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The following excerpt is the Introduction to Unintentional Music: Releasing
Your Deepest Creativity (Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2001)
Strange, discordant sounds came unwanted from my guitar. It was supposed to be
a love song. Yet each time I sang a certain verse, my fingers played the wrong
notes. I started again, enjoying the harmony of the chords, singing the soft
melody, until I came to the same passage and my fingers again refused to play
what I had composed. How puzzling. The sound was so weird, so different from the
feeling of the rest of the song. I tried once more, this time making the mistake
on purpose. My eyes slowly moistened as I realized that this particular line
described what life had been like before meeting my beloved. The out-of-tune
notes evoked that same longing and emptiness. I decided to include the "mistake,"
feeling that the moments of dissonance made the song more poignant.
Whenever we create, just like in other areas of our lives, some things happen
that do not go along with our intentions. The unintentional aspects of the music
we make - the unwanted note, the cracked voice, the strange croaking sound we try
to avoid, the rhythmic problem we cannot erase even after hours of practice -
contain more wisdom than we think. The same is true for the unexpected splash of
color on the canvas, the ungraceful turn on the dance floor, or the writer's block
that makes us pull out our hair. They are intimations of parts of ourselves, and
of our music and art, that lie beyond our awareness. Exploring the unintentional
with curiosity and love can help us to tap into the wellsprings of our deepest
creativity, and make our music, our art, and ultimately our lives, more authentic,
meaningful, and original.
But how can we believe in things we don't like? Why make music that sounds
wrong? Shouldn't we focus on improving the things we are trying to do and make
every effort to make our art the way we want it to be? What could possibly be
useful about troublesome interferences?
There is an old Jewish story about a king who had a large diamond that was
exceptionally pure. He was very proud of this peerless gem. One day, though,
there was an accident and it was deeply scratched. All of the diamond cutters
agreed that the imperfection could not be removed no matter how much the stone
were polished. But one artist engraved a delicate rosebud around the imperfection,
using the deep scratch as the stem of the rose. The diamond became even more
beautiful than it had been before the accident.
An old Taoist tale tells of a man who meditated in the mountains. After a few
years, an immortal appeared and asked the man what he was doing. He replied, "I
am trying to meditate on that mountain, but there is too much fog for me to see
it." The immortal laughed and disappeared. The man went back to his meditation.
A few years later the immortal returned and asked the same question. The man
replied, "I am meditating on the fog." At this, the immortal bowed low and said,
"You are my teacher."
These stories illustrate ancient truths. Rather than ignore or try to get rid
of the things we don't like, we can transform them into things of beauty, or shift
our focus and realize that they are what we have been seeking all along. Like the
alchemists who sought to transform base metal into gold, we too can be enriched by
the things we normally consider to be garbage.
This perennial wisdom is at the core of process work, which is a strange and
wonderful way of perceiving and interacting with people and the world, developed
by Arnold Mindell. Whatever happens unintentionally - what disturbs you or ruins
your best plans - can, if followed, turn into a thing of great value and meaning.
When something unexpected or disturbing happens, this signals the appearance of
Nature, of the Tao, of Spirit, of God. Every culture has its own name for it.
Mindell calls it the dreaming process. The process worker's
job and passion is to find, support, and unfold the dreaming
process in all areas of human experience.
Originally developed as a form of psychotherapy, process work is
now applied to such far-flung spheres as dreams, physical illness,
extreme and altered states of
consciousness, comatose states, dying and near-death experiences,
meditation, relationships, group dynamics, organizational development,
and conflict
facilitation.
This book shows how to follow your dreaming process as you are actually making
music. These methods work equally well with the voice, any instrument, and any
style of (written or improvised) music, with professional musicians and people
who can't carry a tune. You'll see that the same ideas and tools can be used with
all kinds of creativity and expression. Such work can be incredibly fun and
exciting. It also produces unexpected and powerful effects on both the
musician/artist and the music/art itself. The line between self-discovery and
creativity blurs as we cross between these two seemingly separate realms and find
that they actually complement and enhance one other. The door between these worlds
is the unintentional.
