Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-11 Thread Daniel Canarutto

Linda Sherman wrote:


Speaking strictly as an audience member, the most reliable factor that
always seems to separate the good conductors from the not-so-good is how
they use tempo.  The good ones just seem to have the right feel for the
tempo and the general flow of the music, while the not-so-good ones just
don't get the tempo and flow right

I find this very hard to describe.  Maybe someone can help me out here.


Speaking as an audience member I find that several factors separate 
the good conductors from the not-so-good, but I agree that this tempo 
issue is very important. One recording which has always struck me for 
the perfection of the tempi is Der Freischutz conducted by Carlos 
Kleiber. What a delight!


Daniel
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur groups

2006-10-10 Thread hans
Hello Wendell, Lawrence said it streight:

The conductor-pigs do better concerts than those who just
like to please the orchestra with their sweet talk.
Personally, I prefer the bad people in front, as they keep
all high alert  prepared, so to make best quality music.
Never had any problems with those, discussions when
necessary  when there was reason. These beasts understood
it, when they knew your potentials  when you offered them
high quality yourself. Thngs hey dont like: hiding behind
the music stand, mediocre players, not enough character to
bounce back to them. By the way, I also saw players crying
when being corrected by Karl Boehm (he just wanted the solo
flute play the Carmen solo another time  a bit filled with
more life after he had just played it twice !)

And this was not amateur but high grade professional level
..

Anyway, it seems nonsense to me, if a conductor of an
amateur orchestra (even he himself a nobody in the
business) starts yelling and bawling at his players or the
orchestra as a whole  It just demonstrates his impotence




-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Wendell Rider
Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 10:40 AM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur groups


On Oct 9, 2006, at 10:00 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:

 message: 3
 date: Mon, 9 Oct 2006 10:48:11 EDT
 from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

 I used to help out with a local amateur orchestra, the
conductor of 
 which was notorious - he used to yell and bawl at his
players and more 
 than once I saw  grown men and women crying behind their
stands.  The 
 concerts were  terrific!

 Eventually, the management took him to one side and told
him to mend 
 his ways and treat his players more gently.  He did and
everyone was 
 much  happier.
 The concerts sounded like any other amatuer orchestral
concert.

 Cheers,

 Lawrence
And your point is what?
Wendell Rider
For information about my book, Real World Horn Playing,
the Summer Seminar and Internet Horn Lessons go to my
website: www.wendellworld.com




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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-10 Thread Linda Sherman

hans wrote:

What makes a good conductor  
 

Speaking strictly as an audience member, the most reliable factor that 
always seems to separate the good conductors from the not-so-good is how 
they use tempo.  The good ones just seem to have the right feel for the 
tempo and the general flow of the music, while the not-so-good ones just 
don't get the tempo and flow right


I find this very hard to describe.  Maybe someone can help me out here.

Linda

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-10 Thread hans
The tempos stay in certain relations each other
(ganzzahlig), that´s it. Once a conductor has understood
this, he is good. Well, can you describe clean colours ?
Colours which you can find in nature ? If you can describe
them, you have to transpose that to music. That´s it. Some
have this ability by nature - a very very small minority,
others struggle the whole life to find a way, others will
never experience that phenomenon - but many get excited as
one has to be excited no matter they like the piece, the
performance or the orchestra or the picture or the movie or
the dress or -- or --- or   The majority even can be
manipulated easily to be excited. But how does the majority
look inside their hearts ?

Even if we feel our performance including the conductor off
cours were wonderful, the reviews come out just so-so,
because these eunuchs did not get the message as it was not
theirs. One can live with that situation, but it is getting
worse, while the technical standard improves enormously.


===

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Linda Sherman
Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 2:04 PM
To: The Horn List
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

hans wrote:

What makes a good conductor  
  

Speaking strictly as an audience member, the most reliable
factor that always seems to separate the good conductors
from the not-so-good is how they use tempo.  The good ones
just seem to have the right feel for the tempo and the
general flow of the music, while the not-so-good ones just
don't get the tempo and flow right

I find this very hard to describe.  Maybe someone can help
me out here.

Linda

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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur groups

2006-10-10 Thread YATESLAWRENCE
 
In a message dated 10/10/2006 10:41:01 GMT Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

And your  point is what?
Wendell Rider


My point is that in this particular case once the conductor was calmed down  
the performances suffered.  I've seen similar things happen with  sportsmen.
 
Cheers,
 
Lawrence
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-10 Thread Paul Kampen
Message text written by The Horn List
he used to yell and bawl 
 at his players and more than once I saw  grown men and women 
 crying behind their stands. 

Dear All

This is very similar to a conductor (once a leading horn player and now
deceased) for whom I played both as a student and in my early professional
days.  I myself got the rough end of his tongue many times - in particular
for my experiments with 'on the leg' playing which he could not stand at
any price.

He conducted a very well known amateur orchestra in the north Cheshire
commuter belt where many of the Manchester professional community (medical
practitioners, lawyers, university lecturers, senior business people etc.,
etc) reside and the orchestra was made up of such people.  I once went to
help out with them and saw the same behaviour exhibited with which I was
all too familiar in many rehearsal halls in the city.  In a break, I asked
the 1st horn (regarded as the leading amateur player in the Manchester area
in the 60s and early 70s) why these high earning and in some cases very
powerful people did not tell the maestro to  off (choose your own
expletives).  He replied - they love it - they go home elated that he has
noticed them and they think that it is akin to a professional getting a
drubbing from Toscanini!

And indeed, it was then a very fine amateur orchestra and the conductor
never achieved the recognition that he genuinely deserved, making only one
or two recordings of potboiler music and now largely forgotten by the
public.  I often wonder if his behaviour was partly down to frustration at
seeing much less able conductors than him getting the high profile jobs.

Regards

Paul A. Kampen (W. Yorks UK)

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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-10 Thread YATESLAWRENCE
 
In a message dated 10/10/2006 16:09:28 GMT Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


He  conducted a very well known amateur orchestra in the north  Cheshire
commuter belt where many of the Manchester professional community  (medical
practitioners, lawyers, university lecturers, senior business  people etc.,
etc) reside and the orchestra was made up of such  people. 


 
Hi Paul,,
Believe it or not, it's the same orchestra, but a different conductor -  they 
must have a death wish!
 
Cheers,
 
Lawrence

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-10 Thread Bill Gross
Where is the Cabbage in all this?  I'm sure he would be willing to explain
to us just exactly what atomic structure is needed to make a good conductor.
I'm sure it has something to do with the distribution of electrons in the
nuclear structure.



-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Linda Sherman
Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2006 8:04 AM
To: The Horn List
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

hans wrote:

What makes a good conductor  
  

Speaking strictly as an audience member, the most reliable factor that 
always seems to separate the good conductors from the not-so-good is how 
they use tempo.  The good ones just seem to have the right feel for the 
tempo and the general flow of the music, while the not-so-good ones just 
don't get the tempo and flow right

I find this very hard to describe.  Maybe someone can help me out here.

Linda

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread hans
As I conduct an amateur group by myself since many years
(even a horn ensemble) I may add a few words here:

These preconditions of handing out the music in advance etc.
is just normal  we will not talk about these self-evident
things.

The first thing  most important for any conductor is it, to
make the players enthusiastic by giving them the right
impetus. Some players might be excellent performers in their
civil profession, so they are not used to be corrected. If
I stop during the rehearsal to improve things, I do not do
it just to point at a certain player or to blame that
player. I just want things work better. So we work pieces
through step by step. Digest it while we relax, but
concentrate again  play it through again, to correct
another spot after that.

Folks, many of you might not have been exposed to a regular
professional orchestra life. We do not just play through the
pieces to perform the big picture. We work hard even in the
microcosm, understood ? The microcosm here are the several
phrases or parts of a movement, which have to be worked out.
And this requires concentrated work, it also requires critic
by the person in front of us. This critic has to be taken
positively. 

