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Posts Tagged ‘jazz’

Christian McBride and Inside Straight: Kind of Brown

By: Ron Hart

The last decade has seen Philadelphia jazz bass virtuoso Christian McBride expand his boundaries beyond traditional bop by experimenting with a myriad of different tones and textures, from fresh hip hop breakbeats on his amazing 2001 collaboration with fellow Philly musicians keyboardist Uri Cane and Roots drummer Ahmir “?uestlove” Thompson as The Philadelphia Experiment to Latin rhythms on his 2003 Warner Bros. Debut, Vertical Vision, to Miles style electric voodoo on his 2006 triple-disc live set at the sorely-missed Lower East Side jazz club Tonic. However, McBride always seems most at home when he’s in classic jazz mode, which makes his debut on the Mack Avenue label such a treat. Showcasing his new quintet, Inside Straight – vibraphonist Warren Wolf, Jr., modern sax great Steve Wilson, pianist Eric Reed and drummer Carl Allen – the album pays homage to two of his biggest heroes, bassist Ray Brown and one of his first bosses, the recently departed trumpet guru Freddie Hubbard, on his most traditional work since 2006′s New York Time.

However, sonically speaking, Kind of Brown is an album that will surely take jazz heads back to their favorite Blue Note-era Bobby Hutcherson titles like 1969′s Now! and 1974′s Cirrus, particularly in the interplay between Wolf and Wilson on compositions like “Rainbow Wheel” and “The Shade of the Cedar Tree,” an ode to McBride’s New York Time bandmate and hard bop great Cedar Walton. As a bassist, McBride himself displays his strong allegiance to the work of Charles Mingus on the stirring tribute to his old boss, the late Freddie Hubbard, via Hub’s 1978 homage to basketball great Kareem Abdul Jabar entitled “Theme for Kareem” (check the hot solo around the 4:00 mark) and the luscious “Pursuit of Peace,” a tight workout that really projects this Philly boy’s growth as a leader in his own right. Coupled with amazing cover art courtesy of illustrator Keith Henry Brown and designer Raj Naik, Kind of Brown is easily one of the finest new jazz releases of 2009.

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Stanley Clarke Trio:Jazz In the Garden

By: Trevor Pour

If you don’t consider Stanley Clarke one of the top five players in the bass business you don’t know Stanley Clarke. It’s as simple as that. As one of the preeminent global jazz minds of the last four decades, Clarke has contributed his otherworldly abilities to more albums, projects and tours than most artists could ever hope to glean. From his wildly influential 1976 record School Days to his continued work with fusion giants Return to Forever, it appears that Clarke has a true Midas touch. And yet, throughout it all, the man remains as humble and kind as he is talented and creative. But perhaps more surprising than his impeccable history is the fact that throughout his last 40 illustrious and demanding years Clarke has yet to release an acoustic trio record. That is, until now. The long-awaited Jazz in the Garden (Heads Up), features two of the smartest players on today’s scene: Clarke’s long-time friend and collaborator Lenny White on drums and Chick Corea’s protege Hiromi Uehara on piano.


Jazz in the Garden is modeled in large part after traditional jazz albums of the 1970s The tempo isn’t rushed, the character never forced, and the trio never tries to push an overly “modern” spin on their traditional sound. Yet, it remains a fundamentally unique record that rests firmly and confidently against the fringes of both technical ability and emotional intensity. It’s equal parts nostalgia and fresh perspective, shaken to a complex concoction that provides the perfect note for every passing moment. The brilliant chemistry is expected between Clarke and White, whose collaborative history began in their early twenties during their days with Joe Henderson. Their short but lively duet, “Take the Coltrane,” exemplifies their brotherhood on this record.

