Hey Bisem ~
When I started to play the theremin in 2011 (I have been playing for 2 1/2 years already?! wow, it still feels like yesterday!) I decided to make my journey public. I posted a video (or 2) a week on my facebook page and every so often I go back to the beginning and I am able to assess the improvements I have made when things seem to stahl for a bit. I thought it might also be a positive tool for people who are also considering taking up this instrument. I remember when I joined here, the opinions were very strong ~ that to be a great player is an almost ipossible task or status to achieve. Only few Gods/Godesses are "up there" and any others will probably not be worthy. I felt discouraged right at the beginning! So I decided to not listen to anyone but my own self. I did publish videos on FB and told myself that to get better I had to put myself out there. I have had few people critiquing my videos, some were good reviews and positive encouragements and others were pretty downright mean. BUT IT'S OK! It helped me to work on certain things and to improve. Success cannot come without crashing and burning a few times :)
... And it is still a work in progress ~ and always will be I am afraid. I will probably never reach the status of theremin Godess, but that's ok. If one od 2 people remembers little Amey 15 years down the road, it's cool :) One thing I've learned about myself, is that I don't listen to others much. That can be good and/or bad :)
And what is a professional thereminist? According to certain people, there is no such thing as a professional thereminist. I do consider myself a proficient thereminist though. I am professional at pi$$ing people off from time to time when it comes to my very own opinion related to the theremin. haha :)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bisem Wrote:
Lately I have been recording practice sessions like Amethyste and posting them on my Facebook page. The process of making 20 recordings of the same song and only one is decent enough to publish is a helpful learning experience by itself. I have found that posting the work is an important part of the process. Once you hit the upload button you have committed yourself to the scrutiny of others and this can be an important tool for improvement. It allows you to see and listen to your playing with an objective eye and ear.
Amey is right...this isn't a contest. The forum she set up was so non threatening that even I subjected myself to the professionals on the TW community..LOL!
This is about the joy and magic of the holidays and expressing that though the wonderful instrument we all love so let's get some more entries!
Brian