SLOW DOWN

Certificate of Merit exams have passed and as I reflected on the last few months there was one reoccurring phrase I remember telling all my students, “PRACTICE SLOWLY.” I don’t think there was a single student that escaped that phrase.

I’ve been a firm believer in slow practice ever since my competition years; it has served me well through college and now as a professional musician. There is no way you can get through the complexities of classical music without practicing slow. Once you think you can get through a certain level of music easily, there will be another piece out there that will force you to slow down and rethink your abilities (I sit here laughing because after over 20 years of playing music I can STILL get stumped).

Not only do I believe that slow practice is the tried and true way, it is also the most efficient way. There is no quicker way to learn a challenging piece than to humble yourself and slow down; because once you get past all the technicalities of the piece, that is when you actually get to work on the musicality, the part that makes your audience want to listen to you play.

I ran into an article and a video in the last few months that reiterates the methods to my madness. The article highlights some research on practice that was done by University of Texas, Austin, which has a renown music program. The video is of Itzhak Perlman, one of the greatest violinists of our time. At least in my madness I know I’m in good company, enjoy:

8 things top practicers do differently

Practicing: Discipline vs. Motivation

Piano.jpg

The summer days have arrived, along with it are the pool parties, vacations and many other reasons not to practice. People have asked me through the years, “How do you stay motivated to practice?” My simple answer is, “I don’t.”

If I relied on motivation to practice it would never happen, I would never have become the musician that I am today, I would just sit at the beach all day! No sane person wants to play the same scales and arpeggios 10x a day, the same 8 bars of Beethoven over and over and OVER AND OVER again just to get it perfect. Motivation is the most fickle, unreliable, and fleeting feeling. Your time would be better spent cultivating discipline than relying on motivation. Make yourself sit down at the piano. Make yourself stop binge watching Netflix. Make yourself do the work necessary to achieve what you want.

We live in a fast paced digital world where everything needs to happen NOW, the world needs to be handed to me on my iPhone/iPad NOW. Piano and music is one of the few disciplines in today’s world that doesn’t get handed to you on a silver platter, it’s something you truly have to work at. Even naturally talented pianists or “prodigies” can be surpassed by the students that put in more practice and work on a daily basis.

As the lazy summer days go by don’t ask yourself, “how can I keep myself motivated to practice?” Instead, ask yourself, “how can I discipline myself to practice even when I don’t feel motivated to do so?” You will find this same discipline and mental strength will carry over into the other parts of your life.

7 Lessons I Learned From Surfing

A couple weeks ago I had a “me day.” No work related stuff, no emails, no marketing, no cleaning the apartment, blah blah blah. Purely indulging in self. Every now and then you need these kind of days to reset yourself and clear your mind. So I started the day surfing at one of my favorite spots tucked away in Newport Beach, 46th Street. Now that kids are back in school, California beaches are pretty much a ghost town. You’ll find a couple mother’s with their infants out tanning, a straggler here and there, and a few surfers that got the right idea with life and are out having a session before work or during their lunch break. 

During my session I started thinking and somehow related surfing to my music career. Weird I know, but with the growth of my teaching studio this last year I’ve started making the strangest analogies, this is actually a pretty normal one. Here are the 7 lessons I learned from surfing:

1. It’s not always about how great you can swim, but how long you can hold your breath.

Every surfer can attest that at some point you’re going to get slammed, even the greatest of greats. Sometimes for 5-10 seconds, sometimes 20, sometimes more– and each second under the water can feel like minutes. Experiencing the ocean makes you respect nature and makes you realize that no matter how strong or talented you are you can’t always fight the waves of life. When you’re going for those big opportunities, those big risks, it’s not always going to play out the way you want it to. What matters in the end is how long you’re willing to stick it out during the hard times. Being a decent swimmer helps too.

2. Commit.

When you make the decision to go for that wave give it 110% and don’t wuss out because you’ll either miss the ride or you’ll get tossed like a rag doll. Either way it sucks, and it’s all because you didn’t commit to the wave.

3. Sometimes you need to go back to the basics.

There are days where you’re going to find yourself struggling and you don’t know why.  Sometimes the best thing to do is to step back. Surf the easy days/play the easy songs. Hit the gym/do the boring exercises. You’ll probably find that what’s throwing you off is something so basic and simple but you didn’t realize it because you were so consumed by the bigger and crazier things that weren’t so important.

4. Patience and preparation is key.

Waves come in sets. Sometimes you’ll be sitting on your board for 15-20 minutes or longer waiting. Be ready though, when those waves or opportunities come through you don’t want to miss them or be thrown off guard, or in some cases off your board. Another thing, don’t give up and paddle in to shore because no waves have come through for a while. Wait and be prepared, your time will come.

5. With the highest highs come the lowest lows.

You could’ve just gotten barreled and had the ride of your life, grinning ear to ear… and then the rest of your session is just horrible. It happens, life has its hills and valleys.

