Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A mysterious musical message?


Many years ago, my sister-in-law Kay Griffiths shared the musical message above with me. Can you read it?

I use it to explain these three musical symbols to my students. And I always let them know how I learnt it.

Don't be sharp
Don't be flat
Always be natural
I'll let you ponder the philosophical meaning of the saying: I've been doing that for forty years, and still reflect on it, every now and again. But for musicians:

 means Play the key on the right of B





means Play the key on the left of B


And


means Play the original key.


Do you have any other great musical puzzles? We'd love you to share them.

But the little person in the picture is starting with exploring music through movement and actions and sound: sharps and flats can come later!

Your child can explore music at Mitchell Conservatorium in our early childhood program and later learn to make sense of those mysterious symbols, too when you phone 6331 6622 and enrol in 2013 classes.






Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Five make magic music

On Saturday, 24th  and Sunday, 25th November, the Western Wind Quintet will delight you with music by Beethoven, Gershwin, Reicha, Farkas and Milhaud.

Mitchell Conservatorium folk remember with great affection The Quintessentials, a group of five talented young ladies who played the same instruments as those above: clarinet, oboe, bassoon, horn and flute. The girls have left Bathurst and moved on to make music elsewhere, but the magical sounds they made can be heard again, but this time played by

Justin Screen, from our Lachlan branch
Orange's Laith Ismail
Blue Mountains-based Nerida Hext
and Bathurst's Mathias Rogala-Koczorowski and Prem Love
 
They can be heard in Bathurst at Mitchell Conservatorium, on Saturday, 24th November at 7.30 PM, and in Lithgow on Sunday, 25th November at 2 PM at Eskbank House.

The concert is free for children, $15 for concession card holders and $20 for adults.

For more information, please ring Mitchell Conservatorium during office hours on 6331 6622.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Musical appenings


Sight Read 4 Piano is a great iPad app, developed in Britain by music examiner, Christopher Wiltshire to help you improve your sight reading. The app is free, but only includes a few sample exercises to show you how the program works. From the screen above, you click on an exercise you'd like to play, and a new page opens up on your iPad, with a counter ticking down, while you scan the music.
After a few seconds the music disappears. When you are ready, you tap the screen and a two bar count-in begins. After it is finished the metronome continues and a ding! alerts you to start playing.
Then something alarming happens: the music starts to disappear, one bar at a time! But this is a good thing, because it is teaching you to keep going and not go back when you play a wrong note.

When you first begin using the program, you should start a few grades lower than where you are aiming to get to. You may find initially that it is making sight reading harder, not easier. But once you get used to playing in time with a metronome, and can cheerfully play wrong notes and keep going, you have already begun to be a better sight-reader.

For a piano teacher (and there are also modules for people who play other instruments), the most cost-effective version of the program is the whole package. If you only want examples from your own exam system, or only from a few grades, each exercise is proportionately dearer.

I bought the whole lot, which gives me more than 1000 examples and loads of flexibility.



Scale Blitzer is an all-Australian app developed by Abe Cytrynowski, and Andrew and Samantha Coates, of Blitz Books fame. This app costs about $7 and then an extra $3-$6 for modules for your particular exam grade.

The app encourages you to practise up to 16 scales at a time, and tests you on your playing in a wide variety of ways. I am currently road-testing the app with my students, and hope they will like it enough to purchase their own copies to use at home.

It includes fun ideas and characters, and gets you playing your scales in different forms, at varying tempos and volumes, and with plenty of different rhythms. The program develops security and accuracy, and the many different activities provided should keep students enthused and motivated to perfect their scales.

It is designed for your iPhone or iPod, but also works on the iPad, which is my favoured tool in the studio.







Sunday, October 21, 2012

The weird and the wonderful

lira organizzata by Wolfgang Weichselbaumer
This strange-looking instrument copy of an 18th century instrument is called a lira, or lira organizzata. The composer Haydn wrote five lira concertos. This recording of the first movement of Haydn's Lira Concerto in C will give you some idea of what it must have sounded like.

Thierry Nouat and Matthias Loibner playing liras
In this photo of a rehearsal of The Ensemble Baroque de Limoges in 2005, you can see the two lira players turning cranks with their right hands, while manipulating sets of keys with their left. Matthias  Loibner says the instrument is an organised hurdy-gurdy. Harry Edwall's article in The Musical Quarterly gives more detail about how the instruments worked.

I'm going to play a couple of movements at Bathurst's U3A Music Appreciation class tomorrow. I hope the class will enjoy the unusual sound.

U3A welcomes people over 50 who are no longer working full time. We meet at Mitchell Conservatorium on the first six Mondays of Term 4 each year at 11 AM for a one hour varied program.

If you would like to hear a full program of Early Music, please come along to the Baroque Ensemble concert on Saturday, 3rd November at 7.30 PM, where you'll hear
Andrew Baker - violin
Philip Braithwaite - flute
Tracey Callinan - harpsichord
and Sybbi Georgiou
playing some wonderful music from the time of Purcell, Bach and Handel. Please ring 6331 6622 during office hours, Monday to Friday for more information about this delightful musical feast.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Birthday boy beats Mozart

When we think of a child-genius, it is natural to think of Mozart. He was performing and composing at the age of five. But other composers also began very early. And some even surpassed his considerable feats.

