One of my comments, for Caitlin, who played the opening of Mozart's 4th violin concerto, was that I thought she ought to start her trills from the upper note rather than the lower note in keeping with standard performance practice. When Ms. Boisvert read my comment (they were all kept anonymous), she exclaimed,
"Yes! I thought this too! You were about to make me scream with your trills! Of course you must start them from the upper note!"
{Poor Caitlin!}
Then, later in the masterclass, Ms. Boisvert declared,
"Taking an audition is the hardest thing there is. Playing a concerto with orchestra is easier. Having your wisdom teeth removed without anesthesia is easier."
While I've never taken any extremely competitive auditions for major symphony orchestras, if today's masterclass was any indication, I certainly believe her. When she delivered her comments and suggestions to students, it was like this:
"More accent. Do it again. No, more accent still! Again. Your D is too low. Again. Articulate the A better. Again. I can't hear the second note in that sixteenth passage clearly. Again. Start on the string. Try it again. Less bow. Again. Closer to the bridge. Again. Vibrate the E. Again. No, vibrate the E! Again!"
{And all this for about two measures of music, played by a student who plays very well.}
Makes you wonder if we musicians are crazy, willingly subjecting ourselves time and again to this kind of criticism, and then locking ourselves in practice rooms for hours on end. Here at the festival, and at my grad school, and at music schools across the country, it's normal to us to hear teachers saying things like, "Acceptable," or "Somewhat better," or "That wasn't too terrible." It's normal to have our playing, a very personal expression of ourselves, picked apart note by note by difficult teachers who encourage us at times but also push us to always do better. It all seems normal to us. Do teachers in other disciplines work with young engineers or students of literature like this? I wonder.
"That wasn't too terrible"---I'd be in tears. You are very brave to go through such treatment!
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