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A Luxury Authors Don’t Appreciate

I recently played a concert with the Elgin Community College jazz band (trumpet). One of the  tunes was Miles Davis’ version of “Bye Bye Blackbird” and I transcribed his beautiful solo. As I  was doing that, I started thinking about creating art—in this case the difference between playing  an instrument and writing. I’ve been playing for some fifty years. I came to a realization that  astounds me, and I wondered why I had never thought about it before. 

The difference has to do with revisions. Under normal conditions (without springtails!), it takes  me about six months to write a Spencer Manning mystery. That involves any number of  revisions and editing rounds. Every author faces that and has that luxury. I say ‘luxury’ because  we have the opportunity to revise what we write—many times—to make it the best we can.  Famous authors need that luxury just as much as the rest of us. An example of that is this page  from James Joyce’s revision of Finnegan’s Wake.  

But back to Miles Davis. When I transcribed his solo I had the luxury of going over it several  times to make sure I had the notes right. I made several revisions. And when I played it I had the  notes in front of me. I do humbly admit I played it well, but I wasn’t improvising. Click on this  link to hear Miles’ recording of “Blackbird.” http://bit.ly/1lSKpef 

Here’s the astounding thing about what Miles, or any other musician who is improvising, is  doing. It’s one difference between a writer and a musician. As an author I have that rewrite  luxury. When I improvise as a musician, there is no rewrite—I don’t get a second chance. And  when I stopped to think about what that entails, I was astounded. I have to produce a musical  thought seemingly instantly with no chance for revision. And the band isn’t going to stop while I think about the next measure. And a musician not only has to create seemingly instantly, they  have to be proficient enough at their instrument to turn their thoughts into sound—instantly; and  not just any sound, but in the right key, tempo, dynamic, and with attention to the rest of the  group. How that happens is a mystery to me.  

Someone asked me which I like better, writing or playing. I couldn’t pick one because both are  rewarding. But writing has that rewrite luxury. Improvisation can’t be revised. I am satisfied  with a book when it is done. I am never satisfied with an improvised solo. Some are very good,  but I always know of a part I could have done better. That said, improvising on my horn is a lot  more fun. That’s a mystery to me too! 

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