Clarinet News Digital Single Page
Clarinet News Digital Single Page
Clarinet News Digital Single Page
CLARINET NEWS
TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S
Eddie Daniels
On Eddie Daniels
CLARINET NEWS
Issue No. 1, Fall 2016
Editor
KIM WERKER
Denise Gainey
A Book Excerpt
Mary Alice Druhan
Richard Hawkins
Wes Foster
F is for Foster
Bil Jackson
Clarithenics
Designer
WA R R E N N E I LY
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Benjamin Lulich
Eugene Mondie
Why I Switched
Ricardo Morales
Jonathan Leshnoff
The Collaborator
Copyeditor
R E B E C C A B R I N B U RY
Proofreader
MORGAN CHOJNACKI
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22
30
David Shifrin
Publisher/Editor In Chief
JOEL JAFFE
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40
44
Contributors
MORRIE BACKUN, EDDIE DANIELS, MARY
ALICE DRUHAN, KAREN HALEY FOSTER,
D E N I S E G A I N E Y, R I C H A R D H AW K I N S , B I L
JACKSON, JOEL JAFFE, JULIANNE KIRK
D O Y L E , J O N AT H A N L E S H N O F F, B E N J A M I N
LULICH, RACHEL LULICH, CHRISTOPHER
MILLARD, RON ODRICH, RAPHAEL SANDERS,
KIM WERKER, ROB WORKMAN
Photography
CLIFF BRANE, VICTOR DEZSO, RICK ETKIN,
K A R E N H A L E Y F O S T E R , D E N I S E G A I N E Y,
N AT H A N G A R F I N K E L , PA U L G I T E L S O N ,
E R I C A H A M I LT O N , L A R E Y M C D A N I E L ,
A N G E L A P N AVA R E T T E , R O N O D R I C H ,
L O U I S E O P P E R M A N , J E A N I E O W, TA N YA
R O S E N - J O N E S , Y U K I T E I , R O B E RT Y O U N G
T h a n k Yo u
CORINA ACHESON, JEREMY BACKUN, MARY
BACKUN, MORRIE BACKUN, SEAN CHRISTIE,
N AT H A N G A R F I N K E L , C O R R A D O G I U F F R E D I ,
S O N I A G R E G O R Y, J E N J A F F E , E S T H E R
KELLER, CHRISTINE KIM, MEGHAN MAJOR,
E U N I C E PA R K , R I C H A R D S T O L Z M A N , G R E G
WERKER
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Printed on post-consumer recycled paper
with environmentally friendly ink.
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clarinetnews.com
2016 Backun Musical Ser vices.
All rights reser ved.
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59
Joel Jaffe
Editor In Chief
chief@clarinetnews.com
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A FIRST
When Joel laid out his plan for
this new magazine, I was
thrilled to be given the
opportunity to speak with so
many varied and accomplished
clarinetists. As I interviewed
them and they told me about
their lives and their music,
several common themes rose to
the surface: A focus on
mastering fundamentals so they
could let go and have fun.
Their exposure to music in school when they were
children, and the importance of their parents support.
A passionate love of teaching.
I am not a clarinetist. In fact, Im not even a
musician. Im simply an editor who loves to learn
about what drives people to create art. When Joel
first invited me to join him on this adventure, I got
that rare tingling feeling that told me his grand vision
was going to result in something truly great. I hope
you find this great. I hope it inspires you to explore
music in deeper or different ways. I hope youll let us
know what you enjoy, and what youd like to see in
future issues.
Onward!
Kim Werker
Editor
editor@clarinetnews.com
|3
Eddie Daniels
On Eddie Daniels
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EDDIE DANIELS | 5
Eddie and Me
Ron Odrich
Eddie Daniels is that rarest of rare musicians who is not only equally at home in both jazz and
classical music, but excels at both with breathtaking virtuosity. His overriding ambition is to reach
as many people as possible with his music, enlarging the audience for both jazz and classical
music, while tearing down the walls that separate them. Eddie Daniels is a Backun Artist and
performs on MoBa clarinets and his line of Backun/Eddie Daniels Classical and Jazz Mouthpieces.
