No, with canned music for the ballet and musicals, it's bound to happen someday.brianf wrote:This can only happen in the pop world!
restarting performance
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Mark
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Albertibass
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Last year, at a festival in toronto, my school's wind ensemble, was playing Holst's Second Suite.
It was all fine until song of the blacksmith, (which is on th off beat), and a trumpet came in ON Beat ONE, and somehow, the band paniced, and we were not able to get back on our feet.
Afterwards, the adjudicator said that our conducter should have restarted.
It was all fine until song of the blacksmith, (which is on th off beat), and a trumpet came in ON Beat ONE, and somehow, the band paniced, and we were not able to get back on our feet.
Afterwards, the adjudicator said that our conducter should have restarted.
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tofu
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You better play right when Chuck shows up with his magaphone and bag of old cabbage or at least be able to "DUCK"Chuck(G) wrote:
IMOHO, paying audiences are too polite in this country. When a performance gets badly mangled, I yearn for shouts of "Fiasco!" or a shower of wilted produce aimed for the stage.
at least he's not throwing beer bottles like the rock crowd did when we
did an outside 4th of July gig a few years back. They had rock bands all day long in the 90 degree heat and then us (a traditional jazz band) as the last band before the fireworks. Twenty year old drunks let their arms express there unhappiness about jazz! We reallly needed the Blues Brothers chicken wire. The good news about drunks is lousy aim.
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Okay, for those who think that restarting is okay, when is it too late to restart? Taking the Holst Suite in F as an example, do you restart if the tuba and piccolo can't quite seem to line up at the end of the Dargason? Is it okay if the solo tuba misses his cue just before that? If not, when is it too late to restart?
- jtuba
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Are you talking about NYP Shostakovich 5 in the late 90s? I was at that concert and the restart of the third mvmt wasn't the orchestra's fault.BVD Press wrote:There have a been a few I wanted to stop and retart. Anyone ever "crap" all over the opening of the First Ewald Quintet? I am very fortunate to have mossed most of the notes at a conference many years ago. Even more fortunate that I have a tape!!
A few places I have heard restarts in the past:
Columbus Symphony (I used to 1-2 times a week and things are bound to happen)
New York Philharmonic - many years ago
Chrstmas Brass Choir concert a couple years ago - they stopped and started twice I believe
- Joe Baker
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Chuck, if you're fortunate enough to have never been on stage when an ensemble hit a "point of no return", then I envy you. I have been in this situation several times -- less often as I and the people I play with mature. But there is a point at which there's no way to get everyone back together, and it tends (again, I've got some experience here) to go from all okay to a cluster-you-know-what in the space of about 3 or 4 bars. Yes, this is something that SHOULDN'T ever happen. In a professional situation it REALLY shouldn't ever happen. But sometimes it does. When it does happen, I don't think it matters how far into the work you are. The conductor should stop the group, perhaps speak a VERY brief apology ("Ladies and gentlemen, our apologies"), go back to the best point prior to the jam-up and start again.
I should go back and see who it was that said this earlier, but someone mentioned that ensembles shouldn't "go so close to the edge". I wholeheartedly agree. That's one reason I have left the community band I used to play with. I don't remember them ever being close to having to restart, but they mangled a lot of music by trying to do the hardest pieces they could get through. I'd have much rather played easier pieces WELL than more difficult pieces POORLY.
________________________________
Joe Baker, who thinks it's okay for music to be hard to perform, but it should NEVER be hard to listen to!**
** And yes, I know, many of you will disagree.
I should go back and see who it was that said this earlier, but someone mentioned that ensembles shouldn't "go so close to the edge". I wholeheartedly agree. That's one reason I have left the community band I used to play with. I don't remember them ever being close to having to restart, but they mangled a lot of music by trying to do the hardest pieces they could get through. I'd have much rather played easier pieces WELL than more difficult pieces POORLY.
________________________________
Joe Baker, who thinks it's okay for music to be hard to perform, but it should NEVER be hard to listen to!**
** And yes, I know, many of you will disagree.
"Luck" is what happens when preparation meets opportunity -- Seneca
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Joe, there are circumstances that are beyond everyone's control that mandate restarts--and I'm sympathetic to them. Mechanical failures are certainly one. Distracting noises are another, although I recall that Peter Schickele, when performing in San Jose under the airport flight path, incorporated the sounds of the jets flying overhead into his routine by ducking and cowering every time one was heard.
