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Monday, February 1, 2010

confidence

"I have confidence in confidence alone
Besides which you see I have confidence in me!"

My children are obsessed with The Sound of Music.  I am also obsessed with the sound of music but not so much the Julie Andrews / Rogers and Hammerstein version.  More the sound of sound as it relates to music, and how to make music with sound, and how to arrange the sound of music so that it makes sense to me and doesn’t sound too much like the sound of anyone else’s music.  Which brings me back to the very beginning – in this case the quote from The Sound of Music (lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II).

I’ve been working on a new piece for a couple of weeks now (by weeks I mean two days in each of those weeks) and generally speaking it is going really well.  Ideas are flowing, notes are being written down and whole sections of the piece are emerging. There is no shortage of material, there are sheets of manuscript paper everywhere and it certainly gives the outward impression of a composer hard at work – which is the case.  But now I am getting to the stage where I need to refine and condense and structure all this material into a coherent piece of music.  This is usually one of my favourite parts of the compositional process but doubt has started to creep in.  Will this really work?  Will anyone want to perform it? Will anyone want to listen to it?  Is it going to be a ‘good’ piece? In short, I need to have more confidence in me.

I’m not sure whether I ever really thought about confidence as such an important part of the creative process before.  Of course you have to be confident in how you promote your work and how you project yourself to other people when it comes to getting work performed or commissioned.  Not that I’ve ever been that good at brimming with confidence in the cause of self promotion, but I know it is important.  But when I’m here alone at my desk, just writing and dealing with ideas, confidence is actually really crucial.  If I start listening to that voice of self-doubt I will lose my nerve, I will lose my focus and end up not writing the piece I want to write – or most importantly, the piece I know I can write. 

1 comment:

  1. Hi Chris! It's great to find YOUR blog, too! I love reading about the processes of "other" creative types, and am always fascinated to learn that the self doubt (that comes strangely towards the culmination of the work) is incredibly common. It's a good way to identify it, say "oh, you again!" and then nip it in the bud. x

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