The real surprise found herein is how well the young Hiromi meshes with her significantly more experienced peers. A few of the compositions on Jazz in the Garden are written by her, and their caliber is remarkable. The first, “Sicilian Blue,” opens with Clarke playing with a bow and evokes strong visuals inspired by Hiromi’s trip to the Mediterranean island in 2008. It is one of the most haunting, beautiful, endlessly deep tracks on the album, and is one of the best examples of the trio’s chemistry. There truly aren’t any ‘highlights’ on this record, since to label anything as such would be to detract from the rest of the album, something I am unwilling to do. But, a few tracks which warrant mention, including the classic Henderson tune “Isotope,” recreated in stunning accuracy and quality, and the deceptively simple “Someday My Prince Will Come,” which displays a powerful yet delicate performance from Clarke and further exemplifies his stunning rapport with the young pianist. The closing track on the disc, arranged by Hiromi, is an adaptation of the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ “Under the Bridge.” At first, the contrast in styles seems far-fetched, but as the composition unfolds with Clarke’s unique slap-bass and White’s precision percussion it becomes a beautifully fitting end to a contemporary album which pays due tribute to history.

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Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey:One Day In Brooklyn

By: Dennis Cook

The studio debut of the 2009 configuration of JFJO is perhaps the “jazziest” effort from them in some time. While often seen as the genre’s wild child (a well earned tag), the Fred works in a smoother, slinkier vein on One Day In Brooklyn (released September 1 on Kinnara Records), fitting for what may be the most forthrightly sensual lineup in their 15 year history.

Beginning with a rollicking double shot of Rahsaan Roland Kirk, “A Laugh For Rory/Black & Crazy Blues,” dedicated to recently departed friend/producer/music maestro Joel Dorn, the four-piece JFJO – Brian Haas (piano, keys), Josh Raymer (drums, percussion) and new arrivals Chris Combs (lap steel, guitar) and Matt Hayes (upright bass) – struts out confident, playing arm-in-arm like men with something to prove. There’s a forthright appeal to that kind of “chip on your shoulder” mentality when applied to high-end material like this, and JFJO keeps the momentum going till the end of this six-track EP. While Winterwood, their last release with bassist/co-founder Reed Mathis, found them reconfiguring tradition into strange new shapes, One Day, perhaps wisely, is a bit more orthodox and thus probably a better handshake to the bread ‘n’ butter jazz community. Oh, they’ve still got plenty o’ quirks (the hip-hop/classical hybrid “Drethoven” is wholly Fred in nature) and lap steel isn’t your standard jazz instrument (outside of kindred spirit Bill Frisell’s bands, a palpable echo here) but this EP goes down smooth in a way that perhaps their other recent boat rockin’ doesn’t.

Original “Country Girl” is like one of those lovely gems one discovers on old Prestige albums by Yusef Lateef or Sonny Rollins, a beautiful merger of craftsmanship and unabashed melody that shows off Combs unique, moving technique to best form here. Their reading of The Beatles’ “Julia” is actually more melodramatic than the original, with Haas’ piano out front, as it is pretty much throughout One Day. That’s perhaps the main difference between this release and much of what we know as Jacob Fred. Haas is the clear leader now and instead of the creative sparring one’s come to expect there’s unanimity of vision stemming from his keys, where the others certainly shine but their glimmer isn’t quite as bright as Haas, at least not yet. Within a genre that adores pianist this may not be a bad move, especially with Haas turning in some of his loveliest work to date on the non-Western modalities of “Imam” and a superb Midwestern accented reading of Monk’s “Four In One.”

It’s too soon to tell what this newly minted quartet will eventually sound like, but this glimpse into their emerging artistic construction is ample (and satisfying) proof that JFJO endures, keeping jazz on its toes and kicking its borders a few inches wider with each salvo.

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NPR Free Music Samplers

NPR Offering Music Samplers That Feature Bands Playing The Newport Folk And Jazz Festivals


Sam Beam – Iron & Wine

In the interest of providing music lovers with free music, NPR Music is currently offering two free 12-song samplers for download. The samplers feature artists performing at this year’s Newport Folk Festival and Jazz Festival in August. NPR Music is covering both Jazz and Folk festivals with webcasts and broadcasts in addition to the music samplers.

