For private voice at BYU, we students spend 10+ hours a week practicing repertoire and technique in order to prepare ourselves for an end-of-semester juried performance. We walk into a room (one at a time) filled with the Vocal Department faculty, a handful of grad students, and a video camera, each with the same, stern expression. We sing, they make little eye contact, type away on their computers, and dismiss us. In this case, there is little benefit for the performer or the receiver. This is called, according to the Rikki Dictionary ©2012, naybeneficial. It does not benefit any of the parties involved.
Next, going to see your favorite band in concert. Say you had the opportunity to spend a "Rare and Intimate Evening of Music with GUSTER. An Acoustic Evening Featuring the Guster Strings." Say this evening was the first show in their acoustic tour. Say this show was a total jam-fest for them and a total life-changing musical experience for you. This is one of those circumstances that benefits the performer and the receiver. This is dualbeneficial.
In another instance, it is early in the morning and I am belting away my favorite power ballad in the shower. This is one of those cases that benefits the performer but not the sleeping receiver. As irritating as this may be, there is good in it. Let's call this unibeneficial. (I've made up three words today... productive!)
So. In addition to the wonderful world of dualbenefitivity, I am also a strong supporter of unibenefitivity. More simply stated, the art of making music for pure self-expression. Sometimes we create, not to entertain others, but to help make tangible the abstract emotions inside ourselves.
I have two music videos to support this. They are both phenomenal. I find them absolutely inspiring. According to our definitions earlier, this would make them dualbeneficial. However, I do not believe they were made to keep the world happy. I believe that both of these videos are examples of raw expression.
Without further adieu...
Brandon Flowers- Only the Young
Robyn- Call Your Girlfriend
There you have it, kids. Expression. Yummy, huh?