Did you know that Chopin wrote pieces from the age of seven that were much more demanding to write and play than many of the pieces that Wolfie wrote, even in his maturity?



But the one who really impresses me is Camille Saint-Saëns, born on 9th October, 1835.

Consider this: at the age of two he could already read and write, and was picking out melodies on the piano. He began composing shortly after his third birthday, and by the age of five had given his first piano recital.

At seven he was reading Latin, studying botany and investigating butterflies (the last of which he continued to do for the next eighty years).

When he was ten he made his formal debut as a concert pianist, performing a Mozart piano concerto in B flat and Beethoven's Third Piano Concerto in C Minor. For an encore, he offered to play any of the thirty-two Beethoven piano sonatas from memory!


Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Sharing your music

Do you have a song in you? Would you like to share it with the world? Mitchell Conservatorium's Composition Competition gives you the opportunity to do just that. You can even share a piece of music which you have composed for a school assignment.

All the details are here on our website.

12th October is the closing date, so you could finish off your masterpiece during the spring school holidays.

There are some great prizes, ranging from $100 to $350.

Have you got a song in you?

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Armchair Concert



Did you know that several Mitchell Conservatorium musicians are presenting programs on our local community radio station, 2MCE ? Christine Sweeney and David McKay present Mitchell Conservatorium's own fortnightly program, Armchair Concert.

You can hear highlights of Mitchell Con concerts, every second Monday, from 1.30 to 3.30 PM. We have played a wide variety of quality performances on our program so far, including a wonderful concert by Ensemble Six, a Central West string sextet, music by duo pianists, Max and Hayden Reeder, and new compositions by Jamie Briton and Russell Gilmour.

On our next program, on Monday, 17th September, we will play some of these again, because we think they're worth a second play ... and maybe you didn't hear them first time round.

You might also like to listen to Oliver Harris presenting Great Sounds in Music on Tuesday evenings from 8 to 10 PM. Oliver is a terrific brass player and composer, but also a pleasant guide to the world of music, as you'll discover when you tune in.

And David McKay presents a weekly album show called Gontroppo's Grooves, on Tuesdays, from 1.30 to 3.30 PM

You can listen to all of these programs at 2MCE.org
, on 92.3 or 94.7 on your radio, and on the smartphone tunein app

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Mitchell Young Pirates?

Captain Stevenson, Angie LeChuck and Daft Petey

Another great musical devised by Mitchell Young Voices director, Michelle Griffin was enjoyed by an enthusiastic audience last weekend at All Saints Cathedral. As I entered the hall, I was greeted by three exotic characters, who also looked strangely familiar. There was something about Captain Stevenson, Angie Lechuck and Daft Petey that made me think I'd met them before.

As it turned out, I had never previously met the good captain, but when he's not a pirate who doesn't do anything he is Geoff Griffin, the father of musician, teacher, composer and conductor Michelle Griffin.

Angie is Mitchell Conservatorium's Cindy Fox and Daft Petey is talented actor, radio announcer and musician Ryan Fitch.

These three narrated the story, creating a suitable introduction and conclusion to the program.

Kathy Powell is not just the mother of talented Mitchell Conservatorium students Courtney, Timothy and Luke Powell, but is also a great singer and the perfect person to play the part of the evil Miss Elizabeth Black, who makes the orphaned children drink a nasty concoction of Brimstone and Treacle ... or tries to.

Mad Cap'n George
Michelle Griffin makes a grand entrance as the Mad Cap'n George singing Gilbert and Sullivan's Oh, Better Far To Live and Die and gave an excellent impression of a pirate who is one wave short of a shipwreck.
She cleverly kept in character through the whole proceedings: even when handing out prizes for the best-dressed pirate.

I enjoyed hearing the pirate orphans singing Paul Jarman's songs Find The Way Home and Far Away Our Home. You may remember Paul as the composer of the moving song, Pemulwuy

Does this map really lead to buried treasure?


Mitchell Young Voices provides a great way for young people to enjoy music through participating in singing, dancing and acting. If you'd like to be part of their next production, please ring Mitchell Conservatorium during office hours on 6331 6622 to find out about rehearsal times.

Monday, August 6, 2012

All Guitar Program at Mitchell Con

Aaron Hopper and Fretworx

Yesterday, I only knew the names of two of the people in the photo above. But the power of social media has changed all that! From left to right, we have Andrew Dean, Emily Foster, director of  Fretworx, Aaron Hopper, Tim Burrey, Melissa McKinnon and Kiaran Bryant, performing two of  Aaron's beautiful compositions in a concert at Mitchell Conservatorium yesterday.

It was an all-guitar concert, which provided an opportunity for Tim Burrey to present his A Mus A program, but it also included a wide variety of guitar styles.

Heath Auchinachie


Heath Auchinachie, of Ilford, began the concert with Drifting, an intriguing piece by Canadian composer Andy McKee. Heath has referred us to an extremely popular clip of the composer himself playing the piece.






Tim Burrey 


Tim Burrey played a program of music that was written by composers who lived between the sixteenth and twentieth centuries.  He showed he was as comfortable playing a Domenico Scarlatti sonata, Milonga Del Angel by Astor Piazzolla, a John Dowland piece or a suite of three pieces by Federico Moreno Torroba.