But when I'm paying the price of several CD's for my seat and the orchestra messes up badly enough to require a restart, I get the feeling that someone hasn't done his/her homework. In the case of the Mozart restart, I didn't think that things were irretrievably lost if the musicians had simply realized what was going on and resynchronized. The restart was far more irritating than a bucket of clams would have been.
In that respect, I'm with Mike in learning how to recover is probably a very important skill to learn. Thinking that a musical score is like Heroclitis' stream ("Man can never step twice into the same river.") isn't productive. Of course you can step twice into the same river--if you run downstream first.
But when I'm paying the price of several CD's for my seat and the orchestra messes up badly enough to require a restart, I get the feeling that someone hasn't done his/her homework. In the case of the Mozart restart, I didn't think that things were irretrievably lost if the musicians had simply realized what was going on and resynchronized. The restart was far more irritating than a bucket of clams would have been.
In that respect, I'm with Mike in learning how to recover is probably a very important skill to learn. Thinking that a musical score is like Heroclitis' stream ("Man can never step twice into the same river.") isn't productive. Of course you can step twice into the same river--if you run downstream first.
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Re: restarting performance
My tuba instructor chided me if I would stop in the middle of a piece in a lesson.rascaljim wrote:When do you all feel it appropriate to restart a piece?
In recital?
In auditions?
He emphasized the point by suggesting that one shouldn't even stop in the middle of a piece while practicing. Your brain will keep reminding you of the place that you stopped, and it will occur again--possibly in a real performance atmosphere.
The advice was when practicing, plow through until the end of the passage, then go back and work repeatedly on the culprit spot s-l-o-w-l-y.
Jonathantuba asked,
This is not really an answer to the question, just a humorous aside....would people think a work should be restarted if a mobile phone goes off at a quiet moment ruining the atmosphere?
A friend of mine was performing the Gregson Concerto in a private recital for friends and family. Right after the pianist began the long introduction, a cell phone rang. It was the soloist's phone! He answered the call, with the pianist continuing the introduction all the while. "Yes, honey," said the tubist, "I'm about to begin the solo part." Then his jaw dropped, and he walked behind the piano and made a motion as if he was pullling up his zipper. Then, without missing a beat, he picked up his tuba and came in with the opening fanfare.
Yes, this was pre-staged. The soloist's wife had called him from the rear of the recital hall. Most of the audience was familiar with the Gregson, so everyone had a good laugh. Most impressively, the tubist played a fine performance without missing a beat!
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Nope. I believe it was one of the Brahm's Symphonies. I cannot remember why it heppend, but tyhey stopped and started over again from beginning after playing a minute or so.jtuba wrote:Are you talking about NYP Shostakovich 5 in the late 90s? I was at that concert and the restart of the third mvmt wasn't the orchestra's fault.BVD Press wrote:There have a been a few I wanted to stop and retart. Anyone ever "crap" all over the opening of the First Ewald Quintet? I am very fortunate to have mossed most of the notes at a conference many years ago. Even more fortunate that I have a tape!!
A few places I have heard restarts in the past:
Columbus Symphony (I used to 1-2 times a week and things are bound to happen)
New York Philharmonic - many years ago
Chrstmas Brass Choir concert a couple years ago - they stopped and started twice I believe
Bryan Doughty
http://www.cimarronmusic.com/
http://www.cimarronmusic.com/
- dmmorris
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I can agree with both sides on this......sorta.
If I'm shelling out $50 (actually well over $100+ including my sweetie and I and supper, parking, etc.), I expect a great show....particularly if it's an ol' "war-horse", .........there is just no excuse for a botched reading on the "standards".
But I'll definitely cut 'em some slack if it is new music or it has a tricky intro. If it's a train-wreck at the top of the page, then they should re-start. If it's well into the piece, then I sorta expect them to grind-it-out in recovery-mode.