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DENISE GAINEY | 7
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Kal working on mouthpieces for a student. All photos courtesy of Denise Gainey or Louise Opperman unless otherwise noted.
DENISE GAINEY | 9
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The student becomes the master. Dr. Denise Gainey today. Photo, Cliff Brane.
DENISE GAINEY | 11
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From Fundamentals
to a Dark Roast
Richard Hawkins on the joy of teaching, and how coffee roasting
and pottery are like the clarinet
RICHARD HAWKINS | 17
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RICHARD HAWKINS | 19
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RICHARD HAWKINS | 21
F is for Foster
Joel Jaffe
WES FOSTER | 23
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WES FOSTER | 25
Karen and Wes Foster. All photos courtesy of Karen Haley Foster.
My Husband Wes
Karen Haley Foster
I met Wes in 1977 when he joined the Indianapolis
Symphony Orchestra (ISO), but we didnt start
dating until he asked me out for my Halloween
birthday a year later. I fell in love with that tall,
handsome gentleman, and we were engaged by
American Thanksgiving. We didnt want to wait till
summer to get married, so we planned our wedding
to be held at my parents suburban Chicago
home and honeymoon, to coincide with the
ISOs week-long vacation in February 1979. What
we didnt plan on was that two weeks prior to our
wedding, Chicago would experience its second
largest snowstorm in history, which dumped about
twenty-one inches on the area. However, youth
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WES FOSTER | 27
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WES FOSTER | 29
CLARITHENICS
The Art of Peak Performance Preparation
Text, Bil Jackson | Photos, Nathan Garfinkel
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Practice in front of a mirror while standing (use a neck strap if you experience
any pain in your hands or forearms). A mirror enables you to see what is really
going on with your abdomen, embouchure, throat area, and hand position.
Ive stayed away from attempting to describe correct hand position on purpose;
peoples hands are different shapes and sizes. You should structure your hand
positions to allow the greatest efficiency of finger movement with the least
amount of physical effort. Thumb position is critical for the right hand. The
exercises in Jeanjeans Vade-Mecum are wonderful tools to help you establish
efficient, beautifully structured hand positions.
The goal is to create the most challenging performance environment in your
practice space. The long-tone exercise allows for focused analysis of tonal
consistency and linearity between registers. Strive to produce sound ligaments
that mellifluously connect all intervals and registers of the clarinet. Remember to
use a tuner.
Start by using the metronome to determine how slowly you can play a oneoctave scale, in whole notes, in one breath. Begin on low E as illustrated in the
musical example below. After completing the E major scale up and down,
continue ascending in half steps (as shown in examples below). The last longtone scale will begin on G immediately above the staff. This exercise at 92 to
the quarter note takes about thirty-five minutes.
BIL JACKSON | 31
##4
& # #4
w-
w# ##
&# w
-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
While ascending, lightly legato tongue each change of whole note. At the end of
the octave, rest for eight beats, and then descend in the same fashion. You can
choose major, minor, or any linear eight-note creation you come up with. My
advice is to make it simple to start. After you descend, wait again for eight counts,
move up a half step, and ascend on a scale that starts on F.
&b
w-
w-
w-
& b w-
w-
w-
ww-
w-
ww-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
# 4 w& 4
w#
&
ww-
ww-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
w-
Find a tempo that makes it difficult to finish the octave comfortably. Its beneficial
to barely make it through the final whole note. Dont allow the exercise to be easy.
The idea is to improve the capacity of your inhalation and the efficiency of your
exhalation:
Hear your sound. Its imperative and essential that you have in your
minds ear a concept of your ideal sound: an aural North Star that you
can sonically navigate to at all times while playing.
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LONG-TONE VARIATIONS
After five or six round-trip octave scales, its time to implement variations that
allow you to refine additional fundamentals while preserving the positive attributes
of slow practice. Dont get complicated with dynamic variations until you are
comfortable with the basic format. Use your tuner. The examples below are just a
template. Apply variations to all long-tone scales.
