The Stepping
Stone Approach
By Jeffrey Agrell
Imagine that the door to your
house was suddenly six feet off the ground. You have to get
in, there is no way around it. You’re in a hurry, so you
run at the door full tilt and take a flying leap, trying to
make it through in a single bound. Chances are good that
result would be a juicy splat against the side of the house
and the fracturing of something important. But you are
determined. You are not one to give up easily. You think, I
can do this. I will keep jumping at the door until I make
it through.
As they say about winning an argument with an umpire, there
are two chances that you would succeed in finally leaping
through the door: slim and none. Ouch, you say, picking
yourself up after the fifteenth try and noting that your
leaps are now worse than when you began. There must be a
better way.
There is: how much easier would it be to vault through the
opening if you put down a concrete block first so that you
don’t have so far to leap? Or two? Or six? Or twenty-seven?
No-brainer answer: it would be a lot
easier. If you took
the time to lay down enough of these ‘stepping stones’, you
could literally walk effortlessly through the door at last.
How often do we look at a new solo, etude, or excerpt and
fling ourselves at it, expecting, or at least hoping to
clear the difficulties in a single bound? We see the goal
dangling tantalizingly before us: there they are, all the
right notes, printed right there. The ideal tempo marking.
The dynamics. The articulations and expressive markings.
How easy it is to write
a leap up to high
C!
We need some musical stepping stones to help us attain our
goals as effortlessly as concrete blocks would help us
reach an elevated door. Here is the stepping stone theory
in a nutshell: Whatever the difficulty of the piece,
begin from a
place that is easy and comfortable. Advance toward the goal in
small, easily accomplished steps. This recalls Barry Tuckwell’s
dictum: “Horn playing is easy. If it is not easy for you,
you’re doing something wrong.”
Some ‘concrete’ suggestions for stepping stones:
1. In your first acquaintance with the piece, play through
it and isolate the problem areas. These small chunks can be
considered a series of microetudes, so to speak. They may
be as brief measure or less, even two notes. Master them
one at a time. Don’t play the whole piece until the
microetudes are all perfected.
2. The first problem to solve is always rhythm. Work out
and become completely familiar with the rhythms of each
chunk (without the horn at first). Tip for help with
really difficult
rhythms, such as are found in contemporary music: enter the
notes into a computer MIDI sequencer or notation program
and have the program play them back. The great NY
Philharmonic trombonist Joe Alessi said that this was how
he learned an extremely difficult modern concerto.
3. To help almost every parameter, call on the Tempo
Police: use a metronome to enforce slow tempos, starting
slow enough that you can tap or play the rhythms and/or
notes without hesitation. Amass great quantities of perfect
repetitions. Then move the tempo up one notch and repeat.
Gradually and effortlessly you will advance the metronome
toward the final tempo goal. Intersperse mental practice
(finger along as you think through it) with instrument
practice. Speed will occur naturally and easily as the
continued perfect repetitions reinforce the same neural
pathway. Practice is like digging a trench to help water
flow - every repetition is like scooping out some earth. If
the scoop always occurs in the same place, the water will
only be able to flow down that one deep trench. If there
are shallow scraped grooves all over the place, well, you
will never know where the water is going to flow and the
result will be a mess.
4. If fingering is the problem (awkward combinations, sharp
keys, etc), isolate (reduce size of area of focus), slow
down, repeat (and repeat) in a relaxed and controlled
manner.
5. If ‘hearing’ the pitch is the problem (e.g. in atonal
music), ditto.
6. If range the problem, transpose down to a range that is
comfortable. Gradually reduce the size of the transposition
until you reach the original.
7. If endurance - which is often related to range - is the
problem, transposing might be one answer; you could also
build stepping stones by starting with a segment of a
comfortable length and gradually increasing the length of
the segment. Or, you could split the work up into do-able
sections and rest between each; gradually decrease the
amount of rest. Example: the horn solo from Midsummer
Night’s Dream. You could play it first in horn in Bb basso.
This is a kinder setting concerning endurance, but you can
still master intervals, expression, dynamics, accuracy.
When you can play the whole solo perfectly several times
through, start again in horn in C. Continue to the original
key of E and then go one better and do it in F. Or: play it
in the original E only, but practice phrase length (or
smaller) segments punctuated with rest until each is very
solid. Progressively increase the size of the segments
until the solo is whole and solid.
8. If a leap is the problem,
reduce the size of the leap; gradually extend the leap
until it reaches the original - and then go one step beyond
if practical. If Example: if you’re having trouble with the
C”-C”’ slur in Adagio and Allegro, start with a C”-D” slur.
Easy, you say. Great. Then C-Eb”. Continue with patience,
repetition, and rest until you reach your goal. Variation:
practice the octave leap, but start an octave lower: C’-C”.
Then Db’-Db”. And so on.
In general, the approach is the same for every kind of
problem: work the individual problem chunks, then combine
them, playing ever larger and larger sections, ‘knitting’
segments together until the entire piece is ‘seamless.’
Remember that commercial where a person “morphs”
(metamorphoses smoothly) into a tiger before your very
eyes? Construct a variation that you can do easily and well
and use stepping stones (microetudes, metronome,
transposition, etc.) to gradually morph your efforts into
the final product. It may take time and practice to learn
to come up with the right stepping stones at the right
time, but after a while it will become second nature. Just
remember not to start with the tiger.