The Hook

🌺Part of the Essays Series

The hook is the moment you stop playing music and start feeling it—when it shifts from something you’re doing to something you’re in.


I felt it in high school.

We played Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves for graduation.


Up until then, music had been something I was figuring out—notes, rhythms, trying to keep up.

But this was different.


I had heard this music before.

In a theater. In a story. In something bigger than me.


And suddenly, I wasn’t just playing it.

I was inside it.


For me, that felt like the best it was ever going to get.

And I was in awe of being part of it.


I chased that feeling to Colorado State.

I wasn’t entirely sure what I was doing with my education, but I knew one thing—I was going to be in the marching band.


When I was asked to play in Symphonic Band, I felt that hook again.


I was inside this living, breathing ensemble—an experience shared with my friends, something bigger than any one of us.

I played a featured solo.

And somewhere in that moment, it became clear—

music was going to be part of my life.


When I was teaching, the hook wasn’t always easy to spot.

It wasn’t flashy. It didn’t announce itself.


It showed up in small ways—

quiet shifts,
a student leaning in just a little more,
trying again when they didn’t have to.


I’m sure I missed some.


There is a student I still think about.

Jason.


He was a beginning trombone player in summer band, and he couldn’t play an F.

After class, I caught him after class him to encourage him—to remind him he had time.

I wasn’t worried.


He came back the next day playing that F.

He had gone home and practiced.


Something had shifted.


Later, he and two trumpet player friends formed a trio.

They played solo and ensemble pieces together, just because they loved it.


I saw them again in high school.

And then in college.

They kept going.


And sometimes the hook showed up in even smaller ways.


A student would come in, practically bouncing:

“Mrs. Horn! I found this band and I’ve been listening to all their music! Do you know Journey?”


“Yes,” I’d say. “I know Journey.”


And that was enough.


It was never about becoming a musician.

It was about that moment—

when something opens up,

and they’re in it.