Example 1: Start subito forte on the first whole note, subito piano on the second,
and so forth.
Example 2: Start forte and gradually diminuendo to piano on the ascent and
reverse on the descent.
Example 3: Start piano and crescendo to forte on the ascension and reverse on the
descent. (This and the previous variation are especially helpful in controlling the
upper register.)
An exercise to help you determine an efficient amount of tongue movement: Take
the reed off of the mouthpiece and put it in your mouth as if it were still on the
mouthpiece. Stand in front of a mirror and with correct embouchure configuration,
articulate the reed as lightly as possible, while closely observing the movement
of the reed. Strive for consistency and efficiency of tongue motion and reed
movement. Observe the physical sensations of your tongue movements. Put the
reed back on the mouthpiece and duplicate these movements.
On the descent, use half-note values and follow the example below again using
legato articulation.
Four variations are shown in the descending pattern. Pick one and stick with it for the entire octave.
4&4
f
&
-
-
p
-
-f
w-
-
f
BIL JACKSON | 33
Play the measures at the fastest tempo possible. Its okay if the articulations
become fractured at the very end. Again, its important to push yourself; strive
for efficiency and consistency of tongue motion.
3epetJtive tonguing example Blways strive to use a legato tongue articulatioO
4
&4
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
go to next note
&
r
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Rest briefly between each note (separated by the railroad tracks), evaluate
your previous effort, and then set properly for the next note/exercise. Focus
on using the least amount of tongue motion to attain a consistent, refined
articulation while paying specific attention to the interface of your tongue and
reed. Dont forget to use a metronome.
III. PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
Now pick a scale (for example, Ill use C major), and keep in mind the rule for
these full-range exercises. Using the tempo of your repetitive-tonguing exercise,
start with C major, eighth note values, legato tongued as initially illustrated
below.
You can see that Ive included two articulation options: all slurred and all
legato. In addition, there are three rhythmic variations: eighth notes, triplets,
and sixteenth notes.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
--
4
j
& 4 - - -
- - - - -
- - - - - - - - ----- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3
3
3
3
3
-
--
& - - -
- -
- - - - - 3
3
3
3
3
3
3
--3
- - - - - - 3
--- - - - - - - - - - - - -
- -
& - - - - - - - - -
--- - - - - - - - -
The reason for emphasizing the legato articulation versus staccato is that the
legato articulation requires more refinement from the motion of the tongue
muscle. By nature, this requires the tongue to be closer to the reed at all times.
So always think legato even when articulating rapidly.
Start with C major one day and then the next day A minor. On the third day,
go to six oclock on the circle of fifths, G major. Then the next day, E minor.
34 | CLARINETNEWS.COM
Make sure that you are bouncing around the circle of fifths: C, Am, G, Em, F,
Dm, B, Gm, etc. The idea is to do intensive work on one scale each day so that
roughly every month, you will work through all twenty-four major and minor keys.
A future edition of Clarinet News will feature my article, Seduction of the Ear, which focuses on the
fundamentals of breath support and oral mechanics. If you have any questions or suggestions regarding
this article or the exercises in it, dont hesitate to contact me: bil.jackson@vanderbilt.edu.
Bil Jackson enjoys a varied musical career that includes solo, orchestral, and chamber
music appearances. Before joining the faculty at the Blair School at Vanderbilt
University, he served as Principal Clarinet with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra,
Colorado Symphony Orchestra, and Honolulu Symphony, and as Guest Principal
Clarinet with the St. Louis and Cincinnati symphony orchestras. Jackson is currently
on the summer Artist-Faculty of the Aspen Music Festival and Colorado College
Music Festival. He is the only person to win the International Clarinet Competition
twice and was a finalist in the Prague International Clarinet Competition. Bil
Jackson is a Backun Artist and performs on MoBa clarinets and mouthpieces.
BIL JACKSON | 35
BENJAMIN LULICH:
COMING FULL CIRCLE
Text, Rachel Lulich | Photos, Larey McDaniel
Want to go to a Seattle Symphony concert with
me?
