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Music as a Language - Victor Wooten

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    Music is a language.
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    Both music and verbal languages serve the same purpose.
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    They are both forms of expression.
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    They can be used as a way to communicate with others.
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    They can be read or written.
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    They can make you laugh or cry,
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    think or question,
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    and can speak to one or many.
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    And both can definitely make you move.
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    In some instances music works better than the spoken word,
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    because it doesn't have to be understood
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    to be effective.
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    Although many musicians agree that music is a language,
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    it is rarely treated as such.
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    Many of us treat it as something
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    that can only be learned by following
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    a strict regimen, under the tutelage
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    of a skilled teacher.
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    This approach has been followed for hundreds of years
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    with proven success, but it takes a long time.
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    Too long.
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    Think about the first language you learn as a child.
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    More importantly, think about how you learned it.
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    You were a baby when you first started speaking,
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    and even tough you spoke the language incorrectly
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    you were allowed to make mistakes.
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    And the more mistakes you made
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    the more your parents smiled.
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    Learning to speak was not something you were sent somewhere to do
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    only a few times a week.
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    And the majority of the people you spoke to
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    were not beginners.
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    They were already proficient speakers.
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    Imagine your parents forcing you to only speak to other babies
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    until you were good enough to speak to them.
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    You would probably be an adult before
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    you could properly carry on a proper conversation.
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    To use a musical term, as a baby you were allowed
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    to jam with professionals.
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    If we approach music in the same natural way
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    we aproached our first language
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    we will learn to speak it in the same short time
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    it took to speak our first language.
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    Proof of this could be seen in almost any family
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    where a child grows up with other musicians in the family.
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    Here are a few keys to follow in learning or teaching music:
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    in the beginning embrace mistakes, instead of correcting them.
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    Like a child playing air guitar, there are no wrong notes.
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    Allow young musicians to play
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    and perform with accomplished musicians
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    on a daily basis.
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    Encourage young musicians to play more than they practice.
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    The more they play the more they will practice on their own.
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    Music comes from the musician, not the instrument.
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    And most importantly, remember that
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    a language works best when we have
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    something interesting to say.
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    Many music teachers never find out
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    what the students have to say.
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    We only tell them what they are supposed to say.
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    A child speaks a language for years,
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    before they even learn the alphabet.
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    Too many rules at the onset,
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    will actually slow them down.
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    In my eyes, the approach to music
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    should be the same.
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    After all, music is a language too.
Title:
Music as a Language - Victor Wooten
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/victor-wooten-music-as-a-language

Music is a powerful communication tool--it causes us to laugh, cry, think and question. Bassist and five-time Grammy winner, Victor Wooten, asks us to approach music the same way we learn verbal language--by embracing mistakes and playing as often as possible.

Lesson by Victor Wooten, produced by TED-Ed.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:00
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