PROFESSIONAL GROWTH

Click on the tabs below to advance your career by searching Contests & Awards, Schools, Festivals, Camps, Service Organizations, and our list of Services and Products, Scholarships and Grants and Events and Conferences.

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

Philadelphia's O19 Gets Underway with the Brilliant Denis & Katya

September 20, 2019 | By Clive Paget, Musical America

If you caught Philip Venables’s opera of Sarah Kane’s 4:48 Psychosis at last season’s NYC Prototype Festival, you’ll know he doesn’t fight shy of harrowing subject matter. Yet although Denis & Katya, which opened at the Suzanne Roberts Theater on September 18 as part of Opera Philadelphia’ s O19 Festival, has suicide in common with the earlier work, the two could not be more different. Not only is Venables’s newest creation the most brilliantly original operatic work I’ve seen in a decade, it’s a sensitive, subtle, and deeply questioning meditation on youth, voyeurism, and the age of social media.

The opera explores events surrounding a pair of Russian 15-year-olds who holed up in an abandoned cabin following a family argument and died three days later after a shoot-out with police. The 2016 drama, which took place in the village of Strugi Krasnyye in Russia’s western Pskov region, was live streamed on the video app Periscope by the boy, Denis, and his girlfriend Katya. The story, likened by some to Romeo and Juliet, was watched by dozens and widely reported at the time. Venables and his co-creators, director Ted Huffman and dramaturge Ksenia Ravinna, constructed their fictionalized libretto after lengthy research and interviews with friends, residents, and others on the scene.

Siena Licht Miller and Theo Hoffman are "pretty much ideal" in multiple roles

Where lesser collaborators might have produced a gory romance of teenage angst and the evils of the internet, Venables and co decided that since voyeurism was one of their subjects, their two singers should never appear as the children. Instead, they play the parts of a journalist, Denis’s best friend, a neighbor, a teenager, a teacher, and a medic in a series of interviews. Musical scenes are punctuated by spoken narrations describing the video stream plus—and this is sheer genius—excerpts from email exchanges between the creators as they wrestled with how to wrangle the story into an opera.

The two main characters—The Journalist and The Friend—are sung by the mezzo and the baritone respectively, while the other performer provides additional spoken text. The Neighbor (mezzo) and The Teenager (baritone) are both sing in Russian, each speaking the translation of the other’s sung lines. The Teacher and The Medic are sung in duet, in English by both. What emerges, thanks to Venables’s scrupulous setting and Huffman’s inspired yet clinical direction, is both a sophisticated piece of storytelling and a miracle of clarity.

It may sound perverse to have scored an opera for four cellos, but it allows Venables to tap into a rich vein of melancholy. Where 4:48 Psychosis was all jagged rage, Denis & Katya skillfully blends reflective arioso with outbursts of dramatic frenzy. Tapping into a sound world not inappropriately reminiscent of Shostakovich, the four cellists engage in propulsive rhythms, long-limbed lyrical melodies, spiky pizzicatos, and off-kilter glissandos. When they all fire up together, like in the panicky sections accompanying the reminiscences of The Neighbor, they pack quite a punch. The folk-inflected chaconne that underpins the final reflections of The Journalist, on the transience of news, and The Friend, on his desire to move on, is deeply emotional tonal music. Electronics provide the final element, a metrical beat accompanying the collaborators’ typed words projected onto the backdrop.

By looking into the story from the outside, Venables, Huffman and Ravinna are able to investigate not just the tragedy and motivations of two children who grew up projecting versions of themselves into a world of social media, but also their virtual audience, one whose demands ignore the consequences to a pair of troubled human beings. As the collaborators disclose their own temptations to sensationalize the story and the rationale behind their decision not to show actual footage of the events, they shine a light on all of our tendencies to peer into a passing car wreck for the frisson of catching a glimpse of something grizzly. The projection of increasingly prurient online comments from viewers engaging with the children in real time—comments like “show us your tits before you die”—is perhaps the work’s most horrific element.

Andrew Lieberman’s bare set and stark lighting allows Huffman to focus on his two performers with minimum distraction aided by Rob Kaplowitz’s sound design—the singers are subtly miked for speaking over music—and Pierre Martin’s minimal video design. Although the show is unconducted in performance, Emily Senturia’s musical direction is accomplished and sure-footed.

Theo Hoffman and Siena Licht Miller prove pretty much ideal, their young voices well matched. Both are consummate, committed actors, capable of the considerable musical challenge and the equal demands of substantial quantities of spoken text (the only sections that could benefit from greater pace). Hoffman captures the gentle pathos of The Friend, a child who still can’t believe it all ended in tragedy. By contrast, his antsy Teenager is all pent-up judgmental anger. Vocally, his warm baritone purrs and soars. Miller’s wine-dark mezzo captures the world weariness of the lugubrious Journalist and the high-stakes passion of the uniquely Russian Neighbor. At 70 minutes, theirs is a two-handed tour de force.

In his program note, Venables admits to being unsure what they have created, describing the work as “a kind of fictionalized verbatim/documentary/reconstruction/role-play theater.”  What is certain is that Denis & Katya is quite magnificent, and unlike anything else on the operatic stage. As such it points the way forward for an art form that can too often be found facing the other way.

 

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