Posts Tagged ‘Seminars’

Manhattan School of Music, 2011

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

We were absolutely thrilled to have been invited to provide a seminar in January through the Manhattan School of Music’s exciting new “Center for Music Entrepreneurship”.

Violist and CME director Edward Klorman took notice of Velvet Singer seminars through MSM’s Opera Studies Director, and National Opera Association board member, Gordon Ostrowski.

The seminar will be offered as part of CME’s winter seminar series allowing students to fulfill a requirement. From MSM’s website:

“The goal of the Center for Music Entrepreneurship is to provide not just a foundation, but also inspiration, support, and direction for finding new paths in the ever-changing music world. The Center’s programs give young musicians real-world experience as well as guidance, so that they leave MSM with the fundamental tools they need for a career in music today.”

Interview on “The Voice Within” by Travis Whitlock, Tenor

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

Please see this recently posted interview, titled “The Alchemy of Talent: Interview with Tenor Bill Bennett “ by Travis Whitlock, writing for his blog, The Voice Within.

Travis is a graduate student at the Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University, specializing in lyric tenor repertoire including Bach, Handel, Mozart, Purcell and Rossini. I initially met him through Dr. Dana Brown’s graduate-level seminar, “Topics for the Professional Singer,” and was immediately impressed with how Travis developed an active blog following and mailing list, and the professionalism with which he carries himself.

Mostly he writes about me as a person and as a performer. You may be interested to read his kind comments on Velvet Singer Software:

“Bill has developed a software, Velvet Singer, that competitively meets the needs of today’s performers. The most fascinating point about Bill’s software is that it was really designed with the singer in mind. With it, performers are able to organize lessons, run reports on their repertoire, keep a database of various contacts, and even sync with outside applications; and this is just the very tip of the iceberg. Essentially it’s a tool that helps performers take control of their world and plan for results.” Read More.

Boston Conservatory – One Vision

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

When I approached Boston Conservatory’s chair of voice & opera, Patty Thom at the 2010 Classical Singer Convention, she had a vision for how our business of singing seminar might help reinforce her curriculum. While at the convention, she awarded a generous $10,000 annual scholarship to a very lucky high school student with the vision of adding to her talent pool at Boston Conservatory. The convention also serves as a networking opportunity to help her stay connected with her colleagues.

I am delighted that Boston Conservatory was able to find the perfect fit for our seminar as part of our fall east coast swing! The fall can be a busy time of the year with auditions and operas to learn, but the students truly benefit from the receiving the right information at the right time.

The seminar was comprised of a wide range of singers from undergraduate freshman to master’s students with professional performing experience. This was clear from the moment that singers began sharing their scores from our first exercise: the Self-Management Questionnaire. The highest score reported was 41 activities that a singer regularly does, yet there were a group of scores in the teens and lower twenties.

I immediately encouraged those on the lower end, that unlike most of music school, this competition has only winners. The victory comes through identifying where you are in your unique process and also from opening up a dialogue with your peers. If the seminar had no other purpose, this would be enough to justify their time and energy.

The undergraduates seemed to really rise to the challenge of thinking about how to mirror some of these concepts to their current academic pursuits. When talking about auditions, we can just as well be talking about school juries and master classes. Rather than a gig, we spoke about school productions. Rather than focusing on the intricacies of tax accounting practices for freelance musicians, we fielded questions about resumes, cover letters, internships, thriving in competition and networking.

The purpose of the first half of the seminar is to wet the appetite and explore each singer’s unique entrepreneurial strengths and weaknesses as well as organization and outlook paradigms; the master’s students added a great deal to this part of the session. Peer-to-peer discussion can be a very powerful learning method, so we keep the seminar flexible to allow this to happen naturally.

It was the visualization exercise that seemed to resonate profoundly with undergraduates and master’s students alike. Stephen Covey’s foundational book The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People encourages us to “begin with the end in mind.” In creating (and taking time to savor) a vision of the ideal, we can begin to identify a path to get there. Rather than hoping and dreaming for the fame and fortune of an international opera career, the Velvet Singer workbook visualization exercise challenges singers to create a very active and practical vision along seven categories:

  • At Coachings
  • At Voice Lessons
  • Relating to My Colleagues
  • During Auditions
  • At My Next Production
  • When I Relate to Friends / Family
  • About My Career in General

Boston Conservatory also graciously opened up the session to some of my customers and contacts from other Boston-area schools. Some Velvet Singer customers first get to know us through the seminar experience before they dive into the software. It was a real treat for me to watch the process in reverse: to have seminar participants that already regularly use Velvet Singer Software. This was a glimpse into how Velvet Singer Software can truly transform a singers’ outlook and toolkit. It was like reviewing “before” and “after” side-by-side and I like the results!

Survey of University / Conservatory Curriculums

Monday, October 25th, 2010

As I have been traveling around to many music schools, I inquire how they handle the business of singing material.

1) A few schools have courses specifically designed for singers, 2) many have entrepreneurship courses designed for all musicians and 3) many are not able to find any room in the curriculum for this material, so they bring in seminars “a la carte.” Some schools have very active and involved career services departments while others handle career preparation more heavily within the vocal department.

That all said, there seem to be some patterns across class syllabus and seminar offerings.

