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Yes! Why not PianoTeams®?
This exciting new
concept of team-work, team-play, and team-fun for pianists has caught fire - the artistic
and imaginative fire of students, teachers, parents, professional artists and audiences.
In just over one year, the PianoTeams® craze has reached such
countries as Japan, Germany, New Zealand, Australia, Hungary, the Philippines, Korea,
Brazil and others. In the United States, PianoTeams® rehearsals
are becoming weekly scheduled activities in many students' total learning experience.
Additionally, teachers who explore the repertory together in
"teacher-teams" are enjoying the rejuvenation and fun of these piano-socials.
Held in tandem with private lessons, participants of PianoTeams®
experience the excitement of pianistic pow-wows with teammates as they explore the
colorful landscapes of symphonic favorites. Through this new surge of excitement in
team-playing, participating pianists are re-discovering the wonders and joys of piano
playing. This new-found excitement has changed many young students' outlooks on
their piano study -- study that now includes words like care, share, fun,
responsibility and team work. TO these young pianist, daily practice on the 88
keys has taken on a whole new meaning.
What is PianoTeams?
The word was coined
to mean five pianists playing repertoires which were specifically composed, transcribed,
or arranged for five pianos. Not unlike any string or wind quintet, PianoTeams®
performers think, feel, breathe, listen, sing, and play as one unit. Team
members strive to unify and blend the projection of 50 fingers, the musical conception of
five minds and the emotional intensity of five souls. Whether the music calls for
melodic lines bouncing from one piano to another, dueting pairs of pianos in dialogues,
orchestral tuttis, punctuating rhythms or murmuring calandos... five pairs of eyes, ears
and hands watch, listen and respond as one team. Exciting? You bet it is!
Where else can one find laughter ringing out in chorus over a nesting of five
pianos... or piano pals cueing one another for entrances and exits... or team members
plotting winning strategies for the perfection of their symphonic interpretation.
Who can organize PianoTeams®?
Any qualified piano
instructor can organize and direct PianoTeams®. The simplest method
for a community to start is for teachers to band together for explanatory readings of PianoTeams®
repertory. These collegial and fun sessions become an impetus for the organization
of student teams. Teachers can either form teams from their own rosters of students
or team members may be gathered from different teachers to train under one ensemble
director. In the latter case, PianoTeams® directors can set up
ensemble studios where students in the community may register to join. This service
would be greatly welcomed by teacher who prefer to remain solo coaches; their pupils sign
up with the ensemble directors for PianoTeams® participation. These
students then become the immediate beneficiaries of the combined cooperative expertise of
two professionals: their private instructor's and the ensemble director's. At the
same time, students also gain the fun and camaraderie of peer interactions. Team
playing also offers an overall enhanced learning experience which serves teachers and
students well; the discipline of study and practice becomes a team activity with exciting
artistic objectives which are fun, challenging, and meaningful. This translates into
inspired piano studentship in both solo and ensemble works.
What are the performance
opportunities of PianoTeams®?
Besides seasonal
concerts planned by team directors, annual PianoTeams®
International
competitions were started in 1996 at the Junior Gina Bachauer International
Competitions in Salt Lake City, Utah. The first prize winning team
from the 1996 inaugural event was a gregarious group of high schools students (from two
teachers) in Utah who were invited to perform two PianoTeams® concerts in
December 1996 at the Disney Institute Performance Center in Disney World, Florida.
Today, the International
Well-Prepared Pianist Festivals and PianoTeams®
Competitions are held every three years. To join, watch for
announcements on this Web site.
What are the career possibilities
of PianoTeams®?
One of the
important objectives of the PianoTeams® project is to open up more career
opportunites for present and future teachers. Judging from its success, career
opportunities for PianoTeams® directors appear to be bright and promising.
Teachers who're interested in becoming directors should start by making necessary
arrangements for rehearsal facilities. Playing through the PianoTeams®
master classes also provides teachers and students with a wealth of rehearsal and
performance ideas and techniques. Finally, organizing annual PianoTeams®
festivals and competitions in the community gives everyone a common target date and goal
toward which to work.
Where do PianoTeams® hold
rehearsals?
In addition to ensemble
studios with five pianos (acoustic and/or digital), many ensemble directors hold PianoTeams®
rehearsals in showrooms of cooperating piano and keyboard retailers, and in schools where
instruments can be readily moved and nested together for rehearsals. Because
sponsorships by retailer mean more visibility and sales for them, dealers are generally
happy to provide their facilities for weekly rehearsal and concerts. PianoTeams®
is sponsored by Steinway & sons. International Festivals and PianoTeams®
Competitions are Steinway events. Check our Web Site for information on these
events.
What kind of music do PianoTeams®
play?
Most of the current pieces
are popular orchestral classics specifically transcribed for PianoTeams®;
but some are original compositions which were written for this purpose. All five
piano parts appear on the page. This format provides a panoramic view of the music,
thus making it possible for teams to perform without the assistance of conductors.
The players share equal highlighted moments and responsibilities in the total
ensemble. Therefore, entrance cues and leadership roles are bounced and passed form
teammate to teammate. Colors and piano-teaming possibilities are endless, ranging
from conversing duos and trios to exhilarating tuttis. Because the technical level
of the pieces ranges from elementary level to lower advanced, PianoTeams®
directors will have no difficulty finding suitable parts for team members of varying
facilities and strengths. To view some examples of team effort in the music browse
our catalog section to see sample pages of some of the pieces.
Where can the reader secure
information on the international competition and the PianoTeams® repertoire?
Keep checking the PianoTeams® site for new and
upcoming events, not to mention our always growing catalogs of scores. Scores and
catalogs are published by Piano Ensemble International. Telephone number
is: (800) 648-2662.
What are the chances of becoming a
teammate?
Very good! As a matter
of fact, it should be every student's goal to become a teammate. As in a sports
team, one will experience: the melody (ball) being passed from player to player, each
player responding with precision to cues and eye contacts of his teammates;
interpretations (game plans) being laid out and discussed by the director (coach); and
rehearsals (training) honing skills in synchronization and teamwork.
Exciting? You Bet!
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