I've heard examples where the "botched" piece was completed and the conductor turned around, apologized saying "sorry....we really meant to play it this way" where-upon they played it through correctly the 2nd time.
I've seen a lot of big dogs, and little dogs re-start and I respect them for doing so in public.....still I love to be rocked by a first cut that is perfect
If I'm shelling out $50 (actually well over $100+ including my sweetie and I and supper, parking, etc.), I expect a great show....particularly if it's an ol' "war-horse", .........there is just no excuse for a botched reading on the "standards".
But I'll definitely cut 'em some slack if it is new music or it has a tricky intro. If it's a train-wreck at the top of the page, then they should re-start. If it's well into the piece, then I sorta expect them to grind-it-out in recovery-mode.
I've heard examples where the "botched" piece was completed and the conductor turned around, apologized saying "sorry....we really meant to play it this way" where-upon they played it through correctly the 2nd time.
I've seen a lot of big dogs, and little dogs re-start and I respect them for doing so in public.....still I love to be rocked by a first cut that is perfect
beta 14??..........OK!
Mid 70's B&S Tuba
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XtremeEuph
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lmao I had a similar problem but thank goodness it was during rehearsel. Our Bass Clarinetist (is that proper, meh stupid woodwindsken k wrote:
Once at a community band concert we performed a march (can't remember which anymore). Unfortunately there were two versions of it in our folder and about a third of the band had the wrong arrangement up (it was in a lower key than the original). Needless to say I stopped and we made sure everyone had the correct music up and then restarted.
Also one would not necessarily have to go completely to the beginning of a piece or movement. there are often sections within a piece where one could restart.
ken k
BTW I think i have had a restart with my Highschool band like 3 times in 2 or 3 years. Once or twice it turned out well and the JUDGES and audience didnt seem to mind but the other just made things worse. At a festival in Winnipeg recently, a fairly simple song "On a Hymnsong By Philip Bliss" (cant remember who composed or arranged it sorry) and it just fell apart like 52 pick up in the beginning (stupid sax's ,haha i wasnt playing there) but we kept going on and one sax was SQUEALING like a pig. Anyway once we got the recording of the judges, they seemed to ignore the squealing and the whole beginning and just focused on our precision , air , the works. One of the three made a comment saying, the restart could have helped you play the piece properly, or it could have just made you live through all that hell another minute all over again. Just my boring stories I thought i should share.
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big_blue_tubist
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Once, I attended a contemporary recital where the guest artist (a viola player) had to stop and start again because he forgot to retune his strings to the
tritone
....
While I thought his unpreparedness was highly unprofessional, I see why there was the necessity to make this change. The retuning changed the entire character of the composition.
While I thought his unpreparedness was highly unprofessional, I see why there was the necessity to make this change. The retuning changed the entire character of the composition.
Franken-King 1241
Giddings Taku
Giddings Taku
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I agree Chuck that when I am at a professional concert I would expect near perfection as well, and I would not want to hear something fall apart.Chuck(G) wrote:What I expect for my $50 is a near-flawless performance. I don't expect to see the orchestra stop and re-tune in the middle of a movement; I don't expect to hear erratic tempi, bad phrasing, lack of dynamic control, missed entrances, bad articulation and a whole host of other bush-league problems when I pay to sit in the audience. If I do, I feel cheated.ken k wrote:If you were in the audience, would you rather hear a piece played correctly or would you rather listen to someone completely botch it up and not stop? Assuming it can be played better then I would stop. Brain farts happen, and sometimes you just need to get back on track.
IMOHO, paying audiences are too polite in this country. When a performance gets badly mangled, I yearn for shouts of "Fiasco!" or a shower of wilted produce aimed for the stage.
With community/amateur groups or free concerts, my expectations aren't nearly as high. I recall hearing a community band restart "Blue Tango" no fewer than 3 times in a row because the director was unable to communicate to the players. It was a free concert, so I could laugh along with the band.
