PROFESSIONAL GROWTH

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And be sure to browse the excellent career advice offered by legendary Artist Manager Edna Landau in her Ask Edna blog and the entertainment law experts in their Law and Disorder blog.

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Scholarships and Grants

Musical America routinely updates the list of scholarships and grants in an effort to keep current and ensure opportunities for musicians. If you know of a scholarship or grant not mentioned in our lists, please send us a message.
INDUSTRY EVENTS AND CONFERENCES
Trade shows, seminars, events and conferences about the business of the performing arts
July 16-29, 2023 Arlington, VA Piano Technicians Guild Convention
July 31 - August 3, 2023 Pittsburgh, PA International Association of Venue Managers Conference
August 16-18, 2023 Riverside, CA Association of California Symphony Orchestras Conference
August 20-23, 2023 Tokyo, Japan InterNoise Conference 2023
August 23-25, 2023 Huddersfield, United Kingdom Audio Engineering Society International Conference (Spacial & Immersive Audio)
September 5-8, 2023 Seattle, WA Western Arts Alliance Conference
September 6-8, 2023 Hasselt, Belgium Audio Engineering Society International Conference (Audio Education)
September 18-21, 2023 Quito, Ecuador Audio Engineering Society Latin American Conference
October 12-14, 2023 Charleston, SC National Association for Campus Activities Convention
October 16-19, 2023 Beaverton, OR Arts Northwest Annual Conference
October 19-21, 2023 Little Rock, AR National Association for Campus Activities Convention
October 19-22, 2023 Ottowa, ON Society for Ethnomusicology Conference
October 25-26, 2023 New York, NY National Association of Broadcasters Show
October 25-27, 2023 New York, NY Audio Engineering Society 155th Convention
October 26-28, 2023 Miami, FL College Music Society National Conference
October 26-28, 2023 Syracuse, NY National Association for Campus Activities Convention
November 3-5, 2023 Raleigh, NC National Council of Acoustical Consultants Conference
November 4-8, 2023 Ottowa, ON Canadian Arts Presenting Association
November 9-12, 2023 Denver, CO American Musicological Society Annual Conference
November 9-12, 2023 Denver, CO Society for Music Theory Annual Meeting
November 16-18, 2023 Riverside, CA National Association for Campus Activities Convention
November 17-21, 2023 Scottsdale, AZ National Association of Schools of Music Annual Meeting
December 4-8, 2023 Sydney, Australia Acoustical Society of America 185th Meeting
January 3-6, 2024 Phoenix, AZ National Opera Association Annual Convention
January 4-6, 2024 New York, NY International Conductors Guild
January 9-11, 2024 New York, NY International Society for the Performing Arts
January 12-16, 2024 New York, NY Arts Presenters Conference
January 18-21, 2024 New York, NY Chamber Music America
January 24-27, 2024 Spokane, WA American Choral Directors Association Northwestern Region Conference
January 25-28, 2024 Anaheim, CA National Association of Music Merchants Show
January 29 - February 1, 2024 Las Vegas, NV International Ticketing Association Annual Conference
February 7-10, 2024 Omaha, NE American Choral Directors Association Midwestern Region Conference
