tbdana wrote: βMon Sep 16, 2024 5:16 pm
And it drives me nuts when the community players (who are given the music ahead of time) come in and use the rehearsal as their own personal practice time. No!
Practice at home. When you come to the rehearsal you should already be able to play your part perfectly because you put in the time at home. The rehearsal is for the conductor and the group as a whole to put things together, not your time to learn your part at our expense because you didn't bother to practice all week.
Yeah, but a "community" group (community band, community orchestra, community chorus, ...) isn't a professional or even a serious amateur group. The members of it (at least the ones who aren't elderly and retired) have full time jobs during the day that don't involve music. They involve things like administration, factory work, IT at various levels, genuine science (I've played with very good community musicians who were protein scientists, biologists, chemists, etc.), medicine (I've played with a number of M.D.s, including cardiologist and oncologists), engineering (mechanical, electrical, chemical), airline pilots (I've played with a wonderful euphonium player who was an international pilot for American Airlines), etc. etc.
Sometimes these people work very long days. The last couple of years before I retired, my group was frequently working 10-12 hour days (8 in the office, 2-4 at home) on things I won't even try to describe here. And some of them are on call at various times during the week. Yeah, with a job like that (working at SAS, for example) and with three children, I still did find time to practice for the weekly community band rehearsal. True, not as much I "should" have, but I did my best. Some people couldn't manage quite as much practice. And later, I stopped playing for 15 years because I just couldn't do it with the jobs I had.
You just need to stay away from community organizations if you think that people with real full-time jobs can be expected to practice their parts to perfection before coming to rehearsal. I'll go for "should practice their parts before coming to rehearsal," but "to perfection" is definitely unreasonable. Sure, the level of unpreparedness is irritating (even to other members of that organization in the same boat as them). But that's the kind of organization it is, and every conductor of one is aware of that -- even if he/she yells them regularly to PRACTICE AT HOME.
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