It is not enough, that amateur groups like to enjoy making
music. That is by far not enough. Surely, one must not
expect they play as good as the philharmonic, but they must
play reasonably. To achieve that, the conductor (if he or
she is good  just the first among equals !!) has to
eliminate the weak spots. He can do that only, if he notice
them  if he corrects them on the spot. This means stopping
here, stopping there. So he will get the piece together.
Well a first run through regardless mistakes, insulted,
killed or lost members should be done at the first
rehearsal, so the conductor  knows where to work. After all
is worked out in a movement, a run through will follow,
initiating more work the next rehearsal  some homework.

What most of the amateurs desire (just enjoying music
making), does not work in the way they want it. All will end
in chaos  frustration.

If the conductor starts working really, frustration will
come up also, but will disappear  give way to enjoyment as
soon as the things get in order. Rehearsing does not mean
get through the piece, play it through again  again with
the same mistakes over  over. This applies to most students
also. Concentrate your effort to those things you cannot do
well, things needing improvement. Watch how you will enjoy
then. Very differently.



==

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Larry Jellison
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 7:57 AM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

Now to take the subject down a few common denominator
levels, to the ranks of the uneducated and definitely
unpaid-- thoughts on conductors of adult amateur groups.
There is much that could be discussed here among those who
chose to think about it at least a little.

Amateurs play in ensembles for a variety of reasons, for
differing goals.  Most want to improve; most want the
rehearsals and concerts to be enjoyable.  I think these are
among the most common and most important goals of amateurs.
I am tired of looking around at faces in groups and seeing
glum and frustrated expressions.  The conductor is the one
best positioned to change this undesirable condition.

To cut this short-- conductors need to do the following.
1) Set clear expectations for performance. Hand out the
music ahead of time and tell musicians to learn their parts
in their own practice time.  Give musicians a heads up of
which pieces will be worked on at the next rehearsal--
announce at the previous rehearsal or send out a group
e-mail.
2) Know the score yourself; know your interpretation.
Nothing is as frustrating to the group as being directed by
a conductor who is lost or is studying the score during
rehearsal.
3) Hold your instructive comments until a substantial
portion of the piece has been played-- better, wait until
the movement is finished.  Then go over your long list of
comments with everyone.  My biggest gripe is aimed at
conductors who stop every time they have some comment to
make-- this may be acceptable for the pro ranks, but it is
totally unacceptable for amateur groups.  Remember that
amateurs are there to enjoy the music, not to be
micromanaged by a neurotic
conductor-- and there are many of these out there. 
4) The conductor at rehearsal should bring the ensemble
together to play as a unity, to bring intensity to the music
beyond the mere mechanics.

The key awareness issue for clear-headed ensemble amateurs
is -- are we having fun?

Regards,
Larry

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-09 Thread Bill Gross
Two observations on what Steve said, as to not always the best getting the
job, as it is in all industries/pursuits.  A novel of the later part of the
last Century, On Wings of Eagles follows the two careers of officers in
the US Army.  One is the perfect careerist seeking out the right job and
getting to know the right people just to get ahead.  The other is the
stereotypic professional the man who does the right thing for the right
reason, not for personal gain.  The contrast in the two men reflected a lot
of what goes on it large organizations, so much so that the head of the Army
put the book on a required reading list.  

The other issue, on this side of the Atlantic at least, is the fact that
conductors have to be able not only to be musicians, but must also be able
to play up to the people in a community with the big purses to keep funding
coming into the organization.  Not only must he/she know how to get music
from musicians but also work with the Board of Directors to get money out of
donors to keep the orchestra solvent.

I'm not sure if that is an issue in Europe.


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Steve Freides
Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 9:28 AM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

Hans Pizka wrote:

 I try it again to incend a fire(works) about conductors  
 their means of interpretation, as the first attempt resulted 
 in zero effect but one single reply. Are you to cautious to 
 talk about conductors ? Because a few lure around in several 
 lists ? What to fear ? Is it impossible to talk the truth ?
 Even about music ? Poor world intimidated by a handful of 
 people, seems not funny but rather pervers.

Hans, I did not respond because I think you stated the case very well.  A
good conductor must posses everything you suggest and, again as you suggest,
many lack that all-important ability to inspire, to embue a performance with
the kind of life that will bring the best out of the players and move an
audience.  I will also add that I have seen conductors who err in the other
direction, as it were - they attempt to emote but lack musicianship, lack an
understanding of the music they are conducting, or both, and their efforts
seem superficial and insubstantial as a result.  

Unfortunately, in conducting more than in most other areas of musical
endeavor, talent, hard work, and good results do not always lead to success.
At least it seems this way to me - in a blind audition behind a curtain, the
best player should prevail, but conductors are hired by much less direct
processes.  Because I went through music school as a conductor, I have had
the opportunity to watch the careers of several of my colleagues, all of
whom shall remain nameless here; suffice it to say that I have seen at least
one very talented, hard-working individual achieve a career but only
relatively minor success, while another who is a charlatan by measure of
almost everyone who has either known him or played under him has risen to
the top ranks of the profession, achieving his success, so far as I have
been able to determine, by other means.  Such is the way life works
sometimes, I'm sad to say.  

Disclaimer, lest someone think my rant is some sort of sour grapes - I
went through school as a choral conducting major with no aspirations of a
career as a conductor.  I am a theory and ear-training specialist and taught
those subjects at the college level even before my doctorate was completed.
Going through college as a conducting major was much more interesting than
doing it as a theory major - I got to conduct a recital for my doctoral
degree instead of having to write a thesis - how good is _that_? :)  I have
done one conducting engagement per year for the last several decades, a
small professional choir hired for the Jewish High Holy Days (just finished)
at a large congregation in suburban Philadelphia.  I just finished my 27th
year as conductor and  every year feel completely humbled by the task of
doing everything within my power at rehearsals and performances to make the
music the most inspirational and moving it can be.  I don't ever feel I've
gotten it right but I find the process of trying to improve my own ability
to, in turn, improve the performances a noble pursuit and one I look forward
to each year.

-S-
 
 What makes a good conductor  Seems an interesting 
 question. Well, most conductors have a very limited means of 
 expresions or let us better say tools. They know slow-fast, 
 loud-soft, hard-soft, short-long. But this could be done by a 
 programmed machine also. Just think about an electric 
 programmable jumping jack. I might names this way of 
 conducting the bi-dimensional-music-commanding.
 
 But there is more, like bringing the tempos into a certain 
 mathematical relation (plain numbers, no fractions), work out 
 the phrases set by the composer, balance the dynamics within 
 the sections  between the different

RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Bill Gross
The opposite side of Han's coin is the conductor of amateur groups that is
too willing to pass over something that doesn't sound right.  I consider it
a worst sin for a conductor of an amateur group to say something doesn't
sound right -fix it rather than say nothing at all.  

Picking up on Hans comment about those who have achieved a modicum of
success in their civil profession, the smart ones leave that outside the
rehearsal hall.  When we pick up our horns, we are musicians and part of a
group interested in making music.

Going back to my first comment.  A conductor who tells you something's
wrong but offers no further comment is not being honest with the group.
The conductor should at least say, the chord doesn't sound right.  Better
yet, spend some time working on that chord.  


Bleh -muddle comments above.  On to other things hope you all can sort
through it.  Better yet just delete it.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of hans
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 4:17 AM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

As I conduct an amateur group by myself since many years
(even a horn ensemble) I may add a few words here:

These preconditions of handing out the music in advance etc.
is just normal  we will not talk about these self-evident
things.

The first thing  most important for any conductor is it, to
make the players enthusiastic by giving them the right
impetus. Some players might be excellent performers in their
civil profession, so they are not used to be corrected. If
I stop during the rehearsal to improve things, I do not do
it just to point at a certain player or to blame that
player. I just want things work better. So we work pieces
through step by step. Digest it while we relax, but
concentrate again  play it through again, to correct
another spot after that.

Folks, many of you might not have been exposed to a regular
professional orchestra life. We do not just play through the
pieces to perform the big picture. We work hard even in the
microcosm, understood ? The microcosm here are the several
phrases or parts of a movement, which have to be worked out.
And this requires concentrated work, it also requires critic
by the person in front of us. This critic has to be taken
positively. 

