A Musician's Greatest Fear

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timothy42b
Posts: 1812
Joined: Mar 27, 2018

by timothy42b »

My family watches the Great British Baking show and it was a Halloween special.

Consequently one of the contestants was asked what his greatest fear was. He replied, "same as any musician. Child prodigies!"
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RoscoTrombone
Posts: 251
Joined: Oct 17, 2018

by RoscoTrombone »

I saw that, it was a great line & made me laugh because it was so unexpected but also very true :lol:
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Burgerbob
Posts: 6327
Joined: Apr 23, 2018

by Burgerbob »

I saw it too. Just remember that most of them burn out early :)
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Kbiggs
Posts: 1768
Joined: Mar 24, 2018

by Kbiggs »

Yes, that was a funny quip.

For me, it’s the fear and performance anxiety before playing an orchestral trombone solo in the middle of a piece. Pieces like Tuba Mirum, Russian Easter, or Mahler 3. You have all that time playing on stage, and then—the moment when the spotlight turns to you. The lead up to the solo—the racing brain, the jittery hands and arms, the shallow breathing, etc.—can be overwhelming sometimes.
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hyperbolica
Posts: 3990
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by hyperbolica »

aaaaahhhh!!!! Spoiler Alert!

I haven't seen that one yet.

My favorite part of the show is trying to figure out what they are saying.

I'm not a baker, and I don't eat the kind of stuff they bake, but for some reason it's a fun show to watch.

My wife also watches Derry Girls. Watches, I say, but we turn down the volume. Makes the ears bleed.

My biggest fear as a musician, though, is to be subbing at a gig kind of anonymously, and then just before intermission, the band leader calls out my name and points at me. He's just introducing the band, but I somehow think he's calling on me for a solo, so I start playing and it's just nonsense that comes out. When I realize what was happening, I pack my horn up and just walk out. On the way out the door I grab one of those bulletin board ads for people to sell knives or something. Kind of a recurring nightmare, I guess.
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JohnL
Posts: 2529
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by JohnL »

The most terrifying moments for me are when the conductor does something in a concert that he or she hasn't done in rehearsal and I have to guess what the concept is that they're trying to get across (or, indeed, if there is any concept at all beyond simply being inconsistent).

To generalize - I fear having to guess, and guessing wrong.
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RoscoTrombone
Posts: 251
Joined: Oct 17, 2018

by RoscoTrombone »

Ah Derry Girls, I thoroughly enjoyed that. As I was also a teenager in the 90s I could totally relate to the humour plus the music brought back some good memories. The Northern Irish accent is pretty harsh though!

If you want to delve really deeply into the British humour & more specifically Scottish then try Rab C Nesbitt. You will probably need subtitles though ;)

Slightly off topic...
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elmsandr
Posts: 1373
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by elmsandr »

[quote="JohnL"]The most terrifying moments for me are when the conductor does something in a concert that he or she hasn't done in rehearsal and I have to guess what the concept is that they're trying to get across (or, indeed, if there is any concept at all beyond simply being inconsistent).

To generalize - I fear having to guess, and guessing wrong.[/quote]
Oh man… had a conductor give a really weird motion for the last chord change in Finlandia when I was subbing for principle trombone. Was a series of multiple concerts and did not do that same motion before or after… so I moved when he motioned, got the biggest turn and surprise I’ve ever seen from the podium. He cue’d again and I re-articulated it, no idea what he was trying to tell me the first time. The rest of the brass was as confused as I was afterwards. Still felt and sounded odd.

Cheers,

Andy
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robcat2075
Posts: 1867
Joined: Sep 03, 2018

by robcat2075 »

[quote="JohnL"]The most terrifying moments for me are when the conductor does something in a concert that he or she hasn't done in rehearsal...[/quote]

Years ago I got a call late on a Saturday to come and play an Easter Sunday service in a large church. No rehearsal, just play it. OK...

I'll note that all my musical life I've been trained to expect ONE preparation beat from a conductor and that's pretty much what it has been. Not two, not three, not a whole measure...

So you can guess what happened when there was an occasion for all the brass to begin a piece together, forte, and the conductor gave TWO preparation beats. I had not noticed him doing that for anything else, but this piece got two preparation beats. :idk:

And I never got called for that sort of thing ever again. :lol:
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BrianJohnston
Posts: 1165
Joined: Jul 11, 2020

by BrianJohnston »

My greatest fear is orchestral managements sinking musician's jobs across the country.
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imsevimse
Posts: 1765
Joined: Apr 29, 2018

by imsevimse »

My greatest fear is to forget a horn on the underground or commuter train. I'm used to have the case so much that when I sometimes have reason for travel that not includes to play the trombone I get moments of panic and wonder where the horn is.Then I realise I did not bring the horn this morning. That short moment before realizing I have not lost any horn often give me the shivers.

/Tom
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MKtuba
Posts: 16
Joined: Oct 11, 2022

by MKtuba »

I mean my greatest fear is a dog walking on its hind legs for an extended period of time (weird, I know). I guess that doesn't relate to this at all though.
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imsevimse
Posts: 1765
Joined: Apr 29, 2018

by imsevimse »

[quote="MKtuba"]I mean my greatest fear is a dog walking on its hind legs for an extended period of time (weird, I know). I guess that doesn't relate to this at all though.[/quote]

It could. Does the dog know how to play trombone? <span class="emoji" title=":wink:">😉</span>

/Tom
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MKtuba
Posts: 16
Joined: Oct 11, 2022

by MKtuba »

I mean if it can stand on it's hind legs with no trouble I suppose anything is possible.