Friday, December 31, 2010

Wind repertoire with lots of percussion

I was sent an email by a colleague recently who is struggling to find repertoire to occupy the seven percussionists in his high school band. I too have the same blessing of a large percussion section of seven this year. It really can be a juggle to find pieces that keep them engaged. Here are some that I have been studying, have performed, or am considering. Hopefully I'll keep adding to this list. (I note that the majority of Grade 5+ pieces call for lots of percussion...I've only listed ones I know personally)

Band repertoire for 5+ percussionists
(these percussion requirements are off the top of my head)

Grade 0-3
  • The Headless Horseman - Timothy Broege (1.5mins - Grade 2)
  • Mazama - Jay Chattaway (6-7mins, Grade 3) [to be done as written actually requires 13 players, great for combined ensembles/workshops]
  • Old Churches - Michael Colgrass (6mins, Grade 2-3)
  • Whirlwind - Jodie Blackshaw (6-7mins, Grade 1.5 - 2)
Grade 4+

  • Africa: Ceremony, Song & Ritual - Robert W. Smith (7mins)
  • Alligator Alley - Michael Daugherty (5mins)
  • Bali - Michael Colgrass (8mins)
  • Gumsuckers March - Percy Grainger ed. R. Mark Rogers (6mins)
  • J.S. Jig - Brandt Karrick (4mins)
  • The Little Ripper March - David Stanhope (3.5mins)
  • Metroplex - Robert Sheldon (6mins)
  • Nett Interference - Taran Carter (5mins)
  • Of Sailors & Whales - W. Francis McBeth - Gr 4, 17mins (can be split)
  • Sang! - Dana Wilson (5mins)
  • Streets of Forbes - David Jones (5mins)
  • Tocata & La Tumba de Alejandro Garcia Caturla - Shelley Hanson (10mins total (2mvts))
  • Turkey in the Straw - Michael Markowski (5mins)
  • Variations on a Korean Folk Song - John Barnes Chance - (6mins)

Grade 5+
  • Angels in the Architecture - Frank Ticheli (15.5mins)
  • Bandancing - Jack Stamp (10+mins)
  • El Camino Real - Alfred Reed (7mins)
  • Equus - Eric Whitacre (9 mins)
  • Esprit de Corps - Robert Jager (6mins)
  • Masada - Ralph Hultgren (10mins)
  • Short Ride in a Fast Machine - John Adams arr. Odom
  • The Solitary Dancer - Warren Benson (6.5mins)
  • Symphonic Movement - Vaclav Nelyhbel (7mins)
  • Vasa - Jose Suner-Oriola (10mins)
  • Vientos Y Tangos - Michael Gandolfi (11mins)

Composers who generally write for large percussion sections:
  • Michael Markowski
  • John Mackey
  • Nathan Daughtrey
  • Donald Grantham
  • Cindy McTee
  • Karel Husa
  • W. Francis McBeth
  • Warren Benson
  • Frank Ticheli (selected pieces)
If you have further ideas/composers/pieces please email me or share on comments!

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Choosing repertoire (school groups)- musings on our biggest responsibility

Although it comes around several times per year, the December/January period is often an intense time when it comes to choosing repertoire. Apart from score study, this probably takes up the largest amount of time in terms of my preparation for a term/season of teaching.

How much should you plan at once?
With my school group I try to plan the whole year at once, if not further. We actually start the 'year' in September, so most of my repertoire has already been set for some time. I have been using the last few weeks to slot final pieces into place. The advantages of planning a year in advance are the same as those for teachers planning any other curriculum. You need to be able to plan a course sequential learning.

I have just returned from the Midwest Clinic where I heard a great presentation given by Richard Miles, editor of the "Teaching Music Through Performance" series at GIA, whose topic was "The Score is the Curriculum". I have always had long range planning in my sights, in the back of my mind, but he provided a great framework for making it happen. In actual fact he presented and compared and contrasted a whole variety of 'hybrid cycles' of programming that have been proposed over the years, some of which are in the books.

The main points that really resonated were:
1. Plan over a four year cycle.
It doesn't matter what year in the cycle kids enter the ensemble, as throughout their time they will be exposed to all of it. I know this is almost the opposite to what I was saying about sequential learning, but keep reading.