It is not enough, that amateur groups like to enjoy making
music. That is by far not enough. Surely, one must not
expect they play as good as the philharmonic, but they must
play reasonably. To achieve that, the conductor (if he or
she is good  just the first among equals !!) has to
eliminate the weak spots. He can do that only, if he notice
them  if he corrects them on the spot. This means stopping
here, stopping there. So he will get the piece together.
Well a first run through regardless mistakes, insulted,
killed or lost members should be done at the first
rehearsal, so the conductor  knows where to work. After all
is worked out in a movement, a run through will follow,
initiating more work the next rehearsal  some homework.

What most of the amateurs desire (just enjoying music
making), does not work in the way they want it. All will end
in chaos  frustration.

If the conductor starts working really, frustration will
come up also, but will disappear  give way to enjoyment as
soon as the things get in order. Rehearsing does not mean
get through the piece, play it through again  again with
the same mistakes over  over. This applies to most students
also. Concentrate your effort to those things you cannot do
well, things needing improvement. Watch how you will enjoy
then. Very differently.



==

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Larry Jellison
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 7:57 AM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

Now to take the subject down a few common denominator
levels, to the ranks of the uneducated and definitely
unpaid-- thoughts on conductors of adult amateur groups.
There is much that could be discussed here among those who
chose to think about it at least a little.

Amateurs play in ensembles for a variety of reasons, for
differing goals.  Most want to improve; most want the
rehearsals and concerts to be enjoyable.  I think these are
among the most common and most important goals of amateurs.
I am tired of looking around at faces in groups and seeing
glum and frustrated expressions.  The conductor is the one
best positioned to change this undesirable condition.

To cut this short-- conductors need to do the following.
1) Set clear expectations for performance. Hand out the
music ahead of time and tell musicians to learn their parts
in their own practice time.  Give musicians a heads up of
which pieces will be worked on at the next rehearsal--
announce at the previous rehearsal or send

RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Jonathan West
In my view, many of the same characteristics are needed for a conductor of
amateur groups as for professional, but perhaps not in such concentrated
form.

One key difference is that amateurs play for enjoyment, and if they stop
enjoying themselves they will stop playing or go elsewhere. That means that
the conductor of an amateur group has to go about his business more by
encouragement. That doesn't mean avoiding criticism, but concentrating the
criticism on a specific point rather than on the player in general, and
where possible asking for something to be played differently without
implying it was wrong before - after all there are many different approaches
to music making!

I have no time for amateur conductors (or amateur groups for that matter)
who aren't genuinely trying to produce the very best performance they are
capable of. I would much rather play with a group of lesser ability that is
trying to improve than a better group that has become lazy and complacent.
In other words, a professional *attitude* needs to be brought to rehearsal
and performance irrespective of the quality of the players.

Regards
Jonathan West

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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread YATESLAWRENCE
I used to help out with a local amateur orchestra, the conductor of which  
was notorious - he used to yell and bawl at his players and more than once I 
saw 
 grown men and women crying behind their stands.  The concerts were  terrific!
 
Eventually, the management took him to one side and told him to mend his  
ways and treat his players more gently.  He did and everyone was much  happier. 
 
The concerts sounded like any other amatuer orchestral  concert.
 
Cheers,
 
Lawrence
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Bill Gross
It's all about leadership, isn't it?  Some leaders can be hated yet really
get the best from those he/she leads.  Others can be very popular and get
the best from those he/she leads.  Others who scream and yell come across as
martinets and others who are friendly get just mediocre performances.  It's
got to be more than just being nice or just being demanding.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 9:48 AM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

I used to help out with a local amateur orchestra, the conductor of which  
was notorious - he used to yell and bawl at his players and more than once I
saw 
 grown men and women crying behind their stands.  The concerts were
terrific!
 
Eventually, the management took him to one side and told him to mend his  
ways and treat his players more gently.  He did and everyone was much
happier.  
The concerts sounded like any other amatuer orchestral  concert.
 
Cheers,
 
Lawrence
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Steve Freides
Lawrence Yates wrote:

 I used to help out with a local amateur orchestra, the 
 conductor of which was notorious - he used to yell and bawl 
 at his players and more than once I saw  grown men and women 
 crying behind their stands.  The concerts were  terrific!
  
 Eventually, the management took him to one side and told him 
 to mend his ways and treat his players more gently.  He did 
 and everyone was much  happier.  
 The concerts sounded like any other amatuer orchestral  concert.

Batti, batti ...  

There was a time when men treated their wives this way, too, and parents,
their children.  That sort of thing doesn't fly as well as it once used to.
I, for one, will accept the lesser performance quality as a trade-off I can
live with.

-S-

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Steve Freides
Bill Gross wrote:

 It's all about leadership, isn't it?  Some leaders can be 
 hated yet really get the best from those he/she leads.  
 Others can be very popular and get the best from those he/she 
 leads.  Others who scream and yell come across as martinets 
 and others who are friendly get just mediocre performances.  
 It's got to be more than just being nice or just being demanding.

I recall taking the class in Group Dynamics in undergraduate school.  The
format was t group or training group.  The instructor sat and did
absolutely nothing, leaving us to work out things for ourselves.  We all got
very angry at the instructor for not doing anything but eventually a
leadership structure emerged within our class, and for the last few weeks,
we had a more normal class, discussing what had happened in the prior weeks
and discussing types of leaders as well.  I remember autocratic and
democratic as being two types of leader, the former taking charge by force
of will and personality, the latter facilitating consensus among the members
of the group.

Which is my long-winded way of saying that, in my opinion, you raised a very
good point, Bill. :)

-S-

 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
 Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 9:48 AM
 To: horn@music.memphis.edu
 Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles
 
 I used to help out with a local amateur orchestra, the 
 conductor of which was notorious - he used to yell and bawl 
 at his players and more than once I saw  grown men and women 
 crying behind their stands.  The concerts were terrific!
  
 Eventually, the management took him to one side and told him 
 to mend his ways and treat his players more gently.  He did 
 and everyone was much happier.  
 The concerts sounded like any other amatuer orchestral  concert.
  
 Cheers,
  
 Lawrence
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread hans
That´s what I said allready in my letter. Critizism must be
positive  not destructive. A conductor who yells to the
orchestra or at a certain player, will lose his last value
the very same moment.

And for the amateurs: less (challenging) is often more
(quality) and thus more enjoyment.

-Original Message-
  In other words, a professional *attitude* needs
to be brought to rehearsal and performance irrespective of
the quality of the players.

Regards
Jonathan West

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread hans
Does not only apply to amateur orchestra. Great pigs in
front of the orchestra (just reminding a world famous
conductor who looked as his musicians in the manner of a
rattle snake) often make the greatest concerts. Not so nice
truth, but good for the music  not so good for the nerves
of many musicians. Sorry, I never had any great problems
with such supposed monsters, just some very little
discussions - which I won.


=
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, October 09, 2006 3:48 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

I used to help out with a local amateur orchestra, the
conductor of which was notorious - he used to yell and bawl
at his players and more than once I saw  grown men and women
crying behind their stands.  The concerts were  terrific!
 
Eventually, the management took him to one side and told him
to mend his ways and treat his players more gently.  He did
and everyone was much  happier.  
The concerts sounded like any other amatuer orchestral
concert.
 
Cheers,
 
Lawrence
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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-09 Thread billbamberg
Company politics are so important, I just can't justify wasting time on 
the job I was hired to do.


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Sent: Mon, 9 Oct 2006 7:00 AM
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

 Two observations on what Steve said, as to not always the best getting 
the
 job, as it is in all industries/pursuits. A novel of the later part of 
the
 last Century, On Wings of Eagles follows the two careers of officers 
in
 the US Army. One is the perfect careerist seeking out the right job 
and

getting to know the right people just to get ahead. The other is the
 stereotypic professional the man who does the right thing for the 
right
 reason, not for personal gain. The contrast in the two men reflected a 
lot
 of what goes on it large organizations, so much so that the head of 
the Army

put the book on a required reading list.

 The other issue, on this side of the Atlantic at least, is the fact 
that
 conductors have to be able not only to be musicians, but must also be 
able
 to play up to the people in a community with the big purses to keep 
funding
 coming into the organization. Not only must he/she know how to get 
music
 from musicians but also work with the Board of Directors to get money 
out of

donors to keep the orchestra solvent.

