We were lucky to catch up with Ciara Moser recently and have shared our conversation below.
Hi Ciara, thanks for joining us today. It’s always helpful to hear about times when someone’s had to take a risk – how did they think through the decision, why did they take the risk, and what ended up happening. We’d love to hear about a risk you’ve taken.
I would like to tell you about two different situations in which I had and have to face risks:
1.
Being blind from birth, every day of my life holds risks. The society we live in was built for a sighted person. Every sign, signal, light, step, building, contract, letter, packaging and many more things is labeled, built and adapted for a sighted person. There are many skills and techniques that blind and visually impaired people learn in order to adapt to this sighted world that we live in. Still, there are a lot of moments, in which I take a risk. Every time I cross the streets in Boston and don’t know if there might be a car in the middle of the cross walk, every time I play and learn music that is written down on paper and that I have never seen or heard before or every time I eat food that I can’t see before it touches my mouth.
However, to me this is what makes life so enjoyable. Facing fear every day is a practice that I would never ever want to give up because during that process I learn an emense amount about myself and others. Risks help me to grow and experiences and adventures encourage me to develop new concepts, ideas and constructs.
2.
Probably the biggest risk I can think of ever taking was moving from Austria to Boston in order to study at Berklee college of music. For you this might sound easy and underwhelming but imagine doing it blind. Every social interaction, every distance from A to B and every form to fill out can create an obstacle. I had a settled life with a degree, an apartment, a relationship, a family and a strong circle of friends back home in Austria. I still decided for taking the risk, challenging myself and facing a new stage of life. It was a challenging time, especially in the beginning.
However, I didn’t loose the support back home in Austria. The help and advice I received through my friends and especially my family was the reason I could actually take that step. In the end going to Boston to study was the best thing I decided to do in my entire life. I met so many new friends, learnt more about music and bass playing than I could have ever wished for, studied with incredible educators and mentors, went on my first international tours and recorded and produced my first solo album named “Blind. So what?”. All of this would have not happened if I had stayed in Austria and I will be forever grateful to everyone who helped me to take that step towards success.
Great, appreciate you sharing that with us. Before we ask you to share more of your insights, can you take a moment to introduce yourself and how you got to where you are today to our readers.
Irish/Austrian Bass Prodigy Ciara Moser Explores on Her Journey as a
Blind Musician on Her Modern Jazz Fusion Debut,
Blind. So what?
The Album Explores Topics Such as the Art of Memorizing, Spatial Sense for Orientation, Trusting Others, and the Different Perceptions That
Blind People Have on the World
Available since October 20
As a professional bassist and someone who has been blind since birth, part of Dublin-born/Austria-raised/Boston-based Ciara Moser’s identity has shaped her unique journey through life and music in a profound way. Blind. So what?, Moser’s modern jazz fusion debut album, is centered around her experience as a blind musician while also raising awareness for the blind community.
The songs on Blind. So what?, available since October 20, explore topics such as the art of memorizing, spatial sense for orientation, trusting others, and the different perceptions that blind people have on the world. The 27-year-old Moser, who plays virtuosic basslines on a Fodera electric six-string throughout the album, undoubtedly knows her way around groove-laden funk fusion and experimental contemporary jazz/world music.
While Moser pursued her master’s degree at the Berklee Global Jazz Institute, she was mentored by its director and multiple GRAMMY-winning Panamanian pianist Danilo Perez, who Moser has performed with around the globe, John Patitucci, Victor Wooten, Terri Lyne LCarrington, Joe Lovano and others. Moser’s stint at Berklee not only heightened her playing and composing skills but she was also deeply inspired by the theme of using music as a vehicle for social change, thus inspiring her to pen compositions for Blind. So what? Each tune on the album is lyrically and instrumentally dedicated to one topic concerning music and blindness. The lyrics were written by Moser except for the poem “The Lady with a Green Cane.”
Moser’s insightful arrangements on Blind. So what? give each of the many of the album’s musicians, most of which all current and former Berklee students, a chance to showcase their artistry and add their individual flavor to the compositions. Moser is joined by drummer and vocalist Lumanyano MZI, percussionists Juan Sebastian Sanchez and George Lernis, keyboardists Warren Pettey, Stephanie Weninger and Anastassiya Petrova, guitarists Amaury Cabral, Liam Garcia and Isaac Romagosa, saxophonists Salim Charvet, Shahar Amdor and Lihi Haruvi, lead vocalists Aditi Malhotra and Nishant Shekar, backing vocalists Masa Vujadinovic and Shivaraj Natraj as well as several others who provide spoken voices.
