CalgaryTbone wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 5:13 pm
I will speak up for the orchestral audition process. It's not perfect, but neither is any other way of hiring. The use of orchestral excerpts (mostly) makes sense because that is exactly what the job entails, and anyone who says excerpts aren't musical is basically ignoring their value - every one of them that is required needs to be played with style, phrasing and solid fundamentals. They are small snapshots from larger works by master composers that feature the trombone in some way. Also there are ways to show individual musicianship with melodic shape and adjusting dynamics to show a knowledge of where the part being played is more melodic or accompaniment in nature.
I don't disagree with any of that, Jim, and that's the way I teach and always try to play the excerpts. And in most cases - especially at the top of our profession - the winners of auditions display musical thinking in the process. But the musical values of excerpts are subjective. Missed notes, breaths where somebody on the committee thinks they "shouldn't be," "gotchas" of compressing or stretching a rest a little bit, etc., are much more objective and much easier to judge.
Also, most orchestral auditions include section playing and perhaps a trial week (or more). That is a great opportunity to really judge balance, blend, rhythm and tuning. Along with that is the chance to play "chamber music " - adjusting to colleagues while playing accelerandos and ritards, as well as shaping crescendos and diminuendos (without a conductor).
But Jim, even that part of the process is under fire right now. I have read articles from some of the people advocating for more diversity in orchestras arguing against having trial periods at all. And there have been high-profile tenure cases recently that have been harshly criticized, and for good reason as far as I can tell. In some situations I have been in - on both sides of the screen - the part of the audition committee that comes out to play in the section round lose their votes at that point (full disclosure: in one case I probably would have won an audition if they hadn't). I understand it is to preserve anonymity and promote fairness, but clearly there is an aspect of that that doesn't make sense.
As far as any non-musical issues and the possibility of hiring someone who lacks personal integrity, even in the extreme, I seriously doubt that any method of hiring will ever completely eliminate that. People who fall into that category often are very good at hiding that side of their personality, and any workplace can have a creep working there.
Again, I don't disagree, but in the attempt at "fairness" we have made the audition process into a sporting competition much more than a job interview, and because it is now that much more competitive, the hero worship and problems that come with it have gotten worse. Or maybe it's not actually worse and we just talk about it more now, but its certainly not better.
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As to the all-blind auditions and prelims for everybody Katherine Needleman calls for...its hard to disagree with any of that in principle. However, it further dehumanizes the process in ways that I think bring another set of problems, as I'm suggesting above.
Furthermore, the reality is that time is money, and in smaller orchestras there is never enough time to fairly hear everybody who wants to apply. There was a second trombone audition for a New England per-service orchestra recently in which most of the applicants were only able to play 2 excerpts in the prelim. They walked away feeling like they had not been heard fairly. I know the people on that committee and I know they want to hear people play their best, but I also know they had limited time and too many applicants to hear. I would actually propose that the bar for auto-advancing to a (blind) second round be a lot lower rather than higher,
in order to give everybody who auditions a more complete, more fair listen.
Other than that, I don't really know how to reconcile all the issues. I'm just suggesting that we need to think about it a lot more and be creative with the solutions.