2. Use the cycle to simultaneously teach periods/styles and about the elements of music
Now these systems have been designed for use in the US, where Band or Orchestra is a class, and 'Classroom Music' as we know it in Australia often does not exist. In the absence of such a class, all aspects of musicianship - history, performance, theory etc. must be taught IN ENSEMBLE.

Whilst you may think this is not necessary in an Australian co-curricular ensemble, think about how many of your students do classroom music all the way up to year 12. Now think about how much content they miss out on for each year they are not doing it beyond the compulsory years. I think we owe it to not only the students, but also the music we are performing (read composers!) to give them a grounding in the music history and theory behind what we are playing. This only serves to give them more insight into, and by extension more enjoyment of the music.

The way he structured it was:
Year 1: Mediaeval/Renaissance/Baroque - focus on melody
Year 2: Classical/Romantic - focus on harmony
Year 3: Contemporary 1 - focus on rhythm
Year 4: Contemporary 2 - focus on timbre

This really makes sense to me. Very broadly, it's highlighting the major developments of music history through repertoire selection. However, you wouldn't want to spend the whole year just playing music from one period (well, you might!)...so he advocates using the repertoire as follows:
(Presuming four major concerts/year)

Concert 1: One Period piece
Concert 2: A piece from the core repertoire (any era)
Concert 3: One Period piece
Concert 4: A piece from the core repertoire (any era)

It's not all-consuming. Just two pieces throughout the year. But it gives a thread that weaves through your whole year of teaching, you can refer back to things discussed earlier in the year, helping the students make connections. Having the core repertoire also means you don't neglect these important Masterworks. I like the idea of having things that tie all your teaching together and in a way that you are not missing anything out. The structure keeps you on task. I am going to try to begin with this plan this year....I will let you know how I go!

How do you plan?

I want to combine the historical/core repertoire teaching of the Richard Miles model with my musical goals for the students.

Assessment - looking at past and present
Firstly, in order to come up with these goals I spend a lot of time reviewing where the ensemble is at currently and what they have achieved in the past. What are the strengths and weaknesses of the ensemble? What are the strengths and weaknesses of individual players? What is holding the group back musically? What challenges do they need next? This assessment is constant and ongoing - at each rehearsal, weekly, monthly, in performance. It might also be guided by other people's comments about the group, adjudicator notes etc. How successful have they been in achieving the previous set of goals?


Vision - looking forward
What is next for the group? I usually start at the end of the period being planned - I envision what I would like the ensemble to achieve by the end of the year. This might be a set of particular musical aptitudes - ie. I want them to be able to confidently play syncopated semiquaver rhythms at sight, to independently shape a solo or phrase - or it might be a specific piece. Usually if I have a specific piece in mind it is because subconsciously it is ticking a whole lot of musical boxes of what I want them to accomplish. The more specific these goals are the better.

The repertoire choice is wholly determined by what I want the students to get out of it musically.

Then, based on these end goals I find what repertoire I would like them to be playing at the end of the year. After this it is just a matter of working backwards to build up to the final point. Ie. If I want to program Redline Tango by John Mackey for our final concert I know the band will need to be able to:
  • perform complex semiquaver-based rhythms incl. syncopations in mixed meters
  • maintain a fast pulse through mixed compound & simple meters
  • have technical dexterity in certain keys
  • have a certain secure range with good intonation on their instrument
  • certain players will need to perform convincing, expressive solos
And I know that currently:
  • they have technical dexterity in certain keys, but not at that tempo
  • may have a slightly narrower range on their instrument with good intonation
  • can play quaver based rhythms & syncopations in mixed meters
  • can play semiquaver based rhythms & syncopations in simple meters at moderate tempo
  • some players are reluctant when playing solos
So knowing where we are and where we need to get to I work backwards finding pieces that will work us towards the final skills needed.

The repertoire is the test of whether they have mastered the skills I am trying to teach. If they get to the first reading of ie. Redline Tango and have lots of problems and we have to keep stopping and starting then I haven't done my job properly. The idea is that by the time that arrives on their stands they are really ready to tackle it so there isn't too much time spent on technical drilling and we can actually make music. This means that my teaching always has to be ahead of the repertoire - making sure we cover the necessary skill development through warm ups in particular.

That said, there are a whole lot of other constraints to consider:
  • Instrumentation
  • Performances - venue, duration, audience
  • Appeal to audience & students
  • Contrasting styles
  • Covering a wide variety of genres, styles, composers, sound-worlds

Tim Reynish explains it well (from timreynish.com):
"Would I, as a solo player, want to work on this music, does it satisfy me in terms of emotional content, melody, harmony, form, orchestration?"

