Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

What I learned about leadership in high school because my teacher - was absent - drum major edition

In high school - I was the band's drum major for 3 years. The drum major is not the baton twirler. They are the conductor of the band.

That's me - in the yellow uniform and the cool shako - leading the band. Giving them directions, telling them what to play. You get the idea.

 I was elected assistant drum major at the end of my freshman year. The senior who was drum major had her locker next to mine and she suggested I try out.  I was elected.  It helped that I was friends with a lot of the seniors as a freshman.

It was also probably important that the previous drum major - was also female - so I had a female leadership role model. I was either assistant drum major or drum major from my sophomore to senior year.

What I learned - mostly - besides how to wrangle a group of 100 teenagers to cooperate on a project was how to work in a team to get things done. I learned this because our band director was ALWAYS absent. He was a professional touring musician with a big band and he was tour, a lot.

Because he was absent a lot - for anything to happen (like music chosen, and copies ordered, scheduling and things like that - everything a band requires) the band president, treasurer and me had to work together to make it happen.

It was up to me to teach the band how to march. It was up to me to help them learn the music. But I didn't have to do it alone. I worked with my fellow students on the band executive team to pick out music, designed the shows, teach them, rehearse them and more. Oh - we also fund-raised on our own to afford the things we needed.

 I wasn't just out there - marking time, which was the core part of the job. I was part of a leadership team that kept the band functional because our band director - was mostly absent.

One year we organized our normal band camp at the end of the summer (to teach incoming freshmen how to march and to start work on the half time shows). The band director had no part in this. I doubt he even knew we were doing it. At the time,  my mouth was wired shut from oral surgery. I couldn't talk or give people directions. My friends and team members - covered for me to get the work done and the music and formations learned. We did such a good job that some members of the band didn't even know I had my mouth wired shut until a month later when the wires came off and I could speak again.   That's what team work can do!

Learning #leadership at an early age - what I learned is that leaders aren't alone. You can't lead by yourself.  Leadership is collaborative. To do it well - you have to make space for others to lead and take on responsibility. It may look to outsiders like the drum major is ordering people about. But the reality is - the performance is a collaboration between all the members of the group.

Note: I don't want it to see like our band director was bad. He was pretty awesome. I adored our band director. He opened up so many musical opportunities to me and introduced me to so many really amazing musicians. He recruited me to play in a big band with him actually and I spent most of my teen years - playing professionally at gigs several nights a week with adult professional musicians.  Heck - I got to meet Frank Sinatra Jr!  And Jack Wheaton (who was Stan Kenton's protoge!)  Some of my fondest memories are playing next to him in the big band while he's making jokes with his hand while while playing his tenor sax.

I learned so much from him. He mostly taught through the experiences he provided us. His absence at school created experiences that his presence would not have. It gave us the space and necessity for me and my friends to step up into leadership roles. And it opened up some amazing musical opportunities. So while at the time it was kind of absurd that our band director was - usually absent - we just dealt with it and learned from it and from him.

What I learned about leadership from my absent teacher - was that if we collaborate - we can accomplish  - anything. 

Work that has meaning

Work doesn't have to be life altering - to be important.


Was at the local UPS store today talking with the guy who runs it. The death of Russ Solomon (of Tower Records) came up because I used to work for Tower Records and Russ Solomon and yes - I did meet Russ. He advocated for me when I moved to Hawaii and made sure I was taken care of when I moved. He was a very loyal employer.

This guy, at the UPS shop, had worked for a completely different record store. He was just as upset as I was at Russ' passing, even though he never worked for Russ.

We chatted about our experiences working in record stores. I am still friends with the people I used to work with and he is still friends with the people he used to work with. It's not just that these were our first real jobs. It was the ethos of the stores we worked out.

The reason he feels as strongly about Russ as I do is because of the work culture Russ created. The work we did was fun. The work collegiate and collaborative. We all loved different types of music and had different knowledge bases and that was the point. Our job was to help people discover good music and between all the staff - we could do that regardless of the genre of interest.

Our job ... was to help people live life more fully through good music. What better motivation in life is there.  

Music in Life

Music helps us feel more intensely and art helps us understand our common humanity.

This next weekend my son will perform in a youth opera titled “Brundibar.” It was written by Jews in the Theresienstadt concentration camp and performed by children https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brundib%C3%A1r   

It’s an anti-Nazi opera that the Nazi’s didn’t realize was anti-Nazi.  With people dying around them and with people they loved being transported to death camps, the children of Theresienstadt still performed this show.

It’s about people, in this case kids, coming together to defeat tyranny – in this case, in the form of a selfish greedy organ grinder.

Music can be cathartic. It can help us express emotions we didn’t even realize we were feeling.

The arts and humanities are reflections of what it is to be human and how the struggle to live and to be loved and accepted is universal. Good can triumph over evil IF we come together, overcome our selfishness and work together to achieve it.

