Save time and money by printing custom music staff paper online as you need it. This site is great for people who casually write music, those perfecting an inspired music composition, my own private students, or anyone else who needs staff paper when a melody strikes.
http://www.pdfpad.com/staffpaper/
Brandyn has had thriving private teaching studios in Central Florida, New York City, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Cleveland. Brandyn teaches flute, clarinet, saxophone, trumpet, French horn, trombone, tuba, violin, viola, cello, piano, voice, conducting, music theory, and music history. Brandyn has also arranged countless works for concert band and chamber ensembles and has composed a number of original works. He performs and teaches throughout Northeast Ohio.
Monday, March 31, 2014
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Professional Guitar Player sought for High School Musical Production Pit. Paid: Cleveland, OH Area
Avon Lake High School is looking for a guitar player for their spring musical. The position will be paid and is dependent on the number of rehearsals/performances that you can make.
Dates:
April 7,8,9 - 3:30-7 PM
April 10,11,12 - 7:30 PM show
April 13th - 2 PM show
If you can fill this position or know anyone who can please contact the director.
David Eddleman, Director of Bands
Avon Lake High School
175 Avon Belden Road
Avon Lake, OH 44012
(440)933-6290 ext. 1503
http://www.avonlakecityschools.org/highschool/band
Dates:
April 7,8,9 - 3:30-7 PM
April 10,11,12 - 7:30 PM show
April 13th - 2 PM show
If you can fill this position or know anyone who can please contact the director.
David Eddleman, Director of Bands
Avon Lake High School
175 Avon Belden Road
Avon Lake, OH 44012
(440)933-6290 ext. 1503
http://www.avonlakecityschools.org/highschool/band
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Digital Distribution and the Evolving Publishing Marketplace
Personal
media consumption has exploded in the last few years as a direct result of
digital distribution. Nearly all of our
content that we consume is online, whether it be academic, news, research, or
entertainment in purpose. Publishing and
distribution have made it much easier for creative professionals of all types
to publish their works without having to go through an agent or company to do
much of the work.
These
trends also result in greater convenience for the end user. Single tracks can be downloaded rather than
only an entire album. This is largely
because the manufacturing cost to produce a physical single and a cost to
produce a physical album are the same, but the profit margin is much higher on
albums since they carry a higher retail value.
Digital downloads require no manufacturing cost, so profit margin
remains high whether the sales are focused on high-volume small dollar value
sales (singles) or small-volume large dollar value sales (such as albums and
compilations.)
Already
we see many companies moving away from physical distribution entirely. Netflix’s streaming plan is now the norm, and
they have made their physical distribution plans for DVD’s more expensive as
the cost to mail physical DVD’s, carry hard-copy inventory, and process the
materials is much higher than streaming content delivery. (Gemstone Equity Research, 2013.) Thus, I
think that while there is no replacement for physical albums (sic. vinyl is
still around, but not for the every-day end-user) largely this trend will
continue and perhaps new methods of digital distribution will emerge as
technology continues to evolve.
Reference:
Gemstone Equity Research. Netflix Right Move at the Right Time. November 19, 2013. Accessed on Wednesday, March 26, 2014 at http://seekingalpha.com/article/1848321-netflix-right-move-at-the-right-time.
Friday, March 21, 2014
Musical Instrument Choice by Difficulty and Employability
Many
choose a musical instrument based on what sound they like most, but perhaps we
shouldn’t use that as our main reason for choosing a musical instrument. Below I’ve categorized instruments and talk
about their choice in regards to difficulty learning them and employability for
those seeking careers in music.
Flute, Clarinet and Saxophone:
These
instruments are fairly easy to learn, though hard to play well. Fingering requires dexterity on all of these
instruments, but if you learn one of the three, the other two will come pretty
easily; the fingerings are similar on all three. There is always demand for these instruments,
but there are so many players that there is lots of competition for work. Fortunately, there are many venues and genres
for these instruments: theatre, classical, jazz, pop, rock, world music and
more.
Oboe and Bassoon:
These
instruments are challenging to learn.
Their fingering systems are much more complicated and it is difficult to
get the quintessential beautiful double reed sound that everyone loves. However, if you can overcome those
challenges, these instruments are in extremely high demand and you’ll always
find places to play. However, you’ll be
limited mostly to classical music.
