Because unlike you I am not:

1) A professional player
2) Do not have a full time playing gig
3) Play mostly part time when I have the free time.

I do not have the decades of experience that people like yourself might have. 
My hours of prep work are polishing up and making consistent excerpts I am not 
familiar with. 

This is how I want to prepare. This is how I want to spend my free time working 
up for an audition. 

It is nothing like prepping for an entire orchestra concert. This is prep work 
for very small but over exposed parts that make or break a gig. 

Let's say you have to rebuild a transmission on a car. Does this mean you have 
to rebuild everything on the car? No.

Also, what are you referring to when you speak of 'high-school slang'? Please 
cite specific examples.

I'm sorry, but I make a very good living as a non-horn player and I'm not going 
to give up my salary and very well paying job to go back to school and pile up 
more mountains of debt. This is the path I chose. This is the path I'm happy 
with. I'm a part time player. I'm an amateur. 

You tell me to be a realist - I don't see how I am doing anything but that.

I think you're reading far to much into my post and instead of listening you're 
trying to come up with two excuses and a judgement for every single sentence 
that I say.

-William


 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Hans Pizka <[email protected]>
To: The Horn List <[email protected]>
Sent: Wed, May 12, 2010 4:03 pm
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] The Nuances of Auditions


William, 
if you need that much time as preparation for an audition, how will you survive 
in the orchestra if you need a comparable amount of time preparing yourself for 
every performance & the rehearsals, as this would exceed the 24 hours a day 
given by nature.

You should be prepared a long time before applying for an invitation to become 
a 
participant., prepared enough as a player but not prepared for a certain job. 
If 
you need that much time, it would mean, you would become inflexible totally & 
be 
a nightmare for the future section you will play with.

Get your standard pieces prepared for yourself & NOT for the audition, so you 
have to refresh them only. Get all kind of standard repertory (excerpts) 
prepared for yourself also, to be prepared for the audition or any audition. It 
is good being prepared for high & low excerpts as well, as this will keep your 
embouchure flexible.

It is not the amount of spent time bringing you to success during the audition. 
It is how you practice with the brain involved. What will you do, if the 
conductor wants to hear a certain passage much faster or much slower or softer 
than you had it prepared ? You would be lost definitely. No chance. If the 
conductor or the leader of the section or the other principal players find you 
inflexible, forget your dreams, FORGET THEM. ZERO chance.

Be prepared as a player first. Then look around where you would have chances. 
Do 
not look for the places you want to be in the future. Do not dream of it. Be a 
realist. Do all according to your REAL potentials, otherwise forget all. 

Keeping this in mind, practice just three hours (playing time) but with much 
use 
of the brain. to arrive at the top of the success-ladder.

Good luck !
Less is often more !!!!!
Do not waste your time by practicing things you can do very well allready. Be a 
lot self critical. It is not important how good to be you think. The only 
criteria will be what the listeners will think about your playing & your 
presentation. 
##############################################################################################################
Am 12.05.2010 um 21:07 schrieb [email protected]:

> 
> Prepping for my next audition, I got to thinking about all of the nuances 
> that 
I've come across during my prep work and during my audition that could have 
helped me and could have hurt me. 
> 
> There was a discussion on the list a while ago about when one plays in an 
audition (1st or not 1st) and there was almost a consensus that playing 1st 
would be in ones favor. Whether this is because of psychology with the 
auditioning panel, or being prepared for a specific time, or not stewing around 
in a practice room and listening to other players annoy you, well it could be 
anything. 
> 
> I was reminded of this as I was trying to calculate the number of hours I 
> have 
prepped so far for this audition (including fundamental exercises and a warm up 
every morning) and calculated that at my current rate I will prep about 100 to 
125 hours for this next audition (which is about 40 days multiplied by 2.5 
hours 
playing each day and some change). The last audition I had, I went first and 
prepped about 100 hours into and did fairly well. The one before that, I 
prepped 
about 60 hours and didn't do as well as I wanted to.
> 
> So, I wonder, if a survey could be handed out to audition applicants during 
auditions to find out how much prep work they've done coupled with their 
audition time and audition order if one could find any patterns as to their 
audition results? I suppose this could be done by giving a very specific survey 
to determine how many hours they practiced instead of asking them to write down 
a number, then letting the personnel manager write down the order of who won 
and 
sending in the surveys. 
> 
> I know it's probably purely academic, but I do wonder about patterns 
> occurring 
in every day things - and wonder what patterns that human psychology will play 
into audition results.
> 
> 
> This sounds more of a psychology thesis than a music thesis because it can 
apply to acting and any sort of audition or even sports tournaments, but I 
thought I'd share my thoughts with the group.
> 
> -William
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> post: [email protected]
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