"I basically started playing violin at the age of six. That lasted about three years because my previous teacher died and the second teacher didn't really know how to successfully get me going"
About this Quote
There’s a quiet brutality in how casually Vitous frames a pivotal derailment: not as tragedy, but as logistics. A childhood starts, shows promise, then stalls because the infrastructure around talent collapses. The first teacher’s death isn’t milked for sentiment; it’s dropped in like a broken stair. That understatement is the point. It signals a working musician’s worldview, where biography is less mythmaking than a chain of practical conditions that either support you or don’t.
The line about the second teacher “didn’t really know how to successfully get me going” is even sharper. Vitous isn’t blaming fate or claiming misunderstood genius; he’s naming a mismatch in mentorship. “Successfully” is an unusually measured word for a memory that could easily turn into resentment. It implies method, pacing, psychological buy-in - the craft of teaching, not just the ability to play. The subtext: early development isn’t a solo narrative. It’s mediated by adults who can translate discipline into desire.
Context matters because Vitous becomes known not as a violinist but as a bassist and a key figure in jazz fusion. Read backward, this anecdote functions like an origin story for adaptability: one door closes, and instead of fetishizing the “correct” path, he treats paths as contingent. In a culture that loves prodigy arcs, Vitous offers a more honest template: talent is real, but it’s also fragile, dependent on the unglamorous competence of whoever’s in the room with you.
The line about the second teacher “didn’t really know how to successfully get me going” is even sharper. Vitous isn’t blaming fate or claiming misunderstood genius; he’s naming a mismatch in mentorship. “Successfully” is an unusually measured word for a memory that could easily turn into resentment. It implies method, pacing, psychological buy-in - the craft of teaching, not just the ability to play. The subtext: early development isn’t a solo narrative. It’s mediated by adults who can translate discipline into desire.
Context matters because Vitous becomes known not as a violinist but as a bassist and a key figure in jazz fusion. Read backward, this anecdote functions like an origin story for adaptability: one door closes, and instead of fetishizing the “correct” path, he treats paths as contingent. In a culture that loves prodigy arcs, Vitous offers a more honest template: talent is real, but it’s also fragile, dependent on the unglamorous competence of whoever’s in the room with you.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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