Topics / Seminars

  • Business Plans
  • Finances / Taxes
  • Marketing, Networking
  • Resumes, Materials, Promotions
  • Time Management / Organization / Goals
  • Technology / Websites
  • Mock Auditions
  • Recital Programming / Program Notes
  • Career Options / Brainstorming
  • Artist Management
  • Health / Yoga

Course Materials

Assignments

  • Business Plans
  • Informational Interviews
  • Lists (Professional Contacts, Repertoire, Auditions)
  • Journal Submissions (Auditions, Coachings, Lessons)
  • Reading, Blogs, Research
  • Sample Recital Programs
  • Audition Repertoire Book

I would also suggest the following books for any singer:

Westminster Gathers A Crowd

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Earlier this month, we kicked off our east coast seminar tour at Westminster Choir College. Everyone got involved to make sure that this seminar was a huge success. It was amazing to see the voice faculty (represented by Laura Brooks Rice), career services (represented by Joanne Lisa) and the office of the dean take such a large interest in what we were doing. They gathered quite a crowd of undergrads, masters students, alumni and faculty.

Velvet Singer SeminarMore important than the size of the session was the buzz that attendees felt going in. The atmosphere determines so much of what singers get out of the seminar, and Velvet Singer presenters only have so much control. When the singers arrive early to find school photographers snapping pictures and a flawless multimedia setup, the singers put on their thinking caps and get ready to be challenged.

Students at Westminster Choir College seem to possess a healthy sense of idealism and optimism. They generally feel fairly well-equipped for the real world and confident about their abilities to contribute. Their perspective also helped make this seminar unique. We stepped through our usual exercises to help brainstorm singing opportunities and they were very quick to offer creative possibilities.

What are you going to do differently?

These singers also seemed to have a very good sense of their priorities and goals. From Dissonance To Harmony challenges each participant to not only identify their top career priorities, but also to boil those down into a set of goals. Priority categories include:

  • Product Refinement
  • Differentiation
  • Innovation
  • Customer Relations
  • Sales & Advertising
  • Marketing & Growth Strategy
  • Stakeholder Communication
  • Reporting & Analysis
  • Planning & Forecasting
  • Risk Management
  • Operations
  • Financial Planning & Development
  • Cost Management

This group’s action items were some of the best of any seminar I have ever given. Singers really understood the value of moving 1) from priorities 2) to goals and then 3) to action items. It is not enough to stop working at a list of goals. What are the simple, tangible, concrete things you are going to differently as a result of this seminar?

Certified Instructor Program Launched

This seminar also represented a major milestone for Velvet Singer, LLC. This was our first seminar to incorporate the help of a Velvet Singer Certified Instructor, Mezzo Soprano Danielle Wright. Danielle introduced the concept of action items and prepared the singers that their proclamations should be:

  1. Succinct
  2. Measurable
  3. Specific
  4. Actionable

Maybe Danielle is also part of the reason that this seminar’s action items were among the best!

Webinar This Summer

Westminster College of the Arts’ Executive Director Scott Hoerl also shared some of his day with us. He has been instrumental in developing a series of Webinars for students and alumni and Velvet Singer is thrilled to become a part of this series starting in the summer of 2011 through The CoOPERAtive Program.

Thank you Laura Brooks Rice, Margaret Cusack, Joanne Lisa, Joyce Tyler, Scott Hoerl, Dean Robert Annis, Danielle Wright and all of the talented and intelligent singers of Westminster!

Roosevelt: Topics for the Professional Singer

Saturday, October 23rd, 2010

Dana Brown‘s graduate seminar is one of the finest courses of its type across the country. As I travel around to many music schools, I schools I inquire about how they handle this business of singing material. Few have as good of an answer as the Chicago College of Performing Arts at Roosevelt University.

Dr. Brown developed a two-semester course specifically designed for singers and required for graduation from the Master’s degree program called “Topics for the Professional Singer.” He continues to keep his material on the cutting-edge by involving outside guests and tailoring assignments to the needs of the class.

“Topics for the Professional Singer is a graduate seminar designed to help the aspiring singer make the leap into professional work. Topics are chosen in order to cover the musical, physical, psychological and business aspects of being a professional musician. This course includes teaching by guest artists.”

We were thrilled Roosevelt University decided to directly involve Velvet Singer Software into their curriculum as required “Courseware” purchased through the school bookstore. With this relationship, we are able to accomplish so much in such a quick amount of time. This represents a huge victory for the singers.

  • Now we can reach those students that might otherwise not engage with this material. Organization and planning is for everyone — especially for those that are naturally less gung-ho.
  • We can “teach a man to fish.” Dr. Brown’s assignments now come alive. Rather than asking only singers to prepare a repertoire list, we also leave the students with a dynamic and powerful skill set to keep their repertoire list updated throughout their careers!
  • We are able to introduce new high-technology elements into the curriculum. It is not a paper world anymore and Velvet Singer Courseware helps schools take the leap.

Powerful Homework Assignment

With Velvet Singer Courseware, we were able to create a homework assignment including submission of these five reports:

  1. Professional Contacts
  2. Repertoire summarized by Repertoire Type and Status
  3. Audition Selections summarized by Season
  4. Career Journal submissions
  5. Coaching, Lesson and Practice Session Journal submissions

The students truly rose to the challenge and impressed their teacher by submitting far more than the minimum requirements of this assignment. This course (with the help of Velvet Singer Courseware) is one of the most important steps toward organizing and empowering these budding careers!