Thursday, July 28, 2011

Thorough and Effective Music Preparation

by Mercedes Smith



Here are preparation techniques that I use for learning orchestral music, particularly when I am faced with a new pile of music each week and need to prepare quickly.  I use this same method when I am working on chamber music or solo parts too.

If it's a work I already know I will read through the part to re-familiarize myself with it.  Unless it is a piece I know particularly well, this read-through will probably raise a number of questions in several different places.  These questions are often:  how fast does this part really go?  is this a duet with the oboe or clarinet?  And the most common: what happens in these rests?!?  I then sit down with a recording, my music and pencil in hand.  If it's a piece I don't know at all and looks difficult I probably won't even bother to try and read it at first (especially if there are no tempi marked!) and will just start with listening to a recording, part in hand.  I take lots of notes, particularly writing in other instrument's cues before tricky entrances, or reminders to listen/play with another instrument in a passage.  I will also use a metronome to tap in various tempi to get an accurate read on exactly what tempi I heard and I write the metronome markings in my part (this also helps later if you aren't sure whether the conductor is in 2 or 4 -the metronome marking should indicate it for you.)  As always, it's a good idea to listen to more than one recording to get a feel for various interpretations and tempi.  When I am listening to the recording I also practice counting to make sure I understand what happens in the rests.  After this step I will do my serious practice of the part, getting it all up to tempo and making interpretive decisions.  

Then I do one last step in my preparation which sometimes seems redundant, but really helps to make sure I am ready: I play through the entire piece with the recording, headphones on.  We've all been at a first rehearsal where suddenly the rests throw us off, we didn't realize the first beat (or first measure) was silent, we couldn't tell if the 3 was a 5, the page turn came way faster than expected right before a solo, or totally forgot to figure out how the D.S./repeats/coda works.  Playing through with the recording is your opportunity to solve these problems ahead of time.  (It also reduces embarrassment at the first rehearsal!)  This last step helps me to visualize how it will feel to play the piece all the way through in performance.

Now you may ask, what about new music that hasn't been recorded yet?  In general, the rehearsal process for these pieces ends up being much more detailed and there will be time to figure out everything as the rehearsals progress -after all, everyone is on a level playing field in this situation.  My advice above pertains more to young professionals (and students) who may be entering a rehearsal and performance process in which the majority of the orchestra has probably played the work many times before.  You want to arrive at the first rehearsal feeling as if you have performed the piece many times before.  You don't want to be that person in the orchestra who is wasting rehearsal time asking questions that could have easily been answered by listening to a recording before rehearsals started.  Listening to recordings and studying the score can answer most of the questions that get asked in rehearsal.

And it goes without saying -each week or month load all the new music you need to learn onto your ipod so that you can play it in your car or at home while doing the dishes so you are getting the pieces in your ear as much as possible.  These preparation techniques are mainly for learning orchestral works, but are effective for everything from solo and chamber music to orchestral auditions.  Happy practicing!

Thursday, July 21, 2011

What is your favorite piece to perform and why?

My favorite piece to perform is Apparition and Release by Michael Oliva (www.michaeloliva.net). It was the first piece he wrote for me in a collaboration which has since lasted for well over 10 years. The piece is for Kingma system alto flute and electronics, and I still think it’s one of the most well-written alto flute pieces out there. Michael seems to have an instinctive sense of how to compose for the instrument, and he captures the soul of it. It’s a very emotional piece to perform, and has everything in it; expression, technical challenges, and a wonderful electronic part. We’ve performed it over fifty times now, I think, and every time it seems to come to life in a new way. That’s the sign of a great piece! Carla Rees - London, England


I go in cycles.  And like choosing what to wear in the morning, my favorite piece to perform depends on my mood :)
Viviana Guzman - San Francisco, CA

