Academics

Percussion Horn Strings Winds

Endless Becoming — The Process of Lifelong Learning in Music amid a Landscape of Expectations, Goals, and Perceived Success

As a society, we are increasingly driven by immediate gratification. As artists and performers, this terrain can be quite tricky. We are encouraged to make goals and chase them, to dream, to look for inspiration from examples of excellence all around us. Yet it is often those same examples that lead to comparing, judging and negative thoughts. The goals we set in earnest can easily morph into unrealistic expectations, which in turn can lead to disappointment. Artists can find happiness and satisfaction at every level of the industry, yet so many that have found conventional success nevertheless find themselves unfulfilled. Meanwhile, thriving artists full of confidence and passion can be overlooked and judged for not meeting the conventional ideas of success. We’re often told to focus on the process, but in a business overly concerned with one’s lists of achievements and their timely execution of certain skills, it is easy to strive for results and miss the process altogether. In this article, I hope to offer different perspectives on success and how to manage goals and expectations in a healthy way. I offer practical advice for how to bring process-learning into our practice and performances, and how to find peace with every point on each artist’s unique path of endless becoming.

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Piano

Emotion, Experimentation, and Education: C. P. E. Bach’s Württemberg Sonatas

Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach is a composer whose music, though admired by all of the great composers of his day, is today only infrequently heard on the concert stage or utilized in the teaching studio. During his lifetime, however, C. P. E.’s ideas about music were extremely influential. The six Württemberg sonatas, expressive and experimental keyboard works, serve as an excellent summation of C. P. E.’s aesthetic and style. Composed between 1742-1744 and dedicated to C. P. E.’s pupil Carl Eugen, the Duke of Württemberg, the Württemberg sonatas are challenging works that present the performer with a multitude of technical and interpretative difficulties. In each sonata, C. P. E. gives full rein to his creative abilities and seems to relish such difficulties as complicated rhythms, overlapping voices, extreme technical challenges, and unusual or difficult key signatures. This article discusses what makes the Württemberg sonatas stand out from among the more than 150 sonatas that C. P. E. composed over the course of his creative life, focusing on overall aspects of the set as well as significant characteristics of the individual sonatas themselves. Special attention is paid to the pedagogical applications of these works. Contrary to what has been widely assumed over the centuries, C. P. E. Bach is not a composer best consigned to the dusty annals of history but is actually a creative musician of superior ability. He influenced musical thought and composition generations to come, and his works can still speak to us today.

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Violoncello

Preparing Your Orchestra Audition: A Roadmap to Becoming the Musician You Always Wanted to Be

Preparing orchestra audition repertoire is far more than a practical necessity—it can be a transformative pathway toward instrumental and artistic growth. Through my teaching as well as personal audition experiences, I have learned that mastering the excerpts and acquiring the skills necessary to play with confidence under audition pressure can inspire and motivate you to learn to play with better control, refined musicality, and to define and execute virtuosity in new ways. With time and patience, this leads to improvement in all types of playing in all situations beyond the orchestra audition. In this essay, I describe my approach to different components of the preparation process—listening to and absorbing the repertoire, making orchestral excerpts part of your practice routine, using musicality to guide the necessary acquisition of new technique, approaches to intonation, rhythm, sound quality, and dynamics, and the emphasis on long-term progress.

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