Trumpet, Trombone, Euphonium, Tuba:
These
instruments have relatively simple fingerings/slide positions. However, they require great lip flexibility
to make moving between partials clean and beautiful. Trumpet and Trombone have similar
employability level to flute and clarinet, and are used more in jazz
ensembles. The euphonium and tuba are
more limited and you may have to do some work carving out your own niche as a
player here.
French Horn:
The
horn is difficult to learn, but if you have good relative pitch or
sight-singing ability, your job is much easier.
The horn is relatively employable and often in high demand for good
players, but at the advanced level there is a decent amount of competition and the
instrument is largely limited to classical music.
Violin, Viola, Cello and String
Bass:
These
instruments require a great deal of finger, elbow, and arm strength and
flexibility, but you don’t have to do a darned thing with your mouth or
breath. It is easy to play these
instruments, but very challenging to master them. They are highly employable, though the string
bass may have the same issues as tuba and euphonium, and all but violin are
largely limited to classical music.
Percussion:
This
instrument requires no breath control but does require an exquisite sense of
beat and rhythm and requires more technique to play correctly than many other
instruments. Notation is generally
easier to read with the exception of mallet percussion. Percussion is in high demand, however, and
nearly every genre of music uses percussion in some degree.
Thursday, March 20, 2014
BRFB’S 2014 Spring Concert Also Celebrates 10 Years!
The Blazing River Freedom Band (BRFB) will be presenting their next concert entitled Fantasy Magic at 3pm, April 6, 2014. The concert will be held at Pilgrim Congregational Church located on 2592 W. 14th in Cleveland's Tremont neighborhood. This concert is of particular importance because it will mark 10 years of being a community group of LGBT and straight -ally musicians coming together to perform concerts, join Cleveland Pride Parade and other similar venues across the country in making a defiant yet joyful noise, and taking part in the larger LGBT band movement as whole.
From Harry Potter to Disney, Fantasy Magic is a beautiful collection of magic-related selections. The Blazing River Freedom Band’s Flag Corps will also perform original choreography as well. Fantasy Magic will be conducted by BRFB Artistic Director Brandyn Metzko and Assistant Conductor Tommy Casarona. During the concert there will be several gift baskets raffled off as well as two pairs of tickets to the August 12th Gay Games Concert Band performance later this summer. We encourage one and all to bring friends and family of any age to attend this fun and family-friendly concert.
If you would like more information about this event, please contact Karl Kimpo at info@blazingriverband.org or opmik75@gmail.com . You may also call 216-744-3907.
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
A-Cappella Vocal Ensembles
I’ve
recently become the director of a new a-cappella ensemble
in Cleveland, Ohio. A-cappella groups
are vocal groups that use no instruments, only the voice. Most often a-cappella groups perform covers
of existing songs that do include instruments, and use the human voice to
imitate the sounds that the instruments would normally produce through the use
of varying syllables and vowel sounds.
Some groups include vocal percussion,
which is effectively specialized beat-boxing in an a-cappella arrangement that
emulates drum set, electronic percussion and other percussive sounds and/or
remixing effects. While a-cappella groups
can cover songs in any genre, most often they cover barbershop, do-wop, rock,
r&b, pop, gospel, dance and top-40.
There
are a
lot of cool features of a-cappella groups over other groups. A-cappella ensembles may be any size, may be
mixed-gender or standard gender, may allow for soloists (‘leads’), and music
for the group may be more easily tailored to fit the level of the singers than
many other ensemble configurations.
A-cappella can be sung anywhere at any time, since no equipment is
required.
A-cappella
teaches many different skills to singers.
It requires a high level of careful listening and teaches singers to
react carefully to what they hear from the other singers to create a cohesive
sound—much more than they would in a standard choir. Often a-cappella groups have four or less people
on a part, so there is nowhere to hide.
Thus, singers become stronger and more confident as they get used to
singing independently rather in a large choral section. Furthermore, a-cappella develops rhythm in
singers much more than other vocal ensembles.
There is no accompaniment or percussion to keep the beat, so the group
members rely upon each other to keep the beat steady.
With
that being said, I’m really excited about this new ensemble. If you are a singer in the Cleveland area and
interested in singing a-cappella music, please do consider joining us. More information can be found on the group’s
facebook page.
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