Tim's first teacher, Georg Mertens, played Villa-Lobos' popular first prelude, Albeniz's Asturias and a Fernando Sor piece.


The concert was warmly received by an enthusiastic audience of supporters. All funds raised from the sale of tickets were donated to Central West Care. We were interested to hear of their innovative programs from its director, Richard Ulbricht at the beginning of the concert.









Monday, July 30, 2012

Music and Art at Mitchell Con

Georg Mertens by Jennifer DeMaere

Mitchell Conservatorium has so many talented people working together producing great things. But we didn't know till very recently that we have a talented visual artist on our staff.

 Jennifer DeMaere has been a valued member of the administration staff of the Con for many years. Her painting of Georg Mertens captures him perfectly.

Georg teaches cello and guitar at Mitchell Con and at home in Katoomba, but is also renowned for the beauty of his musical performances in Jenolan Caves. These have been sensitively recorded and uploaded to Youtube, where his performances have been viewed more than a million times.

I enjoy his performances of J S Bach cello suite movements, and appreciate the trouble he goes to in the interesting annotations he includes with these performances. But I've only discovered this morning that one of the performances of his own compositions has been cleverly juxtaposed with stunning pictures of the cave interiors. Georg's own Ciaconna is enhanced by the scenes included in this video:

 

 You can hear Georg performing with his student, Tim Burrey at 3 PM on Sunday,5th August at Mitchell Conservatorium. Aaron Hopper and Fretworx will also be entertaining the audience with some great guitar sounds.

 All proceeds from your $ note donation will go to Central West Care For more information, please ring Mitchell Conservatorium on 6331 6622 during office hours.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Sounded Beautiful in Bathurst, and will be Outstanding in Orange and Delightful in Dubbo



A poignant moment from Tchaikovsky's wonderful Souvenir de Florence to be performed by Ensemble Six  on Saturday 21st July, at Orange Regional Conservatorium in Hill St at 7.30 PM and in the Macquarie Conservatorium concert hall in Bultje St, Dubbo on Sunday, 22nd July at 3 PM.


Tchaikovsky wrote such a lot of great music, but was often plagued by self-doubt while composing them. That's how he felt while writing this piece, yet it has become one of his most popular works. He found it challenging writing for six string players, instead of the usual four, and decided to write the work as if it were for an orchestra, but only score it for six players. He later rescored it for string orchestra, and a friend also wrote an arrangement for piano duet.


Ensemble Six is a group of Central West musicians, consisting of Doreen Cumming and Alina Zborowski, violins, Nicholas Newell and Fiona Thompson, violas, and Claudia Douglas and Katherine Moses, cellos.


The performance on Saturday 14th July at Mitchell Conservatorium in Bathurst was superb. Most of the performers have some solo parts to play, which showcase their musicality beautifully.


For more information, please ring Mitchell Conservatorium 0n 6331 6622 during office hours.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

New director for Lachlan

Andrew Baker, B Mus (hons), L Mus A, A Mus A




Fiona Thompson, Executive Director of Mitchell Conservatorium, has announced the appointment of the new Director for the Lachlan Division:
I am delighted to announce that Andrew Baker will be the new Director of the Lachlan Division of Mitchell Conservatorium from the beginning of Term 3, 2012. Andrew Baker has demonstrated that he is well suited to this position; he has extensive experience in managing staff, students and events through his work at Orange Regional Conservatorium and has developed a high profile as a successful music educator, string teacher and performer throughout the Central West over the past 7 years. Andrew will retain a casual professional association with the ORC in the short term.
Andrew Baker began learning the violin at the age of 8 at his school, Barker College, where he ultimately became the school’s first captain of music. He studied violin performance at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music with Alex Todicescu and later in The Netherlands with Berent Korfker and Florian Donderer. Since 2005, Andrew has held the position of Assistant Director, Artistic Programs Coordinator and Head of Strings at Orange Regional Conservatorium in NSW where he has taught violin, string ensembles and school string programs, coordinated tuition and performance programs, and performed in around 20 concerts per year.
 Andrew is currently a Master of Philosophy candidate (String Pedagogy) at the Australian National University. He has presented his research through Violin Pedagogy Australia, The Australian String Teachers Association and The Music Teachers Association, and in December 2012 will present his research findings at the annual conference of the Musicological Society of Australia. Andrew and his wife, Helen, moved to the central west in 2005 to engage in the exciting music teaching and performing opportunities offered by the region. Now raising two young children, they are well embedded in the community and are proud to call themselves ‘locals.’ Andrew says
I take up the position of Lachlan Director, Mitchell Conservatorium, with great excitement. I look forward to working with the Conservatorium's professional staff to develop and maintain community-focused music education programs and resources in the Forbes and Parkes regions of NSW. I am especially committed to creating engaging music-making opportunities across the Lachlan Division’s communities.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

The man, the land, the book and the song

The only known likeness of Pemulwuy, c.1801
It all started when my friend Louise mentioned that she had been on a chilly walk to the Pemulwuy shops today. The name sounded familiar, but it was a name and nothing more.

When I went to Belmont Public School in the 1950s and 60s, we did hear about Bennelong and we learnt about the local Awabakal tribe, but that was about it.

I'm guessing that the children of the 21st century would know that Pemulwuy was The Rainbow Warrior, a brave man who didn't take the arrival of the European boat people lying down.

