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The
Contribution of the Performer |
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by Toni Land
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Reprint from Portland Songwriter Association Newsletter 1999
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"I don't want audiences to feel a specific thing..I just want
audiences to feel."
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Paul Simon |
The gift the performer brings to his or her audience is
sometimes difficult to recognize in a culture which often judges success
by the size of ones house or the amount of money one makes. As an
artist, it's easy to fall into thinking that performing doesn't really
make much of a difference. After all, it's not like being a doctor, a
teacher, or a carpenter who bring a more tangible service to the world.
The performer's basic function is to connect emotionally to
another. Doing this seemingly simple act requires the artist to be open
to and connected with his own emotions and thoughts. This opening is
sometimes difficult for many reasons. The values of a culture or the way
one is raised can interfere with expression of one's passion. For
example being stoic, strong, tough, independent are often contradictory
to the vulnerability required to really connect with someone.
The power of genuinely sharing ones self affects others in all
kinds of ways. Of course this can be confusing to the performer if he
believes somehow his audience should feel what he feels or think what he
thinks. Often the response of the listener is quite different than one
would predict. For example, an artist lovingly performing a song that he
wrote about the woman he's committed to may evoke anger in one and grief
in another. The service the performer provides to his listeners is to
affect them, not to control the nature of the listener's response.
People want to feel. They need to feel. It's enlivening, healing, and
joyous. They come to a concert to be turned on. They come usually ready
and willing to be affected.
The performer's homework is to grow in his own awareness of
the emotions and thoughts, which live inside him. The master performer
allows these thoughts and emotions, without judgement or censorship, and
gives them a "voice" or expression. Life, really. This is the
contribution the performer makes - a shared state of unconditionality or
freedom to let things be exactly as they are in the moment.. It is these
instances that inspire both audience and performer to celebrate and
honor the emotions and thoughts that make us human.
Toni Land
Toni Land of StageWork offers seminars and private coaching on
presentation and performance. Visit www.stagework.com
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