Category - Miscellaneous

1
Grand Rapids Symphony’s Music for Health Program
2
Lincoln Portrait and the Fourth of July
3
Some thoughts on Hartford
4
Cavalcade of baby conductors
5
The Vampire Squid and nonprofits – a real thing?
6
Flying with Instruments: A New Era?
7
Polyphonic.org Needs Your Help!
8
What I did on my summer vacation
9
On playing pieces for the last time
10
Some more words on sub pay and Minnesota

Grand Rapids Symphony’s Music for Health Program

Nathan Kahn  of the AFM’s Symphony Services Division has been telling me about the wonderful music wellness program designed by Grand Rapids violinist Diane McElfish Helle, and I plan to find out more and write an article about their work. Today I noticed that Paul Austin, former ROPA Vice President and Grand Rapids hornist, had[…]

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Lincoln Portrait and the Fourth of July

Copland’s Lincoln Portrait is not terribly popular with orchestra musicians, mostly (I suspect) as a result of over-exposure to bad performances. It invariably gets scheduled on pops programs and outdoor concerts, usually with the lowest-ranking staff conductor who’s in town at the time, and generally with narrators chosen more for who they are rather than[…]

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Some thoughts on Hartford

The Hartford Symphony has been in the news recently, and not in the way that orchestras want to be: Behind the two-year dispute between the Hartford Symphony Orchestra and the musicians union over a new labor agreement is the symphony’s effort to remake itself to appeal to changing audiences and tastes. The orchestra says it’s[…]

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Cavalcade of baby conductors

My orchestra had auditions for assistant conductor today. We saw six candidates for about 30 minutes each. It was an interesting experience, although not very enjoyable. A few I liked; a few I didn’t. But what struck me most was what always strikes me when dealing with young conductors; their failure to follow my two[…]

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The Vampire Squid and nonprofits – a real thing?

Back at the height of the War on the Northern Front, I speculated about how the involvement of key leaders at the two largest banks in the Twin Cities might be making things worse: …there is no third party willing to wade in and lean on the Minnesota Orchestra board to abandon an approach which[…]

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Flying with Instruments: A New Era?

Congress passed a law three years ago to address the problems musicians have encountered flying with their instruments, but the regulations, which will cause the airlines to implement the law, were only published in January, 2015.  And then the airlines had 60 days to get things in order to implement the new regulations. Thanks to the efforts[…]

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Polyphonic.org Needs Your Help!

For the last decade, Polyphonic.org has continually sought to provide a valuable experience for our users. We want to hear from you in order to continue to make your experience a great one! Please help us by taking our quick, three-minute survey! How often do you access Polyphonic.org?   At Least Once A Week Less[…]

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What I did on my summer vacation

Quite literally what I did for two weeks last summer.

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On playing pieces for the last time

One of the oddities of an orchestral career is the lack of control that we have over what we play. A consequencesof that odd fact is that, towards the end of a career, it’s possible to state with some certainty that one will have played a work for the last time. I’ve been musing on[…]

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Some more words on sub pay and Minnesota

The folks at soundnotion.tv hosted a discussion with Drew McManus and myself on the subject of substitute pay and how it was handled in last year’s Minnesota Orchestra settlement. The discussion was moderated (very well, I thought) by David MacDonald and Sam Merciers. It can be watched on YouTube here. I felt the discussion covered[…]

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