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Performance is a way to communicate with others.
Performances can be nerve-racking for some, but they’re essential to becoming a professional musician because that’s what you do when you are one. Hope I didn’t lose anyone there. In all seriousness, it’s extremely important to have a lot of performance experience before your audition and application process starts. Auditions will seem [easy] in comparison. Communicating through music with those listening and watching during auditions will let them sense your ability to express, perform, and even learn under pressure.
Do community work through music.
Many of us, through competitions we’ve attended or through our own search, become involved with organizations that promote music appreciation and education. As part of these organizations, we are able to communicate with children, young adults, parents, teachers, and administrators, orally and musically. These groups provide a forum for us to explain what we feel in music, how we think music affects us as a world community, and why we believe the study and appreciation of music is important. These entities also provide guidance and support during our application process for higher education.
It is important to find some balance between music, school, and a social life. You can have it all, no matter what anyone tells you. The balance can be found by just organizing your time. This can be challenging. Most of my friends and I tend to keep our music, school, and social sides of our lives separate. Others may be able to mix them, especially if they attend a high school, for instance, that combines music and academic curriculum.If you’re anything like me, you’ll know that the perfect balance rarely, if ever, happens. I try my hardest and hope for the best. There are choices and adjustments that have to [be made] to achieve some sort of balance. “There have been quite a few sacrifices made,” says my friend Matt Wright, a flutist starting his freshman year at Juilliard next year. “To be honest, I could be a really great student if I had the time and willpower to focus on school—music is quite draining! However, it’s paid off.” Some days we struggle with academic homework because we need to prepare for a recital; some days we may have to skip a school activity or a party because of a scheduled performance. Other days, we may have to miss a performance or master class because of a school exam. In the end, as my friends confirm, we [can] achieve what we ultimately want. It’s important not to completely deny yourself an activity, whether it’s social, academic, or musical, as you may miss an experience or feeling that you may need to express later, musically or otherwise. As long as we communicate in all sectors, even in different percentages, we feel balanced. During our prep years, it may appear that we concentrate on music more than on social or academic opportunities. This, of course, may be due to the amount of time we spend practicing and preparing for performances, competitions, and master classes. But as we go along, these areas seem to fuse more and more, each supplementing the others. The prep work is all about communication. Through this process we reveal ourselves as musicians at heart, establish a strong link with our teachers and families, learn repertoire through classes and performances, interact with others through music, and make contacts and secure relationships with future teachers, institutions, and organizations. Ultimately, it helps us to establish careers as communicators through music. The whole experience of preparing to be a musician can be as strenuous as any other profession, if not more. The application process can be taxing, but, without the prep work, it would have been impossible for anyone even to make it to the application. The road gets rougher from here. —Gabriel Cabezas Cellist Gabriel Cabezas, 15, is the winner of the 2006 Sphinx Competition and has appeared on the National Public Radio program From the Top. This is the first of three first-person articles following Cabezas on his journey to a conservatory. Learn more about the author at gabrielcabezas.com. |