I'm not sure if that is an issue in Europe.


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Steve Freides
Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 9:28 AM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

Hans Pizka wrote:

 I try it again to incend a fire(works) about conductors 
 their means of interpretation, as the first attempt resulted
 in zero effect but one single reply. Are you to cautious to
 talk about conductors ? Because a few lure around in several
 lists ? What to fear ? Is it impossible to talk the truth ?
 Even about music ? Poor world intimidated by a handful of
 people, seems not funny but rather pervers.

 Hans, I did not respond because I think you stated the case very well. 
A
 good conductor must posses everything you suggest and, again as you 
suggest,
 many lack that all-important ability to inspire, to embue a 
performance with
 the kind of life that will bring the best out of the players and move 
an
 audience. I will also add that I have seen conductors who err in the 
other
 direction, as it were - they attempt to emote but lack musicianship, 
lack an
 understanding of the music they are conducting, or both, and their 
efforts

seem superficial and insubstantial as a result.

Unfortunately, in conducting more than in most other areas of musical
 endeavor, talent, hard work, and good results do not always lead to 
success.
 At least it seems this way to me - in a blind audition behind a 
curtain, the
 best player should prevail, but conductors are hired by much less 
direct
 processes. Because I went through music school as a conductor, I have 
had
 the opportunity to watch the careers of several of my colleagues, all 
of
 whom shall remain nameless here; suffice it to say that I have seen at 
least

one very talented, hard-working individual achieve a career but only
 relatively minor success, while another who is a charlatan by measure 
of
 almost everyone who has either known him or played under him has risen 
to
 the top ranks of the profession, achieving his success, so far as I 
have

been able to determine, by other means. Such is the way life works
sometimes, I'm sad to say.

 Disclaimer, lest someone think my rant is some sort of sour grapes - 
I
 went through school as a choral conducting major with no aspirations 
of a
 career as a conductor. I am a theory and ear-training specialist and 
taught
 those subjects at the college level even before my doctorate was 
completed.
 Going through college as a conducting major was much more interesting 
than

doing it as a theory major - I got to conduct a recital for my doctoral
 degree instead of having to write a thesis - how good is _that_? :) I 
have

done one conducting engagement per year for the last several decades, a
 small professional choir hired for the Jewish High Holy Days (just 
finished)
 at a large congregation in suburban Philadelphia. I just finished my 
27th

year as conductor and every year feel completely humbled by the task of
 doing everything within my power at rehearsals and performances to 
make the
 music the most inspirational and moving it can be. I don't ever feel 
I've
 gotten it right but I find the process of trying to improve my own 
ability
 to, in turn, improve the performances a noble pursuit and one I look 
forward

to each year.

-S-

 What makes a good conductor  Seems an interesting
 question. Well, most conductors have a very limited means of
 expresions or let us better say tools. They know slow-fast,
 loud-soft, hard-soft, short-long. But this could be done by a
 programmed machine also. Just think about an electric
 programmable jumping jack

RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Jonathan West

 3) Hold your instructive comments until a substantial
 portion of the piece has been played-- better, wait
 until the movement is finished.  Then go over your
 long list of comments with everyone.  My biggest gripe
 is aimed at conductors who stop every time they have
 some comment to make-- this may be acceptable for the
 pro ranks, but it is totally unacceptable for amateur
 groups.  Remember that amateurs are there to enjoy the
 music, not to be micromanaged by a neurotic
 conductor-- and there are many of these out there.

I don't think this is necessarily the case. I have no objection to stops,
provided that the stops are brief, and what the conductor says is to the
point. I would rather there be a run-through towards the end of the
rehearsal (if there's time) rather than at the beginning.

Regards
Jonathan West

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors of amateur ensembles

2006-10-09 Thread Steve Freides
Jonathan West wrote:

  3) Hold your instructive comments until a substantial 
 portion of the 
  piece has been played-- better, wait until the movement is 
 finished.  
  Then go over your long list of comments with everyone.  

-snip-

 I don't think this is necessarily the case. I have no 
 objection to stops, provided that the stops are brief, and 
 what the conductor says is to the point. I would rather there 
 be a run-through towards the end of the rehearsal (if there's 
 time) rather than at the beginning.

Going all the way through is, at least in my experience, more important the
lower level of musicianship in the group relative to what needed, e.g., in
difficult repertoire in my community band, the challenge is simply to make
it through without the performance falling apart.  For easier pieces where
making it through isn't in doubt, we can afford to work more piecemeal.

Just my opinion.

-S-

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread Steve Freides
Hans Pizka wrote:

 I try it again to incend a fire(works) about conductors  
 their means of interpretation, as the first attempt resulted 
 in zero effect but one single reply. Are you to cautious to 
 talk about conductors ? Because a few lure around in several 
 lists ? What to fear ? Is it impossible to talk the truth ?
 Even about music ? Poor world intimidated by a handful of 
 people, seems not funny but rather pervers.

Hans, I did not respond because I think you stated the case very well.  A
good conductor must posses everything you suggest and, again as you suggest,
many lack that all-important ability to inspire, to embue a performance with
the kind of life that will bring the best out of the players and move an
audience.  I will also add that I have seen conductors who err in the other
direction, as it were - they attempt to emote but lack musicianship, lack an
understanding of the music they are conducting, or both, and their efforts
seem superficial and insubstantial as a result.  

Unfortunately, in conducting more than in most other areas of musical
endeavor, talent, hard work, and good results do not always lead to success.
At least it seems this way to me - in a blind audition behind a curtain, the
best player should prevail, but conductors are hired by much less direct
processes.  Because I went through music school as a conductor, I have had
the opportunity to watch the careers of several of my colleagues, all of
whom shall remain nameless here; suffice it to say that I have seen at least
one very talented, hard-working individual achieve a career but only
relatively minor success, while another who is a charlatan by measure of
almost everyone who has either known him or played under him has risen to
the top ranks of the profession, achieving his success, so far as I have
been able to determine, by other means.  Such is the way life works
sometimes, I'm sad to say.  

Disclaimer, lest someone think my rant is some sort of sour grapes - I
went through school as a choral conducting major with no aspirations of a
career as a conductor.  I am a theory and ear-training specialist and taught
those subjects at the college level even before my doctorate was completed.
Going through college as a conducting major was much more interesting than
doing it as a theory major - I got to conduct a recital for my doctoral
degree instead of having to write a thesis - how good is _that_? :)  I have
done one conducting engagement per year for the last several decades, a
small professional choir hired for the Jewish High Holy Days (just finished)
at a large congregation in suburban Philadelphia.  I just finished my 27th
year as conductor and  every year feel completely humbled by the task of
doing everything within my power at rehearsals and performances to make the
music the most inspirational and moving it can be.  I don't ever feel I've
gotten it right but I find the process of trying to improve my own ability
to, in turn, improve the performances a noble pursuit and one I look forward
to each year.

-S-
 
 What makes a good conductor  Seems an interesting 
 question. Well, most conductors have a very limited means of 
 expresions or let us better say tools. They know slow-fast, 
 loud-soft, hard-soft, short-long. But this could be done by a 
 programmed machine also. Just think about an electric 
 programmable jumping jack. I might names this way of 
 conducting the bi-dimensional-music-commanding.
 
 But there is more, like bringing the tempos into a certain 
 mathematical relation (plain numbers, no fractions), work out 
 the phrases set by the composer, balance the dynamics within 
 the sections  between the different instrument groups to 
 form a unified sound. This relates to all kind of music. Keep 
 single members or sections from exaggerating their dynamic. 
 Keep sections or the whole at lower dynamic, so the different 
 solos can shine. All this can be learned or acquired by 
 listening to many performances conducted by well acknowledged 
 maestros. Together with the first paragraph requirements we 
 could name this now three-dimensional-music-commanding.
 
 But there is one dimension still left, the dimension which is 
 the most necessary at all levels: expression, expression that 
 does not just make an audience excited, but more, make it 
 moved. There could come excitement in the audience  within 
 the orchestra because of the technical brilliance  the 
 perfection of sound  execution. But still there´s nobody 
 moved besides the conductor himself perhaps.
 
