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A Player's Guide for Keeping Conductors in Line
by Donn Laurence Mills If there were a basic training manual for orchestra players, it might
include ways to practice not only music, but one-upmanship. It seems
as if many young players take pride in getting the conductor's goat.
The following rules are intended as a guide to the development of habits
that will irritate the conductor. (Variations and additional methods
depend upon the imagination and skill of the player.)
- Never be satisfied with the tuning note. Fussing about the pitch takes
attention away from the podium and puts it on you, where it belongs.
- When raising the music stand, be sure the top comes off and spills
the music on the floor.
- Complain about the temperature of the rehearsal room, the lighting,
crowded space, or a draft. It's best to do this when the conductor
is under pressure.
- Look the other way just before cues.
- Never
have the proper mute, a spare set of strings, or extra reeds. Percussion
players must never have all their equipment.
- Ask for a re-audition or seating change. Ask often.
- Give
the impression you're about to quit.
- Let the conductor
know you're
there as a personal
favor.
- Pluck the strings
as if you are checking tuning at every opportunity, especially
when the conductor
is giving
instructions.
- Brass
players: drop mutes.
- Percussionists
have a wide variety of dropable items,
but cymbals are unquestionably the best
because they roll around for several
seconds.
- Loudly blow
water from the keys during pauses (Horn, oboe and clarinet players
are trained
to do this
from birth).
- Long after
a passage has gone by, ask the conductor if your C# was in tune.
This
is especially
effective if
you had no
C# or
were not
playing at the time. (If he catches
you,
pretend to be correcting a note in
your part.)
- At dramatic
moments in the music (while the conductor is emoting) be busy marking
your
music so that
the climaxes will sound
empty and disappointing.
- Wait until
well into a rehearsal before letting the conductor know
you don't
have the music.
- Look at your
watch frequently. Shake it in disbelief occasionally.
- Tell the
conductor, "I can't find the beat." Conductors are
always sensitive about their "stick
technique",
so challenge it frequently.
- As the conductor
if he has listened to the Bernstein recording
of
the piece. Imply that
he could learn
a thing or two
from it. Also good:
ask "Is this the first
time you've conducted this
piece?"
- When
rehearsing a difficult passage, screw up your
face and shake
your head indicating
that
you'll
never be able
to play
it. Don't
say anything:
make him wonder.
- If your
articulation differs from that of others playing
the same
phrase, stick to
your guns.
Do not ask the conductor
which
is correct until
backstage just before the
concert.
- Find an excuse
to leave rehearsal about 15
minutes early so
that others will
become restless and
start to pack
up and fidget.
- During
applause, smile weakly or
show no expression
at
all. Better
yet, nonchalantly
put away your
instrument.
- Make
the conductor
feel he is keeping
you from doing
something really important.
It is time that
players reminded
their conductors
of the facts
of life: just
who do conductors
think they
are, anyway? |
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