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and some practical ideas about how we can use our talents as conductors to be a significant part of a
significant experience. This book is for any conductor who wants to better understand his role as a
leader from the podium.
Dr. Ramona M. Wis
PROLOGUE
Opening Our Eyes
I have always been, as a good friend tells me, a student of process. Midway through my doctoral studies in music I seriously
contemplated changing my major to educational psychology because I was fascinated (or frustrated) by observing how people
function in learning environments, specifically the ensemble rehearsal. I had seen how musicians could achieve far beyond their
innate talent level when the conductor set them up to succeed, but I had also seen how even the most gifted ensemble could suffer
from low morale, lack of motivation and flat-lined expressiveness because the conductor seemed oblivious to or simply uninterested
in the idea of designing a creative, engaging and edifying environment.
In short, I studied what made a conductor successful and taught what I learned to hundreds of students and teachers in
undergraduate and graduate classes and conference workshops.
I really had been studying was leadershipspecifically, the way in which conductors use their skills, knowledge and character to
create not only a fine musical product, but also a meaningful musical experience. More than technique, more than knowledge, more
than talent, more than personalityleadership is the key to great conductors and great ensembles.
Whether or not we make this shift in our thinking determines the quality and direction of our entire careers. If we are
focused on ourselves, self-preservation kicks in and we make decisions based on our ego most of the time. How will it
feel to me? What will work for me? How will I look to my various publics? How successful will I be? But if we shift our
focus to those we lead, who are really those we serve, everything changes. We now ask, "What does the ensemble need
to be successful? How can we work together to get there?"
Few of us take the time to look at the traditional ensemble leadership model from the viewpoint of the individual
musician, a model which can become more and more discouraging as one's knowledge and experience grows. It can be
described in this way:
A conductor communicates with the more than one hundred musicians "reporting" to him by standing on an elevated
platform and waving a stick of wood at them. This communication is essentially one-way since individual musicians
rarelyif everexpress an idea or opinion to the conductor. Orchestral musicians are constantly required to conform,
and they are usually denied an individual sense of accomplishment. For example, in a traditional orchestra, an important
element of the job of violinist number 26 is to make absolutely sure that his bow flies off the strings of his instrument at
precisely the same nanosecond as violinists number 25 and number 27. If he does his job well, violinist 26's immediate
feedback (and reward) is to be ignored by the conductor altogether. Creativity, engagement in the process, and employee
satisfaction don't really enter into the equation.
The success and benefits of the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra musicians empowerment (there is no principal conductor;
responsibilities are shared amongst the players) leaves us with the notion that the conductor is not only unnecessary, but
in many ways a hindrance to artistic freedom and the achievement of musical goals. Are there but two choices: the
dominant autocrat or the absence of a conductor altogether? I believe that neither extreme is necessary or even practical,
at least for the great majority of musical ensembles that exist.
Critical points we can lean:
1. Musicians feel a strong desire to be included in a more creative way than just
following directions on cue.
Musicians are capable of creative decision-making and want to be engaged in the process in order to feel fully invested in the
music. There is a desire, even a need, to be involved when it comes to creating one's own musical destiny. As conductors we
are typically not trained to think collaboratively when it comes to decision-making in the rehearsal and so for many of us this
notion seems foreign and perhaps threatening to our concept of what a conductor is and does. At the core of this desire to
be engaged more meaningfully in the creative process is the musicians' need to be seen and respected as a person rather than
just the "third clarinet" or the "soprano section leader. Authentic relationships are fundamental to the musicians sense of
contribution and value and significantly impact their overall experience and creativity. Musicians also want to feel they are
using their gifts in important rather than utilitarian ways and that they have opportunities to grow.
Studying leadership apart from pedagogical or technical approaches to music can help illuminate universal principles and
free us to reflect on how those principles can work for us as conductors.