Click on the links above for BASBWE, CBDNA, WASBE and NBA websites

 

NEW:  

July 22 – 25 UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI and the COLLEGE CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC

Workshop with Rodney Winther

The application screening process will begin on March 1. At such time, you may download the brochure/application form from http://www.uc.edu/ccm/winds/summer.htm

 

*** Conductor Training Weekend 2-4 May 2008 *** 

 

TIM REYNISH WEBSITE

HOMEPAGE March 2008

LATE NEWS – As at 13th March, the monthly number of unique hits on this website is over 7000 for the first time !!

Many thanks to all of you who check in and of course to my long-suffering webmaster, Mike Grieff. Mike and I would appreciate your ideas on how the site could be made more user friendly and useful – maybe if I just stop writing so much rubbish and tidy it all up. In any case, any comments and queries will be dealt with when I can  – send them to me at

timreynish@tiscali.co.uk

Have a great Spring and Summer, or Autumn and Winter.

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Many greetings from Las Vegas as I prepare to enter my eighth decade. I have spent an interesting February experiencing school and university bands in Nevada (average temperature in the mid 60’s in February) and Alberta (average temperature 20 below!) The greatest experience was hearing the Calgary Stampede Band of about 100 singing Lauridsen’s O Magnum Mysterium quite beautifully, and then playing it with the same expression and emotion. I then conducted Steve Bryant’s prizewinning Radiant Joy – there is not much to beat the Stampede Band’s sousaphones when they suddenly appear. But so many groups both sides of the border play easy commercial music which they know will make a hit in the next Festival. Where is the challenge, the excitement, the radiant joy? I reflected grumpily on Percy Grainger writing over fifty years ago:

TO ALL MILKSOPS OF SISSIFIED MOTHER’S DARLINGS

Don’t mind if you play a few wrong notes; don’t mind if you get the rhythms wrong. Please don’t think that I will suffer if you do. My job is to show you what modern music is like. I’d much rather hear you make a mess of typical modern music than to hear you tootling forever at a lot of baby’s stuff.

He was writing about the efforts of one concert organiser to stop him from conducting the two most difficult movements of Lincolnshire Posy.  He goes on:

I hate forcing my will on the folk. But more still do I hate shielding-the-wind from all these milksops of sissified mother’s darlings  who sit there yawning in the band, thinking they’ve played everything and know everything. If they want me to do anything with them I’ll jolly well see to it that they get something to chew on and taste some of the rocks on the rocky road of now-timey tone-art.

SAVE YOUR STUDENTS FROM BEING MILKSOPS OF SISSIFIED MOTHER’S DARLINGS

There are two links below to guides to innovative non-commercial wind music for the 21st century, a  reflection on the NBA Selective List, and links to the incredible library of Dr David Whitwell.  For more non-commercial music, you might explore two other links below. I am hugely grateful to  Dr Isaiah Odajima of Michigan State University for all of his hard work on the commissioning project in memory of my son William. I am grateful too to the many British composers and publishers who have responded to the challenge of writing music with a new sound for wind ensembles and bands, and I have tried to sum up their sum up this vital new repertoire in my revised  BRITISH WIND MUSIC 1981-2008

It was the great Frederick Fennell who warned against commercialism and insisted:

 We must learn to teach music - not band, not orchestra, not chorus, but music itself...Choosing music is the single most important thing a band director can do, and is the only thing a band director can do alone, made more important because of the substandard repertoire continuously being published. So many publishers in the business today are printers who don't care about quality, but only about what will sell. We must not allow them to give the band a bad reputation nor to make our decisions for us, since the music we choose today can affect students for ever.

Let me know on timreynish@tiscali.co.uk if you need any further information about any of these works. Recordings are available of many of them.

FOUR  LINKS TO  NEW AND OLD REPERTOIRE GUIDES

1                      WILLIAM REYNISH COMMISSIONING PROJECT

2                      BRITISH WIND MUSIC 1981-2008   MAKING IT BETTER

RECENTLY UPLOADED –  This personal account of British Wind Music has been extensively revised and brought up to date.