I was mainly talking about student performances. I teach elementary school band and it has happened on more than one ocassion in the past 20 years where something did not get off to a great start and I stopped and started again.
ken k
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I couldn't agree more. I'd expect my money back if it happened. Just as I would if the film projector broke down in the middle of a movie I'm watching. Still, projectors sometimes break and ensembles sometimes screw up. Both should be EXCEENDINGLY rare.Chuck(G) wrote:Joe, ... when I'm paying the price of several CD's for my seat and the orchestra messes up badly enough to require a restart, I get the feeling that someone hasn't done his/her homework.
______________________________________
Joe Baker, for whom the term "violent agreement" is coming to mind.
"Luck" is what happens when preparation meets opportunity -- Seneca
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I don't know if I'd ask for my money back--but I'd remember it for a long time. And there are the real stinker pieces--I wouldn't flinch too much if I heard a horn crack a note in the Schumann Konzertstück--it's a tough work.Joe Baker wrote:I couldn't agree more. I'd expect my money back if it happened. Just as I would if the film projector broke down in the middle of a movie I'm watching. Still, projectors sometimes break and ensembles sometimes screw up. Both should be EXCEENDINGLY rare.
.
One very memorable time when I really did feel like demanding my money back didn't have anything to do with the orchestra's performance.
It was a "world premiere" of a major work by a big-name composer; orchestra conducted by a big-name conductor flown in from the Old Country.
Comes time for said world premiere and it's announced that it's not ready yet. Well, the orchestra only had one other work prepared, so they played it--three times in a row.
Idiot composer still got a standing ovation. I was ready to throw my shoe at him.
Sometimes I just don't understand audiences.
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That's a different situation than most of the responses have assumed. Excepting contests, performances by schoolkids are not damaged by restarts when the kids lose their focus and things go haywire. Most parents would be grateful that the band director gave them a shot at fixing the problem rather than grinding through disaster.ken k wrote:I was mainly talking about student performances. I teach elementary school band and it has happened on more than one ocassion in the past 20 years where something did not get off to a great start and I stopped and started again.
Also, kids are expected to stretch themselves and play stuff at the limit of their abilities. That's a little risky, but the reward is worth the risk.
Rick "who remembers a sportscaster attracting lots of well-earned ire for calling a college game with the same expectations as for a pro game" Denney
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Well, the listening difficulty is much more a statement about the listener than the performer. Some listeners can never be satisfied, and (most) others wouldn't realize it if one the tuba players played the Star Spangled Banner in the middle of any given work. Thus, your standard is not easy to enforce in practice.Joe Baker wrote:I should go back and see who it was that said this earlier, but someone mentioned that ensembles shouldn't "go so close to the edge". I wholeheartedly agree. That's one reason I have left the community band I used to play with. I don't remember them ever being close to having to restart, but they mangled a lot of music by trying to do the hardest pieces they could get through. I'd have much rather played easier pieces WELL than more difficult pieces POORLY.
________________________________
Joe Baker, who thinks it's okay for music to be hard to perform, but it should NEVER be hard to listen to!**
** And yes, I know, many of you will disagree.
It was me you were referring to, but I think you've gone too far with what I said. I think it's imperative for amateur bands to perform just beyond the limit of their abilities (but not so far beyond their abilities that a piece is likely to require a restart).
This gives me an opportunity to again promote my Performance Index theory. I believe all performing groups have a Performance Index. Professional groups might consistently put 95% or more of what is possible out there, so their index might be 95. Outstanding community bands might approach that--say 90. Some bands might only be a 20.
But I believe that any given band will perform to their index no matter what the difficulty of the music. If the music is purposely easy, they will be bored and unmotivated by it and still do no better than their index (they may get more notes, or not, but it will not be more entertaining and is likely to be less so). Pro groups might do well with a boring work just out of professionalism, but the amateur groups I've been in have frequently performed the hardest work on the program well while botching the filler stuff badly.
A good conductor will put music in the folder that requires a band with an index about 10 points higher than the group can provide (or 100, whichever comes first). That will challenge and motivate them to do their very best, with the result that they might improve a few points.
But the typical amateur group that can't get close to perfection on the hard stuff won't get close to perfection on the easy stuff. That's my long experience.
Rick "who thinks boredom is a worse enemy of entertaining performances than incompetence" Denney
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That's what you get for attending a VIOLA recital...big_blue_tubist wrote:Once, I attended a contemporary recital where the guest artist (a viola player) had to stop and start again because he forgot to retune his strings to thetritone
....
