Your Primary Function

Do you remember when everybody discussed iPhone’s mediocre function as a phone? Dropped calls, antennae, substandard sound. It was in every review of the first few iPhones versions. I don’t hear people wring their hands about it anymore, and the reason is simple. Phone is not iPhone’s most important function. On Apple’s website, […]

The Stages of Artistry

There are five main stages of artistry: 1. Recognition (Hearing) 2. Appreciation (Liking) 3. Participation (Joining) 4. Creation (Making) 5. Dissemination (Sharing) What step are you on? What step are your students on? You can be on any step and not reach the next (He recognizes it as art but […]

Post-Mortem

Final concerts are behind you – or about to be so. What many do is focus forward immediately after things wrap up. Start planning next year, program music, calendars, fundraisers, and on and on. Those are all important things, and I advocate staying as far ahead of the curve now as you can. But I think […]

Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye

When Alice Parker worked with us on this piece, she described it is the most powerful anti-war song ever written. I never fought in a war and I hope beyond hope that my sons (and students) never do either. The profound loss of life breaks my heart. How many leaders, how many artists, […]

Art is Specific

There is nothing like a stellar performance of Shakespeare at the Stratford Festival to remind you that art is specific. Of course, Shakespeare’s As You Like It is plenty specific – specific lines, characters, motivations. 400 years’ of scholarship can give you plenty of specific ideas on motivation, blocking, interaction. The production we saw […]

Creative Pick-Me-Ups

On this long weekend, dive into this great series of creative conversations with photographer Chase Jarvis of CreativeLive. He’s curated a series of 30 60-90 minute talks with experts in creativity, entrepreneurship, etc. Here are three I highly recommend. Austin Kleon – the author of some of my favorite books to recommend on […]

Students Must Study The Arts

John Quincy Adams wrote, I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. My sons ought to study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural history, naval architecture, navigation, commerce, and agriculture, in order to give their children a right to study painting, poetry, […]

Thank You

Dear Seniors, I read with relish your heartfelt tributes on social media and in letters; I watch your faces raw with emotion after our Farewell Concert. I love it all. But today is also my chance to thank you. Thank you for teaching me, for challenging me, for pushing me to be […]

Recording: The Ultimate Test

Last evening I held the first of two three-hour studio recording sessions with my choir. Most years we spend some time in the studio; this year we are putting together the first half of an album that we’ll complete next year. We started tonight with May, the piece we commissioned with Michael McGlynn. […]

Generosity of Spirit

Here’s what I aspire to in my professional and personal interactions: Generosity. Generosity of spirit is the bedrock of my collaborations. I try to make every interaction I have be built on generosity, and when I lapse in my generosity, I apologize and fix it as quickly as I can. Generosity is giving more […]