3                 Thoughts on

                   NATIONAL BAND ASSOCIATION SELECTIVE LIST

4                 DAVID WHITWELL PUBLICATIONS

FOURTEEN LINKS TO CONDUCTING COURSES

CANFORD SUMMER SCHOOL OF MUSIC

3 – 10 AUGUST INTERNATIONAL CONDUCTING  COURSE WITH PHILIP SCOTT, MARK HERON AND TIM REYNISH

7 – 12 JULY INTERLAKEN INTERNATIONAL CONDUCTING COURSE  DOUGLAS BOSTOCK  and University of Texas WE

 CONDUCTING COURSES IN THE USA , SUMMER 2008

NEW- FIVE NEW USA CONDUCTING COURSES

No excuse not to re-charge the conducting batteries this summer with two courses in UK and Swi\tzerland and twelve in the USA . To view links to all USA courses browse CONDUCTING

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WILLIAM REYNISH COMMISSIONING PROJECT

William, our third son, died in May 2001, climbing on Sunday morning in the Pyrenees by himself, something he always told my wife not to do. He was 34, a little younger than Mozart, and had packed into those years an enormous amount of travel and adventure.

His death came at a time when I was still at the Royal Northern College of Music. I had commissioned a wind piece from Matthew Taylor, and the College preferred not to help with the commissioning fee, so Hilary and I turned it into a work in memory of William and paid for it ourselves. This was the start of a six year commissioning project which has given the world no less than twenty works to date.

INDEX OF WORKS

WORKS FOR LESS EXPERIENCED PLAYERS

Aeolian Carillons                      Edwin Roxburgh           Maecenas

Blackwater                               Fergal Carroll               Maecenas

Deep Soul Diving                      Emily Howard

Passacaglia                               Timothy Jackson           Maecenas

Song of Lir                               Fergal Carroll               Maecenas

WORKS WELL WORTH LESS EPXERIENCED PLAYERS HAVING A GO

                                               

Blasket Dances                         Matthew Taylor            Maecenas

Bright Spirit                              Judith Bingham             Maecenas

Dances from Crete                   Adam Gorb                  Maecenas

L’Homme Armé.                      Christopher Marshall    Maecenas

Resonance                                Christopher Marshall    Maecenas

Symphony for William               Derek Bourgeois          HaFaBra

Trumpet Concerto                    Marco Putz                  Bronsheim

Vranjanka                                Kenneth Hesketh          Faber

FOR PROFESSIONAL ENSEMBLE

Cloud of Unknowing                 Kenneth Hesketh          Schott

An Elegy for Ur                        Edwin Roxburgh           Maecenas

Slow Dawn                              Michael Berkeley          OUP

Waves and Refrains                  David Horne                 Boosey & Hawkes

AWAITING PREMIERES

Partita                                      Daniel Basford             

The Silent Sea                           Christopher Painter

Unfinished Symphony               Geoffrey Poole

                                                                                                                       

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OUTSIDE THE BOX – A LOOK AT THE NBA SELECTIVE MUSIC LIST

One of the many reasons for being a member of NBA is the terrific Selective Music List. Time and again conductors write to me to ask for information on an arranger or publisher for a specific piece of music; were they members of NBA, they would have to look no further than the website, for as of today there are no less than 1507 works listed, from Grade 1 to Grade 6, covering a huge range of music.

We are addicted to lists, whether of the top ten hitters, the top ten golfers, top ten quarter backs, top ten films, top ten news stories, top ten actors, top ten embarrassing moments on television, so when WASBE was formed, the World Association for Symphonic Bands and Ensembles, many hours were spent, I almost said wasted, on trying to define a “core” repertoire. We were warned against lists by that great composer and thinker, Warren Benson, but for the tyro band director, they do have a use, and none is more useful than that of the NBA. I find that many of the State Band Libraries, or Recommended Lists for Festivals, are very limited and far from uptodate. Clearly, their compilers are greatly influenced by the commercial side of publishing.