If you can answer this question with a confident yes, you are on the right path.

Anyway, those are just my thoughts. What informs how YOU choose repertoire?

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Finishing School - where to from here with music?

It's rolled around again - today hundreds of thousands of Victorian Year 12 students begin the final stretch of their secondary schooling when they sit the VCE English exam.

Thousands of these students play a musical instrument or sing. They and their parents have invested hundreds of dollars, hours, litres of petrol and tears into becoming the best musicians they can be:

Lessons, concerts, camps, festivals, competitions, recitals, master-classes, eisteddfods, extended rehearsals, excursions, recordings, sheet music and practice, practice, practice.

For the majority of students music is not their career of choice. Whilst some may continue to formally study as an adjunct to something else for most the lessons are over. They have been cast into the musical world to fend for themselves. This begs two questions: -

1) Will they sink or swim?
2) What opportunities can they grab onto?

I've long been a staunch advocate for the power of community music - and NOW is the time to let leaving students know what opportunities exist for them beyond the school music department. There are dozens of community groups of every shape and size out there in just about every community. Whether you play clarinet, kazoo or sing contralto there is something for everyone.

We need more publicity, support and resources available for those who wish to continue their music and we should encourage all students to make use of the talents in which they have invested so much. A great start is the "Music. Play for Life" campaign, a national initiative of the Music Council of Australia. They can put people in touch with just about any music activity going on anywhere:

www.musicplayforlife.org

Another site with lots of links (particularly to choral and orchestral groups) is the Community Music Victoria website:

http://cmv.customer.netspace.net.au/

Finally, the Manningham Concert Band, a community-based wind ensemble in North-Eastern Melbourne maintains an excellent list of links to community bands in Victoria:

http://home.vicnet.net.au/~mannband/9links.htm

We owe it to our students, as a parting gift, to guide them toward opportunities where they can continue to express themselves and discover the unending joys of music.





Sunday, August 15, 2010

It's all for the magic moments

One thing I am constantly discussing with my students is the motivation behind music-making. I strongly believe that practicing, rehearsing and polishing a performance should be directed towards achieving those rare, indescribable musical moments that touch and move you.

Dr. Paula Crider calls these million-dollar moments. They don't come along very often. Through hundreds of performances as an instrumentalist, chorister and conductor I could count these highlights on one hand. Whilst there are many uplifting times during rehearsals and performances once one experiences that rush of being in 'flow' and totally giving oneself to the music there is no going back. The feeling is addictive.

What exactly determines the occurence of these moments is a discussion for another time, but it's these moments that keep musicians going, and audiences coming back. Therefore, young musicians must to be given the opportunity to have these experiences and engage with music on this deep, personal level. Only through this will students come to develop a personal love of music for music's sake.

Leading students to have these million-dollar-moments as their main motivational tool for performing and practicing is a long process. In an ensemble setting it requires extremely careful planning of repertoire, rehearsals, curriculum and listening.

This approach lacks the ease of motivating students with the prize of winning a competition, getting a high score or impressing a teacher. Such goals are clear, the results tangible and measurable. They usually come on pieces of paper with scores out of 100 or a grade from A to F. Is this what music is for? Constantly throwing down these gauntlets to our students without pause to appreciate the aesthetic gives our students exactly that message.

Being motivated by art and the desire to create a feelingful performance is a long road. As stated, the big rewards are few and far between. However this approach leads not only to eventual million-dollar-moments, but an appreciation of the journey along the way. Students who yearn for music to move them do not worry about the competition results, or adjudication reports. They grow to love music, and develop a desire to represent the composer and the music with integrity. They are more afraid of being musically average than wrong notes. As Benjamin Zander says of phrasing: they are like the bird that flies over the fields without worrying about the fences underneath.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Syzygy Ensemble - astounding!

Last month I went to an astounding performance by the Syzygy Ensemble (www.syzygyensemble.com) at the Guildford Lane Gallery in Melbourne. There were so many different factors that contributed to the impact this concert had upon me.