February 21-24, 2024 Louisville, KY American Choral Directors Association Southern Region Conference
February 27 - March 2, 2024 Denver, CO American Choral Directors Association Southwestern Region Conference
February 28 - March 2, 2024 Providence, RI American Choral Directors Association Eastern Region Conference
February 28 - March 2, 2024 Cincinnati, OH Music Library Association Annual Meeting
March 6-9, 2024 Pasadena, CA American Choral Directors Association Western Region Conference
March 6-10, 2024 Washington, DC American Bandmasters Association Annual Convention
March 16-20, 2024 Atlanta, GA Music Teachers National Association National Conference
March 20-23, 2024 Louisville, KY Suzuki Association of the Americas Conference
March 20-23, 2024 Louisville, KY American String Teachers Association National Conference
March 20-23, 2024 Seattle, WA US Institute for Theatre Technology Annual Conference
April 4-6, 2024 Des Moines, IA National Association for Campus Activities National Convention
April 13-17, 2024 Las Vegas, NV National Association of Broadcasters Show
April 30 - May 3, 2024 Perth, Australia International Society for the Performing Arts
May 13-17, 2024 Ottowa, ON Acoustical Society of America 186th Meeting
June 3-8, 2024 Los Angeles, CA Opera America
June 6-8, 2024 Atlanta, GA Chorus America Conference
June 16-19, 2024 Orlando, FL American Harp Society Conference
June 17-22, 2024 Fullerton, CA Guitar Foundation of America Convention
June 20-22, 2024 Chicago, IL Theatre Communications Group National Conference
June 28 - July 2, 2024 Knoxville, TN National Association of Teachers of Singing Conference
June 30 - July 4, 2024 San Francisco, CA American Guild of Organists
July 21-25, 2024 Flagstaff, AZ International Double Reed Society Annual Conference
July 31 - August 4, 2024 Dublin, Ireland ClarinetFest Conference 2024
August 1-4, 2024 San Antonio, TX National Flute Association Conference
October 17-26, 2024 Virtual Society for Ethnomusicology Conference
November 7-9, 2024 Washington, DC College Music Society National Conference
November 7-10, 2024 Jacksonville, FL Society for Music Theory Annual Meeting
November 11-16, 2024 Montréal, QC CINARS (International Exchange for the Performing Arts) 
November 14-17, 2024 Chicago, IL American Musicological Society Annual Conference
November 22-26, 2024 Chicago, IL National Association of Schools of Music Annual Meeting
February 26 - March 2, 2025 Chattanooga, TN American Bandmasters Association Annual Convention
March 5-8, 2025 Columbus, OH US Institute for Theatre Technology Annual Conference
March 15-19, 2025 Minneapolis, MN Music Teachers National Association National Conference
May 19-23, 2025 New Orleans, LA Acoustical Society of America 188th Meeting
June 17-20, 2025 Chicago, IL Dance/USA Annual Conference
August 7-10, 2025 Atlanta, GA National Flute Association Conference
October 23-26, 2025 Atlanta, GA Society for Ethnomusicology Conference
October 30 - November 1, 2025 Spokane, WA College Music Society National Conference
November 4-9, 2025 Minneapolis, MN American Musicological Society Annual Conference
November 6-9, 2025 Minneapolis, MN Society for Music Theory Annual Meeting
March 18-21, 2026 Long Beach, CA US Institute for Theatre Technology Annual Conference

