Clarinet News
Chad Burrow
Chad Burrow on Work-Family Balance
As with any creative pursuit, even professional ones, there comes a point in any day when the art is put away and the rest of life must be attended to. What happens, though, when your frequent arti...
The Seduction of the Ear
In my opinion, the most important aspect of musical artistry is sound. Sound quality is what people initially evaluate when they hear someone play. If a musical sound is unpleasant to the ear, it d...
AirTurn pedals
In His Own Words: Jose Franch-Ballester
On Technology in Art and Teaching
In conversation with Kim Werker
There’s an occasional clicking noise coming through as I speak with Jose Franch-Ballester via Skype. I’m at my dining room table in...
Alpha Clarinet
Chamber Music in the Great Outdoors
Am I going to get claustrophobic?
This was the question on Ellen Breakfield-Glick’s mind as she descended into the darkness of Mammoth Cave, her clarinet safely stowed in its case on her back, her ...
Corrado Giuffredi
Corrado Giuffredi and the New Italian Clarinet School
Corrado Giuffredi is one of the most prominent clarinetists on the global scene at the moment and has played with important orchestras since he was young. His videos on YouTube and Facebook reach t...
bassoonist
The Long Path Together
No relationship is as important to an orchestral principal bassoonist as the one we share with the single-reed specialist who sits to our right. From Beethoven to Brahms, Schubert to Schoenberg, t...
Amelie Foster
My Husband Wes
I met Wes in 1977 when he joined the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra (ISO), but we didn’t start dating until he asked me out for my Halloween birthday a year later. I fell in love with that tall, ...
Clarithenics: The Art of Peak Performance Preparation
An efficient warm-up routine is one of the most overlooked components of regular practice. Professional athletes consider a thorough warm-up essential for peak performance, as do professional danc...
Chamber Music Northwest
David Shifrin: Forging Paths and Building Audiences
When David Shifrin was a student, he told his teachers that he wanted to do many different kinds of work when he became a professional musician. They weren’t having it.
“I enjoyed playing chamber ...