The venue: small, out of the way, the Gallery is situated in a quiet laneway in which you could be forgiven for thinking you'd been transported to the 1900s. Held in the main downstairs space there was a small homely bar and...the programme! All across a long wall of the room was an enormous roll of white butcher's paper upon which the program was scrawled in very artistic pencil script in various fonts. It was a fantastic piece of art on it's own and it meant no-one shuffling programs during the performance.

The music: all twentieth century program - what blew me away was how new and fresh a lot of the music sounded despite being 20 or 30 years old. There were pieces by Copland, Crumb, Beaser and Corigliano.

Performance: Two performances really stood out for me: Leila Engle & Leigh Harrold playing Robert Beaser's Variations for Flute and Piano and Crumbs Apparitions with soprano Greta Bradman. The Beaser was a mammoth work at over 30mins and absolutely virtuosic. I was completely engaged by this performance and the work itself was intriguing.

The Crumb was fantastic. The music was really creepy and used several extended techniques in the piano part. It was helpful that the audience were given copies of the libretto/lyrics to read along with. Greta Bradman's singing was incredible, dramatic and exciting.

The other works on the program were similarly satisfying, but these two works sold the performance for me.

I'll look forward to the ensemble's next concert!

'Johan de Meij' concert

On the last day of term our school band performed a concert at Melba Hall with the Grainger Wind Symphony. Originally composer Johan de Meij was supposed to be guest-conducting GWS in his Symphony No. 3 Planet Earth.

Our program was:
Esprit de Corps - Robert Jager
In Stillness - Brian Hogg
Nett Interference - Taran Carter
Don Ricardo - Gabriel Musella & Rick Rodriguez
First Suite in Eb - Gustav Holst

This program was a big challenge for us. It's a significant amount of music, and to finish with the Holst is a big deal. The piece in itself requires significant stamina especially from the brass. I tried to space the demands upon the brass across the program. Esprit de Corps is also a big blow and in some ways a risky start due to the high tessitura of most parts and possible issues with intonation.

Although I'm yet to hear a recording the concert felt really good. The students definitely played Esprit de Corps the best they had so far - really lifted for the concert. In Stillness was very moving. The expression, dynamics and phrasing are really coming along in that piece. I felt the audience were satisfied with our reading of it. Nett Interference has become much more comfortable for us after several performances - I am very happy with all we have achieved through working on this piece. The composer was at the concert which was brilliant and I got to talk to him briefly afterwards. Don Ricardo was slightly undercooked - we had had the music for the shortest time. I think we have some more work to do on the contrast and really making the high points sparkle. It needs more drama.

The Holst was considerably better than their last performance. The chamber sections in the first movement were much more settled and the stress and phrasing in the March was much better. My project for term 2 will be to improve our soft dynamics - this would open up a whole new dimension to the Intermezzo.

Symphony No. 3 - 'Planet Earth'
Grainger Wind Symphony performed the Planet Earth Symphony, but without Johan de Meij who was unexpectedly unable to make it to the concert (!). The work opens with recorded artificial sounds of what one imagines to be depicting comets or asteroids passing and big bangs designed to represent - yes, the Big Bang! The piece was epic in scale and alternated between strong, fully scored sections and more introspective moments which showcased some beautiful bassoon solos in particular. It also employed celli and double bass which provided an interesting new colour and texture. The taped sounds recur throughout the work. Some difficult moments were when the band came back in with the tape and the pitch was slightly different. Towards the end of the work the texture was full and loud for an extended period which became a bit repetitive - partly due to how small the venue was for prolonged fff's and the piercing high woodwind and mallet parts. It was performed well (from what I could tell without a score). The brass were to be commeneded on their stamina - the piece was approx 50mins. long and they didn't really show any signs of flagging at any stage.

All in all it was a successful evening - even if I didn't get home till after 12am following unpacking the truck at school.

Looking forward to the next big performance!

West Side Story

I'm very behind on reporting on my concert-going activities...so, a quick catch up:

A few weeks ago I went to the MSO's concert conducted by Alexander Shelley which featured a piece by Reveultas, the Concierto de Aranjuez by Rodrigo and West Side Story Symphonic Dances. I went for the Bernstein - I will pretty much go to any concert that involves Bernstein. (Although I do draw the limit at really bad school bands playing bad arrangements of WSS which I have unfortunately been privy to in the past).

