|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Becoming an Orchestral Musician takes you on a journey into the
musical profession. It is the first comprehensive guide for
professional musicians on how to succeed in joining an orchestra or
ensemble, and how to survive as an orchestral musician. Such
crucial topics as how to obtain the right tuition, music college
versus university, auditioning, nerves, the secrets of ensemble
playing and intonation, conductors, the mechanics of the orchestra,
performing philosophies and strategies for survival are covered in
separate sections. The matter of how to explore and adapt one's
musical psyche, the pitfalls of a career in music and the highs and
lows of performing are also discussed. The history, mythology and
science of music-making and numerous anecdotes provide a vivid
background. It is essential reading for all orchestral musicians,
including players of every instrument, whether at college or
university or during their career, whether full-time or part-time,
and whether professional or amateur, and also for the parents of
budding instrumentalists. There are probably more orchestras and
ensembles in the length and the breadth of Britain today than ever
before.With the renewed recognition in schools of the importance of
music, the competition among younger musicians has become intense.
Schools and colleges need to be well informed about career guidance
for their students. Richard Davis's book will give the answers to
many of the questions those students will be asking. It has been
warmly welcomed by his colleagues in the BBC Philharmonic, and by
other musicians, too. Twenty of them have been interviewed by him
specially for it on their experiences and on advice they would like
to give to younger musicians on many different themes. They include
principals and rank and file players, soloists, academics, music
critics, fixers, chamber musicians and people involved in
management.
The story of the National Youth Orchestra of Iraq is here told by
its musical director from its inception to its eventual end. The
NYOI came through the most difficult and dangerous of times to
produce fine music not only in Iraq but also in Britain, Germany,
France and the United States. A beacon of hope and achievement the
young musicians and their tutors made bridges across their own
ethnic divisions, made great music in the most trying and tragic of
circumstances, and became their country's best ambassadors in 5000
years.
This book brings together an extensive and varied collection of Sir
Peter Maxwell Davies's written and spoken-word items for the first
time. Spanning the composer's entire career, this compendium offers
a balanced selection of Davies's articles and essays, speeches and
lectures, interviews, radio broadcasts, programme notes, tributes
and letters to newspapers. A number of items are published for the
first time, including a new article from Davies himself
(commissioned specially for this book), and several BBC radio
broadcast interviews and talks from the 1960s. The structure of the
book is chronological and divided into three parts, allowing
readers to trace the development of Davies's thought and work over
time, and to place each item in its biographical and historical
context. The introduction and notes by Nicholas Jones place the
writings in context, making this volume invaluable for those
interested in the music and wider culture of post-war Britain.
This book brings together an extensive and varied collection of Sir
Peter Maxwell Davies's written and spoken-word items for the first
time. Spanning the composer's entire career, this compendium offers
a balanced selection of Davies's articles and essays, speeches and
lectures, interviews, radio broadcasts, programme notes, tributes
and letters to newspapers. A number of items are published for the
first time, including a new article from Davies himself
(commissioned specially for this book), and several BBC radio
broadcast interviews and talks from the 1960s. The structure of the
book is chronological and divided into three parts, allowing
readers to trace the development of Davies's thought and work over
time, and to place each item in its biographical and historical
context. The introduction and notes by Nicholas Jones place the
writings in context, making this volume invaluable for those
interested in the music and wider culture of post-war Britain.
|
|