The 12-song folk sampler features current indie favorites and folk luminaries, including a track from The Avett Brothers‘ new album, and songs from Fleet Foxes, Iron & Wine, Deer Tick, Gillian Welch, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and Mavis Staples.

The jazz compilation also boasts a mix of contemporary and classic with music from The Bad Plus, Esperanza Spalding, Branford Marsalis, and Dave Brubeck among others.

Full details about the samplers and instructions on downloading them from iTunes are available here.

Folk at Newport – 50 Years Sampler:
“I and Love and You” by The Avett Brothers
“I Keep Faith” by Billy Bragg
“Easy” by Deer Tick
“Chains, Chains, Chains” by Elvis Perkins in Dearland
“Mykonos” by Fleet Foxes
“Look at Miss Ohio” by Gillian Welch
“Belated Promise Ring” by Iron & Wine
“God Is God” by Joan Baez
“Freedom Highway (live)” by Mavis Staples
“Shenandoah” by Pete Seeger
“Richland Women Blues” by Ramblin’ Jack Elliott
“To Ohio” by The Low Anthem

Jazz at Newport 2009 Sampler:
“Jabberwocky” by Branford Marsalis Quartet
“Brother Mister” by Christian McBride & Inside Straight
“Tulum” by Claudia Acuna
“Summer Song” by Dave Brubeck
“Precious” by Esperanza Spalding
“Spirit of the Moment” by Michel Camilo
“Penta” by Miguel Zenon
“James” by Roy Haynes & The Fountain of Youth Band
“Apti” by Rudresh Mahanthappa’s Indo-Pak Coalition
“Radio Cure” by The Bad Plus
“Macaca Please” by Vijay Iyer



Marshall Fine: DVD reviews: Anita O’Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer, Watchmen: Director’s Cut

Anita O’Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer is a documentary that got by me last year – but watching the DVD made me a…

Roy Hargrove Big Band Album

Roy Hargrove Releases Emergence – His First Big Band Album – On August 25


Roy Hargrove

Acclaimed trumpeter, composer, and bandleader Roy Hargrove realizes a lifelong dream with the August 25 release of Emergence, his first big band album. Nineteen pieces strong, Hargrove’s ensemble is a vibrant and versatile group, tackling a wide range of material and styles with equal doses of precision and passion.

“Financially speaking, this is probably the worst thing I could ever do,” Hargrove said. “But it is something that needs to be done, spiritually and musically speaking.”

The seeds of Emergence were planted in 1995, when Hargrove first formed a big band for a New York jazz festival. His big band concept grew as he led the evolving group through a series of regular gigs at the Jazz Gallery, a not-for-profit performance space in lower Manhattan – which proved an invaluable for both Hargrove and the musicians who participated.

Since his own emergence in the late ’80s, Hargrove has proved to be an adventurous and wide-ranging artist, proudly immersed in the jazz tradition and yet continually striking out for new terrain. Among his groups include the straight-ahead, hard-bop Roy Hargrove Quintet and Crisol, an Afro-Cuban ensemble that won a Grammy in 1998 for Best Latin Jazz Performance with its album Habana. With the funk-oriented RH Factor, Hargrove released the 2003 album Hard Groove, featuring guest appearances by R&B superstars Erykah Badu, Common and D’Angelo. His last album, 2008′s quintet session Earfood, was featured in dozens of year-end Top 10 lists.

Hargrove’s big band, which cites the large bands of Dizzy Gillespie, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Maynard Ferguson and Gerald Wilson as key influences, has already been showcased at the Hollywood Bowl and SummerStage in New York’s Central Park. Stylistically, the music ranges from furious swingers to majestic ballads to rollicking Latin jams.

Currently, Roy Hargrove does not have any tour dates.


Joe Craven & Sam Bevan Album

Joe Craven & Sam Bevan collaborate on new CD

Foakee – OUT NOW


Joe Craven

When you take a blues, rock, folk, whirled music multi-instrumentalist and a classically trained pianist/jazz trained bassist and put them together to have their way with traditional American folk songs, you can get something like the Joe Craven/Sam Bevan collaboration called Foakee.

