You write some inspirational thoughts here. Thinking about a koan is a beautiful approach to the musical practice I am referring to. I think I am searching for words for what I do on the day-2-day-practice of music and yours resonant a lot with me - I would love to share more of what I am trying to do as well as what I am doing.
One example, that koan reminds me of, is thinking about mudras - the shape the body and especially the hands take up when interacting with the musical interface. Recently with Gary Peacock’s passing I read his wikipedia and found this wonderful articulation of the physical shape you take when relating to the musical interface,
"I go through an actual daily practice of greeting the instrument, positioning myself with the instrument,
paying attention to my posture, my breathing, the texture, the feeling of the instrument... Sometimes
that takes seconds, sometimes it takes five minutes. Just getting a physical-sensory connection. The
next thing is when I actually start playing, I dont lose that physical connection."
I believe that much of the music making experience makes no sense outside of the experience of making the sounds so how can this be translated? I would like to share this with others in an effort to build community around what I have a guess is more common than the bespoke language I am using to describe it.
That Ize song is fire. Within that I am reminded of the role my voice has played in connecting myself to the musical experience. Hearing myself has in the past caused me a lot of anxiety - this is tied up in a fear of being watched - I think - but I’ve learned to rest into that tension and have found that my voice detached from expectation can draw me into connection with just about any musical expression.