The Man in the Mirror


Michael Jackson was a man of many talents. One of my favorite songs of his was “Man In the Mirror.”
The lyrics are really wonderful.
“I’m starting with the man in the mirror. I’m asking him to change his ways. And no message could have been any clearer. If you want to make the world a better place, take a look at yourself and make a change.”
Sounds like Humanism to me.

If we want to make the world a better place we first have to start with our assumptions about ourselves. What are we capable of? What do we want to accomplish? What are we responsible for? Until we can answer those questions, we can’t hope to create the change we would like to see in society.

Challenge yourself first. Only then can you challenge the world.

Freethought Music

Yes - there is such a genre as Freethought music. And it transcends genres. Here is a list of Freethought artists I am familiar with. If you know of others, please add them to the list. You can sample each artist’s music on their website.

Markella - former opera star turned Freethought recording artist. http://www.markella.com/ 

Freethought MC - MC stands for Man of Conscious, he creates hip hop music and is in the studio working on his next album - http://www.reverbnation.com/freethoughtmc 

Peace of Rock - poetic rock music from and for free minds - http://peaceofrock.net/ 

Johnny Hoax - Atheist Rapper - http://www.reverbnation.com/johnnyhoax 

Also - here are some other Freethought music and entertainment resources you might like to know about.

Keith Lowell Johnson - Atheist comedian - very funny - http://keithlowelljensen.blogspot.com/ 

Inspirational Humanist Radio Hour - an hour long show out of NY. Airs Tuesday nights at 10 pm but available on podcast as well - great music and musings. - http://www.radiohive.org/category/shows/ihrh 

As I said - these are just a few artists I know about. If you know of others, please let me know!

God has all the best music?

There is no question about it. Some of the world’s best music is sacred music. It has the power to move us in ways that we don’t quite understand. It can lift our emotions and take us on a journey that fills us with hope, gladness, longing and sadness all simultaneously. It is no wonder that music, when used to evoke that, which is sacred, is so powerful.

Granted, there is great secular music that can do this for us as well, John Lennon’s Imagine comes to mind. But there is nothing quite like the experience of listening to a great piece of sacred music performed with all the love and delicacy that these pieces require and elicit. And it is perhaps because the performers themselves are so moved by the lyrics and emotions being evoked, that we are too.

One of my favorite experiences in life was to attend Evensong at the York Cathedral. The acoustics of the building combined with the voices of a full choir singing praises to a god was magical. I don’t care that their praise was to god. That they were singing praises to anything was what was moving. We simply don’t do that enough. It was so incredibly beautiful that the thought of that service still brings me to tears just thinking about it.

For me, I don’t care some of my favorite music is sacred in origin. There is clearly something human in wanting to be moved emotionally the way the songs do. So, I say, allow yourself to be transported, to wherever this music takes you. If only for a short time. As Liberace once said, if you have a thing of beauty, it is a shame not to share it. There is enough ugliness in the world that any work of art that celebrates something beautiful and loving is worth cherishing.

And on that note, here is my favorite bit of sacred music: Ave Maria by Schubert, who is probably my favorite composer.


Tell me everything is gonna be alright!

Today is International Love Song Day. A day to think about your favorite love song, because, lets face it, the world would be a much sadder place without love songs.  As I was thinking about what my favorite love song is - I thought - well, what’s my favorite Beatle’s love song?  “I’ve Just Seen a Face” is one of my favorites.  I like it’s simplicity and innocence.  Then I thought, maybe a Duran Duran or Spandau Ballet song might be my favorite.  And I immediately thought of “I’ll Fly for You.”

But as I was thinking about this - I realized, nothing beats a Hawaiian love song.  I literally can spend all day listening to Hawaiian love songs. And then I have trouble.  There are so many I love, that none immediately jump to mind as my favorite.

Do I choose something from Cecilio and Kapono? Goodnight and Goodmorning is certainly one of my favorites. But so is pretty much every song they ever recorded.  Song for Someone, Lovin in your eyes, or About You, come to mind.  But why limit myself to C&K?  Why not go with You Ku’uipo, which is one of my all-time favorite songs. And by all-time favorite, I mean, if all I could do is listen to this song for the rest of my life I would be ok with that. But then how can you forget Far Too Wide For Me by Peter Moon and Patrick Downes? Anyone who’s lived in the islands goes to complete mush when they hear that song. There’s a reason it’s used in the telephone commercial.

But then I realized, no, I know the best love song in the world.  Danny’s Song by Loggins and Messina but sung by a Hawaiian. Every band in Hawaii covers this song. Pretty much every show is ended with this song and everyone in the audience sings along at the top of their lungs with tears in their eyes as they do so.  It is one of the best love songs ever written. Everyone can relate and once you’ve experienced the joy of a community sing along to it, your life will never be the same again.  So there you go. Don’t believe me?  Here is a video of Kapono in New Orleans in 2007 with the crowd singing along. 

Even though we ain’t got money, I’m so in love with you honey. Everything will bring a chain of love. And in the morning when I rise, you bring a tear of joy to my eyes and tell me everything is gonna be alright!
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...