Ah the always "auditioning"  If we only knew who was listening!!!
 
Time for a story:  A few years back I was having real trouble with my tonguing, 
and was in the process of learning
to "double tongue" everything.  One of my exercises was to just practice 
tonguing using "ku ku ku" syllable to strengthen
that part of the double tongue.  Well, ku ku ku being a very weak syllable, I 
sounded pretty awful in the beginning.
 
Sitting back stage before a performance and ... not watching... I didn't see 
the music director walk by.  He stopped and listened.
His comment to me:  Milton you seem to be really having a bad sound today!!!  I 
explained what I was doing and his comment was:
Oh, you had me a little worried there for a minute.  But I KNEW he would be 
listening more closely from then on.  
 
Moral of the story:  Watch where you practice the "bad" stuff, and, yes you are 
ALWAYS auditioning!!!  :)
 
Milton
4th Horn Buffalo Phil
A Survivor :)




________________________________
From: Ralph Hall <[email protected]>
To: The Horn List <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, May 22, 2010 5:04:33 AM
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Alternative to auditions in an amatuer setting

William,

Paul Navarro's reply was good enough - but I've had enough. If you  
don't realise by now that every time you take the instrument out of  
its case you're taking an audition - well, the word naive is the only  
appropriate one. You don't know who might be listening, and looking,  
and on that one acquaintance you might be judged as a player.

Another word of advice, although I suspect it might fall on deaf ears:  
there are professional players who read the horn list and it would not  
take great detective work to find out who this opinionated player is  
and to discount him for any permanent/extra work.

Additionally you condemn yourself by belittling general repertoire,  
orchestral horn parts. You must be talking technique and nothing else.  
If this is the sum total of your musicality...........................

I played one season of first, when I was at college. I was realistic  
enough to see myself as a stop-gap until a better player arrived. The  
bench mark had been set, two years before, by Tony Halstead. However,  
my kick has always been as a good second horn to these people and if  
you come off the stage having kept pace with someone like Tony,  
perfect ensemble, intonation, being solid and neither distracting nor  
competitive, well then you have achieved much and played very well.  
For your information, I find Haydn and Mozart parts the most difficult  
to play really well - and consequently the most rewarding. Nor am I  
talking about 25 in G, 29 in A, 31 in D, 45 in F sharp minor, 55 in  
Eb, 92 in G etc. If you don't know the attribution, enough said.

My impression is that you would be a Trojan horse in any section, in  
my experience a situation most professionals would seek to avoid.

Ralph R. hall

On 22 May 2010, at 05:27, [email protected] wrote:

>
> How? Care to elaborate?
>
> -William
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Fri, May 21, 2010 10:58 pm
> Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Alternative to auditions in an amatuer setting
>
>
> William wrote
>
> "Granted, in real jobs you don't have to re-apply for your own  
> position
> - but you do have to face re-evaluations every now and then. "
>
>
>
> This statement above  indicates a stunning level of naivete about
> professional  performance.
>
> Paul Navarro
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _
>
> _______________________________________________
> post: [email protected]
> unsubscribe or set options at 
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>
>
> _______________________________________________
> post: [email protected]
> unsubscribe or set options at 
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Ralph R. Hall
[email protected]
Ralph R. Hall
http://www.brasshausmusic.com








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