Strong and Wrong

Strong and Wrong

There’s a little trick people use when teaching beginners how to solo in Jazz - which professionals also sometimes utilize - that goes something like this:

“If you hit a note that you didn’t mean to hit or that doesn’t sound right, hit it again. Then again and again, and maybe even hold it out. Then it will sound like you meant to do it.”

And it works.

There’s something about the way we process information as humans that makes us resistant to encountering information which goes against the norm of our everyday experiences, but then that resistance will break down with time and exposure.

There’s a lot of chatter about this phenomenon in the political sphere (how long after an idea is introduced to the mainstream does it become popular with the masses) and in psychology, but it can be highly useful in the artistic world as well.

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There's A Place For Us...

There's A Place For Us...

I was at a networking event earlier this week and got into a conversation - one that I’ve had countless times with theatre professionals and audience members alike - where the central questions are:

Should Broadway shows be about the art or the money?”

Is there a place on Broadway for shows that are only light and feel-good? What about dark, depressing shows?”

How do you expect to get new audiences if all shows look, feel, or sound alike?”

Now, I don’t find the mere asking of these questions to be problematic, but I do find the heart of this oft-had conversation to be problematic. Whichever side you fall on - and yes, there do ultimately seem to end up being two sides to this conversation - there is an insinuation that one type of theatre should exist on Broadway and another type should not.

But my big question is: Why?

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