6. As the waves get bigger and better, the competition gets fiercer.

For the people who have been in the game for a long time, little 1-2 foot waves don’t do it for them anymore. If you’re looking for those bigger waves, those bigger opportunities, you’re not going to be alone and the people around you during those times will be just as hungry for them. With that said, respect those people around you during those times, because it takes a lot of guts and determination to be out there going for the bigger waves. It will make you stronger, improve your character, and coincidentally make you appreciate the simpler things in life. Crazily enough, once you get past those head high waves and start riding those double and triple overhead monsters… the crowd thins out. Not very many people are willing to work that hard or risk everything they have to ride the big waves.

7. Learning how to surf is learning how to fail.

Strangely enough… as I was writing this little blog I came across another one called “Learning How To Surf Is Learning How To Fail,” here’s a little snippet from it. I encourage you to read the rest of you have the time:

“…learning how to surf is learning how to fail. This really struck deep. One of the most haunting things I’ve read in a long time was an article about a new study that came out that discussed children’s responses depending on whether you praised them on effort or ability. Praising on effort was telling the child that you were proud of how hard he tried. Praising on ability was telling the child you were proud of the actual achievement or talent/skill that seemed to correlate to the achievement.

The study showed that the kids praised on ability took less risks, cheated more, took failure more personally, felt entitled to success, and had a hard time bouncing back. Kids praised on effort, on the other hand, embraced failure, didn’t give up, and were ultimately more successful (and happier) than kids praised on effort.”

http://www.theinertia.com/surf/learning-how-to-surf-is-learning-how-to-fail/

That’s my little blurb for the day. Keep on trucking along, whatever it may be. Til next time.

No News = Good News

It’s been about 5 months now since Capule Creative has come into internet existence and I’ve only done one blog post. In the world of blogs that’s a huge fail, but I’ve been so busy with the day to day of Capule Creative that I’ve had no time to update this blog! The adage “no news is good news” rings true for me these last few months. Let me give you guys some key updates on what has happened in the world of Capule Creative recently:

-A Yamaha baby grand was delivered to the studio! Woo! (pictured above)

-There was an influx of new students! Among these new clients include an artist signed to Simon Cowell’s record label, and another artist that also studies with Seth Riggs. (Michael Jackson’s former vocal coach)!

-2 new singles were recorded for Amnesia Beach in April that are waiting to be released to the world. These 2 singles are on opposite ends of the spectrum sonically, and both of my producer’s pushed me in both musically and technically and wouldn’t let me settle for anything but the best. These were some of the most intense sessions I’ve had in the studio, but I loved it. Never stop growing and learning!

-Speaking of Amnesia Beach, I was out on the road with Vans Warped Tour for about a month at the beginning of the summer testing out these 2 new singles with the fans, and the initial response has been great! Can’t wait to show you guys where Amnesia Beach is headed.

-On Warped Tour we also tested out some new jewelry and apparel. Highly likely that Capule Creative is going to expand into something more than just music in the coming years. Look out for a web store very soon.

-With the time I’ve been home in Orange County my weekends have been pretty full with gigs. So if you need me to come play for a wedding/birthday party/anything, make sure to reserve your spot with me right away!

Those are the main things that have been happening lately! My new goal is to not wait 5 months to do another blog post, haha. I hope everyone has been enjoying their summers and getting in as much sun time as they can! Get that Vitamin D!

-Elben-

The Beginning

 Hey everyone!It’s been about a month since I’ve launched this website, and if you are reading this you’ve probably taken the time to support my new venture into Capule Creative and I truly want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for that.I’ve…

 

Hey everyone!

It’s been about a month since I’ve launched this website, and if you are reading this you’ve probably taken the time to support my new venture into Capule Creative and I truly want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for that.

I’ve told many of you via Facebook or Twitter that creating this entity and website is the first step towards the bigger picture in my life. Capule Creative encompasses all that I do as a musician whether it be teaching, performing, or creating– it’s all here. I didn’t want to create different websites for Elben the pianist, or Elben the teacher, or Elben the songwriter et cetera et cetera, because at the end of the day I identify as all of those things.

I’ll be posting on this blog every couple weeks about a variety of things: performance practices, marketing suggestions, recording tips, approaches to songwriting, possibly cute pictures of kittens with inspirational quotes attached.

Now I have a favor to ask of you all. I know at this moment in time most of you viewing this page are friends, family, and recent clients. I’d like to ask each of you to take 30 seconds (That’s .0003% of your day) to share this website on your social networks: facebook, instagram, twitter, whatever you may use. Help spread the word about who I am and what I do in this small sliver of California that is Orange County.

My girlfriend asked me while I was creating this website what my overall purpose and vision for it was. I told her it was going to be the next Sony, or something along those lines, hah. The idea scared her and I think that’s awesome. I read somewhere recently that if your dreams don’t scare you they’re not big enough. With that I know there’s a lot of hard work ahead. Thank you for being a part of this journey.