I was surprised such outings were usually full
family events. This time, it would just be my brother
Ben and me.
Theyre playing Tchaik Five, he said.
Sure!
We were in middle school at the time, living in
Edmonds, Washington. Ben and our older brother
Steven spent their free time poring over full scores
while listening to cassette tapes. Ben was studying
clarinet with Seattle Symphonys Laura DeLuca, and
playing in the youth symphony.
I had never been to a professional symphony
36 | CLARINETNEWS.COM
for the screen than it was in the past, when it felt like
a barrier. This time, he was comfortable with the
concept.
They were typical auditions, he went on, except
for the second final.
In addition to being told which pieces they would
play shortly before their last final round, the
candidates were surprised by a new component:
chamber music.
We played excerpts of Mozarts Clarinet Quintet
with a string quartet from the symphony, Ben
explained. Getting the chance to play chamber
music with other people was probably the most
enjoyable part of the audition.
Knowing how much Ben loves chamber music, Im
not surprised.
The process did not end there. After the finals, Music
Director Ludovic Morlot chose three clarinetists to
hear in trials with the symphony. Ben played two
programs over New Years and over a week in June.
At the New Years concert we played Rhapsody
in Blue and other jazzy tunes, including a Jelly Roll
Morton suite with me, the trumpet, and the trombone
playing solos at the front of the stage.
Ben had about ninety pages of music for that one
concert, and the other New Years program was
Beethovens Ninth Symphony one of the most tiring
pieces for a clarinetist.
For the second trial, Ben played in the chamber
orchestra for Dutilleuxs Second Symphony, sitting
about five feet from the Music Director.
It was definitely a trial by fire.
He got the job offer on his thirty-second birthday.
Ben spent a season with the Seattle Symphony and
the Seattle Opera before heading to Cleveland for
a year as Acting Principal. Come September, hell
be back in Seattle. I asked what its like playing
alongside his former teacher, Laura DeLuca.
Its great! We have a similar concept of sound,
since she was an early teacher in my formative
years, which makes it easy to play together.
Its a lot of fun.
BENJAMIN LULICH | 37
Benjamin Lulich is Principal Clarinet with the Seattle Symphony and Seattle Opera. An exceptionally gifted
young artist, he has held positions in the Pacific Symphony, Kansas City Symphony, and Colorado Music
Festival, and has performed frequently with The Cleveland Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Los Angeles
Opera, Pasadena Symphony, IRIS Orchestra, and many other ensembles. The recipient of many awards and
prizes, he studied at Interlochen Arts Academy, Cleveland Institute of Music, Yale School of Music, Pacific
Music Festival, and Music Academy of the West. His teachers include: David Shifrin, Franklin Cohen, Richard
Hawkins, Fred Ormand, and Laura DeLuca. Benjamin Lulich is a Backun Artist and performs on MoBa clarinets.
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BENJAMIN LULICH
BENJAMIN LULICH | 39
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Why I
Switched
Eugene Mondie on
Why He Plays Backun Clarinets
Text, Kim Werker | Photos, Rick Etkin
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EUGENE MONDIE | 43
Ricardo
Morales
Text, Kim Werker | Photos, Yuki Tei
Like a glow.
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RICARDO MORALES | 45
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RICARDO MORALES | 47
THE
COLLABORATOR
Text, Jonathan Leshnoff
Photo, Erica Hamilton
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JONATHAN LESHNOFF | 49
CLARINET SUMMIT
SEPTEMBER 16 17, 2016
CRANE SCHOOL OF MUSIC AT SUNY POTSDAM, NY, USA
Raphael Sanders
Artistic Director
Chad Burrow
Guest Artist
Daniel Gilbert
Guest Artist
Eugene Mondie
Guest Artist
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JKD
RS
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| 55
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DAVID SHIFRIN | 59
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DAVID SHIFRIN | 61
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DAVID SHIFRIN | 63
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MARCH 9 11, 2017
BLAIR SCHOOL OF MUSIC AT VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, USA
Bil Jackson
Artistic Director
Richard Hawkins
Chief Judge