September 16, 2016

Blog
Mark Holdaway

Practice TIP: Experiment with Changing Volume Levels

Playing strong can help you learn; playing softly can help you discover the “feel” of the music Don’t you hate all those internet ads that start with “Try this one weird trick” and then promise that if you do, it will change your life in a profound way? Well, I have something for you that may seem like a weird trick, but it is really a great little tool that indeed has had a profound effect on my own kalimba, karimba, and mbira playing. People tend to play kalimba music with every note at the same volume level.  But I can point to three big benefits you can get from

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Blog
Mark Holdaway

Thumbing the Karimba at States of Inflammation

What’s a young professional musician to do when her body fails her? Klara is learning mbira and karimba, to play especially when her body doesn’t want to play violin. An introduction from Mark: High level musicians dedicate their body, their time, their soul, and years to their art. They are driven by the dreams of the greatness they have touched in their musical experiences, and they invest their very lives to this god of music. But what happens when their body fails them? When pain and debility make their work and ambitions look like one of God’s great jokes? Many musical instruments are quite physically demanding: guitar, upright bass, piano,

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Blog
Mark Holdaway

Kalimba and Mindfulness – 1

Conscious attention can bring many benefits to you and your music Photo by Glen Davis. Kalimba by Andrew Masters What is mindfulness?  For me, mindfulness is being as present as I can be to the moment that is unfolding.   Consider music as a sort of plow that is able to cut a furrow through the present moment.  Good music invites the listener to become entrained in that furrow as the musical plowshare cuts through the unfolding succession of present moments .  Good music, happy, sad, or otherwise, can be a great comfort as it can largely take us from whatever pathway we were wandering down, and instead directs our

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Blog
Mark Holdaway

TIP:Technique: Playing with the right index finger – 1

The “mbira style” use of the right index finger puts it under the tine, flicking upward Save 13% with the coupon code CAT13 when you buy the African Tuned Karimba How do you play the kalimba? It’s a thumb piano, so mainly you use your two thumbs!  The Brazilian masters like to use four or six fingers, playing the kalimba as it sits in their lap – but I don’t teach that style. That’s because my kalimba playing is a lot about movement of the body while playing, and if you hold the kalimba in your hands and play with your thumbs, you can get up and walk, run, or

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