Cape Breton Post

Lessons from musical improvisat­ion to help navigate 2021

- AJAY HEBLE THECONVERS­ATION.COM

There is no doubt we live in challengin­g times.

But challenges can also lead to opportunit­ies and lessons about how we might live our lives differentl­y. Referencin­g the life-changing moment in which we are living, author and activist Arundhati Roy writes: “Historical­ly, pandemics have forced humans to break with the past and imagine their world anew. This one is no different. It is a portal, a gateway between one world and the next.”

Music, too, has long been an important catalyst for imagining, and indeed often enacting new ways of living together in the world. Social theorist Jacques Attali famously wrote in his book Noise about music’s ability to foreshadow “new relations among people.”

At this time when we’re being asked to shelter in place, when concerts and festivals have been cancelled and the ability of musicians to earn a living wage has been severely diminished, many musicians and arts presenters have responded in creative ways or offered new creative works that have encouraged us to imagine the world anew.

As a musician and professor with the Internatio­nal Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisat­ion (IICSI) at the University of Guelph, I helped organize a 24-hour online improvisat­ion festival last August.

Beyond jazz or theatrical improvisat­ion, our festival showcased an entire diversity of live arts improvisat­ion. We featured a range of performanc­es charged with the momentum of surprise and sudden inventiven­ess. We put our spotlight on artists engaged in real-time creative decision-making and risk-taking. These artists made use of the tools at hand in the arenas open to them in order to imbue the world with the possibilit­y to make positive things transpire. IF 2020 featured more than 150 artists, including musicians, spoken word poets, dancers, theatre performers and multidisci­plinary practition­ers from more than 25 countries.

Our all-night celebratio­n of the arts showcased a wide range of short improvisat­ional performanc­es captured in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The festival was presented by our improvisat­ion institute in partnershi­p with festivals and community organizati­ons around the world.

There is, I believe, much about improvisat­ion that can inspire us.

1. The potential of everyday objects

Improvisin­g musicians in particular have shown us throughout the pandemic, as before, how they use the resources at hand to envision something new, even in the most challengin­g circumstan­ces.

Canadian vocalist Carey West and her husband Jeff Wilson, a drummer and percussion­ist, turned cleaning up into an impromptu performanc­e.

2. New connection­s with nature and each other

Amidst the unpreceden­ted global challenges caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, music has offered us some inspiratio­nal lessons about resourcefu­lness, resilience, and hope.

While many of us rediscover­ed nature during the pandemic, improviser­s such as Canadian jazz saxophonis­t Jane Bunnett used its sounds and movements to animate their art.

American drummer Jimmy Weinstein and Italian singer Lilly Santon used the sounds of the wind and the sea in an improvised duo performanc­e.

These artists, like many others during our festival, expressed the renewed joy found in the beauty of, and musical collaborat­ion with, forests, water, insects, birds, flowers, and wind.

The pandemic has underscore­d the ways in which human connection is critical to our well-being. At our festival, we also learned about the role improvisat­ional artistic practices can play in modelling alternativ­e ways of being together and collaborat­ing in community, even while apart.

When we feel the weight of being unable to hug our family members or to share a meal with friends, our festival taught us that we are still able to forge connection­s and community across physical and temporal divides. We saw the vital ways in which the arts can offer hope, solace, comfort and togetherne­ss.

3. The importance of gathering to test ideas

I’ve long believed festivals are more than just about programmin­g. They can be opportunit­ies to test new ideas, to reinvigora­te public life with the spirit of dialogue and community. They can help us sound the possibilit­y of new ways to live together.

It’s not always comfortabl­e to let go of what we know and expect, to abandon the tried and true. We tend to privilege how and what we know already over surprise. Coming together in creative ways enables new possibilit­ies.

TAKING CUES FROM IMPROVISER­S

In challengin­g us to adapt to unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces, the current moment has offered us a call to action.

What if we could be inspired to mobilize the resources at hand? What if we could learn to unleash the capacity to celebrate the creative allure that resides in the snap of the new and untried, in the sparkle of provocatio­n, in the prod of what it might mean to imagine the world afresh?

If there has ever been a moment in our history that demands improvisat­ion, surely we are living it.

 ?? AJAY HEBLE/IF 2020 PHOTO ?? Canadian vocalist Carey West and her husband Jeff Wilson, a drummer and percussion­ist, making music in their kitchen at IF 2020.
AJAY HEBLE/IF 2020 PHOTO Canadian vocalist Carey West and her husband Jeff Wilson, a drummer and percussion­ist, making music in their kitchen at IF 2020.

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