If they were at all curious, they would also discover so easily that because the city of Sydney is built on his land, his name has been given to a Sydney suburb near Greystanes, and that he is the subject of a stirring novel by Eric Willmot, which inspired Paul Jarman's moving choral piece.

The linked articles from The Australian Dictionary of Biography are fascinating, as is the current Pemulwuy entry in Wikipedia. Matilda Media and See Pictures intend to produce a feature film, telling the story of Pemulwuy's battle for his people.

If you would like to read about Jarman's song, please scroll down this link to an article the composer has written about two of his compositions. The article gives musical examples, the story of the work's creation and also the lyrics which you might like to read through as you listen to this thrilling performance of the song by 500 male voices in the Voices of Birralee concert finale in the Queensland Performing Arts Centre in  2011.


Monday, July 2, 2012

Is Bigger Better, Part Three?

In the old joke, the piccolo player's name is Lester. Lester Bring.

I suppose the pipe organist has even less to bring, but she certainly plays the largest instrument.

But is bigger better?

Pipe organs may also be the most expensive instruments, because some of them cost millions of dollars. And then there's the upkeep.

I have attended pipe organ concerts in Newcastle, Sydney and Bathurst where very few others joined me. I even went to Simon Preston's concert in Sydney entirely on my own, because I couldn't talk anyone else into tagging along.

They are linked so inextricably with churches, it is hard to think of them without religious overtones.

Though we once noticed that a young lad from western Queensland had a different point of view: We were attending a convocation service for Kenmore Christian College, the former Queensland Churches of Christ college, in the Ann St, Brisbane, Presbyterian Church. Many of our students did not regularly attend churches with pipe organs. 
As the organist played before the service, I was thinking pious thoughts ... or trying to. But a young lad suddenly exclaimed, quite loudly: Oo, this sounds like Boris Karlov's coming! I was thinking of heaven, but Robert was imagining a horror movie.

Cameron Carpenter would like us to enjoy the music of the pipe organ on its own terms, and not confine it to the four walls of a church. His brilliant performances show that it is a marvellously flexible instrument and can be used to make a sensuous recreation of Debussy's Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune  just as well as it can be employed playing Bach, or even Rufus Wainwright.


Check out Cameron's terrific version of Leroy Anderson's Sleigh Ride. 


Is Bigger Better, Part Two?

In today's Sydney Morning Herald, Peter McCallum reviews  Erich Korngold's Die tote Stadt (The Dead City) and points out that it calls for such a large orchestra, they couldn't fit in the pit and so are heard via an audio link from the Sydney Opera House's recording studio.

Was it worth separating the instrumentalists from the singers on stage? Is a bigger opera orchestra better?

McCallum says that with triple wind parts, 40 string players, 2 harps, piano, organ and extensive percussion, it is obvious why they had to be separated! He reports that it was a "worthwhile, technically well-managed experiment." He says that the balance between the singers and the orchestra was not as good as the cinema sound in the Met HD broadcasts, but had ample warmth and colour.

But he felt that the experience of hearing a heldentenor soaring above a large orchestra was lost by the separation of the musicians. And he also mused what it would be like to be with the instrumentalists in the studio, with video of the singers beamed in.

The video extract below is the opening of a 1983 German TV production.

Upsizing: is bigger better?

We've been warned of the dangers of succumbing to those bigger meals that the fast food outlets entice us with: and I'm living proof that it's not a good idea!

What about music? Is bigger better? If a string quartet of 2 violins, 1 viola and a cello sounds wonderful, will a sextet with an extra viola and cello turn wonderful into absolutely fabulous?

Fiona Thompson, of Ensemble Six
Here is a great opportunity to find out, when Mitchell Conservatorium director, Fiona Thompson combines her viola with central west musicians Nicholas Newell (viola), Catherine Moses (cello), Doreen Cummings (violin), Alina Zborowski (violin) and Ella Jamieson (cello).

Here's a taste of one of the works they may be playing. I'm guessing that Souvenir de Florence is one of the pieces in the concert, because the promo material says they will be playing Tchaikovsky and this is his most popular work for sextet.

This video features the Tokyo String Quartet, upsized by Born Lau (viola) and Arlen Hlusko (cello).





Is bigger better? You can find out for yourself by attending one of these performances:

Concert dates: 14 July Saturday 7.30pm Orchard Room, Mitchell Conservatorium, Bathurst. 15 July Sunday 3.00pm Parkes Services Club, Parkes. 21 July Sat 7.30pm ORC Auditorium, Orange. 22 July Sunday 3.00pm Macquarie Conservatorium, Dubbo.

Tickets: Adults $20, concession $15 & school age children free. For all booking information and further details  see here or call (02) 6331 6622.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Where did you first hear Mozart's magic music?

Many people first heard the wonderful music of Mozart at school. Maybe your teacher played his delightful string quartet Eine kleine Nachtmusik (A Little Serenade) or did you first encounter him through attempting to play his pieces yourself?
They say Mozart is too easy for the amateurs, but too hard for the professionals. It seems so light and charming, yet Mozarteans spend a whole lifetime in perfecting his phrasing and little nuances.

Like many people, I learnt a lot of his music through the wonderful film Amadeus. And the most striking of all of this music is surely his Requiem. Have you heard it yet? On Saturday, 30th June there will be a very special performance of this superb choral music at 3 PM at All Saints Cathedral.