While I thought his unpreparedness was highly unprofessional, I see why there was the necessity to make this change. The retuning changed the entire character of the composition.
(One cannot help but be reminded of the old viola joke, "Maestro! Maestro! he turned one of my pegs, and he won't tell me which one!")
Last edited by windshieldbug on Wed Mar 22, 2006 12:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
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This IS one of the rare times a professional group should start over, but I'd still be hopping mad that someone, somewhere in the food chain didn't anticipate this or had screwed up.banihex wrote:BSO started over once at Tanglewood, stopped after 25measures of tchaik 6 bc the sprinklers went off in the lawn and it sounded like people where getting murdered the way the screams echoed into the shed.....
-----
There IS a huge difference between a professional group starting over, and an amateur group of any size. Yet, though my wife and I agree that this will happen sometime in a student's career, she takes the "don't put it in their head that this is a possibility" approach. I can see the point, but it does happen, often enough that I see no problem with giving some guidelines and strategies. For one thing, regardless of how many students you ever train, only x of them are going to make it to the bigs. And you are out there to perform and entertain, not screw up.
Even my wife, in this last year, had the occasion of performing with a period instrument baroque ensemble where some of the players took a repeat, and some did not. This was not her issue, but she had the presence of mind to realize what had occured, step in, make a humorous aside to the audience, and then begin the movement over.
This is what had started the discussion for us, because it has always be so verboten to discuss, yet I thought that simple techniques could be universally applicable.
But then, I guess that's why I became a tuba player. Seeing humor in other performers' plight...
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
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Well....I've never understood how people can approach a performance without having all the entrances memorized; I don't mean the notes, I mean where the notes are in relation to the rest of the piece. This is mandatory in a complex piece of music! For a soloist and accompanist...BOTH should know exactly how both parts intertwine; if one of them has a mental lapse, the other should know the music well enough to catch on and continue.
Once, in whatever Beethoven symphony has that second horn part that is quite low and prominent and goes on and on and even has a repeat....I lost my @#$#@ place and did the whole thing by ear. Had to; there was no other way. It worked, well enough anyway. It wasn't like I could raise my hand and say "Oh, conductor, I've lost my place! Could we start the movement over, please?"
With kids and amateur groups, it depends more on the audience than the performers....and most audiences for these kinds of gigs are forgiving.
I do remember very well, however, a professional performance at a major international horn society conference. It was En Foret, I think....horn, piano, soprano; the horn player kept making gestures with her right hand, waving it in the air; and the horn sounded....kind of sick. Then suddenly she stood up, stopped the performance, and turned to the audience. She said she was not properly prepared and apologized for aborting the performance. Then they all walked off the stage. You should have seen the look the soprano gave her....!
And you should have heard the commentary in the audience afterwards too; what I thought was...apparently the horn player was more willing to deal with the fallout from stopping a bad performance than she was to deal with the fallout for continuing a bad performance. Her reputation, I presume, and her decision.
MA
Once, in whatever Beethoven symphony has that second horn part that is quite low and prominent and goes on and on and even has a repeat....I lost my @#$#@ place and did the whole thing by ear. Had to; there was no other way. It worked, well enough anyway. It wasn't like I could raise my hand and say "Oh, conductor, I've lost my place! Could we start the movement over, please?"
With kids and amateur groups, it depends more on the audience than the performers....and most audiences for these kinds of gigs are forgiving.
I do remember very well, however, a professional performance at a major international horn society conference. It was En Foret, I think....horn, piano, soprano; the horn player kept making gestures with her right hand, waving it in the air; and the horn sounded....kind of sick. Then suddenly she stood up, stopped the performance, and turned to the audience. She said she was not properly prepared and apologized for aborting the performance. Then they all walked off the stage. You should have seen the look the soprano gave her....!
And you should have heard the commentary in the audience afterwards too; what I thought was...apparently the horn player was more willing to deal with the fallout from stopping a bad performance than she was to deal with the fallout for continuing a bad performance. Her reputation, I presume, and her decision.
MA
