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MUSICAL ABILITY TALENT VS TRAINING

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Blind people show no consistent superiority (despite famous cases of exceptional talent) ... Top musicians often come from non-musical homes. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MUSICAL ABILITY TALENT VS TRAINING


1
MUSICAL ABILITYTALENT VS TRAINING
  • Glenn Wilson PhD
  • Kings College, London
  • Institute of Psychiatry

2
TALENT VS TRAINING
  • Unfolding of inborn potential or hard graft?
    (Mozart cited by each camp).
  • Musical genius runs in families (Bach, Strauss)
    but this could be down to genes or environment.
  • Often emerges at very early age (but also some
    impressive late starters e.g. Gluck,Wagner,
    Bruckner).
  • Family support not essential Gershwin
    Bernstein grew up in homes without pianos Louis
    Armstrong had no cornet before age 17.

3
TYPICAL DEVELOPMENT (AGES)
  • 0-1 Reacts to sounds
  • 2-3 Reproduces song phrases
  • 3-4 Conceives general plan of melody
  • 4-5 Can tap back simple rhythms
  • 5-6 Understands louder/softer
  • 6-7 Tonal music preferred to atonal
  • 7-8 Appreciation of consonance/dissonance
  • 9-10 Harmonic sense established
  • Source Shuter-Dyson Gabriel, 1981

4
MEASURING MUSIC ABILITY
  • Tests like Seashore Measures of Musical Talent
    (1960) commercially available - take about
    1hr.
  • Present pairs of tones for comparison on pitch,
    loudness, timbre, etc also test rhythm and
    memory.
  • Reliability acceptable, but only moderate
    validity (e.g. prediction of progress in music
    college).
  • Not good at assessing creative aspects (e.g.
    appreciation, composition).

5
CORRELATES OF MA TESTS
  • Only slight correlations with general IQ (around
    .3). Savant phenomenon illustrates considerable
    independence of musical ability.
  • No striking sex or race differences (despite male
    preponderance among famous composers and fabled
    African rhythmic ability).
  • Blind people show no consistent superiority
    (despite famous cases of exceptional talent).
  • Scores improve with coaching and musical training.

6
TWIN COMPARISONS
  • Best way of separating genes from environment (
    family vs non-family influences).
  • Show some degree of heritability for music
    ability(40-70).
  • Training/family environment also shown to be
    important (may override gene effects up to
    moderate levels of ability).
  • Global ability may be more genetic than
    Seashore-type aural skills.

7
INTRINSIC MOTIVATION
  • Top musicians often come from non-musical homes.
  • Report intense, joyful (peak) experiences from
    earliest listening usually not in lessons.
  • Casual and frequent exposure to musical forms
    from
  • an early age favours development (emphasis on
    enjoyment and spontaneity).
  • Pushy parents who force kids into competitive
    situations may interfere with playful exploration
    absence of threat, bribes and browbeating
    needed.
  • Formal training may be counterproductive if
    overly rigid and inhibits creativity (e.g.
    Chopins thumb on black notes).

8
EFFECTIVE PRACTICE
  • Professional musicians practice long hours (or
    did as children) but those most talented may get
    away with less.
  • Sheer amount of practice less important than
    quality. Best when motivated by keenness (not
    whip-cracking) and directed toward specific
    goals.
  • Need to self-monitor performance to diagnose
    weaknesses and thus focus future practice.
  • Consistency of timetable, with emphasis on
    mornings early afternoons best. Important not
    to miss rest/sleep.

9
MONITORING PRACTICE (from Williamon Valentine,
2000)
10
ROLE OF TEACHERS
  • Specialist teaching does enhance knowledge of
    formal aspects of music.
  • Ages 5-9 critical (earliest time at which verbal
    instruction possible).
  • Formal training promotes competence but creative
    genius may follow separate path (may even benefit
    from absence of rules).
  • Difficult to separate maturation experience
    from contribution of teacher (esp. in singing).
  • Cause effect problem talented people find way
    to reputable teachers, further enhancing their
    reputation.

11
ABSOLUTE PITCH
  • Rare and mysterious ability more common in
    great musicians but not universal (a mixed
    blessing).
  • Most striking forms appear early in childhood but
    can be acquired to a degree.
  • More common in those who started music training
    early (ltage 4).
  • Sometimes associated with colour-tone
    synaesthesia sometimes just tonal memory.
  • No evidence that particular keys are suited to
    particular emotions (other than major vs minor).

12
MUSIC AND THE BRAIN
  • Music perception, composition performance
    depend on pattern processing hence mainly right
    hemisphere (damage to left hemisphere may leave
    melody and harmony largely unimpaired).
  • Lateralization more clear in musically untrained
    people training adds analytic, linguistic (left
    hemisphere) processes, so that whole brain is
    involved.
  • Highly developed musical skills are matched by
    anatomical changes (e.g. violinists have more
    cortex devoted to left-hand finger
    co-ordination). Neural plasticity greatest ltage
    10.

13
MUSICAL/UNMUSICAL PERFORMANCE
  • Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI)
    permits digital coding of performances for
    analysis.
  • Musical (as against mechanical) performance adds
    expression emphasis on notes phrases that
    build tension and anticipation.
  • Involves signals that composer performer know
    that a note is wrong (e.g. a dissonant chord is
    pointed up, built or repeated before resolution
    unexpected sequences are underscored).
  • Musical expression seldom formally taught
    acquired mostly by intuition and imitation.

14
PERSONALITY OF MUSICIANS
  • Musicians more introvert than other performers
    and general population.
  • Introversion is associated with
    private/imaginative thought, which promotes
    creative engagement with the domain.
  • Also enables tolerance of long periods of
    solitary activity (e.g. practising, composing).
  • Variations among types of musicians (e.g. pop
    jazz more extravert than classical, brass players
    more extravert than strings).

15
CREATIVITY AND MADNESS
  • Many great poets, artists, writers and musicians
    suffer from mental disorders, including
    Aspergers/autism, bipolar mood disorder,
    antisocial personality, addiction.
  • About half of great composers suffered
    significant psychopathology.
  • Depression may provide painful feelings to
    express (Tchaikovsky). Mania/obsessionality may
    contribute to creative output (Mozart).
    Grandiosity may spill over in works (Wagner,
    Beethoven).
  • Danger that genetic engineering and drug
    treatments might deprive us of great art?

16
CREATIVE VS EXECUTIVE SKILLS
  • Distinction helps resolve inborn/training debate
    and research contradictions.
  • Creative (compositional) talent appears more
    inborn. Benefits from freedom from
    pre-conceptions, internal motivation, defiance of
    rules.
  • Executive (performance) skills benefit more from
    training, hard work, encouragement of
    teachers/parents.
  • Neither benefits from coercion.
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