefs it would all be easy, crossed those bridges in their music education at about age 20 or before. I was learning calculus and physics at that age, heh, heh.
Rick "who still had trouble with calculus" Denney
Well, yes I knew two clefs before age 20; treble and bass. My first instrument was piano. Second, violin. I did do some composing for orchestra in high school, and had to learn how to write the various parts in the proper clefs. So, yes, exposure was in high school. But....I didn't do calculus until I was in my 30's, with the rest of my engineering education. I had to work my butt off. And I realize I'll never have the facility with math and engineering concepts, particularly electronics, that people who grew up tinkering with that kind of thing have. I'm slow at figuring out what to do to get that light fixture to fit on the ancient receptacle in the bathroom, but I eventually get there. It might take me 100 times longer than someone who has seen stuff like that all his life, but I keep working at it.
MA, who thinks "gifted" may have a subset of "stubborn"