Following an intro that a screen reader (software that translates what is displayed on the screen for a blind person) recites the album title in 16 languages, Moser, and the band lock into the tight funk groove on “I Trust.” Moser says the composition is dedicated to the “trust in sighted peers, friends, family and colleagues which is necessary for living in this visual world as a blind person. The first step to trust others is to be confident in yourself, let go of any fear and urge to control and open your heart and have faith in the people who help me to see.”
Moser says “Memory,” for which she won a 2023 Herb Alpert Young Jazz Composers Award, “is about the art and structure of memorizing, which is crucial for a blind person. A blind person needs to memorize all the music they play, the ways they walk, where they put their belongings and many more things. The task of internalizing melody and chords of a song like a language or a code requires practice, discipline, patience, consistency, concentration, and energy and in contrast to reading it will help the player to express the emotion and message of the song.”
“The Call to See Beyond,” Moser says, is about “the visual first impression a person has of someone and a call to see beyond the physical appearance of a person. Open your heart, soul and see beyond because the person is the thing we care about and not the stereotypes that were put on them and what they look like by society. A blind person is not blinded by those things.”
“Different Ability” is a two-part composition in which the first part is “dedicated to the moment of realization that something is different, and we are being treated differently while entering school, kindergarten and growing up as a blind person,” Moser says. Part two of “Different Ability” outlines the importance of individuality and leads to the conclusion that being different is something special.
Moser plays a stunning two-minute bass intro before launching into the Latin-tinged “Humanity,” which she says speaks of the dark sides of humanity, “but that the belief in hope and its ability to strive will lead towards inclusion, unity and equality.” The composition features vocalists from India and South Africa who say and sing the words hope, unity and humanity in their mother tongues.
Moser’s composition “Developing Senses” looks at the higher use of senses that blind people need to compensate for lack of sight. “A sighted person relies on 90 percent of their perceptional information for seeing, which means that there is only 10 percent left for other methods of perception,” Moser says. “A blind person, however, makes far more use of the other senses, such as hearing and touch, and thus elevating these senses far beyond those of sighted individuals. In the piece each of the four senses a blind person uses to a higher extent is assigned a motive and the motives are extended and developed throughout the piece, which symbolizes the higher use of those senses.”
“Sixth Sense” is about the proprioception sense or kinesthesia, the sense of body awareness. The song contains spacy sounds and rhythms that symbolize the feeling of movement.
On the odd-metered song “Traveling,” Moser invites the listener into the world of traveling as a blind person with different smells, feelings, emotions, tastes and influences weaved into the composition to create a full sensory experience. “Along with the exciting 11/8 rhythms come catchy synth and guitar sounds and a Moroccan drone with an emotional and meditational improvisation bring the idea of traveling through music to a new level,” Moser says.
The album closes with “The Lady with a Green Cane,” a free improvisation performed along with a poem of the same name written by Fran Gardner. Moser says the poem was recorded first, and then everyone improvised over it one at a time. Each musician had only one take to improvise, which allowed for an honest and raw interpretation from every instrument.
How’d you build such a strong reputation within your market?
The first thing that is indispencible as an artist is to have a good skillset in what ever you do. In my case this includes foundational knowledge about bass playing but in addition to that it is extremely important to show professionality outside of music. I make an effort to show up on time to rehearsals, have all the music well prepared and be reliable. This is also what I expect from the members of a band I would lead.
Another thing that helped me build my reputation is that I created a brand. As far as I know, I am the only blind female bass player in the world. That is branding without me creating anything. It has been a huge add on to my career, reputation and marketing and I did nothing but being myself and fullfilling my dream of becoming a professional musician.
We’d love to hear a story of resilience from your journey.
As a blind person there isn’t one specific story I want to outline. Resilience is something I show every day. Starting at a very young age, I had to educate the people in my environment how to deal with me. An example is that I had to educate my teachers how to educate me and how to adapt the lessons in order for me to have the same experience as everyone else.
All the experiences I make as a blind person show me that there is a lot that has to be done during our journey towards equity and inclusion. This needs resilience from both people with and without disabilities.
One of the occasions that illustrate resilience was when I started the podcast named “Blind. So what?” which later enspired the name for my debut album. Every time I enter a new institution or meet new people I get asked the same questions. It is not the fault of the people but it is the fault of the ignorance that exists in our society towards blind and visually impaired people. As a result of this struggle I decided to start the podcast in which I talk about everything concerning daily life of a blind person. Of course I am aware that this won’t stop the people from asking me questions. I also want people to continue asking as I believe that the more we talk about those things the less will be unknown in the future. I started the podcast in order to give another source of information about blind people and people with disabilities and to spark a fire for a brighter future of inclusion.
Contact Info:
- Website: www.ciara-moser.com
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/moserciara/
- Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ciaramoser5859
Image Credits
Manuela Häusler