ϰϲʿ¼

Skip to content

‘Talking’ with music

NOW Improvisation workshops aim to start in new school year
Submitted
For more information on the NOW workshops, or to contact Ferguson, email him at [email protected].

For Wylie Ferguson, musical improvisation, like you hear in modern jazz, is as easy to do as chatting with someone at the coffee shop.

Ferguson, 22, is a ϰϲʿ¼ product and musician who facilitated a workshop at Howe Sound Secondary School at the end of May for students interested in the art of musical improvisation.

“I work for the NOW Orchestra in Vancouver, which is the New Orchestra Workshop Society,” he said. “It’s a collective of professional musicians who’ve been teaching these workshops for more than 20 years in the Lower Mainland.”

Ferguson said kids are usually a little shy or timid when they first start learning an instrument, and are hesitant about musical improvisation.

“In the workshops we ask them if they’ve ever had a spoken conversation,” he said. “That’s improvisational, so we show them that it’s the same thing, but we’re teaching them to talk with their instruments. It’s an exploration and learning experience.”

Ferguson said he hopes to bring the NOW workshops back to ϰϲʿ¼ in the new school year.

“I’d like to start doing the workshops regularly at all the schools,” he said. “After each workshop, the idea is to split the students up into different groups and have a concert where each group performs a short improvisation. We are hoping to start up sometime in September. The workshops are free for the students.”

In addition to his work as a liaison for NOW, Ferguson is finishing a degree in musical composition at Capilano University, and also teaches guitar and music theory privately in town.

“I’d also like to set up a monthly chamber orchestra,” he said.

For more information on the NOW workshops, or to contact Ferguson, email him at [email protected].

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks