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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.”

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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.”

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Owen handed United No 7 shirt

• Ferguson gives new striker Ronaldo’s shirt number
• Owen will line up alongside Rooney and Berbatov

Sir Alex Ferguson has handed Michael Owen the prized Manchester United No7 shirt. The former Liverpool, Real Madrid and Newcastle United striker will take over Cristiano Ronaldo’s shirt and his place in an attacking line-up containing Wayne Rooney and Dimitar Berbatov.

The United youngsters Daniel Welbeck and Federico Macheda will both be given a chance to prove they are worthy of the accolades that have been bestowed on them. “They are both young players – but young players with ability always get a chance here,” said Ferguson.

The United manager confirmed he made a bid for Karim Benzema, only to be rebuffed by the Lyon forward, who instead became part of Real Madrid’s extraordinary spending spree.

With a world record £80m burning a hole in his pocket following the sale of Ronaldo, United had the funds to compete. But Ferguson refuses to be drawn into a bidding war for any player beyond the level he thinks is acceptable. He has already recruited Antonio Valencia and Gabriel Obertan in addition to Owen.

“There are some amazing numbers being talked about, not all of them realistic,” Ferguson said. “It is very difficult to get value now. In a way we benefited through the sale of Cristiano, although that figure was non-negotiable.

“But I feel we have a good squad, which meant there was no need for knee-jerk reactions. We asked about Benzema and we had a value for him. Lyon have done well because they got €42m [£36.3m] but I think we took a sensible view.”

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Ferguson rules out more signings

Sir Alex Ferguson

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson says he will not make any further signings during the summer.

United have brought in Michael Owen, Antonio Valencia and Bordeaux’s Gabriel Obertan to replace departed forwards Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez.

Ferguson revealed he had bid for Karim Benzema, who joined Real Madrid, but insisted he had no further targets.

"It is the end of our business," he said. "Stories about who we are supposed to be getting – forget it."

United pocketed £80m from Ronaldo’s world record transfer to Real Madrid and the Old Trafford club had been expected to spend a sizeable proportion of the funds on new players.

Among those to be linked with a move to the Premier League champions are Brazilian forward Douglas Costa, French playmaker Franck Ribery, and Spain striker David Villa.

But Ferguson feels the market is now over-inflated and he does not want to pay over the odds for players.

Real Madrid, for example, have spent in excess of £170m this summer in capturing Kaka from AC Milan, Benzema from Lyon and Ronaldo.

606: DEBATE

"We can now forget about signing fantasy players and focus on our squad for the season"

Dean_Machine89

And Ferguson added: "There are some amazing numbers being talked about, not all of them realistic. It is very difficult to get value now.

"In a way we benefited through the sale of Cristiano, although that figure was non-negotiable.

"But I feel we have a good squad, which meant there was no need for knee-jerk reactions.

"We asked about Benzema and we had a value for him. Lyon have done well because they got 42m euros but I think we took a sensible view."

Instead, Valencia has arrived from Wigan, 20-year-old winger Obertan has been recruited and Owen was signed on a free transfer after his contract with Newcastle expired.

And the England striker has been handed the number seven shirt – the shirt vacated by Ronaldo.

Owen will add extra experience to an attack that still boasts plenty of established talent in Wayne Rooney and Dimitar Berbatov, plus youngsters Danny Welbeck and Federico Macheda.

"There is no question that Michael will score a lot of goals for us"

Sir Alex Ferguson

Ferguson hinted that Welbeck and Macheda, who scored vital goals at the end of last season, will be given opportunities to play their part.

"They are both young players – but young players with ability always get a chance here," added Ferguson.

Owen, meanwhile, has vowed to recapture his best form and show he will be an important part of the United team.

"I am hungry to do well and if this challenge doesn’t create a hunger and put a spring in your step and a smile on your face then nothing will," he said.

"I honestly believe I can still do well in a top team like Manchester United."

Ferguson praised the desire of Owen to prove his critics wrong and is confident the 28-year-old can rediscover the scoring touch that made him one of Europe’s most feared strikers.

"His experience is vital and with Michael you will see the experience he will give us in the penalty box," commented Ferguson.

"There is no question that he will score a lot of goals for us and he has been great for years and years.

