Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
09:35 on Saturday, October 21, 2006
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Dennis (587 points)
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To anyone who cares,
I recently attended a masterclass led by Alberto Almarza. It was during The Flute Summit here at FSU. Our Flute Summit was about health and healing through the flute. We had many concerts by people who play Native American flutes, and Alberto Almarza who played modern Boehm, and Baroque flute. The weekend was severely energy-depleting. We had requirements of how may things we had to go to, and that kept us busy the entire weekend.
During the masterclass, we heard some the Graduate students play pieces of Northern or Southern American influence. We heard pieces like - Sonata Latino (which Alberto said he has asked Mike Mower to change the title in the next edition to the correct "Sonata Latina"), Poemeto, Kokopeli, and some Tango Etudes by Piazzola. They all received the music the week before!!!
He had different things to say about each player. He mentioned how when the line or phrase is leading to a certain note...the most important note is not the high point in the phrase. It happens to be the one right before it because that note will determine how the line is moving, and how intense it is.
Tone/Tonal Colours: He said a very remarkable thing about using different tonal colors and how to achieve them. I thought this was very cool insight. He said to use the spanish vowels to form your mouth and throat openness. A (ah), E (ay), I (ee), O (oh), U (oo). You go from being REALLY open and free sounding (A), to kind of hollow and eerie sounding (U). He likes to use the I color to make a distant sounding entrance. If you are supposed to start very soft and get louder, you shouldn't have to compromise that with fuzz in your sound. This was what he was talking about with the Poemeto. If anyone knows this piece you now that is starts soft with an A2 D3 C2 ornamentation. He also used the spoon tongue technique.
For the spoon tongue technique you practice your notes starting mf and reduce the volume until you start to lose the integrity. Then you jam the tongue behind your teeth to cut off the airflow. The trick is to keep the setup you have, and not change anything. Then you release the tongue and get a clear soft sound (with the I vowel).
Posture was important. We probably all know about this. His main thing was to let your bones do what they were made for...supporting your body. If anything isn't lined up your body will have to compensate by using extra muscles to keep your body from succumbing to gravity. This will negatively change your sound and embouchure.
Most of all he said that flexibility of embouchure is important for tone and changing colors. I was completely blown away by a piece he played at an evening concert in which he was playing A3/Bb3 literally ppppp and not succumbing to whistle tones (those were done later in the piece).
I would love to go to Mr. Almarza's school for my Master's Degree, however, he teaches at Carnegie-Mellon, and that school is $47K per year. Of course everyone who gets in pretty much gets scholarships for most all of it, but since there are only 15 flutists in their entire studio, I can safely assume that when I audition I will not get in. LOL I hope this provided some insight to others, too. I need to find out about getting a lesson with him.
-Dennis <Added>Of course I meant the ornamentation was A2 D3 C3!
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
12:59 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Pickled (123 points)
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>.I would love to go to Mr. Almarza's school for my Master's Degree, however, he teaches at Carnegie-Mellon, and that school is $47K per year. Of course everyone who gets in pretty much gets scholarships for most all of it, but since there are only 15 flutists in their entire studio, I can safely assume that when I audition I will not get in. <<
Eh, that depends on you, your porfolio/application, and where you are 3-1/2 years from now. You might surprise yourself. You also don't have to go straight to grad school, *if you can work in your field and build up your resume/CV.
My sister got her MFA from CMU in their theater department, on a full scholarship. She did theater design, though, for smaller regional theaters, for a few years after college, so she had a fairly thick portfolio of both academic and professional work.
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
18:43 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
20:37 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
20:50 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
21:55 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
22:05 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
22:17 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
22:41 on Sunday, October 22, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
06:24 on Monday, October 23, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
08:23 on Monday, October 23, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
11:49 on Monday, October 23, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
12:47 on Monday, October 23, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
16:03 on Monday, October 23, 2006
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Re: Masterclass with Alberto Almarza
17:51 on Monday, October 23, 2006
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