Reaching Out: A Musician's Guide to Interactive Performance


Book Description

Connect with and captivate concert audiences as never before with Reaching Out, the groundbreaking new guide to audience engagement and interactive performance for musicians. Author David Wallace shares the techniques he has taught at The Juilliard School and used with orchestras and conservatories around the world for reaching out to any audience regardless of demographics and musical expertise and enriching their concert experience through interaction. Featuring real-life examples, concert transcripts, and an Interactive Concert Checklist, this text gives performing musicians the tools they need to put these techniques to practice and design programs that give their audiences a deeper experience and appreciation of music.




Engaging the Concert Audience


Book Description

(Berklee Guide). Learn to engage, excite, captivate and expand your audience! These practical techniques will help you to communicate with your listeners on a deeper, more interactive level. As you do, the concert experience will become more meaningful, and the bond between you and your audience will grow. Whether you are performing music for an audience, teaching a group of students, leading an ensemble, or just speaking publicly, your success as a performing musician directly depends on your ability to connect. Featuring real-life examples and eight actual concert transcripts from several different genres and performance settings, this text gives you the tools you need to deepend your impact, build an enduring relationship with your fans, and sustain a long-term musical career. You will learn to: design concerts that capture and maintain your audience's atention * develop an engaging stage presence * create meaningful activities for your audience that increase their enjoyment and understanding of your material * communicate as an amabassador across cultures and languages * become more engaging, interactive, educational and memorable.




The Music Teaching Artist's Bible


Book Description

When the artist moves into the classroom or community to educate and inspire students and audience members, this is Teaching Artistry. It is a proven means for practicing professional musicians to create a successful career in music, providing not only necessary income but deep and lasting satisfaction through engaging people in learning experiences about the arts. Filled with practical advice on the most critical issues facing the music teaching artist today--from economic and time-management issues of being a musician and teacher to communicating effectively with students--The Music Teaching Artist's Bible uncovers the essentials that every musician needs in order to thrive in this role. Author Eric Booth offers both inspiration and how-to, step-by-step guidance in this truly comprehensive manual that music teaching artists will turn to again and again. The book also includes critical information on becoming a mentor, succeeding in school environments, partnering with other teaching artists, advocating for music and arts education, and teaching private lessons. The Music Teaching Artist's Bible helps practicing and aspiring teaching artists gain the skills they need to build new audiences, improve the presence of music in schools, expand the possibilities of traditional and educational performances, and ultimately make their lives as an artists even more satisfying and fulfilling.




Creative Research in Music


Book Description

Creative Research in Music explores what it means to be an artistic researcher in music in the twenty-first century. The book delineates the myriad processes that underpin successful artistic research in music, providing best practice exemplars ranging from Western classical art to local indigenous traditions, and from small to large-scale, multi-media and cross-cultural work formats. Drawing on the richness of creative research work at key institutions in South-East Asia and Australian, this book examines the social, political, historical and cultural driving forces that spur and inspire excellence in creative research to extend and to cross boundaries, to sustain our music industry, to advocate for the importance of music in our world, and to make it clear that music matters. In the chapters, our authors present the ideas of informed practice, innovation and transcendence from diverse international perspectives. Each of these three themes has an introductory section where the theme is explored and the chapters in that section introduced. Taken as a whole, the book discusses how the themes in combination, with reference to the authorial group, are able to transform music pedagogy and performance for our global and complex world. Chapter 9 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.




From the Stage to the Studio


Book Description

"The fact is, you will teach." from the Foreword by Stephen Clapp, Dean Emeritus, The Julliard School. Whether serving on the faculty at a university, maintaining a class of private students, or fulfilling an invitation as guest artist in a master class series, virtually all musicians will teach during their careers. From the Stage to the Studio speaks directly to the performing musician, highlighting the significant advantages of becoming distinguished both as a performer and a pedagogue. Drawing on over sixty years of combined experience, authors Cornelia Watkins and Laurie Scott provide the guidance and information necessary for any musician to translate his or her individual approach into productive and rewarding teacher-student interactions. Premised on the synergistic relationship between teaching and performing, this book provides a structure for clarifying the essential elements of musical artistry, and connects them to such tangible situations as setting up a studio, teaching a master class, interviewing for a job, judging competitions, and recruiting students. From the Stage to the Studio serves as an essential resource for university studio faculty, music pedagogy teachers, college music majors, and professionals looking to add effective teaching to their artistic repertoire.




The Musician's Way : A Guide to Practice, Performance, and Wellness


Book Description

In The Musician's Way, veteran performer and educator Gerald Klickstein combines the latest research with his 30 years of professional experience to provide aspiring musicians with a roadmap to artistic excellence. Part I, Artful Practice, describes strategies to interpret and memorize compositions, fuel motivation, collaborate, and more. Part II, Fearless Performance, lifts the lid on the hidden causes of nervousness and shows how musicians can become confident performers. Part III, Lifelong Creativity, surveys tactics to prevent music-related injuries and equips musicians to tap their own innate creativity. Written in a conversational style, The Musician's Way presents an inclusive system for all instrumentalists and vocalists to advance their musical abilities and succeed as performing artists.