Mitchell Conservatorium's Jonathan Lewis (tenor) will join with Helen Barnett (soprano), Bill Moxey (bass) and Narelle Hissey (mezzo soprano), The Allegri Singers, Macquarie University Singers  and Bathurst Chamber Ochestra to perform under Timothy Chung's baton.

This brief excerpt was one of the favourite parts of the mass when NSW secondary school students performed excerpts in a choral concert in Sydney Opera House, conducted by Graham Abbott in the late 1990s.



You can have a preview of other parts of the Requiem in Mitchell Conservatorium's Armchair Concert on Monday, 25th June at 1.30 PM on 2MCE fm, 92.3 or 94.7 fm or at 2MCE.org

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The voices of angels?





Another great Mitchell Conservatorium concert to enjoy after work, on Friday, 22nd June. The concert starts at 5.30 PM and will be held in the All Saints Cathedral hall and features our own wonderful Mitchell Young Voices, singing with the distinguished Sydney Children's Choir. 

A $ note donation is requested, which you can pay at the door. Please ring our friendly office staff for more details, Monday to Friday, 10 AM to 5 PM on 6331 6622



Monday, June 4, 2012

You can't beat a piano!

Amazing pianist, Hiromi Uehara

OK. I'm biased. But can you think of anything more wonderful than a piano? I think it is the ideal musical instrument, because it is so versatile. Pianos are perfectly suited to solo performance, and the music sounds complete without the addition of any other instruments. But they also sound amazing when they accompany others or take the lead in front of a band or orchestra.

In the 1800s, hundreds of thousands of them were shipped to Australia, and some of those are still being played today. My very first piano was one of them. My parents bought it in 1959, with a lot of help from my Nanna.  The price was 90 guineas, which means £90 and 90/- (Ninety pounds and ninety shillings.) That is roughly $200, but in 1959 money, when the average wage was £15 ($30) per week! Nanna told Mum and Dad she'd pay the pounds, if they paid the shillings!


I think some people would still like to buy a piano for $200, which may be why many children begin on a small keyboard and not a piano.


But substituting a keyboard for a piano could be compared with buying a bicycle and expecting it to do the job of a car. A digital piano makes a better alternative, though it's still like asking a motorbike to substitute for a station wagon.


If you want a reliable piano, you are less likely to be disappointed and more likely to get something that will last by buying from a reputable music shop, whether you buy a new or second-hand piano. Each piano I've purchased was bought from a music store and I've been generally happy with what we were sold, although when I've tried to do it cheaply, I have not got the quality instrument that the store had first recommended.


A new piano should easily last twenty years. The digital keyboard might also, but they tend to go out of fashion as new ones keep being made with the latest do-dads.

At Mitchell Conservatorium, we always advise that you get your teacher's advice when buying a musical instrument. Good ones are expensive and it is worth getting help in making sure that the one you buy is worth what you are paying for it.


Here is a sensational performance on a quality piano by Hiromi Uehara of George Gershwin's I Got Rhythm. If you want to see some dazzling playing, keep watching. The video is 9 minutes long, but it's worth it.






Thursday, May 31, 2012

A Japanese Music Lesson

Sally Nguyen in Osaka, 2012
Mitchell Conservatorium piano student, Sally Nguyen enjoyed her visit to Japan, made during the school holidays. Her host family kindly took her to a koto class, where she was able to hear this special instrument being played by an ensemble of keen students.

If we tell you that a koto is a little like a zither, you may still be wondering about it, because you won't see many zithers in Bathurst, either.

But this amateur Youtube video, made by another student from another school during a trip to Japan, might be worth watching, and better than any verbal description we could supply.



Many Australian composers have become fascinated with the music of our Asian neighbours and have incorporated some of the music in their writing. Peter Sculthorpe has even written pieces for piano called Koto Music I and II. The Australian Music Centre has a short sample here. You will notice that the performer is playing inside the piano, not on the keys.

If you would like to try this, please ask the piano owner's permission first: it can damage the strings.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Talented Artist and Musician

Emily Calder with her daughter Ellianna


Emily Calder is a versatile artist and musician. Since the age of four, she has been working her way down through the string section of the orchestra. Emily began exploring violin via the Suzuki Method. Her first teacher was former Bathurst resident, Janice Donaldson.

At the age of thirteen, she began lessons with Mitchell Conservatorium's Nicholas Newell, who introduced her to the viola when she was fifteen.

She is currently studying cello with Mitchell Conservatorium's Sybbi Georgiou.

Emily has the University of Queensland's Diploma of Music Teaching, which is a tertiary accreditation for teaching instrumental music, and is currently working towards the Bachelor of Music degree, awarded by the University of New England.

Emily enjoys many different styles of music, and is as happy playing gypsy violin as she is in performing the great classical violin repertoire.

At Mitchell Conservatorium Emily teaches violin and also directs two string ensembles for primary school students.

Mitchell Young Strings



On Wednesday afternoon, she enjoys teaching Mitchell Young Strings to play various stringed instruments. On Thursday, she leads Fiddlesticks, which is a NSW government assisted ensemble for students from Department of Education primary schools. Thanks to their support, lessons only cost $2 per session.

