EBOOK

The Art of Is

Improvising as a Way of Life

Stephen Nachmanovitch
4.1
(7)
Pages
288
Year
2019
Language
English

About

A critically acclaimed musician and teacher presents a guide to the dynamics of improvisation.

It's easy to assume that Martin Luther King, Jr.'s famous and endlessly influential "I Have a Dream" speech was scripted beforehand, vetted by others, written, and rewritten. It was not. Instead, it was given on the fly, when from the audience, singer Mahalia Jackson urged King off his prepared text. The result has inspired millions.

The Art of Is contains breath-of-fresh-air thinking about how to cultivate the kind of game-changing creativity everyone seeks. Stephen Nachmanovitch shows exactly how the passion and immediacy of improvisation can be cultivated and how, in fact, we all improvise all the time - whether we are driving or deep in conversation. He explores ideas about being in the moment and reacting to people as they are, finding gold in unexpected distractions and roadblocks, and not only accepting, but also celebrating imperfections in everyday practices. This creative mindfulness also makes innovation the province not of solitary geniuses, but the result of engagement and interaction - and makes clear that improvising, creating, and innovating are only of value when rooted in an ethical and social foundation. The results, Nachmanovitch shows, foster meaningful change and invention - and may just ignite a dream.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"In an age of standardized packages and constrained choices, Stephen Nachmanovitch gives us The Art of Is, a refreshing encounter with how to improvise and be fully alive in the face of deadening habits of mind. The author is a musician and a teacher who has an uncanny ability to see and listen and help others do likewise. We are verbs, not nouns, he tells us, because we are ever in motion - open
Jerry Brown, governor of California 1975–1982 and 2011–2018
"A beautiful book, full of power, full of life, written from the deep experience of an artist and a wise person."
Joan Halifax, abbot, Upaya Zen Center
"The Art of Is IS real ART! It is so lucid, grand, kind, easygoing, and deeply helpful, I could not stop reading it, even in time I did not 'have'! It is full of surprises, gems, and open-ended inspirations. It starts from the moment of Mahalia Jackson's startling outburst to MLK Jr., catapulting his "I have a dream" speech into the improvisation of a soaring liberation of the spirit that it was.
Robert Thurman, Jey Tsong Khapa Professor of Buddhist Studies, Columbia University

Artists