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Music Blog Posts - Page 48 of 52 - The Open College of the Arts

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OCASA Music Representative thumb

OCASA Music Representative

Chris Lawry has represented Music Students on the OCASA Committee since the Student Association was set up last Autumn.  Having now completed his studies with OCA, he is stepping down from the role.  I’m sure that everyone would want to join me, and the committee, in saying a big ‘Thanks’ to Chris for getting involved […]

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The True Subtlety of Music thumb

The True Subtlety of Music

If, as many history text books direct us to, we believe that tonality lay down and died between the great 20th century wars, then we have to resign ourselves to having lost not only a vital organ in the apparatus of the musical body without which longer term survival is unlikely, but we are also […]

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Composing for unusual instruments thumb

Composing for unusual instruments

There are lots of people writing music in the world, and a plethora of instrumentalists too, but it can often be difficult to be noticed. In my line of work I often come across what I call the ‘generic flute piece’ – a basically well constructed piece for flute which does most things right and […]

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Music to look at thumb

Music to look at

We seem to have invented for ourselves a new dilemma.   The demand for old music in our concert halls continues undiminished in strength, though the listeners grow older, more tired and, most likely, less perceptive – for how far away can we be from the conception of a Beethoven symphony and still participate in the […]

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Why collaborate? thumb

Why collaborate?

For artists, photographers, musicians, writers and other arts practitioners at all levels, it is all too easy to become isolated. We can work alone, often from home, and it can sometimes be difficult to engage with a wider community of other artists. For some, this is an ideal scenario, affording control over the work produced, […]

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So what do the listeners make of it? thumb

So what do the listeners make of it?

A concert audience is a rather different creature now compared with what it once was, although it can give performers just as hard a time as reputedly in the 18th century.   It is not unusual for a singer in an Italian opera house to receive applause and shouts of ‘encore’ which, far from being flattering, […]

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Taking inspiration from Sally Beamish thumb

Taking inspiration from Sally Beamish

When I heard the composer Sally Beamish talk about her composition for the Cultural Olympiad several weeks ago I took inspiration from the way she had responded to the theme of sports. The composition Spinal Chords, commissioned by the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, expresses the slow recovery process of journalist Melanie Reid who […]

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Getting your works performed Part 2: 11 Golden Rules of submitting your work to performers thumb

Getting your works performed Part 2: 11 Golden Rules of submitting your work to performers

In Part 1, I mentioned some of the ways a composer can get their music heard.  In this article, I want to highlight the 11 Golden Rules of submitting your work to performers, either through a Call for Scores or as an unsolicited approach. My ensemble, rarescale, has an open Call for Scores, and I […]

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Getting your works performed 1: Starting Points thumb

Getting your works performed 1: Starting Points

There comes a point in the life of most (if not all) composers, when the computer-generated realisation of their music is no longer enough, and some sort of contact with live performers is required. Employ some musicians. Go to a composer workshop, such as the one held recently at the OCA Enter a competition Send […]

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What's in a name …? thumb

What's in a name …?

Looking up from the programme, a puzzled expression crossed the child’s face as he asked: ‘What’s a lieder recital?’  ‘A song recital’.  ‘So what’s lieder?’  ‘German for songs’.  ‘So why . . . .?’.   And well might the apparently naïve question be asked of a recital of chansons too. Is it not yet another curiosity […]

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