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PT85: “How to be Confident, Effective, and Humble on the Podium,” with Jeffery Meyer

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Manage episode 269779208 series 2290057
Content provided by Podium Time. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Podium Time or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

Today we talk with Jeffery Meyer, Director of Orchestras at Arizona State University and Artistic Director of the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic. We jump right in at the beginning of the interview by talking about the biggest issues that arise in young conductors and how we can have better ears for the orchestra’s sound. We also cover how you can develop your confidence and conviction, the importance of real relationships in music, and the most important qualities that he looks for in young conductors.
Today we discuss:

  1. The biggest issues with young conducting students, and how to listen to the ensemble and work collaboratively with the orchestra musicians (3:39)
  2. How to expand your palate of what is possible to do with an orchestra by watching rehearsals and studying recordings (7:49)
  3. How creating music is more complex than reading and interpreting the score, and how Historically Informed Practice and the instruments a composer used shape the sounds we should create (13:21)
  4. What musicianship is, and how it develops over time in a conductor (20:01)
  5. Advice for when you don’t feel confident, how to develop your conviction, and why it’s critical to make imagined sounds physical. (24:48)
  6. Jeffery Meyer’s eclectic interests (juggling, magic, composition, etc) and how they all led to him being a conductor (37:10)
  7. How Jeffery founded the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic with a friend he met at a workshop, and how developing friendships with other professionals leads to new opportunities (46:53)
  8. How every detail of our conducting and interactions works towards or takes away from the trust and influence we have with the orchestra, and the importance of learning extra-musical skills (52:30)
  9. The most important qualities of a young conductor that Jeff looks for in his students, and how his priorities as a teacher have developed over time (1:00:23)
  10. Jeffery’s Hidden Gems and Final Advice (1:09:47)

Find this and all other episodes at PodiumTimePod.com. Subscribe and download Podium Time on your favorite podcast player and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram at @PodiumTimePod. You can also join our Facebook Group, the Podium Time Inner Circle to ask questions and continue the conversation after every episode. If you’d like to support the podcast monetarily and get bonus content, consider joining our Patreon community at Patreon.com/PodiumTimePod. If you’re in the market for a new baton, use our promo code “PodiumTime” at Pagubatons.com for 20% off your first order.

Support the show

  continue reading

Capitole

1. Intro (00:00:00)

2. The biggest issues with young conducting students, and how to listen to the ensemble and work collaboratively with the orchestra musicians (00:03:39)

3. How to expand your palate of what is possible to do with an orchestra by watching rehearsals and studying recordings (00:07:49)

4. How creating music is more complex than reading and interpreting the score, and how Historically Informed Practice and the instruments a composer used shape the sounds we should create (00:13:21)

5. What musicianship is, and how it develops over time in a conductor (20:01) 5. Advice for when you don’t feel confident, how to develop your conviction, and why it’s critical to make imagined sounds physical (00:24:48)

6. Jeffrey Meyer’s eclectic interests (juggling, magic, composition, etc) and how they all led to him being a conductor (00:37:10)

7. How Jeff founded the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic with a friend he met at a workshop, and how developing friendships with other professionals leads to new opportunities (00:46:53)

8. How every detail of our conducting and interactions works towards or takes away from the trust and influence we have with the orchestra, and the importance of learning extra-musical skills (00:52:30)

9. The most important qualities of a young conductor that Jeff looks for in his students, and how his priorities as a teacher have developed over time (01:00:23)

10. Jeff’s Hidden Gems and Final Advice (01:09:47)

139 episoade

Artwork
iconDistribuie
 
Manage episode 269779208 series 2290057
Content provided by Podium Time. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Podium Time or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

Today we talk with Jeffery Meyer, Director of Orchestras at Arizona State University and Artistic Director of the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic. We jump right in at the beginning of the interview by talking about the biggest issues that arise in young conductors and how we can have better ears for the orchestra’s sound. We also cover how you can develop your confidence and conviction, the importance of real relationships in music, and the most important qualities that he looks for in young conductors.
Today we discuss:

  1. The biggest issues with young conducting students, and how to listen to the ensemble and work collaboratively with the orchestra musicians (3:39)
  2. How to expand your palate of what is possible to do with an orchestra by watching rehearsals and studying recordings (7:49)
  3. How creating music is more complex than reading and interpreting the score, and how Historically Informed Practice and the instruments a composer used shape the sounds we should create (13:21)
  4. What musicianship is, and how it develops over time in a conductor (20:01)
  5. Advice for when you don’t feel confident, how to develop your conviction, and why it’s critical to make imagined sounds physical. (24:48)
  6. Jeffery Meyer’s eclectic interests (juggling, magic, composition, etc) and how they all led to him being a conductor (37:10)
  7. How Jeffery founded the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic with a friend he met at a workshop, and how developing friendships with other professionals leads to new opportunities (46:53)
  8. How every detail of our conducting and interactions works towards or takes away from the trust and influence we have with the orchestra, and the importance of learning extra-musical skills (52:30)
  9. The most important qualities of a young conductor that Jeff looks for in his students, and how his priorities as a teacher have developed over time (1:00:23)
  10. Jeffery’s Hidden Gems and Final Advice (1:09:47)

Find this and all other episodes at PodiumTimePod.com. Subscribe and download Podium Time on your favorite podcast player and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram at @PodiumTimePod. You can also join our Facebook Group, the Podium Time Inner Circle to ask questions and continue the conversation after every episode. If you’d like to support the podcast monetarily and get bonus content, consider joining our Patreon community at Patreon.com/PodiumTimePod. If you’re in the market for a new baton, use our promo code “PodiumTime” at Pagubatons.com for 20% off your first order.

Support the show

  continue reading

Capitole

1. Intro (00:00:00)

2. The biggest issues with young conducting students, and how to listen to the ensemble and work collaboratively with the orchestra musicians (00:03:39)

3. How to expand your palate of what is possible to do with an orchestra by watching rehearsals and studying recordings (00:07:49)

4. How creating music is more complex than reading and interpreting the score, and how Historically Informed Practice and the instruments a composer used shape the sounds we should create (00:13:21)

5. What musicianship is, and how it develops over time in a conductor (20:01) 5. Advice for when you don’t feel confident, how to develop your conviction, and why it’s critical to make imagined sounds physical (00:24:48)

6. Jeffrey Meyer’s eclectic interests (juggling, magic, composition, etc) and how they all led to him being a conductor (00:37:10)

7. How Jeff founded the St. Petersburg Chamber Philharmonic with a friend he met at a workshop, and how developing friendships with other professionals leads to new opportunities (00:46:53)

8. How every detail of our conducting and interactions works towards or takes away from the trust and influence we have with the orchestra, and the importance of learning extra-musical skills (00:52:30)

9. The most important qualities of a young conductor that Jeff looks for in his students, and how his priorities as a teacher have developed over time (01:00:23)

10. Jeff’s Hidden Gems and Final Advice (01:09:47)

139 episoade

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