She teaches the students in these two groups the basics of playing an instrument in the violin family in an ensemble, and also uses her knowledge of conducting to show them the ropes in that area also. Emily enjoyed being part of Jerry Nowak's conducting classes when the world-renowned director and musical arranger visited Australia last year.

Pastel by Emily Calder
Emily is also a visual artist. She favours working with pastels, which she finds challenging and rewarding.

You can hear Emily playing Summer, from Vivaldi's Four Seasons, and a movement from Mozart's Violin Cocnerto No 5 in A Major in a free concert on Sunday, 20th May at 4 PM in The Orchard Room at Mitchell Conservatorium, West Wing, Bathurst Court House in Russell St. Emily will be accompanied by pianist, David McKay. Her brother, Jared Killey will perform some beautiful classical guitar music.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Great ideas for encouraging your child to play


Here are six tips for successful music practice from Jammin' with you, the New York Music blog.
1. A place to play with no distractions
2. Practise every day          It makes playing music more fun.
Practising is not fun when you do it irregularly.
3. Play early
 Playing before school often works well and beats playing just before you go to bed and are really tired, or after a hard day at school. Become a morning person and you won't miss the best part of the day!
4. Keep your instrument ready to play.
Don't put it away in a case. Keep the piano smiling: lid open! One reason I can't play the cello is that mine was in a soft case with lots of straps to undo. I didn't have a stand for it and rarely got it out of the case!
5. Reward success: stickers, trip to the park, be creative!
6. Praise good playing.
Don't jump every time your child plays a wrong note. Occasionally point out a note that has been played wrongly several times. (A good tip for us teachers!)
If you head over to Jammin' with you you'll see I have my own way of putting their advice. It's worth reading what they said there - and it looks so cool, too!

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

A music lesson from Einstein


Reader's Digest has published Jerome Weidman's 1955 story about the evening he spent with Einstein.

Weidman has just had dinner in the home of a distinguished New York philanthropist, and discovers that there is to be a chamber music concert following, which he is going to have to endure.
I fixed my face in what I hoped was an expression of intelligent appreciation, closed my ears from the inside, and submerged myself in my own completely irrelevant thoughts.

After a while, becoming aware that the people around me were applauding, I concluded it was safe to unplug my ears. At once I heard a gentle but surprisingly penetrating voice on my right: “You are fond of Bach?”

I knew as much about Bach as I know about nuclear fission. But I did know one of the most famous faces in the world, with the renowned shock of untidy white hair and the ever-present pipe between the teeth. I was sitting next to Albert Einstein.

When he tells the famous scientist that he is tone deaf, and knows nothing about music, Einstein takes him upstairs away from the concert and shows Mr Weidman that he has a greater appreciation of music than he realises, by patiently leading him from the popular music he is familiar with into classical instrumental music. Then, Einstein dramatically announces
“Now, young man, we are ready for Bach!”
As we returned to our seats in the drawing room, the players were tuning up for a new selection. Einstein smiled and gave me a reassuring pat on the knee.

“Just allow yourself to listen,” he whispered. “That is all.”

It wasn’t really all, of course. Without the effort he had just poured out for a total stranger I would never have heard, as I did that night for the first time in my life, Bach’s “Sheep May Safely Graze.” I have heard it many times since. I don’t think I shall ever tire of it. Because I never listen to it alone. I am sitting beside a small, round man with a shock of untidy white hair, a dead pipe clamped between his teeth, and eyes that contain in their extraordinary warmth all the wonder of the world.

I wonder if you also feel that you are not able to enjoy music, because you are "tone deaf?" Part of Einstein's method in helping Weidman to appreciate the music was to get him to sing what he had just been listening to. The young man discovered that he was able, at least to some degree, to reproduce what he had been hearing.

Mitchell Conservatorium can't resurrect Einstein to help you to explore the wonderful world of music, but we can provide you with other enthusiastic guides who can help you, too to develop a love of music through making music yourself.

You can find out more from our website or by speaking to one of our friendly staff during office hours on 6331 6622.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Music is for everyone

I have endeavoured to make the children and teenagers clearly realise that music is not a mere pastime, not just a "garnish" to life, a kind of entertainment which one can take or leave at will, but an important entity of life itself ... And when I speak of music I always have in mind the great art of music and not music simplified specially for children.

I've been reading some great comments from Dimitri Kabalevsky, who was a twentieth century Russian composer and music educator. He was a strong advocate of helping everyone to enjoy music, which he believed
teaches mutual understanding, includes humanitarian ideas and helps mankind safeguard peace.

In 1974, he came to Australia to an international music conference which was held in Perth. At the conference he conducted a fanfare he had written for the occasion and also talked about his hopes for the future of music.

Here are a few of his reflections on the power of music:
Music has the amazing capacity to become a true friend, capable of sharing not only our joy, but also our grief, taking a part of it on.

All over the world live and work a great number of musicians and amateurs of music, including a very great number of young people, who deeply understand what is real life and what is real art. And they will determine the future of the art of music.

Kabalevsky spent a lot of his time writing music for children. He believed that the way to introduce music to people is to help them to enjoy songs, marches and dances, which he saw as the three foundations of all music.
Songs, dances and marches are the most democratic, the most popular and mass genres of music. There are millions of people in the world who have never heard professional music and know nothing of musical notation. But you would hardly find a single person who has never sung a song, never danced or never marched in a procession or to the roll of a primitive drum.