I once worked at a seminar with a professional flutist, Sharon, who began by
playing a beautiful, meditative, Japanese piece. I was entranced by the loveliness
of the music and her full, smooth tone. But I noticed, at times, a breathiness that
seemed unintentional. Sharon said that she had often been disturbed by this
breathiness, which she could not get rid of, despite years of practice and work on
her technique. I asked her to intentionally play even more breathily. When she did,
there was more vibrato in her playing, the sound now making the air in the room
undulate. As this next unintentional signal was encouraged and Sharon tried to play
with more vibrato, she complained that she had to use lots of air. I suggested she
use even more air. But then she could only play short phrases, because she ran out
of air too quickly. When she did this on purpose, the way she held her mouth got
sloppy, and so the tone became very weak.
A few minutes before, Sharon had played beautifully. Now, after following a
succession of unintentional signals, she could hardly play at all. At such moments,
I tend to wonder whether anything useful can come out of all of this, and sometimes
I start to feel sorry for the unfortunate person who volunteered to explore her
unintentional music. But then I remember how many times such processes have been
transformed, how many roses have grown out of irreparable scratches. I relaxed and
continued.
I asked Sharon to allow her mouth to get even sloppier. When she tried to play
this way, no tone came out of the flute at all. I thought, there you've done it,
Lane, you have ruined her playing. But I waited. She said, "I have no voice." Then
she started to cry and said, "I never had a voice." She told me that no one has
ever heard her in her life, that she feels powerless and defenseless. I asked her
to play that feeling. A barely audible, sorrowful melody came out of her. A few
seminar participants began to cry. Suddenly, in the middle of a note, she stopped.
She said a voice in her head had told her to stop. She realized that this voice is
the one who always stops her. This is why she has no voice. This is why no one
hears her - because she is never allowed to express herself.
Blood surged to Sharon's cheeks and her eyes opened wide as the effect of this
inner voice became clearer to her. She was furious that it had stopped her all her
life. I suggested that she pick up her flute again and first play the voiceless
one, then the stopper, and finally her reaction to the stopper. This was
incredible. At first she played with lots of feeling and almost no tone, the same
mournful tune as before. Then came a loud sudden note, followed by silence. Then
she began to play frenzied, wild, violent, angry, ecstatic torrents of notes. It
was passionate and intricate, resonant and complex. It came out of her like a
volcano erupting, like a machine gun, like an ecstatic dance, like the spit that
was flying from her lips.
When she stopped, she just stood there for a long time in awe of what she had
done. She had never played like that before. She had had no idea that it was
possible to play like that. She did not even know all of those emotions were inside
of her, much less that she could express them with her flute. She did not know this
part of herself or of her music.
Was this music or was it self-discovery? Yes. Unintentional music led Sharon
inside herself to places she had never known. And it helped her to play music in
ways she had never imagined. Music and personal growth are intertwining lines of a
dreaming song.
Music is my passion and the focal point of this book. But everything discussed
here can be applied to any creative medium. Actually, you can read the whole book
thinking of music as a metaphor for whatever you want to create, or however you
want to express yourself. It's shorthand. Every time I write "unintentional music,"
feel free to read unintentional painting or writing or film or dance or whatever
your chosen medium is. You can use these same principles all the time, whether
speaking in public, talking with friends, making love, planting a garden,
decorating your home, or whenever you feel inspired or seek inspiration. Life
itself can be your creative project.
This book is meant for musicians and people who are convinced they will never
be musical. It is for artists of all kinds and people who think they don't have a
creative bone in their bodies. It is for anyone who longs to express herself more
fully and authentically. For that person who has always been told how boring and
average she is, whose tiny creative spark just needs a little love and
encouragement to turn into a creative flame. For that person who was stopped at
an early age from trying new things, who dreams of the courage to experiment. For
anyone who has experienced blocked creativity and is looking for ways to tap back
into the source of inspiration. For anyone who wants to walk the path of heart, and
yearns to open her ears to an inner guide. For music teachers and music students,
art teachers and art students. For music therapists, art therapists, speech
therapists, and psychotherapists. The many examples I've included will give you a
taste of the huge variety of ways that unintentional music arises and unfolds. I
hope that by reading about other people's experiences, you will be inspired to
explore your own unintentional music.
A strong wind is blowing outside my window. I can't see the wind itself. But I
can see the leaves shaking on the trees, the sheets billowing like sails on the
clothesline. In the same way, the dreaming process -- though impossible to see
directly -- affects you and your music in untold ways. If you tap into that
mysterious source and learn to follow it, you and your music will never be the
same.
Unintentional Music: Releasing Your Deepest Creativity
is available from Amazon.com.

Unintentional Music: Releasing Your Deepest Creativity
(Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2001)
©2005 Lane Arye, Ph.D.
All rights reserved.
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