 How to achieve that most important goal ? The fourth 
 dimension. Using the right vocables during the rehearsals, 
 preconditioned everything else is right. The richer the 
 vocabulary of the conductor, the richer the colours of the 
 orchestra and the richer the performance. Vocables as 
 lovely, blooming, heroic, thundering, not audible but 
 noticeable, fanatic, fantastic, full of love, glooming like 
 rock coal, poisonous, 

Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread Jasoncat
Hans, I agree conceptually, but let's talk about an older generation of 
conductors so as not to offend, Leinsdorf, Solti and Guilini none of which in 
my 
experience in rehearsal were colorful or verbose. All were passionate all could 
move you and the audience. So I would suggest that there is an unspoken 
chemistry between conductor and orchestra and an unspoken respect that goes 
both 
ways that also comes into play. 

Debbie
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread hans
Hello Steve, then you know perfectly whom I had in mind when
I mentioned the rare hidden gems, - people like you, people
who love the music and people whos heart beats at the right
place  in the right rhythm.

There are a lot of conductor careers, jump started careers,
promoted by a clever crew of public relation people. And
they get their 20%, so they push the salaries up. But some
conductors cannot be sold in certain countries - dont think
rassistic, as the Arabs do not listen to our music and
special the fanatics refuse to attend  or allow concerts
(see Taliban etc.). Some conductors cannot be sold because
they have not any market value there no matter how much
their value might be in your or in my country. Some of these
pushed figures fall on their nose sooner or later (ask them
what note you have to play in a Verdi opera - see
transposition to Ab-basso ???), but some get along with the
musicians in a clever friendly way, absorbing any given
information by the musicians, capable to use these info for
themselves  their conducting, well, these might make their
way up  are most welcome to us. Interesting might be, that
a lot of very successful and good conductors are jewish. Why
? Jews had to assimilate themselves everywhere they went or
where they were pushed to. They spoke two languages from the
beginning (Jiddish  the local language). Language skill
sharpens the brain. Assimilating requires to be very
sensitive. All prerequisites for that job infront of the
orchestra. And, many jewish families keep traditions of
music making themselves at home over the centuries (at least
playing the piano). And special the German jews, they kept
the German culture high, kept the music tradition very high,
and literature - even in the diaspora.

But for the others, dont fraternisate with them. If they
make you trouble you honestly dont deserve, watch for their
defects  never help them if they get in trouble. Play as
they conduct (wordly !), so they will disappear after a
while.


== 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Steve Freides
Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 3:28 PM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

Hans, I did not respond because I think you stated the case
very well.  A good conductor must posses everything you
suggest and, again as you suggest, many lack that
all-important ability to inspire, to embue a performance
with the kind of life that will bring the best out of the
players and move an audience.  I will also add that I have
seen conductors who err in the other direction, as it were -
they attempt to emote but lack musicianship, lack an
understanding of the music they are conducting, or both, and
their efforts seem superficial and insubstantial as a
result.  

Unfortunately, in conducting more than in most other areas
of musical endeavor, talent, hard work, and good results do
not always lead to success.
At least it seems this way to me - in a blind audition
behind a curtain, the best player should prevail, but
conductors are hired by much less direct processes.  Because
I went through music school as a conductor, I have had the
opportunity to watch the careers of several of my
colleagues, all of whom shall remain nameless here; suffice
it to say that I have seen at least one very talented,
hard-working individual achieve a career but only relatively
minor success, while another who is a charlatan by measure
of almost everyone who has either known him or played under
him has risen to the top ranks of the profession, achieving
his success, so far as I have been able to determine, by
other means.  Such is the way life works sometimes, I'm sad
to say.  

Disclaimer, lest someone think my rant is some sort of sour
grapes - I went through school as a choral conducting major
with no aspirations of a career as a conductor.  I am a
theory and ear-training specialist and taught those subjects
at the college level even before my doctorate was completed.
Going through college as a conducting major was much more
interesting than doing it as a theory major - I got to
conduct a recital for my doctoral degree instead of having
to write a thesis - how good is _that_? :)  I have done one
conducting engagement per year for the last several decades,
a small professional choir hired for the Jewish High Holy
Days (just finished) at a large congregation in suburban
Philadelphia.  I just finished my 27th year as conductor and
every year feel completely humbled by the task of doing
everything within my power at rehearsals and performances to
make the music the most inspirational and moving it can be.
I don't ever feel I've gotten it right but I find the
process of trying to improve my own ability to, in turn,
improve the performances a noble pursuit and one I look
forward to each year.

-S

RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread hans
Debbie, I have no experience with Giulini, but did several
concerts with Leinsdorf  Solti.  So I cannot agree with
you, that they were not verbose, in contrary, both could
explain very well how they wanted the things, very
illustrative indeed. Well, we had no problems to understand
Leinsdorfs fine nuances in the language as we all spokethe
same language as mother language, which might make a big, a
very big difference. And Solti, I think that German was also
his second mother language. He was the boss of my orchestra
after WW2. You should have heard him explaining R.Strauss´
Don Juan. Never heard it explained better. Or watch the
Golden Ring documentary with the VPO. But you need to
understand the fine nuances in German. Or Bernstein ? Just
two words explained everything. If the right words are used,
just few words will make it. And these calibers were full of
fun. Fischer-Dieskau once asked Klemperer if he could attend
one of his concerts, but Klemperer asked why. I will conduct
Schuberts Great ! Let me check my calender (Klemperer), yes,
yes, I might be free that night, but, but I have to attend
George Solties Liederabend, sorry. 

Sawallisch knew when  where  why singer errors could
happen during a performance, but he could repair them BEFORE
they happen. I have witnessed that on many occasions.
Kleiber did not help, - speaking of Carlos -, but he studied
the things very well for himself first, even inserting
special instructions into the several parts by himself, -
and he could talk colours enormously, even his German
vocabulary was very short, but he had just the right terms.
Watch his Fledermaus, Woyzzeck, Rosenkavalier, Tristan,
Freischuetz, Othello (nearly all his repertory regarding
opera), oops, he did two Bohemes  one Madame Buterfly with
us without rehearsal. You could read everything from his
face (I played both Bohemes). Another performance (La
Traviata) was cancelled due to a singer illness (the tenor
had to leave the stage  the famous aria was jumped, when we
did the first of the La Traviatas in that series) and
Kleiber asked for a change in the program, Pavarotti was in
town and sang Rodolfo, can you imagine that excitement. The
audience really boiled but came to tears (no exaggeration !)
 we too. We were so moved. It was the music, the great
singers AND Carlos Kleiber. Muti uses a thin vocabulary but
all words are placed right, and his great discipline when
conducting. The greatest advantage of these great conductors
is their ability to LISTEN, to listen what´s coming from the
various players in the pit or on stage and just use what´s
being offered to them or even fine tuning the one or the
other phrase or voice.



== 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 5:05 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

Hans, I agree conceptually, but let's talk about an older
generation of conductors so as not to offend, Leinsdorf,
Solti and Guilini none of which in my experience in
rehearsal were colorful or verbose. All were passionate all
could move you and the audience. So I would suggest that
there is an unspoken chemistry between conductor and
orchestra and an unspoken respect that goes both ways that
also comes into play. 

Debbie
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread Steve Freides
Hans Pizka wrote:

-snip-

 ... The 
 greatest advantage of these great conductors is their ability 
 to LISTEN, to listen what´s coming from the various players 
 in the pit or on stage and just use what´s being offered to 
 them or even fine tuning the one or the other phrase or voice.

As a conducting student, I found this process the heart of the matter but,
while easy enough to describe, very difficult to do well.  One must learn to
conduct what one wants musically, to ask for what one wants with words, but
to do that well _and_ to listen carefully to what's being played - that is a
real multi-tasking skill.  Those who can only listen and critique are
coaches, not conductors.

My favorite definition of musical talent comes from theorist Carl Schachter.
I cannot quote him exactly, but if one knows a bit about Schenkerian
analysis, Carl's speciality, one can appreciate his comment that while many
people might be able to manage the big picture (emotion, character, style,
history, etc.), the smallest details, or the levels in between (e.g.,
phrasing), the truly talented at music manage _all_ these things
simultaneously, and it is that simultaneous attention to the big picture,
the smallest detail, and everything in between that makes for a great
performance.  Carl studied with, and later coauthored a theory text with
Felix Saltzer who, in turn, worked directly with Heinrich Schenker.  And let
me hasten to add that Carl is a delightful, insightful teacher, a
wonderfully musical pianist, and always a interesting person to be around.

