Search Results For -feed

1
Justice for extras – some practical considerations
2
November 22, 1963
3
Hot not
4
Ask the Experts: Bring On Your Music Career Questions!
5
On Blogging
6
Newsflash: conductor doesn’t like unions
7
Millennial America
8
A Verdict in the Masterclass Debate
9
Do Masterclasses Belong in Our Bios?
10
Lessons Without Borders: Teaching Music in a Virtual World

Justice for extras – some practical considerations

There was an unusual amount of feedback on my post last week about the pay disparity between full-time musicians and subs in Minnesota and how that might have come about. Some of the feedback confirmed my suspicions that the root of the problem was a “new model” mindset on the part of some board members.[…]

Read More

November 22, 1963

It wasn’t until I checked the date on my Macbook while writing an email that I realized that today was the 51st anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. I found that a little disturbing, as the realization of the anniversary came to me without my looking it up for years and years.[…]

Read More

Hot not

OK, Buzzfeed‘s not the most… respectable… source for articles about our business. But this one (which is complete with pictures) demands some pushback: 18 Classical Composers, Ranked By Hotness Players gonna play 18. Wilhelm Richard “Velvet Cap” Wagner Here we see Wagner reclining on a basket of flowers, all like, “You can ride my Valkyrie,[…]

Read More

Ask the Experts: Bring On Your Music Career Questions!

This webinar will be an open forum for questions related to music careers. Attendees can submit questions when they register, as well as live on the webinar. Our panel of creative and experienced music career advisers will answer questions and discuss thoughts and strategies with participants. This is a great opportunity to get feedback regardless of whether you are a student about to embark on your career, or an experienced professional looking to advance your career. No matter how big or small, simple or complex your questions might be, bring them on! And let our expert panelists offer you their thoughts!

Read More

On Blogging

This September marks the two-year anniversary of my entry into the blogosphere. I began writing for Polyphonic soon after I began my graduate studies at Eastman in 2012, and have contributed regularly ever since. The experience of sharing my writing and receiving feedback has been as educational as it has been enjoyable, and as I’ve[…]

Read More

Newsflash: conductor doesn’t like unions

In this week’s edition of The New Yorker (paywalled, unfortunately) is a fascinating piece by Alex Ross on Iván Fischer, the Hungarian conductor and founder of the Budapest Festival Orchestra. While the piece focuses largely on his unhappiness with the current rightward lurch of Hungarian politics, Ross also reports on Fischer’s views on the orchestra[…]

Read More

Millennial America

Orchestras need to offer compelling reasons for millennials to make live symphonic music a part of their lives.  After all, millennials are the largest generation in human history, and at nearly 90 million people they will very soon make up the vast majority of our orchestras’ stakeholders, constituents, audience, staff members and supporters – and[…]

Read More

A Verdict in the Masterclass Debate

Do masterclasses belong in our bios? That was the question I posed in last week’s post, which argued against the all-too-common practice of sticking a star-studded honor roll into a biography. Masterclasses are really no different than trial lessons, I asserted; they generally don’t have a lasting influence on your playing; and the mere selection[…]

Read More

Do Masterclasses Belong in Our Bios?

We at the Eastman School of Music have enjoyed a parade of celebrities this past month. First we hosted Chris Martin, the principal trumpet of the Chicago Symphony, who came with the Gaudette Brass; next, famed cellist Steven Isserlis stopped by in between concerto engagements; then, the legendary pianist Leon Fleisher came to town for[…]

Read More

Lessons Without Borders: Teaching Music in a Virtual World

This webinar will discuss a variety of online music tools that offer opportunities for virtual instruction ranging from simple course supplementation to real-time, webcam lessons.

Read More