Have you ever seen a score Gustav Mahler conducted? Look at Mengelberg's scores. They where full with cues, codes, tempo markings, etc. If you conduct an orchestra/chorus or whatever, you shopuld know your score, but it doesn't matter at all HOW you study the score. Do whatever works for you. I once conducted Strawinsky's Psalm Symphony and the score was full with makings and colors, it helped me to find the structure of the piece.
Many great conductors marked their scores with colors. Ormandy truly led the way on this and many other followed suit. Yes it is important to study the score. It is the most important aspect of conducting! However, how the score is studied is up to the conductor. This is less of a way to conduct and more of a way to study and rehearse
I think its beneficial...no matter how good you are, why not be prepared to screw up...? you should be able to do whatever helps, conducting is an art form, as is music...each conductor is different...a piece conducted by 2 different people will never sound the same...its only natural..I say go for color coding to help in getting out what the editor/composer wished!
This is absolutely ridiculous! I don't think he needs to colour code his score if he can't read the music corectly, i think he needs glasses! After conducting Les Toreadors from Carmen i know where the woodwind should enter and where the violins should drop to p: simply by studying the music and by listening to other orchestras play it
mein gott... why cant u just print the whole score in different colors, c soft = light blue , c forte = light red and also have different colors for different notes... oh i forgot we can have different colors for the lines on the staves tooo .. it would help in case we forgot... and we could also write Treble clef next to the Treble clef in flourescent...
as MCTrumpetAce21 said "These videos should absolutely NOT be used for educational purposes, except as a model of what NOT to do. "
if you can't see THAT much red -- if all that crayon doesn't "catch your eye" -- then you're colorblind, dude! part of score-reading is LEARNING THE SCORE. if you don't automatically see the entrance after the rest WITHOUT a big honkin' yellow star, then you need to look for another profession...
These videos should absolutely NOT be used for educational purposes, except as a model of what NOT to do.
I have to totally agree with you here ... KNOW YOUR SCORE study it ... Im not a conductor but I have plenty of scores and conduct along with them for the fun of it at home ... I don't need any of those colors or anything ... I study the score, know the score and every detail about it ... even trickier when you add in choir and soloist.
This method promotes the idea that soft is peaceful, loud is angry. It promotes the idea that loud is simply the opposite of soft - a gross oversimplification.
This is to be avoided. Instead, simply learn what the composer intends to say with the dynamics and conduct that.
Somebody I know highlights all over their score and I don't even know how they can look at it!! It's a $30 score and they're ruining it with so much highlighter!!!
visual learner obviously.cmon guys
ninjakid165 9 months ago
it looks like an ART ATTACK on Disney Channel.... just incredible that people like him talk about music!!!!
gaemp 1 year ago
Have you ever seen a score Gustav Mahler conducted? Look at Mengelberg's scores. They where full with cues, codes, tempo markings, etc. If you conduct an orchestra/chorus or whatever, you shopuld know your score, but it doesn't matter at all HOW you study the score. Do whatever works for you. I once conducted Strawinsky's Psalm Symphony and the score was full with makings and colors, it helped me to find the structure of the piece.
musiced29 1 year ago
Many great conductors marked their scores with colors. Ormandy truly led the way on this and many other followed suit. Yes it is important to study the score. It is the most important aspect of conducting! However, how the score is studied is up to the conductor. This is less of a way to conduct and more of a way to study and rehearse
jumpdookie 2 years ago
I think its beneficial...no matter how good you are, why not be prepared to screw up...? you should be able to do whatever helps, conducting is an art form, as is music...each conductor is different...a piece conducted by 2 different people will never sound the same...its only natural..I say go for color coding to help in getting out what the editor/composer wished!
NateMelo614 2 years ago 3
This is absolutely ridiculous! I don't think he needs to colour code his score if he can't read the music corectly, i think he needs glasses! After conducting Les Toreadors from Carmen i know where the woodwind should enter and where the violins should drop to p: simply by studying the music and by listening to other orchestras play it
EbonHawkProductions 2 years ago
color coding? is this guy straight out of kindergarden? oh wait...yes
weatherreport82 2 years ago
Oh dear!
A conductor should KNOW his score.
You learn it by reading what's there, not by pretty coloured marks!
Who would colour a poem in order to learn it?
1401JSC 2 years ago
He can't see, at a glance, where the violins, viola, and cello come in!? It's where you see a whole bunch of those little black things on them lines.
LandownerRecords 2 years ago
mein gott... why cant u just print the whole score in different colors, c soft = light blue , c forte = light red and also have different colors for different notes... oh i forgot we can have different colors for the lines on the staves tooo .. it would help in case we forgot... and we could also write Treble clef next to the Treble clef in flourescent...
as MCTrumpetAce21 said "These videos should absolutely NOT be used for educational purposes, except as a model of what NOT to do. "
Evextonn 2 years ago
Does anyone know where i can buy cheap practise/study scores? (any free ones?) thanks..
danielwills93 2 years ago
wikipedia
joshclarksjb7389 2 years ago
Wow, that was subtle.
plaidfingers 2 years ago
if you can't see THAT much red -- if all that crayon doesn't "catch your eye" -- then you're colorblind, dude! part of score-reading is LEARNING THE SCORE. if you don't automatically see the entrance after the rest WITHOUT a big honkin' yellow star, then you need to look for another profession...
These videos should absolutely NOT be used for educational purposes, except as a model of what NOT to do.
MCTrumpetAce21 3 years ago 7
I have to totally agree with you here ... KNOW YOUR SCORE study it ... Im not a conductor but I have plenty of scores and conduct along with them for the fun of it at home ... I don't need any of those colors or anything ... I study the score, know the score and every detail about it ... even trickier when you add in choir and soloist.
contranimal 2 years ago
This method promotes the idea that soft is peaceful, loud is angry. It promotes the idea that loud is simply the opposite of soft - a gross oversimplification.
This is to be avoided. Instead, simply learn what the composer intends to say with the dynamics and conduct that.
aidan86 3 years ago
Somebody I know highlights all over their score and I don't even know how they can look at it!! It's a $30 score and they're ruining it with so much highlighter!!!
seshygirl04 3 years ago