This was the second time I'd seen/heard Shelley conduct the piece - the other time was in January last year with AYO. It was an exciting performance. I was listening and watching in a different way to normal as someone in the Frankston Symphony has requested that we play it in a movie-theme concert at the end of the year. In particular, I was focussing on what the strings role was and how hard their parts were. I was actually surprised at how uncomplicated yet fantastic their parts are in the first two main dances. Afterwards their parts became more challenging - far beyond our players at the moment. A highlight of the performance was Geoff Payne's trumpet solos, especially in the Mambo (always a highlight, actually) and the orchestra yelling out 'Mambo!'. Concertmaster Marcus Tomasi turned directly to the audience each time and yelled at the top of his lungs with great love and energy - looked like he was having a ball. The violas too were having fun - they seemed to pulse their instruments ever so slightly upwards. With each successive cry of 'Mambo' I was on the edge of my seat waiting to see if they would go the thole Simon Bolivar thing and jump up and down. If you haven't seen the video you need to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtnjixhvOTU

Lots of fun!!

Slava Grigoriyan (?sp) played the Rodrigo, which was great, but sandwiched between the two much fuller pieces the guitar sound seemed to pale in comparison, just to do with the orchestration. Interesting to note in my future programming.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Love the opera!

I've just returned from Victorian Opera's double bill production of William Walton's The Bear and Jacques Ibert's Angelique. For me it was yet another successful journey into the world of opera.

Ten years ago, having read several of Oliver Sacks' books I attended my first opera - Michael Nyman's The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat. I don't remember much about the production except that I lost track fairly quickly as I wasn't used to deciphering operatically-sung English and unfortunately there were no surtitles. Perhaps most memorable was that my mum and I sat in Horti Hall, which was set up cabaret-style on a table with a very engaging 30-something proudly Socialist couple. This story did not go down well with my grandmoher the next day who thought I was being turned into a dreaded Commie.

My second dip into opera was at the Liza Lim production The Navigator at the Melbourne Arts Festival a few years ago. I'm sure in industry circles it must surely acquired the moniker of 'show with the fake penis' for it's weird costumes, brazen nudity, sex scenes and entomological references. The music was particularly avant-garde and I left the show not feeling satisfied - it didn't connect with me.

So, it's therefore much more exciting and romantic to say that I really first went to the opera in December 2009 when I saw the Metropolitan Opera production of Tristan & Isolde in New York. I lined up for a ticket right at the back of the stalls for $35 and was mesmerised. Although I did doze for a few moments I saw the majority of the 5-hour epic and marvelled at Daniel Barenboim's conducting. It was somewhat of an operatic baptism of fire to get through it, but it was a remarkable experience.

Next I had the incredible good fortune of going to Opera Australia's Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk last year with a friend & colleague who is very much involved in the opera world. I love Shostakovich at any time of day in any setting, but Lady Macbeth was mindblowing. The rawness, the scathing humour and parody was absolutely brilliant.

The same friend decided that evening to become my opera buddy and initiate me into the joys of the artform. We next hear Victorian Opera's Xerxes which was of course an entirely different affair. I loved the purity of the countertenor sound the irony of the gender-swapped roles and the simplicity of the music that so aptly and beautifully supported the story.

By all accounts I was due to hear an Italian opera next, but tonight's production came first. The Bear was fantastic. I loved the set which reminded me a lot of the Met's one for Tristan. The characterisation of the widow was so clear. Her main aria had a definite Weill/ Hindemith feel to it and she hammed it up to well. The Bear was equally amusing. The music was much
more dissonant than I would have expected from Walton, but then I am really only basing this judgement on my knowledge of Crown Imperial March!! It was premiered in 1967 so I shouldn't be surprised. The comments it seems to make about Feminism would be ripe for a historical analysis...perhaps even a comparison with Shostakovich.

Angelique was really a farce, a man at the cloakroom called it a 'pantomime'. Nevertheless it was all done in very good fun and acted very well. There was comparatively little music in it, with long chunks of spoken dialogue. I probably mist enjoyed the regular interjections of the gossipy neighbours. As base as this description may be there were moments where it conjured a concept of 'Desperate Housewives' the opera - however that's not meant to be denigrating. These performers had the caricatured nosy neighbours down pat. The larger-than-life costumes (mostly comprising enormous padded hairpieces and bellies, but also a hilarious Italian codpiece) really kept the whole thing lighthearted.

On a different note it was great to see so many young musos I know in the orchestra. Conductor Olivier Phillippe-Cunei seemed to do an excellent job.