"You always have to be aware of him in the last third."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Wade: we’ll refute phone-hack claims

• Guardian ‘substantially misled’ public, claims incoming NI chief executive in letter to Commons committee chairman
• Lib Dems refer Metropolitan police phone-hacking inquiry to Independent Police Complaints Commission

Rebekah Wade, the Sun editor and soon-to-be News International chief executive, said today that company executives would refute allegations of phone hacking being a widespread practice at the News of the World when they appear before a Commons inquiry.

Wade, who takes over on 1 September as chief executive of News International, publisher of the News of the World and the UK newspaper arm of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, said the company would welcome the chance to appear before MPs on the Commons culture, media and sport select committee to answer questions on the Guardian’s allegations.

She said News International believed the Guardian “has substantially and likely deliberately misled the British public”.

Wade also accused the Guardian, BBC, Channel 4, ITN and Sky News of “either deliberately or recklessly” combining references to the Information Commissioner’s report about the use of private investigators by newspaper publishers, including Guardian Media Group, which also publishes MediaGuardian.co.uk, with “specific and very limited evidence” from the police investigation of illegal phone interceptions by Glen Mulcaire and former News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman.

She has written to the chairman of the Commons culture, media and sport committee, John Whittingdale, saying that the company would “refute allegations that illegal phone tapping was a widespread practice”. The News of the World editor, Colin Myler, and Tom Crone, NI’s legal counsel, will appear before the select committee at 10.30am on Tuesday 21 July.

Culture select committee representatives are understood to be locked in negotiations with former News International executive chairman Les Hinton in a bid to ensure he appears before an earlier emergency session about the News of the World phone hacking affair on Tuesday 14 July.

In her letter, Wade said: “It [the Guardian] is rushing out high volumes of coverage and repeating allegations by such sources as unnamed Met officers implying that ‘thousands’ of individuals were the object of illegal phone hacking, an assertion that is roundly contradicted by the Met Assistant Commissioner’s statement yesterday.”

On Wednesday the Guardian revealed that News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary that publishes the News of the World, paid out more than £1m to settle legal cases that threatened to reveal evidence of its journalists’ repeated involvement in the use of criminal methods to get stories.

The select committee said yesterday it would be calling senior managers from News International to give evidence as early as next week to clarify what they knew about malpractice by journalists at the News of the World.

The inquiry is expected to call the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who is now the Conservative party’s director of communications. Coulson resigned after the News of the World royal editor Clive Goodman was jailed in 2007 for tapping the phone of members of the royal household.

Earlier today, the Liberal Democrats referred the Metropolitan Police inquiry into phone hacking by journalists at the paper to the Independent Police Complaints Commission.

Chris Huhne, the Lib Dem home office spokesman, has written to IPCC chairman Nick Hardwick asking for an inquiry into Scotland Yard’s 2006 investigation into widespread phone hacking by journalists and private investigators.

Huhne wrote to Hardwick saying that an independent inquiry was required because the Metropolitan Police “cannot act as judge and jury in its own trial”.

The Lib Dem MP added that given the “scale and scope” of the Guardian’s revelations, “the possibility that other journalists and investigators were involved must now be seriously considered”.

Yesterday Metropolitan Police assistant commissioner John Yates said no additional evidence has come to light and no further investigation was required. However, Keir Starmer QC, the director of public prosecutions, said he had ordered an “urgent examination” of material provided by the police in the News of the World case three years ago.

“The Metropolitan Police cannot act as judge and jury in its own trial. Only an independent inquiry can properly consider any possible neglect of duty by the Specialist Operations Department into the original investigation,” Huhne wrote.

“Given the scale and scope of the allegations, the possibility that other journalists and investigators were involved must now be seriously considered. The review by the director of public prosecutions is a tacit admission that the review by assistant commissioner Yates was rushed, and supports the case for a full, independent inquiry by the IPCC into the original police investigation,” he said.

“These allegations have serious implications for privacy laws and freedom of the press in this country, and as such must be investigated thoroughly. When the civil courts are recording large settlements to hush up potentially criminal activity, public authorities have a duty to investigate the matter fully.”

Former senior Scotland Yard officer Brian Paddick also called for an independent inquiry.

Paddick, the former deputy assistant commissioner at the Metropolitan Police, said there should be an independent, external review of the force’s investigation into phone-hacking.

The Met’s assistant commissioner, John Yates, said yesterday that Scotland Yard would not be reopening its files on Goodman because no new evidence had come to light and the original inquiry had concluded that phone hacking had occurred in only a minority of cases.

