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MYS S.O. Notes for Feb 29, 2020

Hi everybody,


Our rehearsal plan for 2/29 is below. Please note that strings have a later call time and a later end time.

 

Rehearsal plan for Feb 29, 2020


9:15am - woodwinds, brass, percussion call time (15 min before downbeat as per Student Handbook)

9:30am-10:30am - Begining of rehearsal: Schiff, Mov 2

10:15am - strings call time (15 min before downbeat as per Student Handbook)

10:30am-11:00am - Schiff, Mov 1

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11:00am-11:15am - break

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11:15am-12:10pm – tutti mov 4

12:10pm-12:30pm - Seereise

12:30pm - woodwinds, brass dismissed (if you're staying for band, please eat lunch outside rehearsal room)

12:30pm-12:45pm – Oblivion (strings and harp)

 

1. Drill → 2. Drill → 3. Drill → 4. Groove


This is it, everybody! We are getting to concert week.


Please spend time this week drilling rhythm in the Schiff concerto. You can do this away from your instrument (sing, scat, tap, clap, solfege, whatever works for you). The more you do this, the more comfortable you will be with your part, and then, like magic, GROOVE happens.


Make sure to mark your parts with your pencils. It's VERY useful to write lines or dashes across rests when they fall on the beat. I've added an example below (excerpt is in cut time, or in 2).


Also, I want to remind everybody that our guest soloist, Regina Carter, is world-class. She is a recipient of the MacArthur “genius” award, she's a Grammy-nominated recording artist, she is faculty at Manhattan School of Music, she has been a Pulitzer Prize jurist TWICE. We're incredibly lucky to have her. I'm adding her full bio at the end of this post.

 

Updated Rosters


Due to too many missed rehearsals or extraordinary commitments, several people will be sitting out this concert. Please review updated rosters here.

 

Regina Carter - Bio


Trying to fit Regina Carter into a neatly defined musical category is pointless. She enjoys performing many styles of music—jazz, R&B, Latin, classical, blues, country, pop, African, and on and on. In each she explores the power of music through the voice of the violin.

Above: Regina live in Atlanta, photo by Ernest Gregory.


A recipient of the MacArthur “genius” award and a Doris Duke Artist Award, Regina has been widely hailed for her mastery of her instrument and her drive to expand its possibilities. In 2018 she was named artistic director of the New Jersey Performing Arts All-Female Jazz Residency, a unique summer immersion program for aspiring women jazz professionals. In December of that year she was nominated for a Grammy for Best Improvised Solo for “Some of That Sunshine,” the title track on vocalist Karrin Allyson’s album. She is on the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music. Past positions have included artist in residence at the Oakland University School of Music, Theatre, and Dance; resident artist for San Francisco Performances; and resident artistic director for SFJAZZ.


Born in Detroit, Regina began studying violin at the age of four using the Suzuki method. She attended Cass Technical High School in Detroit, and her training continued at the New England Conservatory of Music and at Oakland University in Michigan for jazz. She taught violin in public schools in Detroit and on a U.S. military base in Germany. She first gained attention with Straight Ahead, an all-female jazz quintet that recently celebrated its 25-year reunion at the Detroit Jazz Festival. She also recorded and toured for six years with The String Trio of New York.


In 1995 Regina released her self-titled solo debut on Atlantic Records. Three more albums followed in rapid succession: Something for Grace (1997), Rhythms of the Heart (1999), and Motor City Moments (2000), all on Verve. Traveling to Genoa, Italy, and making history by being the first nonclassical violinist to play Niccolò Paganini’s Il Cannone (“The Cannon”), the legendary violin built by Giuseppe Guarneri in 1743, inspired her next effort, Paganini: After a Dream (Verve, 2003). I’ll Be Seeing You: A Sentimental Journey (Verve, 2006) became a powerful and heartfelt tribute to her late mother. The connection to family, history, and tradition continued in Reverse Thread (E1 Music, 2010) and Southern Comfort (Sony Masterworks, 2014), drawing ties between her own African heritage and her family’s history. Her most recent release, Ella: Accentuate the Positive (OKeh, 2017), celebrates the music and spirit of her inspiration, musical legend Ella Fitzgerald.


Regina also can be heard on such albums as Arturo O’Farrill’s Fandango at the Wall: A Soundtrack for the United States, Mexico and Beyond; Stefon Harris’s Sonic Creed; John Beasley’s MONK’estra, volume 2; and James Carter’s Caribbean Rhapsody, along with Eddie Palmieri’s Listen Here!, which won a 2005 Grammy award for best Latin Jazz album, and the Grammy-nominated Freefall with Kenny Barron.


She has performed at numerous jazz festivals, including Monterey, Newport, Detroit, Atlanta, Bern, Montreux, Miami, New Orleans, Montreal, Mid-Atlantic (Washington, DC), PDX (Portland, Oregon), Rochester, and North Sea (Rotterdam, the Netherlands). Among the orchestras she has appeared with are the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Chicago Symphony, the Orquestra Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo, the Knoxville Jazz Orchestra, the Atlanta Symphony, and the Chicago Sinfonietta. Particularly thrilling was her participation in the 2017 International Jazz Day All-Star Global Concert in Havana, Cuba.


A winner of multiple readers’ and critics’ poll awards from DownBeat, JazzTimes, and other publications, Regina tours with her own group and has appeared frequently as a guest soloist, including with such performers as Kenny Barron, the late bassist Ray Brown, Akua Dixon, Steve Turre, Stefon Harris, George Wein, Mary J. Blige, Joe Jackson, Billy Joel, Dolly Parton, Omara Portuondo, Cassandra Wilson, and Chieli Minucci and Special EFX.


Regina has twice been a Pulitzer Prize jurist. She is currently featured in J. Jill’s “Inspired Women” ad campaign.


Regina lives in Maywood, New Jersey, with her husband, drummer Alvester Garnett.

 

Thanks for reading all the way to the end. See you Saturday!


Dr. G.

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