How to do hearing protection right
November 23, 2014There’s always talk about hearing protection, but I’ve heard of remarkably little action by orchestras on the subject. So this came as welcome news: A program to protect Queensland Symphony Orchestra players in Australia from hearing loss is producing encouraging results, according to a new study. Sophisticated analyses of sound dynamics in concert halls led […]
Friends come and go…
November 21, 2014Many years ago I had a colleague who used to say “friends come and go, but enemies accumulate.” It stuck with me, that saying. On the way home from a dinner party at this colleague’s house, my wife Emily remarked “did you notice how often he said ‘they used to be friends of ours’?” I’ve […]
Someone else discovers gender discrimination in orchestras
November 20, 2014Long-time readers of this blog might remember an article I wrote in 2009 on the subject of discrimination in orchestras. I thought at the time that my survey of the rosters of ICSCOM orchestras demonstrated a marked differential between the number of men and women, especially in principal positions. Someone else has done much the […]
Is tenure good for musicians?
November 18, 2014An interest in the law inclines me to surf amongst the legal waves on the Internet, leading to the occasional odd discovery relevant to my day job. This post from the blog Lawyers, Guns and Money caught my eye: Recently Kyle Graham, a professor on the tenure track at Santa Clara Law School, announced on […]
Armistice Day
November 12, 2014Yesterday was Veterans Day in the United States. But, in Great Britain, Canada, most of the Commonwealth countries, and several European nations, it’s known by an older name – Armistice Day. And originally it commemorated the end of World War I at 11:00 AM on November 11, 1918. Veterans Day is taken seriously in the […]
Looking for Perfection in an Imperfect Process
October 20, 2014We recognize that the use of beta-blockers by musicians is a serious and controversial topic. Nonetheless, we feel it is better to discuss it than to pretend that it doesn’t exist. We neither condone or condemn the use of beta-blockers, but wish to have an objective discussion about its use. Feel free to join the […]
Technology and the Orchestra
October 16, 2014Symphony magazine featured an interesting article about how digital technologies are impacting orchestras. Written by Andy Doe, a media and technology consultant who writes about music at his blog, properdiscord.com, “The Digital Orchestra” takes us from 1994, when the New Zealand Symphony’s principal bassist Dale Gold put up a simple website, to our world of ever-increasing mobile […]
It's A Pitch
October 6, 2014This post first appeared in Symposium, the journal of the College Music Society. It is reprinted here with permission. I’ve had two careers in my lifetime: as a symphony orchestra clarinetist and as a technology executive. One of the advantages these dual careers have given me has been the ability to apply my business experiences […]
Be An Entrepreneur! Get Outside Your Comfort Zone!
September 29, 2014How many times have we musicians heard those phrases? Do they mean that we should try to be like Janice Martin, the violinist who plays while hanging upside down? My most recent experience is not quite that dramatic….. “What time is the lunch break?” I asked the stage manager, knowing that he was the one […]
A Disgusting New Low
September 23, 2014This post originally appeared on the blog Mask of the Flower Prince. It is reprinted here with permission. You know, over the course of the Minnesota Orchestra and Metropolitan Opera labor disputes, I’ve seen a lot of ugly things. Managements in both the disputes resorted to hard-ball tactics and inflammatory rhetoric as part of a […]