• Latest
  • Trending
FREE Printed Edition Returns! You Must Confirm Your Address!

Mallet Percussion and the Visual Arts

August 13, 2021
My Story

My Story

July 12, 2025
Doing Better Next School Year

Doing Better Next School Year

July 10, 2025
Bring Harmony to Your Classroom

Bring Harmony to Your Classroom

July 10, 2025
Composing for Middle and High School Choirs – A conversation with Laura Farnell and Reginald Writer – Part 1

How Choir Practice Builds Confidence in Middle School Students

July 5, 2025
I Love ASTA!

I Love ASTA!

July 3, 2025
Technology: DAW Bundles

Features You Must Have in a Small Portable USB Audio Interface!

June 28, 2025
Choosing the Right Microphone(s) to Record Your Choral Rehearsal

Choosing the Right Microphone(s) to Record Your Choral Rehearsal

June 28, 2025
Best Budget Microphones for High School Podcasting

Best Budget Microphones for High School Podcasting

June 30, 2025
The Midwest Clinic Announces 2025 Clinicians and Performers

The Midwest Clinic Announces 2025 Clinicians and Performers

June 28, 2025
Running the Race

Running the Race

June 26, 2025
Sharpening the Tools in Your Toolkit

Sharpening the Tools in Your Toolkit

June 24, 2025
Treat Your Ears to Recordings of Upcoming Jazz Charts

Treat Your Ears to Recordings of Upcoming Jazz Charts

June 24, 2025
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
  • Contact
SBO+
  • Departments
    • Concert Band
    • Orchestra
      • String Section
    • Choral
    • Marching Band
    • Jazz
    • Modern Band/Popular Music
      • Mariachi
    • Theater
    • Editorial
      • Upclose
      • Advocacy
        • NAfME Neighborhood
        • MAC Corner
        • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
      • Commentary
        • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
        • Leadership Tips
        • Perspective
        • InService
          • America’s Bandmasters
          • America’s Musicians
        • Tone Deaf Comics
      • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
      • New Products
    • Performance
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Technology
    • Travel/Festivals
      • Fundraising
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Awards/Entries
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
  • Subscribe to SBO+
    • Subscribe
    • Login/Manage Subscription
    • Support
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
No Result
View All Result
  • Departments
    • Concert Band
    • Orchestra
      • String Section
    • Choral
    • Marching Band
    • Jazz
    • Modern Band/Popular Music
      • Mariachi
    • Theater
    • Editorial
      • Upclose
      • Advocacy
        • NAfME Neighborhood
        • MAC Corner
        • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
      • Commentary
        • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
        • Leadership Tips
        • Perspective
        • InService
          • America’s Bandmasters
          • America’s Musicians
        • Tone Deaf Comics
      • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
      • New Products
    • Performance
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Technology
    • Travel/Festivals
      • Fundraising
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Awards/Entries
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
  • Subscribe to SBO+
    • Subscribe
    • Login/Manage Subscription
    • Support
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result

Mallet Percussion and the Visual Arts

August 13, 2021
in Archives, GoodVibes, August 2021
Share on Facebook
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

I am going to discuss how percussion relates and can be influenced by the visual arts. I am also going to talk about a recent experience I had that really opened my mind to the realm of possibilities for percussion as an artform and how this concept can help your students. 

I was recently asked by a filmmaker to watch one of his silent movies of just landscapes and scenery in Iceland. He asked me to setup my marimba while I watch the movie and improvise while I interpret the visual elements of the film. It sounded like a cool idea. This film maker is advanced in many art forms, so I knew he had great ideas. But I had absolutely no clue what I was in for. He wanted only one take of my performance because he only wanted my initial reaction to what I was watching. So, there were no edits and very little production after the fact.

I knew I had to silence my mind and go into a “Zen” mode to be able to pull this off. I realized that I would have to quiet my mind, not think, and just react to the visual stimulation. I found myself in a state of relaxation, enjoying the scenes and just creating music. And I just let my emotions dictate what I was playing from scene to scene. The most challenging part was watching the film and playing accurately, meaning hitting the notes that I was intending to hit. But I felt so relaxed that it wasn’t a problem. And I am also known for closing my eyes for a minute or longer during my live performances.

The hour of music flew by so quickly because I was really enjoying the experience and just locked into the scenery. When Dan Johnson softly told me, “The end is approaching, and we are about a minute away”, I was shocked!

What had I just played? I would find out a couple weeks later. But I had thought to myself that if somebody had told me to improvise for an hour, playing whatever came into my brain, the end result would be zero musical form or unity. I would expect a bunch of abstract ideas strung together.

When I heard the audio for the first time, I was absolutely stunned. The music flowed from one section to the next. It made sense. And there was form. There were also “themes and variations” on one idea throughout but approached in different musical ways. What had just happened!? After much thought, I figured it out.