Gospel, blues, Appalachian, Cuban, West African, hip-hop, Brazilian and jazz influences are all combined with sound samples, and looping technology to create beats from mouth, found objects and conventional acoustic on this album. The fun, innovative tribute to the old and the new, on Foakee, creates a fresh cocktail of sound stretching the boundaries of musical style while paying tribute to and forwarding evolving musical traditions.

Joe Craven is a madman with anything that has strings attached or not: violin, mandolin, tin can, bedpan, cookie tin, tenor guitar, mouth bow, banjo, berimbau, balalaika, boot ‘n lace, animal bones, squeeze toys, cake pans, waste cans, umbrella stands, martini shakers, and so on. Mandolin Magazine lauded Joe as, “One of the most daringly inventive musicians working today.” As an educator, former museum curator, visual artist, actor/storyteller and festival emcee, Joe plays all kinds of music and he has made it with all kinds of artists ranging from jazz violinist Stephane Grappelli to Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia to banjo player Alison Brown to The Persuasions.

When it comes to Sam Bevan, Guitar World’s Bass Guitar Magazine says, “Bay Area jazzman Bevan is a bassist for all occasions…” Sam’s own recordings showcase not only his chops but his composing and arrangement abilities as well. Sam is a first call bassist, having played and/or recorded with a variety of artists including Roswell Rudd, David Grisman, Geoff Muldaur and more.

Foakee Track List

1. Dig a Little Deeper in the Well

2. Julianne

3. Little Sadie

4. The Leather Britches of Hackensack

5. Nobody’s Fault but Mine

6. Brown’s Ferry Blues

7. Sittin’ On Top of the World

8. Intro to Shady Grove

9. Shady Grove

10. Bright Sunny South

11. Wayfaring Stranger – Lagrimas Negras

12. Black Jack Davey

13. Cluck ‘ol Hen


The Roots | 07.08.09 | New York

Words by: Alex Borsody | Images by: Robert Chapman

The Roots :: 07.08.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Black Thought :: 07.08

The line stretched down the block, people of all ages waiting to enter NYC’s Highline Ballroom for “The Roots Present the Jam Produced by Jill Newman Productions.” Even though it was a Wednesday night, this and every other Jam was sold out. The floral smell inside gave new meaning to the phrase “high art,” and there was nothing but positive vibrations throughout the night. The Roots‘ emcee Black Thought referred to this weekly event as the “the 10 dolla bill show.” This recession special, combined with the high level of quality control that everyone involved brought made for a really interesting and fun time. The night was a session musician/producer convention, a who’s who of the jazz and funk world as well as an anti-pop consortium; a chance to see the musicians behind some of your favorite songs, names you can find in the fine print liner notes of many different albums.

The horn section included contemporary jazz greats such as Teodross Avery (sax), Maurice Brown (trumpet), Ingmar Thomas (sax) and Corey King (trombone), who are some of the most respected brass players in music right now. The night was a veritable education in the contemporary NYC experimental jazz and hip-hop scene, including cellist Dana Leong, which overlaps at times with the music of true artists such as Marley Marl, Common and, of course, The Roots. Previous guests include members of the hip-hop collective The Soulquarians, Talib Kweli, Mos Def and Q-Tip. The Soulquarians also include The Roots drummer ?uestlove and are responsible for taking hip-hop music off the beaten path into funkier, so called “conscious” territory. Others to drop in have included Vernon Reid, festival regulars Antibalas, MOP, Estelle and Grand Puba. From a different side of music past guests like Dee Dee Bridgewater, Andy Bey, David Murray, Craig Harris and Patmore Lewis have appeared.

