The South Bend Symphony has a great concert this weekend that I've been really excited about. If you are in town you should definitely try to attend, as it features Prokofiev's thrilling Symphony no. 5 AND our marvelous concertmistress, Zofia Glashauser, playing the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto.
However, I will not be there. This Friday and Saturday I am playing Strauss's Ein Heldenleben with the Milwaukee Symphony, and loving every single minute. This orchestra sounds spectacular, and here's why. They rehearse. They have plenty of time to really listen to each other and get things right. This morning, our service was a wind sectional, which blew my mind. Almost 2 full hours with only the winds and brass, just on this one 40-minute piece. The conductor worked with us on every detail. Intonation, articulation, ensemble, balance, style. And still we have another full orchestra rehearsal tomorrow as well as the dress.
I haven't sat in a winds-only rehearsal since playing in the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, a training orchestra that I worked with right after college. It's a student-y thing, NOT because professionals can't benefit like CRAZY from breaking things down and focusing on ensemble and intonation, but because orchestras at the level that I usually work in do not have the time or the resources to really dig into those details. We run a piece through once, have a "working rehearsal" in which we make sure it won't fall apart at the transitions, and run it once more at the dress, and that's often all we get.
I haven't been asked in a long time to examine my part this closely, and to re-explore my role in a chord or really blend with an Eb clarinet for the two notes we suddenly unexpectedly have together. I ask this of myself, of course, but what a splendid change to be taught and to have the time to work at it! To have to really concentrate and focus for two hours on the complexities of this fantastic piece. I felt like I'd just run a hard 10K - the same sense of concentration and work and triumph though a lot less sweat.
I'm sorry to miss the SBSO concert - it was the one I most wanted to play in our season - but I am so delighted to be subbing up here this week. I love my life.
However, I will not be there. This Friday and Saturday I am playing Strauss's Ein Heldenleben with the Milwaukee Symphony, and loving every single minute. This orchestra sounds spectacular, and here's why. They rehearse. They have plenty of time to really listen to each other and get things right. This morning, our service was a wind sectional, which blew my mind. Almost 2 full hours with only the winds and brass, just on this one 40-minute piece. The conductor worked with us on every detail. Intonation, articulation, ensemble, balance, style. And still we have another full orchestra rehearsal tomorrow as well as the dress.
I haven't sat in a winds-only rehearsal since playing in the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, a training orchestra that I worked with right after college. It's a student-y thing, NOT because professionals can't benefit like CRAZY from breaking things down and focusing on ensemble and intonation, but because orchestras at the level that I usually work in do not have the time or the resources to really dig into those details. We run a piece through once, have a "working rehearsal" in which we make sure it won't fall apart at the transitions, and run it once more at the dress, and that's often all we get.
I haven't been asked in a long time to examine my part this closely, and to re-explore my role in a chord or really blend with an Eb clarinet for the two notes we suddenly unexpectedly have together. I ask this of myself, of course, but what a splendid change to be taught and to have the time to work at it! To have to really concentrate and focus for two hours on the complexities of this fantastic piece. I felt like I'd just run a hard 10K - the same sense of concentration and work and triumph though a lot less sweat.
I'm sorry to miss the SBSO concert - it was the one I most wanted to play in our season - but I am so delighted to be subbing up here this week. I love my life.
I know this is late, but I attended the Ein Heldenleben performance by the MSO on Friday (and the concerts last week, too). It was phenomenal. I can only imagine what a winds-only rehearsal would sound like. The final chord in Ein Heldenleben is blissful live, and it must've been amazing to literally be inside the chord.
ReplyDeleteDo you know if you're playing in any other concerts that require at least three oboes and an English horn?
Why, yes I am! At least, I'm playing Die Walkure this weekend, and enjoyed our sectional rehearsal today despite the threatening weather...
ReplyDeleteI'd love to attend the Die Walkure concert, primarily because of Emanuel Ax, but I've been to the past three concert series and forty minutes driving both ways takes a toll on money.
ReplyDeleteOnce again, the winds-only rehearsals must sound wonderful. I can't help but pry by asking if you auditioned for the principal oboe spot recently. I'm curious, because Stephen Colburn is retiring after forty-four years and a new timbre, I think, is in order.
I did take the audition; I did not win. What a lovely orchestra this is, though - if an opening appears again I'll try again.
ReplyDeleteAh, yes. I actually heard that nobody won. It's a pity, because the MSO deserves a new oboe sound in that first chair. Believe it or not, but Stephen Colburn doesn't sound "ducky" enough. His timbre is, I think, too bright, but his technical ability is still there. I'm looking forward to seeing what the new season looks like, especially the Carnegie Hall concert, both of which should be announced soon. I wonder what dramatic oboe pieces are to be heard.
ReplyDelete(same person, new username)
The Milwaukee Symphony's 2010-2012 classics season has been airing on WPR (Wisconsin Public Radio) and WFMT (in Chicago) since the beginning of June, and I just wanted to say that this week, the Ein Heldenleben concert was aired. I have to say, the entire concert was extremely exhilarating and the Strauss was much better than I remembered (simply because I've heard the piece more since the actual concert). I listened to the oboes when they were exposed and you really sounded great in the high register (which is where you were a lot).
ReplyDeleteI have to ask, as a violist: what was it like sitting near the violas during Ein Heldenleben, especially in "The Hero Goes to Battle"? That section is probably Strauss' most difficult string writing and the MSO's strings, especially the violas, are some of the best in the nation. Were you too engulfed in the sound to hear them?
You know, it was fabulous. As you say the strings in the MSO are world-class, and sitting in the orchestra feels like being, well, right in the middle of the orchestra. It was inspiring and uplifting and I was NOT too busy to notice.
ReplyDelete