Here is a beautiful recording of Dominique Kim, from San Diego, playing the first movement of Kabalevsky's 3rd piano sonata.



You can find out more about Kabalevsky from Australian musicologist, David Forrest's website, which also includes information about his book, from which these quotes come.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

The power of music



This video shows the amazing power of music for older folk. One reason that it makes people come alive is the way it brings back memories of happy times enjoying music from our past.

It makes sense to get those happy experiences happening now, so that you do have something to recall later.

Some of the most enjoyable things we can do musically are to sing and play music with others. Do you have memories of singing with friends, playing in a musical group or even listening to music together?

Are you doing any of this currently? Mitchell Conservatorium provides many opportunities for music-making in Bathurst and Forbes, including Mitchell Young Voices, various chamber music ensembles and we also have The Allegri Singers and Bathurst City and RSL Band which meet at the Con each week.

Please ring Mitchell Conservatorium during office hours on 6331 6622 for more information.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Me and my cello

This has to be one of the cleverest classical music videos. The music is beautiful and the video of a man and his cello is funny and holds your interest (I hope ...) right through.



We have some great cello teachers at Mitchell Conservatorium - not currently involving sky-diving lessons.

Please ring 6331 6622 during business hours to begin your cello experience.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Armchair Concert


I was pleased to see the special promotion of Orange-born Tim Hansen's music on The Australian Music Centre's website today.

I admit I'm biased, because Tim has composed music for my son Daniel McKay to play, including an entertaining concerto for amplified classical guitar and orchestra and also a piece called Earwig, which Daniel recorded with violinist Zoë Black.

You can hear Daniel and Zoë's version of the piece in the next Armchair Concert program, on Monday, 2nd April between 1.30 and 3.30 PM on 2MCE FM, Bathurst's community radio station.

We will also be rebroadcasting part of a terrific concert which featured duo pianists Max and Haydn Reeder and flutist Prem Love. Prem teaches at Orange and Mitchell Conservatoriums. He plays flute superbly and we will later feature him in a wonderful concert where he plays with flutist, Phil Braithwaite and pianist, Cindy Fox.

Max Reeder was for many years Senior Music Lecturer at Charles Sturt University and also director of Mitchell Conservatorium. Max and brother Haydn will be heard playing piano duet works by Mozart, Debussy, Bizet and others.

We hope you will listen on 92.3, 94.7 FM, at 2MCE.org or by using the smartphone tunein radio app. There's plenty of ways to make sure you don't miss the program.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Love, Chemistry and Cryogenics


Another entertaining show devised by Mitchell Conservatorium's Michelle Griffin, showcasing her talents and those of Mitchell Young Voices is being thawed as we type this and will be ready for your consumption on Friday 23rd March, 2012 at 6 PM and Saturday, 24th March, 2012 at 7 PM at Bathurst Memorial Entertainment Centre.

The program also features Cameron Moor as Michelle's lab assistant and a band which comprises of Aaron Hopper (guitar), Andrew Smith (percussion) and Cindy Fox (piano).

To find out more about Michelle and this new show, you might enjoy reading Maryanne Jaques' interview in the Western Advocate's online feature site.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Simon Tedeschi performing this weekend in Lithgow, Bathurst and Forbes


Internationally renowned pianist Simon Tedeschi is quite often described by respected critics and musical peers as "one of the finest artists in the world" making the young pianist's mark on music both undeniable and admirable. Renowned especially for championing non standard repertoire, Tedeschi enjoys a full international performing career.

Playing with the Bathurst Chamber Orchestra at All Saints Cathedral on Saturday 17 March, Simon and the BCO will be conducted by The Reverend Michael Deasey “Michael was my music Master at St Andrews Cathedral School in Sydney where I studied and I jump at any opportunity that I have to be able to come to Bathurst and perform with him” says Simon.

Hosted by the Mitchell Conservatorium the concert series takes in Lithgow and Parkes on the Friday and the Sunday of the same weekend. Several young musicians from the Mitchell Conservatorium will also be joining the BCO ensemble onstage as their special guest as part of the Conservatorium’s Music in Schools program. All school age children are welcome to attend the concert FREE of charge. For more information go to our website or call 02 6331 6622.

Here is an extract from Ginastera's Piano Concerto No 1, which Simon performed with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, back in 1998.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Armchair Concert


It is all happening, commencing on Monday, 5th March at 1.30 PM and fortnightly thereafter.

In our first program, David McKay will be replaying our 2006 Living Sound concert, featuring Bathurst Chamber Orchestra and others, with music by Matthew Bieniek, Jamie Briton and Russell Gilmour.

And we also hope to tease you with music from our up-coming concert in Lithgow, Bathurst and Forbes, which will feature internationally popular pianist, Simon Tedeschi, playing Mozart's Piano Concerto No 19 in F Major with Bathurst Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Michael Deasey, OAM.

Don't forget you can listen on 92.3 or 94.7 fm, at 2MCE.org or by using the tunein app for your smartphone.

If you'd like to make a comment or request, you can send us an email at armchairconcert@gmail.com We look forward to hearing from our listeners.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

What day is your birthday?