-S-
 
 
 
 == 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
 Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 5:05 PM
 To: horn@music.memphis.edu
 Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc
 
 Hans, I agree conceptually, but let's talk about an older 
 generation of conductors so as not to offend, Leinsdorf, 
 Solti and Guilini none of which in my experience in rehearsal 
 were colorful or verbose. All were passionate all could move 
 you and the audience. So I would suggest that there is an 
 unspoken chemistry between conductor and orchestra and an 
 unspoken respect that goes both ways that also comes into play. 
 
 Debbie
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 de
 
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread hans
But unknown in this hemisphere. Steve, you said everything
perfectly, but it seems hard to get this understood by the
majority. Playing on a first chair in a wind section or
playing as a soloist or chamber musician requires  the same
skill as you just described. If you are the leader of that
particular group (chamber music) you need all these
requisites too.

 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Steve Freides
Sent: Sunday, October 08, 2006 6:56 PM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

Hans Pizka wrote:

-snip-

 ... The
 greatest advantage of these great conductors is their
ability to 
 LISTEN, to listen what´s coming from the various players
in the pit or 
 on stage and just use what´s being offered to them or even
fine tuning 
 the one or the other phrase or voice.

As a conducting student, I found this process the heart of
the matter but, while easy enough to describe, very
difficult to do well.  One must learn to conduct what one
wants musically, to ask for what one wants with words, but
to do that well _and_ to listen carefully to what's being
played - that is a real multi-tasking skill.  Those who can
only listen and critique are coaches, not conductors.

My favorite definition of musical talent comes from theorist
Carl Schachter.
I cannot quote him exactly, but if one knows a bit about
Schenkerian analysis, Carl's speciality, one can appreciate
his comment that while many people might be able to manage
the big picture (emotion, character, style, history,
etc.), the smallest details, or the levels in between (e.g.,
phrasing), the truly talented at music manage _all_ these
things simultaneously, and it is that simultaneous attention
to the big picture, the smallest detail, and everything in
between that makes for a great performance.  Carl studied
with, and later coauthored a theory text with Felix Saltzer
who, in turn, worked directly with Heinrich Schenker.  And
let me hasten to add that Carl is a delightful, insightful
teacher, a wonderfully musical pianist, and always a
interesting person to be around.

-S-

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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors etc

2006-10-08 Thread Jasoncat
Hans, We agree they were not verbose 

I said Leinsdorf, Solti and Guilini none of which in my experience in 
rehearsal were colorful or verbose. I used the word NONE.

I used them as an example and purposefully excluded Bernstein because I took 
your initial remarks

Which were;

Vocables as
lovely, blooming, heroic, thundering, not audible but
noticeable, fanatic, fantastic, full of love, glooming like
rock coal, poisonous, destructing, like clouds before
hailstorms, radiating sunny, heating up like a hord of huns,
icy, sound of glass, static, desperately sad, full of
heavenly joy, etc. - these would be the words we musicians
would understand  interpret the right way.

To mean verbose. That was a mistake which I now see from your response. 



What they say is important without doubt but great conductors are passionate 
but to the point they can say the same thing 100 different ways to get the 
sound or effect they want (also an attribute of a great teacher).

But no matter how great a conductor without an orchestra to conduct we have 
no music and I will reiterate that great conductors have an unspoken respect 
that goes both ways.

Debbie 
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Re: [Hornlist] conductors

2006-10-06 Thread Fred Baucom
That is an interesting question...who are these 'gems' that you are thinking 
of?  Simon Rattle had a great reputation when with City of Birmingham...does he 
enjoy the same in his years at Berlin?
 
Thanks, Fred


- Original Message 
From: hans [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: The Horn List horn@music.memphis.edu
Sent: Friday, October 6, 2006 9:51:02 AM
Subject: [Hornlist] conductors


What makes a good conductor  Seems an interesting
question. Well, most conductors have a very limited means of
expresions or let us better say tools. They know
slow-fast, loud-soft, hard-soft, short-long. But this could
be done by a programmed machine also. Just think about an
electric programmable jumping jack. I might names this way
of conducting the bi-dimensional-music-commanding.

But there is more, like bringing the tempos into a certain
mathematical relation (plain numbers, no fractions), work
out the phrases set by the composer, balance the dynamics
within the sections  between the different instrument
groups to form a unified sound. This relates to all kind of
music. Keep single members or sections from exaggerating
their dynamic. Keep sections or the whole at lower dynamic,
so the different solos can shine. All this can be learned or
acquired by listening to many performances conducted by well
acknowledged maestros. Together with the first paragraph
requirements we could name this now
three-dimensional-music-commanding.

But there is one dimension still left, the dimension which
is the most necessary at all levels: expression, expression
that does not just make an audience excited, but more, make
it moved. There could come excitement in the audience 
within the orchestra because of the technical brilliance 
the perfection of sound  execution. But still there´s
nobody moved besides the conductor himself perhaps.

How to achieve that most important goal ? The fourth
dimension. Using the right vocables during the rehearsals,
preconditioned everything else is right. The richer the
vocabulary of the conductor, the richer the colours of the
orchestra and the richer the performance. Vocables as
lovely, blooming, heroic, thundering, not audible but
noticeable, fanatic, fantastic, full of love, glooming like
rock coal, poisonous, destructing, like clouds before
hailstorms, radiating sunny, heating up like a hord of huns,
icy, sound of glass, static, desperately sad, full of
heavenly joy, etc. - these would be the words we musicians
would understand  interpret the right way. But this
requires conductors, human conductors, musical  super
sensitive characters, which are too rare today within the
list of travelling stars. It seems too often, that the only
teaching they received was counting $$$. But there are
some gems left, fortunately, but most of them will never get
any chance to explore his or her potentials with an
orchestra of high class. This is the reason, why some
provincial orchestras can do a superb performance once a
while, which would blame the superstars.

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RE: [Hornlist] conductors

2006-05-08 Thread Bill Gross
Interesting. . .

I do note that one major symphony in the US has made it the business policy
not to hire top of the line conductors.  They look for a conductor that
can work well with the orchestra to produce solid music, but not demand so
much money that it diverts funds from musicians and other programs. 

And the obligatory, oh by the way, I think most lots of folks on the amateur
side are in agreement with your statement about following the conductor in
what ever group we are members.  It's just nice to have a place to come it
and vent frustration over the foibles that a particular conductor visits
upon us.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Hans.Pizka
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2006 9:09 AM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: [Hornlist] conductors

Dear friends from the amateur league,

You have no idea about what happen during rehearsals at high
professional level, absolute no idea, sorry. 

Even with the greatest  world famous maestros (Sawallisch,
Mehta, Muti, Masur, Boehm, etc.) we just played half a
movement  started plucking it to pieces. They stop if the
balance is not right, if the expression is not what they
expected or wanted, for certain accent markings, dots, fp,
sfz, how strong or how soft they wanted it ever. O.k. next
sixty measures (or not)  the same procedure  forward
again. So to make two movements the first rehearsal 
playing these streight once (perhaps)  if they are not long
as a Bruckner Adagio movement. We get them to play again in
the public dress rehearsal, but even then they will
interrupt if something must be fixed (or not). This or not
is very important, as even these calibres are happy, if we
put all together during the concert. But this first concert
is compareable to a seat in a formula One car  driving at
the course of Nuerburg or Spa. Often these conductors seem
to have rehearsed another piece than they conduct at the
concert - and the orchestra has to fix that instantly
WITHOUT any complain. We are paid for it. 

But admitted, the maestros are overpaid in a really sick
manner. If their fee goes into 50.000 or up to 100.000 USD,
not per month or year, but per CONCERT, per EVENING, plus
all the extras 1st class flight, 1st class *
accomodation  all bills paid  a luxury car with driver at
disposition (the maestros above did not use it, nor were
their fees in this region except one of them, but he drives
by himself), this is more than sick. Many of them are made
up stars (none of the gentlemen mentioned), special these
2nd or 3rd or 4rth class made up stars, not capable playing
a single instrument not even the piano. These are the worst,
but you can fool them more easily. And they fall into the
traps, but without any effect. And they can be dangerous,
very intrigant  dangerous.

