At Tido, we are building more than an app, a digital sheet music reader, or a website; we are building an environment. We sometimes call it a platform, but whether it’s described as an environment, platform, or ecosystem, the idea is the same – we are creating a musical world in which you can live.
One of the surprising joys of using Tido Music myself is the voyages of exploration and discovery it is taking me on. I expected that I would use it as a professional tool, to find a work and practise it, leading to a performance. But the richness of audio, video and text we provide, alongside notation, have increasingly also led me into byways and serendipitous discoveries. Finding a new work, or a composer I haven’t formerly paid attention to, is one of the really wonderful things about the Tido Music experience. Because everything is there. I can click on a person and immediately hear their music, which might lead me further to other works or persons in turn. A very happy way to lose hours! At a deeper level, this is actually the kind of journey we all aspire to as musicians; we are all lifelong learners. And in a music industry which can often seem increasingly narrowed and commodified, a tool which enables journeys of discovery is a precious thing.
In a way, I see ‘wasting’ time–following a trail of breadcrumbs–as a valuable way to expand horizons. One of my close friends has started to dedicate time each morning to simply following links of interest online, leaping from lilypad to lilypad. And he tells me he’s learning some amazing things serendipitously that way! Time is always precious, but unstructured discovery can provide a welcome relief from the highly directed, goal-driven educational system many of us grew up in. Music–its discovery, practice, and performance–can be its own goal. It doesn’t always have to be in the pursuit of something else (marks, results, success). It can be play, in the deepest sense.
Recent additions to the Tido Music environment are excellent illustrations of this dynamism. (Click on the following titles to go straight to the things in Tido Music.) I have a pretty good idea about what Handel – 20 Favourite Pieces might contain. But Kuhlau is a name I haven’t heard spoken in decades, and to look at one of his Sonatinas, in the historic Peters edition engraving, is delightful.
I conduct Ravel’s Rhapsodie Espagnole often – but Liszt’s work of the same title is a complete revelation to me. I used to pride myself on my repertoire knowledge and recall. But what Tido Music is showing me is that, in my narrow world of performance and musicology, my knowledge was barely scratching the surface. The amount of forgotten, neglected or excluded music is many times the size of the tiny, so-called ‘canon’.
Four volumes of Scriabin’s piano music. A piece by Reger. And, just as a fillip, all four of Brahms’ Symphonies in the famous arrangements by Otto Singer, who also made the piano reductions of Wagner’s operas. All added to the Tido Music platform in the last few weeks. And our collection continues to grow like topsy.
This discovery journey will be a recurring theme of my blogs. I encourage you to embark on your own Tido-led voyage!
Until next time