Hard to say just one, but I do think Copland’s Duo for flute and piano is one of the most delightful works for flute by an American composer.  I love the many moods of the piece and how effective it is with audiences.   The opening notes are so simple yet powerful -- I think of being alone on a Western prairie with the sun just rising – it is beautiful.  Then the restrained yet deep emotional poignancy in  the second movement, followed with the lively “cowboys having a rip-roaring good time” in the third movement.   Altogether a wonderful American piece full of rhythmic play.
Kathryn Master - Sarasota, FL

Favorite piece to perform:  Syrinx, for it's simple freedoms. 
Mercedes Smith - Houston, TX

Friday, July 8, 2011

Conor Nelson Youtube Page

Irena Grafenauer, Penderecki Concerto for Flute


Terri Sanchez Youtube Page

Paula Robison, Carmen Fantasy




Jean Pierre Rampal, Mozart Concerto in D


Emmanuel Pahud, Corrente from Bach Partita in a minor


Flute Articles & Misc.

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Tuesday, June 7, 2011

What is your favorite practice ritual?

A: Because my high school flute teacher loved coffee, I forever associate flute lessons and flute practicing with coffee!  My favorite practice ritual is to wash my face, put my hair in a ponytail and have a fresh cup of coffee as my companion while I play my flute! 
Terri Sanchez - Carrollton, TX


A: My favorite practice ritual is to do warmups from my book!  
Paula Robison - Boston, MA


The Paula Robison Flute Warmups Book: 
Musical, Physical, Psychological Warmups for flutists of all ages!  

European American Music Corporation, 1989

A: Practice time, for me, happens at the same time of day that all the real "work" in my house gets done - after my kids are in bed.  For this reason, I invented a new word - practicleaning. I practice for 15 minutes, clear the dining room table, practice for 20 minutes, start some laundry, practice for 10 minutes, scrub the pots and pans, practice for 25 minutes, transfer the clothes from the washer to the dryer, practice for 15 minutes, put away some toys, practice for 25 minutes... you get the idea!  I try to be very focused with those practice "chunks", always asking, "What can I accomplish in these next few minutes? What is my goal?"  I let nothing distract me.  By splitting up my practice time, it recharges my brain.  I'm less likely to fall into the zombie-style of practicing, when I'm just going through the motions and not actually accomplishing anything.  Practicleaning lets me hone flute skills, AND keep an orderly house...  at least until the kids wake up!  
Jocelyn Goranson - Commerce, TX

I like to practice in the morning after walking the dog and having breakfast. If I have something coming up I have to promise myself not to touch the computer until I've practiced for at least an hour. (I don't always keep that promise:(. I start with tone studies on both flute and piccolo. Flute--harmonics, long tones, extended intervals... on piccolo I do a long tone exercise and couple of the exercises from Patricia Morris' Piccolo Study Book. Then I take one key a day and do a variety of scales/arpeggio exercises in that key then I rotate between the Maquarre, Stallman, Barrere's Flutist Formula, Gilbert's Sequences. the Flutist Vade Mecum and the Flute Scale book. From there i move to etudes...either sightreading or working on a technique that needs improvement for an upcoming performance. Finally, I work on whatever I have coming up or some new music if I've entered a "dry" period. If I have a piccolo performance, I tend to focus mostly on piccolo. Nan Raphael - Washington D. C. 


My favorite practice ritual is a bit wacky (at best, unique), I must admit.  I brush my teeth (have to have a clean mouth my teacher, Albert Tipton used to say), I light  candle and name off 3 things I'm grateful for in that moment, I light my favorite incense, Nag Champa, and sip my favorite herbal tea.  Ahhhh.... wonderful!  Ready to start my difference tone tuning exercises to tune my sound, my flute, my Self... HA! Viviana Guzman - San Francisco, CA


I almost always practice with the television on.  I find it easier for my conscious to focus if my subconscious is occupied :-). Nicole Esposito - Iowa City, IA


Chai tea and CNN on mute. Mercedes Smith - Houston, TX


My favorite place to practice is in my teacher's (Brad Garner) office when he is not there, because I can still imagine him correcting everything I play! It makes me hold myself to the same high standard that I would in a lesson! Shauna Kay Thompson - Cincinnati, OH