The NBA list has its fair share of commercial music, and does represent a cross-section of taste and artistic judgement. However, everyone will find favorite pieces missing, and there are certainly some gaps which might be filled in the next update. I would recommend at least some of the following works to be tried out by colleagues and perhaps incorporated.

From a cursory search, the most popular composer is Percy Grainger with 31 works; this repertoire includes both Hill Song No 1 and No 2, but omits two of my favorite Grainger works, the magnificent sweeping Marching Song of Democracy and the poignant Power of Rome and the Christian Heart.  Grainger’s music ruins the gamut from Grade 3 to Grade 6 as do the works of Ticheli (20) and Holsinger (14). Like Ticheli, Adam Gorb (5) is 50 this year, and he is another who writes for all levels. He is now Head of Composition and Contemporary Performance at the Royal Northern College of Music , but wears his learning lightly as demonstrated by a number of charming pieces at Grade 2/3 level. Candlelight Procession (G&M Brand) is a moving introduction to 5/4 metre, Eine kleine Yiddische Ragmusik (G&M Brand) is another hilarious essay in Klezmer, while he explores teasing aleatoric textures in his most recent school wind band work, Sunrise and Safari, written for the 2007 Singapore Festival Contest. Also commissioned for school bands but more taxing are Bermuda Triangle (Maecenas). Another British composer well represented is Philip Sparke (5) but I would certainly add in his Four Norfolk Dances (Anglo) which are in the vein of the Malcolm Arnold Dances and  very good fun.

Finding excellent school music at Grade 2/3/4 is perhaps the hardest job. If you enjoy the metric intricacies of the Serenade by Derek Bourgeois (3), you will enjoy (sorry about his punning title) his Metro Gnome (HaFaBra) at about Grade 3. It is well worth exploring the HaFaBra website for more challenging literature, and in the upper grades I would  recommend his Symphony of Winds (HaFaBra) and Bridge over the River Cam (G&M Brand).

Fergal Carroll is a young Irish composer who has contributed two fine works at Grade 3, Song of Lir and Blackwater, and at Grade 4 Winter Dances, all published by Maecenas/Masters Music. A magnificent work which I think provides a Mahlerian experience for players at Grade 3 and 4 is Bill Connor’s Tails aus dem Vood Viennoise.

At Grade 4/5, it is much easier to find substantial works which players, con doctors and audiences will enjoy. I felt that Martin Ellerby (1) is under-represented, and would certainly suggest that Paris Sketches (Maecenas),  New World Dances and Venetian Spells (both Studio) are explored. Guy Woolfenden (3) has continues a stream of useful pieces and bands who enjoy Gallimaufry and Illyrian Dances ( Illyria has recently been  identified as modern Kosovo!) will also enjoy Mockbeggar Variations and his most recent workDivertimento (All published by Ariel). Another British composer who might well appear in future editions if McNeff, whose Ghosts (Maecenas) is an ingenious set of variations, and you can leave out the most difficult movements. A work which introduces the band to some simple aleatoric writing and to mixed metres is Introduction: Rhythms by Makris  (2)(Ballerbach), a publisher whose publications and indeed compositions are usually very interesting.

At Grade 5, there are several newly published works from UK well worth  playing, including Hesketh’s (3) Vranjanka, (Faber), Gorb’s Dances from Crete (Maecenas) and the New Zealand composer, Chris Marshall’s L”Homme Armé and Resonance (Maecenas); add to this  Gregson’s The Kings go Forth (Studio) and for those who want to experiment with contemporary techniques, his Metamorphoses (Noveelo).

From Europe , it would be good to see in the list some of the works of Marco Pütz, Piet Swerts and a wonderful newcomer from Spain , Luis Serrano Aloncon, while two composers from Japan who have contributed sensitive pieces at about Grade 4 are Ohguri and Hoshina.  Finally it was great to discover Radiant Joy by Steve Bryant (1) is the winner of the 2007 NBA/William D. Revelli Memorial Composition Contest .  I conducted it recently with the excellent Calgary Stampede Show Band in Calgary in February, and they reminded me that they also commissioned Bryant’s Stampede which I think is terrific fun. He, together with his colleagues in BCM, Whitacre (5), Newman (1) and Bonney, are in my view making a huge contribution to contemporary American wind band literature with a series of interesting and challenging works. 