Cap’n Kirk & ?uestlove :: 07.08

The show started out simply, with a slow jam on a couple of chords. I thought to myself, “I guess this must be why they call it the jam.” My fatalistic side was quickly shattered as the night progressed with a seemingly never-ending cast of characters and musical surprises. At one point on the stage were Roots members Black Thought on the mic, ?uestlove on drums, Cap’n Kirk on guitar, Owen Biddle on bass and James Poyser on keys. Biddle began playing what sounded like the bass line to Mobb Deep’s “Quiet Storm,” evoking the synergy between hip-hop and jazz, which The Roots pioneered. The bass notes seem so simple, but mimicking the tone and rhythm of a hip-hop beat machine on live instruments is difficult. After jamming for a bit, things began to take off as Reverend Vince Anderson took the lead on keys and vocals. The Reverend plays every Monday at Union Pool, serving as a shining light in the darkness that is Williamsburg. Anderson has a soulful, Southern, dirty gospel style that really drew an interesting contrast to the jazz and hip-hop that dominated the night. The horn section kicked in and things were on for the rest of the evening. Mazz Swift got on the stage throwing in some variety on violin, and Philadelphia rapper Truck North, who appeared on The Roots album Rising Down, collaborated with Black Thought on vocals. Later on Craig G also took up the mic, rapping on subjects more varied than what is on the radio, not limiting himself to violence, cars and clothes. Craig G has worked with one of the funkiest and most unique producers in hip-hop, DJ Marley Marl. I remember growing up in the mid ’90s when Marley Marl made beats that sounded like no other, every single one a funky jewel, and they were unique to everything else at the time.

The Brown Girls Burlesque :: 07.08

This was all great music, but the real fun started when an original and even strange group came on stage calling themselves The Brown Girls Burlesque. This group identified themselves as cabaret, specifically representing women of color. They got almost naked and sang some good songs. The group exuded a confidence that overshadowed the fact that they did not live up to current body image ideals. This off-beat performance definitely sent waves of humor, shock and fun through the crowd and lightened things up.

As the funky circus kept going strong, Tiombe Lockhart took to the stage. Lockhart is a beautiful, charismatic woman who knows how to move and captivate the audience. Her voice was good, but I could not help but sense that there was a strong desire to emulate Santigold. Lockhart turned to ?uestlove and asked for “four to the floor” (beats used in disco and electro). Clearly she wanted that electronic “cool” sound, which many jazz drummers just don’t mess around with. After trying to steer the band in an electro direction to no avail, you could tell she was a little frustrated. Regardless, she rolled with the music well enough, adding powerful, confident vocals. I would love to see her do her thing with her own band backing her. A female guitarist Jane Getter joined the crew for this jam and played some solid rhythm and interesting solos.

The Roots Present the Jam :: 07.08

I lost track of the keyboardists, as there were four of them constantly changing it up. In addition to Anderson and Poyser, there was
Robert Glasper of Blue Note Records and Adam Holzman of
Miles Davis fame. These keyboardists are respected studio musicians and songwriters who are behind many well known songs, instrumentals and hooks.

As the night turned into day, things were mixed up further with a massive drum collaboration led by ?uestlove including Dana Hawkins and Chris Daddy Dave. Hawkins is a young, energetic musician who together with Daddy Dave reached virtuoso levels on the kit. Other artists that dropped in this night were guitarists Mark Whitfield and Binky Griptite of Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings.

The evening closed out in grand style with two Jackson 5 covers, “I Want You Back” and “I’ll Be There.” It was a suitable pick for these serious musicians to dig back to Michael’s Motown roots, where bass players like James Jamerson broke conventions exploring different rhythmic styles which paved the way for funk and hip-hop. These were some of the best times in music and despite what happened to Michael later in life, he was there when it all started. “I Want You Back” has one of the most unique and memorable bass lines in music and was held down by Louis Cato (Eric Krasno and Chapter 2). These two songs were a perfect way to close a night that celebrated soulful, unique, forward-thinking musical virtuosity.

For more on The Roots check our recent feature/interview here. Roots tour dates available here.