Frédéric Chopin and his family always said that he was born on 1st March, 1810. However the church baptismal records state that he was born a week earlier, on 22nd February.

What day would you like your birthday to be? My name's David and I think I would quite like to have been born on 1st March too, as it is St David's Day, patron saint of Wales.

When we think of a child-genius, it is natural to think of Mozart. He was performing and composing at the age of five. But other composers also began very early. And some even surpassed his considerable feats.

Did you know that Chopin wrote pieces from the age of seven that were much more demanding to write and play than many of the pieces that Wolfie wrote, even in his maturity? In fact, if you were to purchase a copy of Chopin's Earliest Pieces and compare it with a copy of Chopin's Easiest Pieces, you would find that there is not much overlap, because some of Chopin's earliest pieces are quite difficult to play and are written in quite complex, and accurate notation.

Chopin is also quite a different composer from Mozart in another way: while Mozart wrote in all musical genres of his day (as several of the great composers have done), Chopin wrote almost entirely for the piano. Even when he wrote for orchestra, it was for piano and orchestra.

There is a lot of wonderful music to enjoy from the twenty-seven or so years that Chopin was composing music. But the Scherzo in B Flat Minor is a particular favourite of mine, played here in a very resonant acoustic, by Konstantin Bogino.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

What a mother says in one day

What a mother says in one day, but condensed into a 3 minute song, to the tune of the William Tell Overture. (Well, the last part of the William Tell Overture.)



Thanks to AMEB for reminding us of this fun video. (The video quality is poor, but if you watch it on Youtube, you will also get a copy of the amusing lyrics.)

Did you know that today is Rossini's 53rd birthday? You'd think he would be older, but the poor chap was born on 29th February ...

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Countdown

Simon Tedeschi

Our new Armchair Concert radio program begins on Monday, 5th March at 1.30 PM and will feature Simon Tedeschi, Bathurst Chamber Orchestra and Guitar Trek, performing music by Mozart, Gershwin, Australian composers and a few surprises.

You can listen on 92.3 or 94.7 FM, at 2MCE.org or with the smartphone tunein app.

We are playing music by Simon Tedeschi and our own local orchestra, because we want to let you know about the great concert at 7.30 PM in Lithgow on Friday 16th March and Bathurst on Saturday, 16th March, and at 2 PM in Forbes, on Sunday 18th March.

Tickets are only $20 for adults ($15 concession) and free for all school-aged children!

Later Armchair Concerts will feature the best of Mitchell Conservatorium concerts over the past few years, including piano duets from Max and Hayden Reeder, flute and piano music featuring Phil Braithwaite, Prem Love and Cindy Fox, and performances from our Rising Stars concerts.

Christine Sweeney and David McKay are looking forward to showcasing our talented musicians every fortnight from Monday, 5th March at 1.30 PM

Thursday, February 23, 2012

His father didn't want him to play


It's true. Famous composer, George Frederick Handel, born on this day in 1685, had to smuggle a small keyboard called a clavichord into his house to be able to fulfil his dream of playing music. His father was a barber and surgeon (those careers often went hand in hand in the 1600s) who wanted his son to be a lawyer. He didn't want him to waste his time learning music!

Here is a modern version of an Italian clavichord:




One of Handel's best-known pieces is his Hallelujah Chorus, performed here in a shopping centre in Canada.



Wouldn't you like to be able to sing along to such stirring music? There's an opportunity to do this, every second year in Bathurst, just before Christmas. But you'll have to wait till Christmas in 2013, because the last performance was only a few months ago, at All Saints Cathedral.

If you would like to find out more about Handel,Classics For Kids is a great site to explore. There's a page about Handel there, but also lots of interesting information for children who want to explore classical music, and guidelines for parents who want to help them do it.

The site includes an interesting timeline of composers, musical games, articles for parents and an interactive chart of the instruments of the orchestra.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Armchair Concert series begins

Christine Sweeney and David McKay introduce Mitchell Conservatorium's new community radio program Armchair Concert


On air Mondays at 1.30pm, fortnightly from 5 March 2012 on 92.3 and 94.7FM or live streaming at Radio 2MCE



  

Friday, February 10, 2012

from The Nutcracker Musical Storybook

It's always worth reading what educationist Trevor Cairney has to say about helping children to learn. In this post he recommends seven new children's story smartphone apps.

They all look interesting, but I was taken by the Nutcracker Musical Storybook. It looks a lot of fun, using the original story by E T A Hoffman, and some of the music Tchaikovsky wrote for his famous ballet.

Here is some more information from Cairney's article:
It comes in story or movie mode. Each has a single line of text at the bottom of the screen that presents the simple narrative. In the read-only option the user can control page turning and tap pictures for a number of simple effects (mainly sound and some movement). In the movie mode the story moves automatically from one screen to the next. Both modes make use of segments from the opera. The read only page is controlled from an initial Christmas tree image with numbered baubles allowing different paths through the story. The reader can swipe the pages and interact with a number of visual elements on the way.

The images are delightful and capture the mood of the 19th century winter setting with wonderful variations in colour, light, movement, animated figures (puppet-like), sound and of course Tchaikovsky's wonderful music. The well-known scenes are all there with the 'Waltz of the flowers' and the 'Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy' brilliant!

It sounds like an app that will help your 4 to 8 year old child to enjoy hearing or reading a story and experience some great music as well.