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DAVID WHITWELL <davidwhitwell@msn > writes that his 13 volume History and Literature of the Wind Band is now available from Ruh Music, Ltd., Soodstrasse 53, 8134 Adliswil , Switzerland .  The contact person is Michael Hug, the owner of Ruh, who can be reached by fax (from the US) at 011 41 1711 74 45 or by email at michael.hug@ruh.ch  Ruh also has his Berlioz on Band and Wagner on Band (the Concise History of the Band and my Art of Musical Conducting are still with Shattinger in St. Louis).
He writes:
Ruh also carries a large number of my editions of early original music for large band, including,
Berlioz, Symphony for Band
Reicha, Symphony for Band (arr. for modern instruments)
Beethoven, Siegessinfonie
Ponchielli, Sinfonia in b minor
Ponchielli, Sinfonia in f minor
Ponchielli, Elegia on the Death of Garibaldi
Ponchielli, Marcia funebre for Manzoni
Ponchielli, Variations on The Carnival of Venice
Ponchielli, Concerto for Trumpet and Band
and works for large band by Haydn, Kling, Krommer, Maschek, Mejo, Meyerbeer, Ochs, Spontini, Wieprecht, etc.  They also carry my own saxophone concerto, Civil War Reflections, and my five symphonies.  

Works previously carried by WINDS are lodged in the Bundesakademie for Musik in Trossingen, and are available via Ruh, who has an arrangement with Trossingen to go find the work and copy it.
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CONDUCTING COURSES IN USA   UPDATE – 5 NEW COURSES

To access the website, browse on the University or the link.

JUNE 16 – 20 DUQUESNE UNIVERSITY

 Instructors Robert C. Cameron & H Robert Reynolds

JUNE 8 – 12 MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY

Kevin Sedatole and Mallory Thompson

 NEW

JUNE 16 – 20 CBDNA & UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO AT BOULDER

Alan McMurray, Tom Lee, John Mackey and Jim Cochran

To apply, you may download the application form from http://bands.colorado.edu and return it with the required deposit to:

 NEW

JUNE 16 – 20 PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY, OREGON

Rodney Winther with the 234th Army Band

Details from  www.oregonconductorssymposium.com.

 JUNE 16 - 21 UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN

Kevin Sedatole, Richard Floyd, Robert Carnochan and Jerry 

.NEW

JUNE 23 – 25 INDIANA UN IVERSITY

Stephen Pratt and Richard Blatti
Website address for application form and more information:
http://www.music.indiana.edu/special_programs/conducting/

JUNE 29 – JULY 3 ITHACA COLLEGE

 Richard Floyd and Steve Peterson    

 June 29 - July 1 SUNY FREDONIA

Paula Holcomb and Gary Hill

 July 13 – 18 UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS CITY

  Steve Davis, Craig Kirchoff, Daniel Schmidt and Joe Parisi. 

NEW

July 13 – 17    TEXAS TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY

The Art of Conducting and Pedagogy
 Sarah McKoin and Rodney Winther, Cincinnati Conservatory
For more information, please contact Debbie Holt at debbie.holt@ttu.edu

July 21 – 26  FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY

  Roby George, Michael Haithcock, and Matt Farquhar 

NEW

July 22 – 25    UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI and the COLLEGE CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC

Workshop with Rodney Winther

 The application screening process will begin on March 1. At such time, you may download the brochure/application form from http://www.uc.edu/ccm/winds/summer.htm

JULY 5 – 13 THE 2008 WORLD WIND ORCHESTRA PROJECT (WYWOP) will be held July 5th - 13th as part of the Mid Europe festival in Schladming , Austria . This is an International Wind Ensemble open to anyone age 15-30. Guest conductors include Kevin Sedatole (USA), Felix Hauswirth (CH), and Johann Mösenbichler (A). If you have any students who might be interested, please direct them to this website for application forms and more information:

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