Voices of Santa Clara: Bill Stevens
SCU music professor shares his thoughts on sound and spirit
Gavin Cosgrave
The Santa Clara
February 21, 2019
The following is an entry in a series called “Voices of Santa Clara,” which profiles noteworthy students and faculty. The Q & A is excerpted from the “Voices of Santa Clara” podcast.
Bill Stevens is a professor of music at Santa Clara, where he focuses on jazz piano. Bill has been blind since the age of 14, and he pursued music at the Oberlin Conservatory. Bill has done work around deep listening, Somatic Experiencing and the link between music and spirituality.
Bill recently came out with a new album called “A Blues by Any Other Name” available on iTunes and Amazon.
Stevens discusses seeing music, spirituality, healing. He also comments on his journey through childhood, becoming a composer, scholar and learning to be human in the present moment.
Gavin Cosgrave: How did you get interested in music as a child?
Bill Stevens: We had a beat-up piano in the corner of the dining room. When I was four years old, my mother won a month of piano lessons at an auction, but I was completely uninterested. My brother took the lessons and came back and played a little tune. Then our babysitter showed us how to play the “Star Wars” theme, and that was pretty cool. I became curious.
There was one day in the fourth grade when I had a tune in my head, and the tune wasn’t in any of my books. I wasn’t sure how to write it down, so I just wrote down the letter names, “G A B G G A B.” The band director got interested and arranged it for the band.
I lost most of my vision when I was 14 fairly suddenly. That’s when I started to get serious. I started to have some fairly profound spiritual experiences through music.
GC: Did becoming blind change your relationship to music?
BS: I’m sure it did, but largely through changing my relationship with so many other things. Music was one of those things that didn’t have to change. In some ways there was a process of elimination going on. I was really interested in mathematics and computers.
At the time I lost my vision, we were doing some basic trigonometry, and doing that when you can’t look at the page is a little challenging. My mom and I would spend hours a day describing the graphs. My mother would say, “Imagine a snake wrapped around a stick.” And I would ask where it starts, crosses the y-axis… I was memorizing all my work. I got through Calculus III by the end of high school, and that was really fun.
Ironically, I’m primarily a visual learner and thinker. I hear notes and see a color association.
GC: We throw around the term “listening” a lot in society, but what is deep listening?
BS: Deep listening comes from the work from composer Pauline Olivero who did a lot of work on being curious on all sounds. So often in music, we’re focusing on a foreground. We often ask, “What’s the sound of piano or violin?” Deep listening tries to listen to the sounds in the environment with just as much attention as I’m bringing to the musical sounds. The sound of my voice in this room is much different than my voice in the recital hall, or if we were outside in the cold.
In elementary school, they would take me out of class to do what’s known as orientation mobility training. One of the things my teacher was showing me was how sound reflects in different ways. If you run your hand close to your ear, you can almost feel it because the it changes the way in which all the other sounds you’re hearing reach your ear.
Deep listening is making a practice of walking into a space and hearing the size of the room based on the ambient sounds and echoes.
GC: What is the link between music and spirituality?
BS: I see spirituality as the experience of creativity, creation, creator, all interlinked. And the experience of connection to the world outside oneself through creativity. Some of the most profound spiritual experiences for me have been when I’m in a community that’s going deep with creativity. Sometimes that’s been as a part of music programs where I’ve been a student or taught.
Also dance, I studied dance improvisation in college. I’ve done retreats in some of those areas, and it helps me get out of my own head and into the present moment.
GC: You’ve done some work on how music can aid in healing from traumatic experiences.
BS: I think you’re referring to Somatic Experiencing. I had a lot of emotional experiences growing up that I didn’t know how to digest in the moment.
My way of coping was to bury them away and pretend everything was fine. The weight just builds until sooner or later you deal with them. In my mid-twenties, it was clear I needed skills in processing experiences.
I connected with a fantastic program in New York City called Helix which tried to bring together teachings from psychological and spiritual healing from western and non-western cultures. It was designed as a self-transformational program.
A lot of my people skills that come into my teaching comes from that work. Part of what I do is coach students through performance anxiety.
The principles are to take the big overwhelming energy and break it up into small digestible pieces. It’s very much like teaching. I can’t teach the whole subject at once, so we’ll start with one little piece. The other principle is pendulation. We have waves of more and less intense.
I used to think that the way to get better was to work all the time. That’s a very inefficient and unpleasant way to learn. Learning happens best when we have sprints and rests.
To listen to the full interview, visit voicesofsantaclara.com or search “Voices of Santa Clara” on the iTunes Podcast App.