That picking on the musicians is necessary to achieve a high
class result. But , as we say the tone makes the music, it
all depends how these maestros do it. I know some of them,
who show their great respect for the corporation (orchestra)
even by how they are dressed at the rehearsal. They are very
demanding, but never insulting, never blaming single
players. They have great respect for the integrity of every
player. They never step on your cock (slang). An this is
very pleasing. We do all for the success with them together.


But there are also some self made tyrrants, whom we let fire
up to the last shot, - and do all with passive resistance,
means playing everything correct, but correct only. The
audience will understand that  these maestros will never
come back again.

But, sorry, this is not your business at amateur or even
very advanced amateur level, where a greater part of the
musician is still on fight with their instrument or with
the music. Here you have not to take every correction by the
commander (conductor, concertmaster, leader of the
section) as a personal insult. They give their best to fix a
good performance together  you should better follow them,
instead putting every word on the gold wages. As said by
other before, music is not the place for democracy. It is a
place of leadership  teamwork.


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Re: [Hornlist] conductors

2006-05-08 Thread Per Ottar Gjerstad

Hi all,

If you are interested in reading about conductors and how they (often) 
behave, you should read this book by Norman Lebrecht: The Maestro Myth.

He takes the gloss off most of them.

Per Ottar



- Original Message - 
From: Hans.Pizka [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: 'The Horn List' horn@music.memphis.edu
Sent: Monday, May 08, 2006 4:09 PM
Subject: [Hornlist] conductors



Dear friends from the amateur league,

You have no idea about what happen during rehearsals at high
professional level, absolute no idea, sorry.


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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-30 Thread hans
Whom do you have in mind ?  Joseph Keilberth (+), Barry
Tuckwell, Michael Hoeltzel, Michael Thompson, Radek Baborak,
Sebastian Weigle (ex solo horn State Opera Berlin, excellent
conductor  nice fellow, conducts Berlin State Opera,
Dresden, Barcelona, Tokyo, etc.), ... 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Bob Gibson
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2005 6:43 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Conductors

GOD Help us from ex horn players turned
Conductors(?) !
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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-30 Thread Paul Mansur


On Monday, May 30, 2005, at 01:43 PM, Bob Gibson wrote:


GOD Help us from ex horn players turned
Conductors(?) !
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I rather think horn players make efficient conductors.  I've played 
under quite a few and I find they understand the problems of the 
players, they give cues, and can maintain a steady beat.  I've served a 
bit in a conducting capacity myself and if I say so myself, I enjoy it, 
and the groups I've conducted are not complaining!  Actually, at my 
age, I now conduct a whole lot better than I can play the horn!  Hans 
is correct in naming quite a few excellent players who made the switch 
very pleasantly!   My personal experience supports that ex-orchestral 
players make very decent conductors compared to the stick wavers who 
never had any orchestral playing experience.


CORdially,  Mansur's Answers

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-30 Thread Bill Gross
I thought I heard on the local classical music radio station that the
director of the Fort Worth Symphony played horn in Argentina before
switching to conducting and being picked up as the Music Director of the
FWSO. 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2005 12:58 PM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

Whom do you have in mind ?  Joseph Keilberth (+), Barry
Tuckwell, Michael Hoeltzel, Michael Thompson, Radek Baborak,
Sebastian Weigle (ex solo horn State Opera Berlin, excellent
conductor  nice fellow, conducts Berlin State Opera,
Dresden, Barcelona, Tokyo, etc.), ... 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Bob Gibson
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2005 6:43 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Conductors

GOD Help us from ex horn players turned
Conductors(?) !
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-30 Thread hans
We will get a new music director, who´s biography says
nothing about him having studied any instrument other than
the baton ! Nobody could imagine such even in short time
past ??? He has good working attitudes, but no idea
about the instruments. You should ask the Dresden players
about the recent Salome production there  .
  They built up several traps, into which he ran streight on
 But we had a nice cooperation (me special) with Billy
Budd (difficult page long technical solo passage - you can
camouflage a lot, if you play JUST convincing !! Old trick.)
  He starts allready building up plans for his EGO with CD
productions (who will buy these CDs ?), concert tours (for
us being duty, for him extra big cheques, - the usual way, a
way to get much attention in Spain or Italy or wherever, -
sorry, I doubt that !)
  But he is a working horse, has excellent manners,
demanding but friendly,  But all this does not bother me
much,  Just until 2007  After that, as extra hired
player to fill the vacancy until they find the replacement
for me, . But I can finish the contract every month
.
Just the money drives me then . Not for me, but for
my children, will get plenty enough as pension cheque.

==
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Paul Mansur
Sent: Monday, May 30, 2005 7:54 PM
To: The Horn List
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors


On Monday, May 30, 2005, at 01:43 PM, Bob Gibson wrote:

 GOD Help us from ex horn players turned
 Conductors(?) !
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I rather think horn players make efficient conductors.  I've
played under quite a few and I find they understand the
problems of the players, they give cues, and can maintain a
steady beat.  I've served a bit in a conducting capacity
myself and if I say so myself, I enjoy it, and the groups
I've conducted are not complaining!  Actually, at my age, I
now conduct a whole lot better than I can play the horn!
Hans is correct in naming quite a few excellent players who
made the switch 
very pleasantly!   My personal experience supports that
ex-orchestral 
players make very decent conductors compared to the stick
wavers who never had any orchestral playing experience.

CORdially,  Mansur's Answers

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-30 Thread Wilbert Kimple

I've held back as long as I can, but no more Mister
nice guy.

I am a horn player AND a conductor, and proud of
it.  

In fact, I enjoy the conducting more than the
playing, but God has been kind, and at age 59 I can
still pop out those high e's above the staff.  I'm
good to the bottom of the horn, too.  I play first
in two local orchestras and one community band.  I
also play first in the area's local professional
summer band, and have for more than 25 years.

From what people tell me, I'm an excellent
conductor.  In fact, last month I was rehired for
next season in front of the orchestra at our dress
rehearsal for the final concert of this season.  I
not only got a standing ovation from the orchestra,
but our audience at that concert was the largest in
the seventeen year history of the orchestra.  Well
over 1,000 people.  (Pat myself on back, here).  

I also have been an arranger for more than thirty
years, along with the various orchestras and bands
I have conducted during that time.  I've even
conducted at IHS workshops.  (Oh horror of
horrors!)

So.What's the deal?  I know my craft(s),
people like what I do, and I'm well paid for it.

If it's the truth, you're not braggin'

Wilbert in SC
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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-30 Thread Carl Bangs
I frequently cross over to the dark side and it has made me a better 
hornist.


Carl Bangs

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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-24 Thread Paul Kampen
Message text written by The Horn List
Personally, I have respect for anyone with the brass
to get in front of a bunch of musicians who by their
very nature can be rather unforgiving.

Dear All

But does brass neck always lead to the best talent emerging?

Whilst at Opera North, I played for all the Leeds Conductors Competitions
which have so far taken place (there is one to come this year).

The winners have included several whose careers took off brightly.  But
those competitions were an eye opener as far as young conductors are
concerned.  The arrogance of some of those people was mind boggling.  On
the other hand, there was a very petite and shy young lady who entered
twice. Obviously very nervous the first time that she entered, she was
persuaded to enter again by several orchestra members who were impressed
with what they saw.  The second time was worse and she finished one of her
sessions  seemingly close to tears.  Yet she obviously possessed far more
talent than most of the others.  Perhaps it shows that the main thing that
you need to be a conductor is brass neck rather than talent!

I remember one of the earlier competitions when the Chair of the jury was
the late Sir Charles Groves.  One young man thrashed around
enthusiastically for 10 of his allotted 20 minutes in a knock out round. 
But then he had to think of something to say and this stumped him so, he
said - I think that I will finish early!  Sir Charles, one of the nicest
and gentlest of men ever to have rode a rostrum was moved to unexpected
forcefulness - young man, you are throwing away 10 minutes of the time of
a very expensive professional orchestra!  But our hero could only respond
by playing through the overture (or whatever it was - I forget) again. 
Mind you, he sank without trace.