Continue reading for a more pics of The Roots Present the Jam Produced by Jill Newman Productions

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SF’s NBJF Postponed

San Francisco North Beach Jazz Festival Postponed


Rebirth Brass Band

Due to financial losses, incurred in 2008, the San Francisco North Beach Jazz Festival has been postponed and will not take place during its normal late-July timeframe in 2009. The annual tradition, which has been enjoyed by thousands of music fans from around the world for 14 years, will be taking a one-year hiatus due to monetary losses during the 2008 fest. The one-year pause will give festival organizers, Sunset Promotions, the necessary time to reorganize and re-launch the event on a more sustainable model. To help raise money to offset fiscal losses, benefit concerts will be held at Great American Music Hall on July 24-25 2009 with frequent NBJF headliners Rebirth Brass Band. Purchase tickets for the shows at sunsettickets.com.

The festival has become increasingly more costly since 2005 when the producers changed the configuration in Washington Square Park to appease a minority opposition who opposed alcohol sales. The new configuration cost an average of 40% more to produce while revenues have not kept pace. In addition, the San Francisco Rec. and Park Commission has recently increased their fee requirements to meet massive budget deficits.

Sunset Promotions has worked continuously to produce this San Francisco event and looks forward to turning 15 in 2010. John Miles and Robert Kowal of Sunset are currently working with San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and Northern Station Police Department, Board of Supervisors President David Chiu to re-engineer the event for a re-launch in 2010.


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

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In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


In the factory of dreams

Continuing our series on recession-era graduates, we visit one of Britain’s most famous conservatoires and meet four young musicians setting their sights on stardom

I am standing in the foyer of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama looking up at some gigantic wooden panels. On them are the names of the great and the good who have passed through this famous London conservatoire – and the gongs they received. There are the winners of the gold medal, the school’s highest honour, such as cellist Jacqueline du Pré in 1960, violinist Tasmin Little in 1986, and the world’s favourite bass baritone, Bryn Terfel, in 1989. Then there’s Beatles producer George Martin, sopranos Anne Sofie von Otter and Kate Royal, flautist James Galway and pianist Paul Lewis. All entered the Guildhall as callow students and left to become international musical celebrities.

For all the concrete-clad modernity of its architecture, the Guildhall boasts 129 years of history; today’s students can hardly avoid being intimidated, as well as inspired, by their predecessors. Yet only a tiny handful of the 250 people graduating from the Guildhall’s music courses – which cover everything from electronic music composition to jazz, trumpet playing and opera singing – will make it on to the world’s biggest stages. It’s the special cruelty of Britain’s music conservatoires: they encourage their students to reach for the stars, to dream of being, say, the next Thomas Adès, yet there’s simply no room in today’s musical world to accommodate the hundreds of hugely talented graduates who emerge from colleges every year. There’s no space in our orchestras, few vacancies in record companies, and a dearth of openings for the latest hot crop of jazz musicians.

Some make a living as freelance teachers and sometime professional players, but for many, the dream dies when the bills pile up, and other careers start to look more tempting than a life teaching overprivileged five-year-olds how to play C major scales. While it’s true that today’s marketplace is more diverse than ever – with new opportunities online, on record and on stage – this is also the most competitive environment any generation has ever faced. Factor in the economic crisis and you could say that no one’s ever had it tougher than the class of 2009.

So who are these brave wannabes? What are their dreams? And how will they avoid a career at Citibank or Sainsbury’s? Jamie McCredie, a 27-year-old from Newcastle and a guitarist on the postgraduate jazz course, isn’t blind to the challenges. “The competition out there is super tough,” he says. “You can’t think when you get to the Guildhall, ‘Aren’t I great, I got into this place.’ There’s a big mountain to climb to get good enough for the career you want.’

To walk the corridors of the Guildhall is to be confronted by a cacophony of dreams being forged. On the top floor, I can hear all of musical history. Peering through the little portholes in each door, I see a double-bass player in the thick of an intense lesson from the symphonic repertoire; a pianist hacking her way through a Beethoven sonata; and two tenors belting out Verdi arias. Down in the strip-lit basement, a string ensemble plays 17th-century English music, a guitarist stumbles through a complex riff, and the machines of the electronic music department hum with computerised fantasies.

