Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- PART ONE The Conductor's Mind
- PART TWO The Conductor's Skills
- 7 Balance
- 8 Choral Works
- 9 Concerto Accompaniment
- 10 Ear
- 11 Eye Contact
- 12 Opera
- 13 Rehearsing
- PART THREE The Conductor's Hands
- PART FOUR The Conductor and the Musicians
- PART FIVE The Conductor and the Instruments
- PART SIX The Conductor, the Composer, and the Score
- PART SEVEN The Conductor and the Audience
- PART EIGHT The Conductor and “the Business”
- PART NINE Inside the Conductor
- Suggested Reading
- Musical Example Credits
- A Note on the Illustrations
- Index of Conductors
10 - Ear
from PART TWO - The Conductor's Skills
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- PART ONE The Conductor's Mind
- PART TWO The Conductor's Skills
- 7 Balance
- 8 Choral Works
- 9 Concerto Accompaniment
- 10 Ear
- 11 Eye Contact
- 12 Opera
- 13 Rehearsing
- PART THREE The Conductor's Hands
- PART FOUR The Conductor and the Musicians
- PART FIVE The Conductor and the Instruments
- PART SIX The Conductor, the Composer, and the Score
- PART SEVEN The Conductor and the Audience
- PART EIGHT The Conductor and “the Business”
- PART NINE Inside the Conductor
- Suggested Reading
- Musical Example Credits
- A Note on the Illustrations
- Index of Conductors
Summary
“If I ever find out who did that,” said a conductor after a loud cymbal clash in the wrong place, “I'll fire him!”
Orchestral musicians love stories about conductors who can't hear what's going on. This is partly out of a sense of natural justice (“I'm expected to use my ears, so why can't that man on the podium use his?”) but more because a conductor who hears everything gives them focus. His awareness of details helps their concentration and their ability to play as an integrated unit. It's frustrating to play with a conductor who doesn't hear what's happening. I know—I've done it.
The importance of ear training can't be overemphasized, and it's never too early to begin. When I was five, I started piano lessons with Miss Ianthe Bridge in Canterbury, who immediately began training my ear. During my earliest lessons she'd produce a model of a flight of steps named after the notes of the scale (do, re, mi, etc.), with a soldier standing on each step; then she'd hand me a soldier and ask me to sing his note. She taught me to sight sing to “tonic sol-fa” where “do” is the keynote, whatever key you're in. (That's different from solfège, where you name the notes like a typewriter, regardless of their place in the key.) Miss Bridge had a large dog called Toby who lay on the rug during all my lessons and growled when I made a mistake. I wonder if any readers have come across the name “Ianthe” or been scared into practicing by a dog.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Inside Conducting , pp. 41 - 42Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013