Basically, the moral of this extraordinarily long post is that with every production I become increasingly enamoured with opera. I love everything about it-the sets, the costumes, the make-up, the drama, the music, all of it!

With any luck the next stop on the opera train will be Tosca and Brett Dean's Bliss before Threepenny Opera. Can't wait!

Monday, March 8, 2010

Martin Bresnick Lecture, the MSO on Friday

Last Friday I was extremely excited to attend the first Fridays @ 3 presentation at ANAM. They're free lectures presented every fornight, usually by artists engaged at the Academy that week. I've been to a couple in the past, which were really interesting. It was packed, which was fantastic to see. The lecture 'Hidden Meaning in Music' was presented by composer Martin Bresnick (Professor at Yale) and his wife, the phenomenal pianist Lisa Moore. They opened with a performance of several movements of Robert Schumann's Album for the Young. Her playing was absolutely beautiful and riveting. Bresnick went on to explain Schumann's various sneaky devices, hidden messages to Clara, the pictures painted that contradict the titles etc. Very interesting. I was so moved I went straight to the VCA library and copied the pieces she played to analyse them. Turns out some of them are simple enough that even I can play them! Which has a dual purpose in improving my keyboard skills with something that sounds beautiful. The little electric keyboard at home doesn't quite do Schumann justice, but hey.

Friday night saw me go the MSOs concert which was: Faure - Requiem, Debussy - La Mer and Rachmaninov's The Bells. There were very interesting colours created in the Bells, which I hadn't heard before. But Lisa Moore's piano was the highlight of the day.

Randomly, I'm very much looking forward to all the upcoming opera: La Bear/Angelique and Bliss in particular (as well as the production of Tosca mentioned in a previous post).

Friday, March 5, 2010

The 10 Commandments of Conducting

At the end of last year our conducting teacher gave us a final assignment of writing our own '10 Commandments of Conducting' based or Richard Strauss' rather amusing and outdated list which includes such gems as (and I'm paraphrasing):
Never look encouragingly at the brass
If you think the brass are too soft, bring them down another level
The conductors left hand should only ever stay in his pocket
The conductor should never work up a sweat conducting, only the audience should perspire

Needless to say mine aren't quite as pithy...but here's my two cents. I'd been brooding over it for the whole summer and now I think I'm satisfied that this list encompasses everything I learned last year, as well as everything I try to be when I get up on the podium...

(NB. as you may gather, some of these are in direct contravention of the words of Herr Strauss!)

The 10 Commandments of Conducting

By Ingrid Martin

1. The phrase is of the utmost importance. By showing the phrase many other things will fall into place. Rehearse, conduct and speak with this in mind. Analyse to this end.


2. To convey any sense of phrase or momentum the beats must convey the light & shade of the music – they must be different weights.


3. Give musicians space to express themselves – donʼt dictate everything. By forming a space in which the musicians and conductor can collaborate a wonderful and unique partnership emerges at every rehearsal and performance.


4. The mind must direct the movements of the body. If the concept of the music is kept present in the mind it will flow through to the gestures and to the musicians.


5. Keep the score in your head and your head out of the score. The majority of any conductorʼs musical message is portrayed through the eyes and face. To deny this to the ensemble means the message becomes is lost, incomplete or confused.


6. Speak clearly, deliberately and honestly to the ensemble from the podium.

Only give criticism or praise when it is deserved – this respect for the ensemble garners respect for the conductor. NB. Remember – no one is ever deliberately making mistakes, donʼt treat them as if they are.


7. Be the music – show it in your whole connected body. Conducting is a full body sport!


8. All parts of the body must have the flexibility, grace, control and independence akin to that of a dancer.


9. Ancora imparo – I am always learning. Watch as many conductors as possible, listen to as many performances of as many types of music as you can afford, read widely and immerse yourself in life & culture in every way possible. The more experiences you have the more you can bring to the podium to enrich your music-making and relationship with the musicians.


10. Know the score – everything else is for nought if this isnʼt in place. Know it intimately and keep learning it over and over again in the joyful hope that a new treasure might be revealed to you at each reading!


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

My head is so full of scores!

My conducting bag was extremely heavy yesterday - more so than normal - and I wondered how many scores I was actually carrying around - 29! (Plus a couple I'm not actually doing at the moment that are for later in the year). No wonder I can't stop the tunes going round in my head, much less heave the bag into my car!