Alex Maynard, a 22-year-old trumpeter from Milton Keynes, has come through this practice-room purgatory. After four years of the undergraduate course, he’s just received a first in his final recital, making him one of the stars of his instrument at the college. But his relationship with the school has been vexed. “College got in the way,” he says. “I wanted to do a lot of work outside the school, but they wouldn’t shift my commitments.” Like many conservatoire students, Maynard worked at the weekend, making “a sustainable amount” playing in a band for weddings and functions, recording computer game soundtracks, and gigging as a session musician.

Things eventually came to a head. “Last year, I was offered a gig with the BBC Big Band,” he says, referring to one of the best light music outfits in the country. “But it clashed with a college thing I had to do – playing eight bars for an off-stage band in the opera.” Given that eight bars is about 30 seconds of music, it was a choice between the chance of a lifetime and a snippet of anonymous trumpetry. “The college wouldn’t let me do the BBC gig,” says Maynard. “I was gutted. I thought, ‘It’s now or never: I either tell the Guildhall I’m leaving, or I stay and finish the degree and hopefully the professional work will come again.’”

His teacher Paul Cosh – an experienced orchestral player, like most instrumental teachers at the Guildhall – told him to get rid of the outside work, and concentrate on the degree. “After that, you can do what you want,” he told Maynard. And it worked: “My finals were only a week ago – and all the work has come back as word has got round that I’ve finished my degree.”

Maynard’s degree seems to matter less than the contacts he’s been able to build up at the Guildhall. The world of trumpet-playing is a small cabal; get in with the right people and it can set you up for life. Much more than the degree course (Maynard says he wasn’t taught much about music that he didn’t already know), it’s the way Guildhall meshes instrumentalists into the professional world that makes it special.

The college is proud of its links with the outside world. Jono Buchanan, who teaches electronic music, even goes as far as to say: “Our head of department says that the ultimate success for an electronic music student is that they don’t finish the course: that they’ve become so much in demand from the outside world they have to leave before they complete their studies.”

Mica Levi’s story is a good example. Aged 22 and from Guildford, she’s the singer with Micachu and the Shapes, who released an album on Rough Trade earlier this year. The three band members met at the Guildhall, and they have created one of the most quirkily distinctive sounds in pop. As the Guardian music blog put it: “Micachu’s mashed-up DIY sound is pure aural alchemy.”

Having completed three years of composition, Levi’s not going back for the final year. “Because I’ve got work as a musician – which is ridiculously rare anyway – it seemed a shame not to take advantage of it,” she says. “And studying composition is not something you have to do when you’re young. There’s so much to learn, and you’re part of a tradition that’s so ancient. When I’m older, I can come back to it. The band’s success might not last beyond this year – so I thought, ‘I might as well enjoy it.’”

Levi played two sets at Glastonbury this year, and will work on a new album in the autumn. Does she really think it could all be over so soon? “The pop music industry is a nightmare,” she says. “It’s so fickle. But we’re doing all right now. We’re just about supporting ourselves, just about breaking even, and that to me is success, because I’m able to do exactly what I want as a musician without needing any other support.”

Richard Baker, joint head of composition, defines the department’s ethos as: “We don’t want anyone to feel obliged to write any particular kind of music. We want them to be free to experiment and find their own way.” In the case of Levi, who was working on pop songs rather than symphonies, they agreed it was in her best interests to follow her career. “I was really supported,” she says. “The teachers are really aware of everything that’s going on musically beyond western classical music. So I had an education through learning about all of that, and I was encouraged to indulge in the music I wanted to write.”