Cheers

Paul A. Kampen (W. Yorks UK)
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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-24 Thread Richard Smith
I am fortunate to be the principal horn in church orchestra composed of 
local professionals and band directors. We get to play for services each 
week as regular part of the worship as well as special occasions during the 
year. The orchestra is thoroughly professional in ability and there are no 
prima dona attitudes!! It is a joy to play with this group.


My general perception is that good musicians who are secure in their 
abilities and don't feel like they have something to prove are usually not 
attitude problems. I do sometimes confidence and/or definite musical 
opinions are mistaken for arrogance.


I have been privileged to work with musicians at many levels and in all 
fields of music. In my experience, arrogance and bad attitudes seem most 
often to accompany inexperience and/or incompetence.


Richard Smith
www.rgsmithmusic.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

- Original Message - 
From: Paul Kampen [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: The Horn List horn@music.memphis.edu
Sent: Tuesday, May 24, 2005 8:35 AM
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Conductors


Message text written by The Horn List

Personally, I have respect for anyone with the brass

to get in front of a bunch of musicians who by their
very nature can be rather unforgiving.

Dear All

But does brass neck always lead to the best talent emerging?

Whilst at Opera North, I played for all the Leeds Conductors Competitions
which have so far taken place (there is one to come this year).

The winners have included several whose careers took off brightly.  But
those competitions were an eye opener as far as young conductors are
concerned.  The arrogance of some of those people was mind boggling.  On
the other hand, there was a very petite and shy young lady who entered
twice. Obviously very nervous the first time that she entered, she was
persuaded to enter again by several orchestra members who were impressed
with what they saw.  The second time was worse and she finished one of her
sessions  seemingly close to tears.  Yet she obviously possessed far more
talent than most of the others.  Perhaps it shows that the main thing that
you need to be a conductor is brass neck rather than talent!

I remember one of the earlier competitions when the Chair of the jury was
the late Sir Charles Groves.  One young man thrashed around
enthusiastically for 10 of his allotted 20 minutes in a knock out round.
But then he had to think of something to say and this stumped him so, he
said - I think that I will finish early!  Sir Charles, one of the nicest
and gentlest of men ever to have rode a rostrum was moved to unexpected
forcefulness - young man, you are throwing away 10 minutes of the time of
a very expensive professional orchestra!  But our hero could only respond
by playing through the overture (or whatever it was - I forget) again.
Mind you, he sank without trace.

Cheers

Paul A. Kampen (W. Yorks UK)
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-23 Thread Loren
   Yep, the rule is to keep your eyes on the conductor, but the truth is you
gotta know when NOT to look at the conductor.
   War story. I was playing 3rd horn and had the important solo at the
beginning of the 3rd movement of a symphony which I now can't remember the
name of. I very much had to empty my horn at the end of the 2nd movement
which I did as quickly as I could-keeping my eye on the conductor. He saw my
eye contact and thought I was ready so started conducted faster than I
expected. I could not put my slide back in fast enough to play the solo. Now
I don't look at the conductor until I am ready.

Loren
\@()
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(520) 403-6897
 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
WIlliam Botte
Sent: Monday, May 23, 2005 1:38 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: [Hornlist] Conductors

The past 15 years, I've been pleased and/or plagued with excellent and 
less than excellent conductors.  The excellent conductors were niether 
timid or tyranical.  They were universaly clear in direction and 
consistent with cues and tempi.  No surprises.  No tantrums.  No 
compromises.
The plagues were incompetent time wasters, ill prepared, inconsistent 
withe cues, tempi and beating patterns.  There is nothing more 
terrifying than to look up at conductor twirling the baton in the air 
like a skylight.  Or looking for the noexistent downbeat. WTF!!!  Or the 
micromillimeter twitching of the right hand to indicate pianissimo.  
AAAGH.  Communicate with troops in the back row, not just the 
octet semicircle within whispering distance.
--wabotte
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Re: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-23 Thread Valkhorn
 
Was it the Saint-Saens symphony 3?
 
-William
 
In a message dated 5/23/2005 6:29:25 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Yep, the rule is to keep your eyes on the conductor, but  the truth is you
gotta know when NOT to look at the  conductor.
War story. I was playing 3rd horn and had the  important solo at the
beginning of the 3rd movement of a symphony which I  now can't remember the
name of. I very much had to empty my horn at the end  of the 2nd movement
which I did as quickly as I could-keeping my eye on the  conductor. He saw my
eye contact and thought I was ready so started  conducted faster than I
expected. I could not put my slide back in fast  enough to play the solo. Now
I don't look at the conductor until I am  ready.

Loren
\@()
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(520)  403-6897


 
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-23 Thread Loren
   I am not sure, I don't think so. All I and the principal horn player can
remember is that it was an allegro 2/4 movement and there are a few
introductory bars before the solo. I went through our concert recordings and
couldn't find it, but not all concerts were recorded.
 
Loren
\@()
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(520) 403-6897
 

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, May 23, 2005 4:30 PM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Conductors

 
Was it the Saint-Saens symphony 3?
 
-William
 
In a message dated 5/23/2005 6:29:25 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Yep, the rule is to keep your eyes on the conductor, but  the truth is you
gotta know when NOT to look at the  conductor.
War story. I was playing 3rd horn and had the  important solo at the
beginning of the 3rd movement of a symphony which I  now can't remember the
name of. I very much had to empty my horn at the end  of the 2nd movement
which I did as quickly as I could-keeping my eye on the  conductor. He saw
my
eye contact and thought I was ready so started  conducted faster than I
expected. I could not put my slide back in fast  enough to play the solo.
Now
I don't look at the conductor until I am  ready.

Loren
\@()
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(520)  403-6897


 
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RE: [Hornlist] Conductors

2005-05-23 Thread G
Hi,

With all the talk about conductors, I figure I might
as well jump in.

Personally, I have respect for anyone with the brass
to get in front of a bunch of musicians who by their
very nature can be rather unforgiving. It's pretty
safe to say that the vast majority of us will never
swing a stick.

I used to be just as vocal as the next when I was
dissatisfied with a conductor. It wasn't until I got
on the podium that it hit me like a Mack truck that
conducting is far more difficult than it looks from
either side, either the risers or the audience. The
first thing I ever conducted was a Sousa march that I
knew backwards and forwards. But it's amazing how much
you forget when you are facing the music, so to speak.
As players, we're so used to following the leader that
being the leader is pretty daunting.

Fact is, conductors are human too, and even the great
ones screw up from time to time. I remember playing
under a very well-known and respected conductor; he
made a mistake during the third movement of
Lincolnshire Posy, and the band followed him to the
letter and made the mistake sound like it was
intended. The nasty little critic from the paper
didn't even catch it. That comes with being attuned to
not only your fellow musicians, but your conductor as
well. I think that is one of the responsibilities of a
good ensemble - you have to be ready to bail out your
conductor on the rare occasions that he or she will
need it. It's a great thing to accomplish your own
mission, but it is truly wonderful to have the ability
to support a fellow musician in the accomplishment of
their mission. Case in point - the performance of the
Strauss Serenade for Winds a few years ago, with me in
the principal horn chair. The principal oboe was a
freshman, and it was her first big chance in the
principal chair, and she was terrified. I told her to
just relax and play how she wanted to play, and I
would follow her, and catch her if she fell. She
played flawlessly, and I refused to share the bow with
her at the end. Oh, yeah...the performance was the
conductor's master's recital.

On another occasion, while playing Mahler 3, the
conductor, a very accomplished conductor and
interpreter, lost it about 5 bars into the last
movement. You could tell the orchestra was trying like
hell to hold it together, but couldn't. He stopped the
orchestra, turned to the audience, and said,
sometimes, it just doesn't work. He restarted the
last movement, and we played it out...probably a
little better than we would have if there had been no
error.

I also could never figure out which is more difficult
- being a wind player and knowing nothing about
strings, or being a string player and knowing nothing
about winds. Maybe it doesn't matter.

Gary

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