The repertoire takes most groups up to the end of March with the exception of MSW, who will play these pieces until the end of May:

MSW

Under the Sea

Alan Menken arr. Jerry Nowak

Pirates of the Caribbean

Klaus Badelt arr. Ted Ricketts

Of Sailors & Whales

W. Francis McBeth

The Water is Wide

Rick Kirby

Variations from the Northern Sea

Ito Yasuhide

Bayou Breakdown

Brandt Karrick

American Riversongs

Pierre La Plante

Ye Banks & Braes O’ Bonnie Doon

Percy Grainger

Reflections in a tidal pool

James Bonney



FSO

The Gypsy Baron Overture

Johann Strauss Jr.

Violin Concerto No. 3 in B minor

Camille Saint-Saens

Violin Concerto in E minor

Felix Mendelssohn

Oboe Concerto

Cimarosa arr. Arthur Benjamin

Symphony No. 8 – ‘Unfinished’

Franz Schubert

Fugue in Bb

Johann Sebastian Bach arr. Larry Daehn


School

Shepherd’s Hey

Percy Grainger

Black Saturday

Mike Fitzpatrick

With My Swag

Sean Thorne

Selections from Les Miserables

Claude-Michel Schonberg arr. Warren Barker

Chorale & Shaker Dance

John Zdechlik

First Suite in EB

Gustav Holst

Nett Interference

Taran Carter

Esprit de Corps

Robert Jager

In Stillness

Brian Hogg

Don Ricardo

Gabriel Musella/Rick Rodriguez


SEBA

Fanfare & Processional

Brian Hogg

Overture for Winds

Charles Carter

On A Hymnsong of Phillip Bliss

David Holsinger

Hot Latin

Various arr. John Moss

The Tide Rises the Tide Falls

Frank Erickson

A five concert week...phew!

Normally such jam-packed weeks involve me playing in lots of concerts, but this week it was my turn to sit in the audience.

Wednesday night was one of the MSO in the Bowl concerts with Ben Northey conducting. They opened with A Midsummer Night's Dream which was fascinating in that it was accompanied by a live Twitter stream which consisted of comments about the drama portrayed by the music as well as 'insider' type tips on parts which were difficult for the orchestra or showcased particular players. The Bowl was quite full so I'm estimating there were at least 5000+ people there, but only about 80 Twitter followers. I followed and added my two cents, but it became distracting (but this was probably due to the fact I'd never really used Twitter before, certainly not on my phone). Overall a great concert though. Rebecca Chan played the Bruch Violin concerto - she was stunning. Really captivating playing - she totally went for it! Till Eulenspiegel rounded out the program which was fun & lively. I got the most awesome surprise when Shostakovich's Festive Overture was the encore - one of my favourite pieces, and so good to see it conducted in 1, as it should be.

Friday night was a totally different affair with some students playing as a support act at the Corner Hotel. It was ridiculously loud but I was too self-conscious to wear my Musicians Earplugs, but I really should have. I'm not sure how to classify their sound...but indie/rock/psychedelic might somehow place them correctly. Either way their songwriting was fun and their orchestration interesting.

Saturday night was the next Bowl concert - Opera Highlights conducted by Richard Gill. The highlight for me was definitely the tenor singing an aria from Tosca. I had never heard anything from this Opera before and I was totally moved by it. I will have to see the upcoming Opera Australia production. It was such sensational music and he sang very emotively.

Melbourne Musicians - This was the first concert I'd been to in this group which I went to because a friend was depping. The ensemble was much smaller than I expected - I had thought it would be a full orchestra, but the strings were 3.3.3.2.1 with all wind parts covered as necessary. The program consisted of the Chopin Piano Concerto No. 1 (Ian Holtham, soloist), the Barber Adagio for Strings and Mozart Symphony 39. The Chopin was played very well, however the balance of the strings suffered at times, I think just because the wind scoring was quite full in tutti passages and it was just a struggle to hear 3 first violins. Other than that it came across well. Although I really like the Adagio as a piece I wasn't completely engaged by it for some reason. The Mozart was great and really worked for that size orchestra. The first movement Introduction seemed to start quite fast and then the Allegro seemed comparatively quite slow - in 3. But as a tempo itself it actually worked as the movement got further along. The second movement had a nice lilt to it and the forging ahead nature of the third movement was also good. Now, a few days later, I can't remember what I thought of the last movement.

