Wooden Wednesdays: Overlooked Habits 2

Note: this is the seventeenth of a series of posts investigating the leadership style of John Wooden and its applicability to choral music education. We have reviewed the fifteen traits John Wooden included in his Pyramid of Success. Throughout, I felt there was a universality to his selected traits as applicable to all disciplines, despite his developing them as a basketball […]

Look For The Silver Lining

Jerome Kern and B.G. DeSylva wrote this song nearly a hundred years ago, in 1919. I was revisiting Chet Baker’s beautifully understated singing today and was knocked off my feet by his interpretation. Look for the silver lining, Whene’er a cloud appears in the blue. Remember, somewhere the sun is shining, And […]

Collaboration in a Conference Performance

Imagine if conference performances afforded you a chance for collaboration beyond the confines of your ensemble. Conference performances are high-stress, high-profile opportunities, and as such can be perceived as ego-driven. For me, the best performances are the ones that subsume the ego and put genuine music-making at the core of the performance. […]

Proficiency and Growth

Both proficiency and growth are important. In kindergarteners, growth is far more valuable than any proficiency. On college graduation day the potential for growth should be intact, but it’s more important that the graduate has some finished skills. At a professional level, the growth achieved must be on top of current proficiency. In educators, in orchestra […]

Festival Snapshot

It’s getting to be festival season for high school choirs and bands, and that means a reminder is needed: Every performance is a snapshot. A single picture of your actual potential. Will every snapshot show you in the best light? Of course not: even the most photogenic people take pictures with their eyes closed. […]