Category: music

Motivation

Yesterday, I was at a  New Balance factory outlet buying some new sneakers. I’ve always liked New Balance shoes. They fit. Their shoes are made in the USA. When we lived in Boston, we often passed by their corporate headquarters that was near the headquarters for the flagship public radio and television stations, WGBH. So when I needed some new sneakers, it was off to the New Balance factory outlet near our home.

Nice people work there. Attentive, knowledgable. And I walked out of the store with two pairs of sneakers. While browsing around, I noticed a display of t-shirts with slogans on them. Here are two of them:

Motivational slogans. You see these all the time. They are very big in the corporate world. How many times have you been in an office and seen one of these posters:

Be_the_bridge

Motivational posters by Successories.com

They have also provoked a backlash, the cynical DE-motivational poster:

dysfunctiondemotivator

Demotivational posters by Despair.com

One of the big threads of conversation in the teaching world is how to motivate students. Anyone who has been a teacher of any subject knows that a classroom is full of students who have different goals, different energy and skill levels, and who approach tasks differently. Teachers try many things to help students want to learn. Countless books have been written on the subject.

For over 20 years of my career in the Boston Symphony Orchestra, I sat next to Norman Bolter. Norman played second trombone in the BSO and principal trombone in the Boston Pops Orchestra. We are nearly the same age – he’s my big brother by four months – and we were and remain good friends even since we have both retired from the orchestra. We both taught together at New England Conservatory of Music and we spent a lot of time talking about teaching, our students and trombone pedagogy. One day, we were talking about some of our students who just didn’t seem to be making progress. I commented that one of my students was very talented but he seemed lazy and wasn’t working to his potential. To which Norman said:

“Doug, I can give my students a lot of things. But I can’t give them desire.”

BINGO. I cannot motivate my students. I cannot make them want to work hard, want to be curious, want to explore, want to go the extra mile, want to understand what is needed to succeed, want to be great at what they do. Those things need to come from the inside, not the outside. But I CAN lead by example, be honest, share all I know, offer strategies for improvement. These are two different things. If a student doesn’t have the desire, the motivation to work, then someone else can’t give it to them. A pretty poster won’t give it to them either.

Norman was – and is – right. You can’t give someone else desire. The fuel to get better, the fuel to become great at something, the fuel to make a difference has to come from within. For me, that fuel has fed and feeds my engine in two ways:

  1. When I was a student at Wheaton College, the great trumpet player Maurice André gave a concert on campus with a small chamber orchestra. My teacher, Edward Kleinhammer, also came to the concert and the next day I had a lesson with him. I burst into his studio in the Fine Arts Building in Chicago and began babbling away, “Wow, wasn’t Andre amazing?! I’ve never heard anything like that!”Blah, blah, blah.  After my superlatives were spent, Mr. Kleinhammer looked at me and said, quietly, “André. Yes, he was really good. But, look. Did you see that bass player? He made a concerto out of every note.” I missed it. I was focused on one thing – the great trumpet soloist. But I missed the bass player who was doing his job excellently in support of the great soloist. I learned at that moment that I needed to pay attention. Pay attention to things – even and especially little things – so I did not miss something that I could take and make my own. Paying attention gave me fuel for my engine as I internalized my observations of others who were demonstrating excellence in their field, whether music, art, business, or even the act of being a knowledgeable shoe salesman.
  1. I am very aware that my talents and abilities are a gift from God; I cannot take credit for them. As a result, I have a responsibility to be a good steward of those gifts, to use them well and wisely. So my desire to improve on the trombone, or write an article that gives people something to think about, or share what I have been given with others, comes from my understanding that everything I have is a gift from God and I have a responsibility to use it wisely. The Parable of the Talents  is fuel for my engine, a daily reminder of how I return to God the investment I make with that which he has given to me.

The New Balance t-shirt slogans are cute. I smiled when I saw them. But I wasn’t fooled. They didn’t make me want to go home and practice. Something else fueled that within me. Something much bigger.

Something to say

Something to say

In his translation of the Bible into German, Martin Luther rendered 1 Corinthians 15:51-52 like this:

Siehe, ich sage euch ein Geheimnis: Wir werden nicht alle entschlafen, wir werden aber alle verwandelt werden; und dasselbe plötzlich, in einem Augenblick, zu der Zeit der letzten Posaune.