The BEST Concert of the week (and possibly the month - even though it was only on the first day!) was Camerata Melbourne at the Abbotsford Convent. This was the first concert of a new orchestra set up by Roy Theaker, Co-concertmaster of the MSO. Most of the players are MSO members, casuals, ANAM graduates and the like.

The venue was small but again excellent for a small ensemble. The program - as discussed by the host - was to showcase classic chamber style works as well as present playable, listenable new music.

It opened with Company by Phillip Glass which I really engaged with. Immediately recognisable as Glass it brought back many fond memories of our Music History class last year - a moment that made me really glad I learned and studied all that I did last year. The piece was in several short movements, unconducted, for string ensemble. It's one I'll definitely be hunting for a CD of. I could imagine it being really good driving music - and I don't mean to degrade it in saying that - it would just be meditative. Then there was the Mendelssohn Octet, which I hadn't heard live before. It was well nuanced and all the interrelationships were brought out really well by excellent players. Seeing the communication was lots of fun. The second half was Schubert 5 which I thought was outstanding. Despite the small room the balance was great, the architecture (of the music) made exceptionally clear and I particularly liked the dynamics. Roy Theaker gave short introductions to the concert and each work - he spoke clearly and passionately and his brief insights really illuminated the works for the listened and gave more meaning to the music.

Their next concert is going to be Dumbarton Oaks, Piazzolla and something else so, purely to hear what I think will be a marvellous ensemble do the Stravinsky, I will be there with bells on.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Last weeks rehearsals and concerts...

I had a few interesting musical experiences last week.

School Rehearsals
It was the second week of rehearsals at school, and I had a big talk with the section leaders, which I hope will yield some successful results. It seemed to go well. They were all quite enthusiastic. During the rehearsal we sight-read Esprit de Corps by Jager, which they liked, even if they were a bit flabbergasted by the speed of the semiquavers at the eventual future tempo of MM=160!

I've decided this year that I wouldn't tell them what any of the musical terms meant and that they had to look them up themselves. A trumpeter asked me at the rehearsal what 'Tempo di Bourgeois' meant - eg. tempo of the middle classes? She'd looked it up already (an hour after she'd snuck a look at the new music!) and couldn't find anything on it. I conceded and explained the role of John Bourgeois as the commissioner of the piece for the Marine Band. I think they thought it was a mildly silly tempo marking!

We also read Nett Interference by young Australian composer Taran Carter. It will be fabulous and the more I get into it the more I like it. It's going to really challenge the students rhythmically - lots of independent entries and semiquaver syncopation, but I'm impressed with how much they have absorbed after only two rehearsals.

We're also playing In Stillness by Brian Hogg which was originally written for the band several years ago. The tempo is marked MM=40-48 and it definitely works at this speed, however I'm having a lot of trouble internalising this tempo. We keep getting faster as we get through the piece. I'm not sure if it's just me, or a component is the band getting faster. Might be time to video next Tuesday's rehearsal to find out!

Orchestra
Thursday was orchestra rehearsal which went relatively well - achieved everything I had planned to. The B major section of the Saint-Saens Violin Concerto No. 3 is probably the most difficult thing we have to play in the current program. It's way under tempo, but it's becoming cleaner. It should be ok by the concert. I'm having trouble holding back the tempi at orchestra too, especially in the second movement of the Schubert Unfinished Symphony. I think I'll make this my pet conducting project for this term.

MSO rehearsals
Went to MSO rehearsals on Wednesday and Friday which was great. The conductor was Lutz Kohler, who had been taking the Symphony Australia course the week before. I really love the way he can let go of the beat and let the musicians make music. He shows fantastic phrasing and musical nuances. A great example for me to aspire to!

The Raah Project & Paris Wells
On Friday night we also went to an interesting concert: The Raah project at MRC. It was supposed to be a cross-genre fusion-type concert. It was interesting, but it was all amplified and it would have been good to hear it unplugged in that venue. The theatrics of the lead violinist were a bit crazy and the conducting of the two main guys was way to big and really detracted from the slow, quite moments. There was a lot of unnecessary pulse. However I did really like the support act, singer Paris Wells. I'll probably end up buying her CD. The pianist that was playing in the main act and hers was FANTASTIC. Really cool improvisation and amazing harmonic ideas.

We also had band recruitment night at school - 108 kids signed up! Now that's a BIG band!