Usually, we create music from the cerebral part of our brain. This was a completely different beast. The music was coming completely from the “visual” part of the brain, with no thought process happening. The only reason the music had form, made sense, and thematic material is because of the movie! It had absolutely nothing to do with me. The musical form “was” the film form. They had melded into one entity as I interpreted the changing scenery. I was also shocked with the perfection and excellence in which I performed completely improvisational music on the spot. And I could not have composed a better piece of music if I had spent six months trying.

There is a very strong connection between the visual and musical aspects of our brains. This made me realize that we need to integrate the two different art forms into curriculum for our students. It will open up new horizons and teach them to use different parts of their brains than they are currently taught to use. Staring at sheet music and learning music that becomes so repetitive can be a very sterile form of pedagogy. Even if our students aren’t at a level on their instrument to be able to improvise well, I think it could be a great idea just to have them watch a scenic and beautiful film before a performance and rehearsal, and at least interpret the emotion that the student feels after the visual stimulus.

Jeff Moore, dean of fine arts and professor of percussion at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, has recently created a multimedia computer lab where students from every school of art at the university can work together and collaborate. I would imagine that film students could ask for music from the music students, dance students can ask for music for choreographed routines, and the possibilities are endless. 

It is my strong opinion, that after my experience of recording “Icelandic Saga”, students at the high school and university level need to experience collaborative and multimedia art. It will teach them to use different parts of their brains while performing or writing music, and it will also teach them how all of the arts relate to each other. This is why we have Impressionism in both music and painting. The style characteristics are the same: Faded boundaries, dreamlike moods, and images and sounds that seem to flow into each other in a ghostly manner. All art is universal. Now I understand why Jeff Moore created this ingenious idea long before my amazing experience with artist Dan Johnson in southern Illinois.

In 2016, The Huffington Post called Kevin Lucas “the most talented percussionist since Lionel Hampton, Ginger Baker and Tito Puente”. He has been nominated for 38 music industry awards for his Echoes in the Sand album, and he won the 2016 American Songwriting Awards. Kevin Lucas performed with the Madison Scouts Drum and Bugle Corps from 1992-1994 and won the DCI Midwest Individuals in 1994 for keyboard percussion. He placed second in the United States for concert hall percussion at the Music Teachers National Association collegiate competition in 1997.

You may also like:

The 22nd Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference Report: 50 Directors Default Thumbnail2011 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report SBO Presents The 19th Annual 50 Directors Who Make A Difference SBO Presents the 21st Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

POPULAR STORY

  • 50 Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

    50 Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

    1357 shares
    Share 543 Tweet 339
  • When Selecting New Choral Music, Choose Success

    1293 shares
    Share 517 Tweet 323
  • Concert Band Set-up Fundamentals

    1093 shares
    Share 437 Tweet 273
  • The Immediate Threat to School Music Programs

    1008 shares
    Share 403 Tweet 252
  • TI:ME Announces Free PreSonus Revelator USB Microphone at 30th Anniversary Celebration at TMEA

    970 shares
    Share 388 Tweet 243
ADVERTISEMENT

SchoolMusic.Travel

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northwest USA

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northwest USA

Mountains, music, and vibrant cities — the Northwest offers unforgettable experiences for student groups. 🎷 1. Seattle, WA – Innovation Meets Inspiration• Why it’s great:…

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northeast USA

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Northeast USA

From Broadway to Boston, the Northeast inspires music students with rich culture and iconic venues. From Broadway lights to historic concert halls, the Northeast is…

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Midwest USA

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations in the Midwest USA

The Midwest is the heartbeat of America — and it beats in 4/4 time. The Midwest is the heartbeat of America — and it beats…

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations on the West Coast

Top 10 School Music Travel Destinations on the West Coast

Coastlines, concert halls, and creativity — the West Coast delivers stunning performance opportunities. From iconic performance halls to scenic coastal venues, the West Coast offers…

Next Post
Are You Proficient with Notation Software?

Are You Proficient with Notation Software?

  • July 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • June 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • May 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • April 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • March 2025

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2025 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

No Result
View All Result
  • Departments
    • Concert Band
    • Orchestra
      • String Section
    • Choral
    • Marching Band
    • Jazz
    • Modern Band/Popular Music
      • Mariachi
    • Theater
    • Editorial
      • Upclose
      • Advocacy
      • Commentary
      • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
      • New Products
    • Performance
      • Woodwinds
      • Percussion
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Technology
    • Travel/Festivals
      • Fundraising
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Awards/Entries
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards
    • 50 Teachers Who Make a Difference
  • Subscribe to SBO+
    • Subscribe
    • Login/Manage Subscription
    • Support
  • Advertise
    • Email PR!

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114

Wenger EndurAd Promo