- Source: Conductors Guild
The International Conductors Guild is a 501c3 non profit organization whose purpose is to encourage and promote the highest standards in the art and profession of conducting. Recently the Conductors Guild revised its name to International Conductors Guild to accommodate its growing membership of conductors from the United States of America, Canada, South America, Europe, and Asia. The Guild offers services to enhance the training and development of conductors, and promises to represent the views of conductors to the larger community of music professionals.
The International Conductors Guild publishes the Journal of the Conductors Guild. It also sponsors an annual conference that provides a means of bringing new compositions to the attention of conductors, the viewpoints of a variety of conductors and composers, and a unique chance of fellowship and gathering for conductors from around the globe. The Guild's training activities include a mentor-apprentice program, conducting workshops for conductors of all skill levels lasting from three days to two weeks, Symposia, and Online Materials and Training.
The International Conductors Guild is governed by a group of Officers, and up to 25 Directors, who meet 3 times annually. A variety of board committee work is required of Board Directors who serve in order to help the profession, without personal gain.
Since 1988, the Conductors Guild has honored outstanding achievement in the conducting profession with the Theodore Thomas Award. Recipients of the award include Claudio Abbado, Sir Georg Solti, Maurice Abravanel, Marin Alsop, Kurt Masur, Robert Shaw, Frederick Fennell, Pierre Boulez, David Zinman, Michael Tilson Thomas and Esa-Pekka Salonen. The Guild's Max Rudolf Award, given since 1997, recognizes outstanding achievement as a scholar and mentor. Recipients have included Gustav Meier, Herbert Blomstedt, Daniel Lewis, and Paul Vermel.
History
The Conductors Guild had its beginnings in June 1974 at a national conference of the American Symphony Orchestra League (now the League of American Orchestras) in Memphis, Tennessee. An informal meeting of conductors to discuss challenges facing the profession led to plans to form a professional organization. The Conductors Guild was officially born in 1975 at the League's San Diego conference. It continued as a subsidiary of the League until becoming a separate organisation in 1985. The first European conference of the Conductors Guild took place in Copenhagen, Denmark in 2010.
Guild events have featured leading figures in the world of concert music, including Pierre Boulez, Catherine Comet, David Zinman, Leonard Slatkin, Chen Yi, Frederick Fennell, Norman Dello Joio, Gunther Schuller, James Levine, Ulysses Kay, Keith Lockhart, and Alan Gilbert,
Presidents
Harold Farberman (1975–1979)
Charles A. Ansbacher (1979–1981, 1986)
Maurice Peress (1981–1983)
Donald Portnoy (1983–1986)
Samuel Jones (1987–1988)
Evan Whallon (1989–1990)
Michael Charry (1991–1992)
Larry Newland (1993–1994)
Adrian Gnam (1995–1996)
Barbara Schubert (1997–1998)
Wes Kenney (1999–2000)
Harlan Parker (2001–2002)
Emily Freeman Brown (2003–2004)
Tonu Kalam (2005–2006)
Sandra Dackow (2007–2008)
Michael Griffith (2009–2010)
James A. Anderson (2011-2013)
Gordon Johnson (2014-2016)
John Farrer (2016-2019)
Julius P.Williams (2019-
External links
Conductors Guild official site
Conductors Guild Records, 1975-1997 Music Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tempo (musik)
- Adagio
- Conductors Guild
- Symphonic Metamorphosis of Themes by Carl Maria von Weber
- Julius Penson Williams
- National Association for Music Education
- David Zinman
- Samuel Jones (composer)
- Tigran Arakelyan
- Jonathan Sternberg
- Chamber Symphony No. 1 (Schoenberg)
- Roger Zare