However, the Guardian’s allegations focus on the activities of many other journalists at the paper, drawing on separate evidence kept secret under a £1m series of deals agreed by its parent company, News International.

The former deputy prime minister, John Prescott, one of those whose phone was allegedly hacked, told the BBC’s Newsnight that Yates’s statement’s had not gone far enough.

“Frankly he has come out, he has defined in a very narrow way what he is going to look at, and then gives a report that everything is OK,” he said.

Paddick told the same programme that Yates should not be criticised for dealing with a brief referring just to the Goodman investigation. But he said Yates was not sufficiently distanced from the original investigation to launch a fresh review.

“John Yates said that he had a degree of independence because he was not involved in the initial investigation,” Paddick added.

“But he is now in charge of the department that did that initial investigtaion, so not only have we got the Metropolitan Police investigating themselves as far as this is concerned, but the department that investigated it investigating themselves.

“There must be some degree of independence here in this investigation, at least an outside force looking at it if not the Independent Police Complaints Commission.”

Mark Stephens, a lawyer at Finers Stephens Innocent, said Yates’s statement did not “address the possibility that there had been a criminal attempt or a potential criminal conspiracy”.

“I think Keir Starmer, the director of public prosecutions, will force the police to reopen this investigation,” he told Radio 4′s Today programme this morning.

Legal experts said the Yard’s decision would not affect the ability of alleged hacking victims to sue the News of the World for breach of privacy.

Stephens said several legal firms had been approached by people who thought they might have been the target of the News of the World’s activities.

“Aggrieved celebrities are contacting lawyers across London,” Stephens said. “I had two calls yesterday – one from somebody who has been identified by the Guardian as having been hacked and also the private office of somebody who believes they may have been.”

The Guardian also revealed today that the Manchester United manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, and the former Newcastle United manager Alan Shearer were among those whose private telephone messages were recorded by a private investigator working for the News of the World.

Both men are said to have left messages on the mobile phone of Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers’ Association, who sued the newspaper last year, according to sources familiar with the police investigation.

The prospect of legal action by victims comes after three fresh inquiries were launched yesterday into the conduct of News of the World journalists following the Guardian’s disclosures that Rupert Murdoch’s News Group company paid £1m to keep secret the use of apparently criminal methods to get stories.

The director of public prosecutions, Keir Starmer, ordered an urgent review of the evidence relating to phone hacking gathered in the investigation of the News of the World reporter Clive Goodman, who was jailed in January 2007 for obtaining information illegally.

A powerful Commons select committee said it would be calling senior managers from News International to give evidence as early as next week to clarify what they knew about malpractice by journalists at the News of the World.

The inquiry by the culture, media and sport select committee is expected to call the former News of the World editor, Andy Coulson, who resigned after Goodman was jailed and is now the Conservative party’s director of communications.

The Press Complaints Commission also announced it was conducting an inquiry.

David Cameron, the Conservative leader, has defended Coulson, saying he did “an excellent job in a proper, upright way”.

The parliamentary inquiry will focus on executives at News International, including Rebekah Wade, the outgoing Sun editor who has been promoted to News International chief executive; Stuart Kuttner, the News of the World’s outgoing managing editor; Colin Myler, the current News of the World editor; and Les Hinton, the former chairman of News International. Hinton left News International in December 2007 to become the New York-based chief executive of anther News Corporation subsidiary, Dow Jones, which publishes the Wall Street Journal.

John Whittingdale, the chairman of the culture select committee, said he was particularly keen to question Hinton, who told a previous hearing he was “absolutely convinced” that Goodman was the only person who knew about the phone hacking at the paper.

Whittingdale added that he was “completely shocked” that News Group had paid out more than £1m to settle cases involving illegal surveillance and said he would be asking Hinton whether he wished to amend the evidence he gave the committee then.

Another member of the committee, Labour MP Paul Farrelly, said Hinton would be asked “whether he wishes to correct, or amplify, his evidence”.

“That reopens our inquiry and, if we are not satisfied with the answers, parliament can potentially take the rare – but reputationally serious – step of finding witnesses in contempt,” he wrote on the Guardian’s Comment is Free website.

News International said last night it was “prevented by confidentiality obligations from discussing certain allegations made in the Guardian newspaper”.

The company added that its journalists had complied with relevant legislation and codes of conduct since February 2007, after the Goodman case and Coulson’s resignation.

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