Levi’s story is one that all Guildhall graduates want to emulate: getting paid to make the music they want to make. You can sense it in the commitment and intensity of 28-year-old soprano Rhona McKail’s performance as the female lead in a rarely heard comic opera by Bohuslav MartinuËš. It’s her final performance on the opera course, and one she hopes will be the catalyst for a soprano career. “I know I’ve got something valuable to offer,” says McKail, who’s from Prestwick in Ayrshire. “It’s just a question of where it’s going to go. I’m really happy to be leaving Guildhall now. After this term and these performances, I feel prepared. I’ve learned so much in terms of my confidence – in thinking yes, I’m worth it.”

In the 14 years since he graduated from the Guildhall, singer Toby Spence hasn’t stopped working, going on to become one of the world’s most sought-after tenors. Why shouldn’t it all work out for McKail? The odds may be stacked against her, and most of the college’s students. But if they can make their time in the dream factory work for them, anything is possible. “When you get here,” says McKail, “you look round at everyone else and think, ‘I’m crap!’ But it’s all come together in the last few months. Four years on, I now feel that my voice is ready.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Don ‘Sugar Cane’ Harris:
Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues

By: Trevor Pour

align=right src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/Wednesday/Sugarcane.jpg">

I recently had a jazz professor as a guest in my home. Before she could make it through the front door, her thoughts were interrupted by a cacophony of a high-pitched instrumental drifting towards her from the stereo in my kitchen. As an ear-to-ear grin began to appear on her face, she demanded to know, “What IS that?”


“That” was Don ‘Sugar Cane’ Harris, the one time violinist for Frank Zappa and the man who has been endlessly referred to as the “Jimi Hendrix of violin.” Recently, Promising Music released a 24-bit re-mastering of his live 1971 tapes recorded at the Berlin Jazz Festival. That album, originally produced by Joachim Ernst Berendt, features a all-star cast including Volker Kriegel (guitar), Terje Rypdal (guitar), Wolfgang Dauner (keys), Neville Whitehead (bass), and Robert Wyatt (Soft Machine) (drums). From the first note until the very last, this album takes you on an epic journey. It’s unequivocally one of the most technically impressive, emotionally powerful and historically poignant albums I’ve heard at this juncture in my life. Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues consists of four tracks ranging from ten to fifteen minutes in duration, each with a unique character and displaying a different facet of Harris’ musical persona.


The opening chops of “Song For My Father” are remarkably accurate and precise despite their technical difficulty. Sugar Cane displayed a kind of warped refinement that very few individuals on the planet have mastered; others that come to mind include Skerik, Col. Bruce Hampton and Brian Haas, in addition to a small handful of bebop/free jazz legends. But amongst all these illustrious names, Sugar Cane still, indisputably, rises to the top. With an ability unmatched in his time or ours, he may remain one of the most under-appreciated musicians of his century; not due to a lack of consideration, but because it is virtually impossible to do him justice with mere prose. This particular track weaves a beautiful tale, carrying the audience to dramatic highs and lows without losing their attention or their understanding.


“Liz Pineapple Wonderful,” the intro track, sets an absurdly high bar for the remainder of the album by taking no time before screaming into a full-tilt jam. It’s catchy, energetic, creative and alive. With impressive interplay between each musician, it remains driven by the Harris’ commanding violin. It is immediately followed by the title track, “Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues.” The longest track on the disc, this creation highlights each performer’s ability to explore the depths of their collective resonance without regard for urgency or boundaries. The result is a beautiful and elegant piece, which does not simply tread the line between blues and free jazz but fully incorporates them into a unified style. Finally, the album closes with “Where’s My Sunshine,” which prominently features the Sugar Cane’s soulful vocals, develops slowly with bluesy guitar, and ends with an exquisite piano solo from Dauner.


Musicians of all shapes and sizes, jazz fans of any sub-genre, jam-rock connoisseurs and anyone willing to become totally lost in great music shouldn’t think twice about picking this up. Admittedly it’s an import and might cost a few extra bucks, but this is an excellent introduction to one of the preeminent talents of the 1960s and ’70s. And even if you’re well versed in the world of Sugar Cane Harris, this re-mastered record will fit neatly, and prominently, in your collection.

JamBase | Rosin Rich
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