Sunday, January 3, 2016

"It Takes Two: On Being An Instrument"

instrument:  a device used to produce music; a means or agency for achieving an effect
If you were to ask me to describe the instrument, I would do so in the most elementary of terms. If the same request was applied to the music which comes from it, I would have to search for adequate words. How does one explain the experience of being captivated and enraptured by a musician and his instrument? It transcends all adjectives and vocabulary.
 “You have one more chance,” my client said. I had come to blow debris off his driveway with my blower, and he referred to my refusal several weeks earlier of a ticket to the symphony. Bone-tired, I had begged off then and asked for a rain check. And here it was.  “Would you like a ticket to hear Yo Yo Ma play?,” he asked. My jaw dropped. I was not going to refuse this invitation. I resolved to get a good night’s rest before heading off to the concert.
The cello is a large instrument in the violin family. Made of wood, it has four strings that are played with a bow. The end pin rod holds the cello planted in the floor while it's played.
From my vantage point in the audience, this instrument of the world-renowned virtuoso looked very similar to those of his fellow cellists in the orchestra. It may or may not have been his Venetian cello, made in 1733 by Antoni Stradivari. Known as the Montagnana, that cello is valued at $2.5 million. But, then again, Yo Yo Ma looked as ordinary as his fellow musicians in the orchestra as well.
That changed when he began to play. It wasn’t just the music that flowed from the cello, but also the experience of watching as man and instrument became one. I found myself holding my breath as he pulled his bow back and forth across the strings on the final note of a song, the sound floating off into the air. Those of us in the audience sat completely silent before bursting into thunderous applause.

A child prodigy, Yo Yo Ma had been challenged by one of his teachers in his early years to “pull the soul” of the composition through the strings of the cello. He performed with the desire to “make the music live" and to "hear that special hush.” And he certainly does. 

“The instrument is my voice,” he says.

I found myself considering the instrument and its spiritual application. 
There is a gross misunderstanding and false perception in the world and in the religious realm when it comes to God and the manner in which He works with people, bringing about His will and revealing Himself on earth. Those who speak in spiritual terms often use catch-phrases. They say they are “being used by God" or they are "His tool, His instrument.” This suggests He is a puppet master, and we are the puppets, being controlled. It is a natural response of man to resist such, to turn away from this image of  God.

"Bless the fruits of our labor," was a common prayer heard during my childhood. "Lord, make me an instrument of thy peace." While an honorable idea, prayers such as these may carry the implication that I am able to bring about change through my own efforts. These suggest I am able to "do something" to make the world a better place-- if God would just help me. Many prayers invoke His blessing on those good deeds.
The reality is that living life with God is a collaboration as we work together. Living life with Him isn’t my working for Him, under Him, beneath Him, being used by Him but rather, with Him. Yes, I am His instrument, I am His voice, and it takes the two of us. 
The Montagnana was created for the purpose of producing beautiful music, but that can only happen at the hand of a master.  Yo Yo Ma was given the gift of making music, but that can only happen if he has an instrument.  It takes two. The cello's purpose is fulfilled simply by being, not by doing.  Do you see it? So it is with God and man. Being His instrument is in the being, not the doing. And that is when beautiful "music" is made--from Him and at His hand.


"I am the vine, and you are the branches.  If you abide in me, and I in you, you will bear great fruit.  Without me, you will accomplish nothing."











   



   



   



   

1 comment:

The Spirited Walker said...

I love it, Ladonna. And want to add that Yo Yo Ma's gift is even greater than his ability to release the soul of music. He somehow manages to make every audience, and every person in the audience, feel that this is the most wonderful, fulfilling performance he has EVER DONE! He has the power to connect with listeners, and to honor listeners, to link with listeners. Maybe it takes THREE!!.