Which, as every trombone player knows, since Posaune is the German word for trombone, it will be trombones, not trumpets that will be performing an important task at the end of time:

Behold! I tell you a mystery. We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trombone.

Well, not so fast. Actually, we really don’t have any evidence that Martin Luther ever saw or heard a trombone. With fairness to the enthusiasm of trombone players – and I am certainly one of that number – Luther was using Posaune as a German word for the ancient ram’s horn, the shofar, to distinguish it from his use of the word Trompete which he used when translating the Hebrew word chatsrotsra, or the Biblical metal signal trumpet.

But never mind, we still have that delightful phrase, “the last trombone,” to enjoy, one that was once lofted at me by a conductor at a Boston Symphony Orchestra rehearsal, “Last trombone! Please, a little more legato. Thank you.”  I looked around; I guess I WAS the last trombone, third in a row of three, a bass trombonist. So in 1996, when I was putting together my production company that oversaw the publication of many of my CD recordings and music editions, I decided to call it Die lezte PosauneThe Last Trombone. And, so, it is now the title of my blog.

In 1996, I launched my website, yeodoug.com, where I have posted hundreds of pages of articles and resources for trombonists and other musicians. Part of my website has been the What’s New? section, where I have posted information about new items on my website as well as commentary on events that I wanted to share with readers. After a long and immensely satisfying career as bass trombonist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra (1985-2012), I retired in order to write several books and have more time to travel and spend time with my family, my wife, daughters, and sons-in-law. But God had other plans and my retirement was short-lived. I flunked retirement and accepted the position of Professor of Trombone at Arizona State University (2012-1016). As  a University Professor, I was engaged in recruiting new students for our program 24/7/365 and turned to Facebook to let people know about our program. Truthfully, I never understood Facebook. The format, while helpful while I was at ASU in letting people know about our Trombone Studio activities, didn’t seem to be a format that interested me on a personal level. The reasons for this will be a subject for another post, but when I decided to try retirement again and retire from ASU last month – this time to write several books (which are now under contract and have deadlines), travel, and spend more time with my family, my wife, daughters, sons-in-law (plural) and grandchildren (yes, plural as well), many of my then current and former students asked me to join Facebook so they could know what I am doing. Sorry, but Facebook isn’t in my plans, but as I thought about it, I realized that I do wish to share some commentary with friends and family and others who might be interested. Those who know me know that I can’t say hello in fewer than 5000 words so Twitter just wasn’t going to cut it. After a lot of thought, discussion and prayer, I’ve decided on this blog.

So, what is this all about? I’ve explained the title, The Last Trombone. As to the whole point of the enterprise, I wish to use this blog as a platform to offer some thoughts on three broad subjects that are represented in the logo photo above: Life, Faith and the Trombone.

The first photo is sunrise in the Sierra Estrella in Arizona. It’s the view from my front porch. I live in an area of the world that has exceptional beauty, and one of my favorite activities is hiking with my wife in the great National Parks of the American west. This beauty inspires me in a lot of ways. These mountains remind me of so much of life – beauty, tranquility, peacefulness, inspiration, challenge and much more. This I wish to share with you.

The second photo was taken at the Kotel, the Western Wall in Jerusalem, where I found myself praying earlier this month. Our trip to Israel will be the subject of future posts, but this photo, with my Bible open to Psalm 147, represents the commentary I will offer about my Christian faith, how it informs everything I think, say and do, and how the intersection of that faith with my life in the public square has shaped my life.

Finally, I will be talking about the trombone; the third photo shows a 19th century form of trombone, a buccin, from France. I’ve been playing the trombone for over five decades. You don’t get a lot of five decade periods in a lifetime. So here is an opportunity for me to share thoughts about this great instrument, and comments about a few others instruments and musical ideas as well.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the inspiration for the format of this blog. I commend to you the excellent blog by Dr. Micah Everett, Assistant Professor of Trombone at University of Mississippi, The Reforming Trombonist. Micah’s blog is inspiring, and  full of wisdom and information about faith and the trombone. I’ve been enjoying his blog for quite awhile and hope that The Last Trombone will likewise have something to say in the public discourse about Life, Faith and the Trombone. Thanks for joining me in the journey.