You are Your Instrument


Book Description

Open up new avenues of expression through a pain-free, healthy, fluid approach to music-making; Overcome performance anxiety, general tension,and muscular injury; Increase your learning skills and facilitate more effective motor coordination. The New England Journal of Medicine cites that 50% of all professional musicians suffer from varying levels of muscular injury.




The Musician's Guide to a Great Live Performance


Book Description

If you are a musician who wants to discover how to connect with any crowd, win them over, and make them love you and your music, then this book will teach you the exact methods used by the most successful musicians on the planet.Have you ever been on stage, performing your music, only to discover that the crowd is just not that into you?Does the audience sometimes seem unimpressed with your show?Even though your music is good, are there times when you just can't seem to "grab" the crowd and you don't know what to say or do to draw them in and win them over?If you answered yes to any of these questions, you are certainly not alone. As musicians, we have probably all had that experience. And it's a really awful feeling, isn't it? You want the crowd to love you, and when they don't, it's embarrassing... and really hard to take.But the good news is that it's very likely that the problem is not that you lack talent or passion for your music. It's much more likely that the problem is in the WAY you present your music (and yourself) to the audience. You are just not connecting with the crowd.Here's what I'm talking about... as musicians, we put our hearts and souls into our music and we just want to share it with the rest of the world, but in the real world, it's just not that easy.WHEN YOU ARE ON STAGE, IT WOULD BE MUCH EASIER IF THE AUDIENCE WOULD JUDGE YOU ONLY ON THE MUSIC YOU PERFORM, but the truth is... THEY WON'T.They will also judge you on...** What you say to them between songs.** How confident you appear to be.** What your attitude is toward them.** Whether you smile and appear friendly.** How you handle mistakes on stage.** How you make them feel.** Whether you touch them emotionally.** How much energy you project on stage.** Plus a whole lot more that is beyond just the physical act of making good music.You know, when you think about it... success in the music business is really about making the audience happy. THAT'S how you get lots of fans and lots of gigs. And if you want to get paid for what you do, then it's important to remember that in the music business the money is in the pockets of the fans. So if you want to be successful, PUT THE AUDIENCE FIRST IN ALL THAT YOU DO... not yourself... not even your music. ALWAYS make them your highest priority and they will love you for it.Understand that the audience comes to your live show for one reason only... THEY WANT TO BE ENTERTAINED AND HAVE A GOOD TIME. It takes more than just good music to have a great live show. AND THAT'S WHERE MOST PERFORMERS FAIL. They don't know how to engage the audience and make that important connection. And the truth is... IF THEY DON'T LIKE YOU AS A PERSON then it won't really matter how good of a musician you are.So let me ask you this... wouldn't it feel great to have the audience in the palm of your hand, knowing that they love what you do? How would it feel to perform for hundreds or maybe even thousands of raving fans and finally get the recognition you deserve? How would it feel to experience the pure, adrenalin pumping excitement that happens when you really kill it on stage.Don't waste all the months and years of hard work you've put into developing your musical talent just because you don't know how to present your music to the audience in the best way possible. You owe it to yourself (and your music) to discover how to really grab the crowd and make them love what you do.Now, forgive me for sounding a little overly dramatic here, but... think of what it may cost you in the future if you don't have this knowledge. What will your show look like a year from now? Will it be any better than it is now? Will you have more fans than you have now? Will you be making more money with your music than you are now? Or will you still be struggling along... trying to figure out why people aren't crazy about you and your music?Is your musical success worth $29.95? ORDER TODAY.




Coaching for Musicians


Book Description

This innovative, inspiring, and practical book-the first of its kind for musicians-will change your life forever. Coaching for Musicians is the essential guide for all musicians and performing artists who are ready for a new perspective in their performance, career, and life and who long to reach their fullest potential. You'll learn to take a new approach for your most important performance moments: concerts, exams, competitions, and orchestra auditions. You'll discover the best solutions to get over creative blocks and how to find and pursue your dream career.




A Music Librarian’s Guide to Creating Videos and Podcasts


Book Description

A Music Librarian’s Guide to Creating Videos and Podcasts is a guide every music librarian will want to use to develop and enhance multi-media skills. The digital age has created a divide between music librarians and their patrons: traditional models of interaction have been superseded or replaced by electronic communication, and virtually all librarians have felt the ensuing decline of their users’ information-seeking skills. Music librarians can now be proactive in reaching out to patrons digitally with videos and podcasts, since editing technologies for both platforms have become inexpensive and easy to use. In A Music Librarian’s Guide to Creating Videos and Podcasts Katie Buehner and Andrew Justice give music librarians the step-by-step instructions for creating their own content in both Mac and PC platforms. This ready reference on videos should find home in every library and also many personal collections.