Ask Edna
Edna Landau’s blog
Edna LandauEdna Landau—doyenne of the music business, long-time managing director of IMG Artists and director of career development at the Colburn Conservatory of Music in Los Angeles—writes Ask Edna exclusively for MusicalAmerica.com to provide invaluable advice to music students and young professional artists. Read more about Edna’s impact on the performing arts.

Send your questions to Edna Landau at AskEdna@MusicalAmerica.com and she’ll answer through Ask Edna. Click the links below to read Edna’s recent columns on the critical aspects of launching and managing and professional music career.

Arts Administration

Career Etiquette

Communicating with Your Audience

Finding a Manager

For Chamber Music Ensembles

Listening to Your Inner Voice

Managing Your Own Career

Publicity and Promotion

The Orchestral World

When It Comes to Recording

During Edna’s 23 years as managing director of IMG Artists, she personally looked after the career of violinist, Itzhak Perlman and launched the careers of musicians such as pianists Evgeny Kissin and Lang Lang, violinist Hilary Hahn, and conductors Franz Welser-Mõst and Alan Gilbert.

Edna believes young musicians can grow their own careers, with “hard work, blind faith, passion for the cause, incessant networking and a vision that refuse[s] to be tarnished by naysayers.”

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Reviews

Met's Macbeth Not Quite Creepy Enough

September 30, 2014 | By John Yohalem, MusicalAmerica.com

NEW YORK--Verdi once said of his Lady Macbeth, “She shouldn’t sing at all … I would rather her voice were rough, hollow stifled,” and these unwary words have been used to justify all manner of vocal mayhem. It is unusual to hear the role sung by a lyric soprano in her prime, as Anna Netrebko did for the first time Sept. 24 at the Met Opera. Macbeth is a tale of apparitions, hallucinations, diabolism, and devouring guilt. The opera, like Shakespeare’s play, has always been a creep show.

Netrebko filled the house with brilliant sound, though the occasional croak suggested she did not have the part entirely within her grasp. Her voice is larger than ever, with none of the pinching nasality Russian sopranos sometimes bring to the western repertory. She sings trills and triplets where the composer requests trills and triplets, details that dramatic sopranos often fake. Her soft singing for the great post-regicide duet and when commencing the serpentine “Le luce langue” was lovely, though a loveliness curdled by the noxiousness of her character. When her voice is loud, it can grow strident, and this Lady is outgoing. Sleepwalking, Netrebko never seemed upset, wracked by guilt or even asleep. There was no eeriness to her voice, no veiled quality, but an air of triumph when dwelling on her misdeeds. It was an exultant but unruly performance, attractive but lacking in nightmare. The crowd went wild.

Some of her over-the-top portrayal may derive from requirements of this staging. Adrian Noble’s 2007 production places the story in post-Soviet Eastern Europe, the “bloodlands” as they have been called, ruled by tasteless oligarchs (Netrebko’s blond wig and bosomy costumes suit the style) and run by murderous thugs who break out the AK-47s when the libretto calls for the boughs of Birnam Wood. Around the festive “civilized” scenes on their turntable lies a dank gray wood, and the Witches who emerge from it are bag ladies, screeching their waltzes (as Verdi directed) and swatting each other with pocket books. They do not “fit” with the rest of the characters in this story, but that’s just the point: They dwell in a different world.

With Macbeth, his tenth opera, in 1847, Verdi set the Italian lyric stage on notice that he intended to transform the art, to introduce new themes and ways of tackling them. He was the first Italian composer to have read actual Shakespeare, first translated in 1838. Macbeth was a curious play to choose, its supernatural elements more familiar to German audiences than to Italians. Too, famously, this is an opera without a love story or a (principal) tenor. But opera back then required a prima donna, so Verdi’s Lady Macbeth becomes far more malevolent than her Shakespearean model. Her double aria in Act I sets the scene for regicide splashily than do Macbeth’s nervous soliloquies, and hers, too, is the exultant meditation on power attained, “Le luce langue,” in Act II.

To hold his own, Macbeth must be a true Verdi baritone, with enough voice and enough hues in it to imply power-lust and terror at the same time, whether confronting Banquo’s ghost or the Witches’ apparitions. He must warm us to his despair at the last, when Verdi finally gives him a melody worth filling the house. Željko Lucic possesses such a voice, sturdy and soaring, his arching phrases expressing the self-questioning of a man who commits crimes while knowing better.

This “bloodlands” fable becomes most moving in the great chorus of refugees that opens Act IV. The huddled masses’ plea for peace in their despairing melody will strike a chord with anyone who reads today’s headlines. The Met’s chorus gave the story a bleak, appealing universality with their restrained, beautiful performance.

René Pape tossed off Banquo’s apprehensive music with suave technique but little feeling. Joseph Calleja singing Macduff’s “Ah, la paterna mano” -- a father mourning his murdered family – drew our sympathy and demonstrated a natural command of the line, sung with easy power and melancholy beauty.

Fabio Luisi led the opera with an urgency, a disinclination to dwell on Verdi’s careful orchestration and subtle changes of mood, that was thrilling to experience but undercut the tale’s spookiness, notably during the Sleepwalking Scene. This aria-that-is-not-an-aria is unlike anything else in Italian opera: We wander through Lady Macbeth’s tormented thoughts; she herself never quite grasps the thread of it, never actually sings the uneasy melody. Luisi’s conducting and Netrebko’s singing seemed to overlook the neurotic side of the affair.

 

 

Anna Netrebko and Željko Lucic are Mrs. and Mr. Macbeth
 

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