Visualisation for Guitarists Part 2 – Event Rehearsal
Visualisation for Guitarists Part 2 – Event Rehearsal
How does visualisation help us to deal with common problems like stage fright, nerves and the fears that often experienced by performing musicians? To answer this question we need to realise:
The Power of Association
The Word Game
Words are a great way to explain the power of association. I believe that the meanings and labels we apply to events often actually shape our experience of the event. Our words and labels form the lens through which we see the world – like tinted sunglasses! Some people choose dark glasses, some rosy spectacles! Bear with me I’ll show you what I mean.
I also believe there is a fine line between “nerves” and “excitement”. Two performers can experience the same physical symptoms, e.g. faster breathing, a sense of energy, greater alertness, sweaty palms, etc. before going onstage yet one will label them “Fear” and one “Excitement”. Both have same physical experience but with completely different applied meanings – it is a word game!
Try this out for yourself: Consider the words “Stage Fright”. Say it out loud, focus on it. How does your body react? Do you feel yourself tightening, the breath becoming shallower, the shoulders rising, etc.? What pictures does it portray on your inner screen? Now consider Stage Terror! A slight change of words creates a more intense emotional experience, doesn’t it? What’s on your inner screen now?
Your Ability to Choose – Creating Positive Associations
We have the innate ability to choose. I like to encourage pupils to choose STAGE JOY! A new concept for most! How does that feel when you focus on it? For many it opens a new vista of delight with communication and the sharing of beauty being the core values of the performance. I don’t know about you, but I find that my mind conjures up much more positive images for STAGE JOY!, and I feel uplifted at the thought of connecting with people and sharing the music I love a much more useful and enjoyable mindset.
This is a massive subject, more than I can cover here. For more details you could explore the writings of Anthony Robbins and his concept of Transformational Language and the work of Dr Richard Bandler.
The Power of Association
Whether it is words or images it all comes down to association. The more we associate positive words and experiences to our musical performance the more we will look forward to it and enjoy the process. The technique of Event Rehearsal helps us to achieve this by creating powerful positive associations, greater familiarity and comfort with the performing situation.
Much of our fear is fear of the unknown. Through Event Rehearsal we can experience the performance situation repeatedly in our minds and purposely create joyful, positive associations with it projecting a happy outcome. When we finally get to perform it is already a familiar, friendly situation, and we have conditioned ourselves to succeed. On stage such positivity becomes contagious. You only need to watch a rock performer like Bruce Springsteen in action to see how subtle shifts in body language can affect massive crowds in positive, uplifting ways.
Olympic Gold! – A True Story
A story that really brought this home to me is featured in The Success Principles by Jack Canfield. It tells the tale of Peter Vidmar and Tim Dagged, two American athletes preparing preparing for the 1984 Olympics. Peter and Tim used Event Rehearsal by visualising their event in advance after every training session. After each training session their trainer would announce them to a pretend stadium, they would walk out in front of an imaginary crowd of 13 thousand people with another 200 million watching at home and then proceed and run through their routine. By the time they did their real event they had already completed it thousands of times in their imagination. The situation had become very familiar and they had built lots of positive associations. They went onto win the Gold Medal that year!
The Inner Stage for Guitarists
Most guitarists that I have met try to imagine that they are in their front room alone while on stage in order to reduce nervousness. I feel this is backwards, it is better to repeatedly imagine ourselves onstage. Imagining you are alone is not going to help you connect with your audience and surely communication and the deep musical connection is what performing is all about?
How to use Event Rehearsal
- When preparing for a concert, get a good idea of how the hall will look from the performers perspective. You could seek out pictures on the internet or even visit and play in the venue. If you can’t do this, just imagine your favourite hall from past concerts.
- Now holding the guitar ready to play imagine the hall. Imagine the people in the audience. The colours, sounds and fragrances. Mentally thank them for being there. Visualise yourself smiling at them and them smiling back………. As you raise your hands to the guitar now feel the hall fall silent……. All eyes are on you and out of the silence grows the most beautiful music……..from your guitar…….look down at your fingers and watch them moving smoothly, effortlessly with the precision of a highly trained master musician……….. Mentally run through the piece enjoying the sounds and the flow of the music…… When the piece is finished stand and take your applause. Smile at the audience acknowledging their support and bow to thank them for listening.
- Condition It. Repeat this many times until it becomes habitual, until the positive associations are well ingrained. You can have fun enhancing the visualisation by adding details that help you to achieve more of a joyful association. Remember STAGE JOY? For example, you can make the pictures bigger and brighter, enhance the colours, involve other senses, etc. As you create more joyful positive associations you condition yourself to enjoy and succeed more and more and to look forward to the performance experience. Whatever we repeatedly give to our brain and nervous system becomes like a programme that can click into place when it is most needed. This sort of practice helps us to control our focus and our emotions and ultimately to really enjoy our work as musicians.