Horn Playing as Sports

Intro

Horn Playing is an inescapably a bodily activity. Several accounts 1 describe horn playing primarily as an athletic activity, a kind of sports.

The characteristics the are emphasised in this view are akin to that of a high-level athlete:

  • strength
  • agility
  • coordination
  • speed
  • balance
  • elasticity
  • etc

The Sports metaphor is broad: sports can be recreational and/or competetive. Goals and means differ. We will primarily focus of high-level competetive performance of sports - the kind that music performers often strive for. This focus has a lot in common with the metaphor of Horn Playing as a Profession.

Logics of Sports

The sports analogy carries with it several logics:

  • competition
  • achievement, outperforming others
  • goal setting, the only thing that matters is aiming to the top
  • top shape at all times (best når det gjelder)
  • determined, deliberate, tough training
  • no pain, no gain
  • measurability, objective comparison

On the more positive side it also implies

  • game or play; immersion
  • mastery and goal achievement
  • clarity of goals
  • challenge
  • mastery

Sports psychology has gained increased recognition in music performance in recent years (in addition to the physical aspects). This embeds horn playing even deeper into the logics of sports. Not only the physical strength and ability, but also the cognitive strategies of high-performance sports define this view of horn playing.

  • background/foreground
  • open/closed skills
  • rule based, not rule based
  • intentionality

It is common to stop at these logics of sport, when discussing the Sports metaphor. One such example is dance.

Similar fields

Dance community is grapling the issue of being defined as sports as well (Guarino (2015) 2).

It is illustrative that complex phenomena like dance and music struggle to come to terms with what they are. The matter is not made easier by sports thinking of themselves as art (ANY QUOTES OR BOOK TITLES)

Tensions with other views

Consider the contrast between these two quotes:

Music is not sports - Henrik Hellstenius

and

QUOTE from the sports book (Belfrage?)

Viewing horn playing as sports comes into tension with “idealistic” views. By “idealistic” I refer to the views that lean towards idealistic ontology: there is a world of ideas separate from the physical world. It is in this world of ideas that horn playing lives.

Possibilities and limitations of the Sports metaphor

The potential of the sports metaphor is influened how we think of goals of music making. These are influenced by how we arrange the totality

Research on knowledge and expertise

Being a top athlete vs being in shape

Closed skills vs open-skills

In music, we often learn closed skills in order to enable open-skills. But it is not necessarily a linear realationship. Tasks of music making are broad and only partly rule-based (again, depending on the kind of music you make).

Questions the metaphor raises

On Rules

  • rules are ample in music, either self-imposed or cultural
  • rules are not always explicitly stated

  1. Belfrage et al (1982): Practice methods for brass players based on physiological factors (related: Belfrage: “Blechblaser-Sportler” in Brass Bulletin 21, 1978") ↩︎

  2. “Is Dance a Sport?: A Twenty-First Century Debate” ↩︎

By Julius Pranevičius