PROFESSIONAL GROWTH
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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.
Communicating with Your Audience
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.”
Special Reports
MA Top 30 Professional: Harriet Stubbs
Concert Pianist
In June, British pianist Harriet Stubbs was named on Queen Elizabeth II’s Birthday Honors List, recognized for “services to the community in West London during COVID-19.” Her services entailed playing 250 brief concerts, heard every evening through the open window of her apartment by neighbors and people gathered on the street.
“I’m so glad my British Empire Medal came from her,” Stubbs said. “Her majesty’s death was the end of an era, and I feel so privileged to be on her last list.”
Stubbs, who divides her time among New York City, London, Los Angeles, and the Cayman Islands, was stuck in London during the pandemic. She ended up staying for a year and a half to perform her free window concerts. “I think people responded because of the variety,” she said. “The repertoire was everything from Beethoven to the Beatles, Scriabin to David Bowie. People came to listen even in the rain and the dark. It was amazing. I felt really invigorated and inspired, because we all got to experience something greater than ourselves at such a desperate time.”
One of the most popular numbers Stubbs performed was her arrangement of the Bowie song “Life on Mars,” which she intends to include on a 2023 recording whose mix of classical and pop music she describes as “Rachmaninoff meets Bowie.” Her first album was Heaven & Hell: The Doors of Perception, an homage to poet William Blake that featured Marianne Faithfull delivering a narrative in Stubbs’s rendition of John Adams’s formidable Phrygian Gates.
Also on the pianist’s agenda: the Sonic Blue Cayman International Festival, which she began developing before the pandemic. The plan is to give performances on a stage set in the water just off a beach on Grand Cayman, with the festival to debut in January 2024. “We’ll have a ballet night, an opera night, a jazz night, a rock ‘n’ roll night,” she said. “I want to combine the ocean and different genres of music.”