Working in the pit as a West End musician
Recently I had an email from an aspiring musician who had read my West End rehearsal pianist article and was very keen to join the West End pit musician clan. She was Grade 8 on four instruments and already had experience playing in local theatres and regional orchestras on clarinet, flute, piccolo and saxophone. She had recently moved nearer to London and emailed to ask me if I had any advice for how to start getting theatre work in a new area.
The thoughts I had turned into the following article, recently published in a number of ezines and journals. You are welcome to add it to your blog or ezine in its entirety if the author paragraph at the end is included with its live link.
Seven Key Elements for Working as a West End Theatre Musician
If you're a young musician wanting to break into the world of the West End theatre orchestras, where do you start?
It is impossible to walk into a West End pit job (or "hold a chair") with no previous experience. Therefore, your first task is to deputise for the existing players in a show.
It may come as a surprise that players who hold a chair would need a deputy. You might expect a chair holder to play at all performances, but there is an unwritten rule that says that players can take some shows off. It might be because they have other commitments, taken on before being offered the show. In my case, my first West End depping appeared because the keyboard player on Me and My Girl was also the assistant conductor, and needed a regular dep because he conducted at least one show a week.
If you are looking for musical theatre pit depping work, you need to put yourself into the mindset of a permanent pit orchestra player. If a musical theater orchestral player needs a dep (and they do, quite frequently), there are at least seven things they look for in a musician.
1. Can you do the job? The West End is the highest arena for orchestral pit playing in musical theatre. The players are, without exception, extremely good at what they do. Are you up to the standard of everyone else? When you hit the West End, everyone expects you to be able to play the notes in time, in tune and in style - that's a given. You need to demonstrate that you can play the instruments, play the music and fit in with the existing ensemble with the minimum of fuss.
2. Will you get on with the other players? Remember that your sponsoring musician will not be there when you dep for him. If you get to play a performance, but you irritate the people around you, you won't be asked back. Getting on with your colleagues is as vital as getting on with your sponsoring musician. Will you fit into the social structure? The job is as important in the off-duty moments as the playing moments. Demonstrate that to the musician you're depping for, and you're half-way there.
3. Can you sightread superbly? You'll probably be sightreading or reading music at very short notice - make sure you can do this (and count the bars rest of course). Most deps in the West End get to sit in on a show once or possibly twice, then dep either the following day, or later that week, or occasionally a month later. When you're sitting in, take particular note of the difficult or exposed entries and the solos, those are the things you will be judged on later!
4. Does the fixer know you? West End players are ALWAYS fixed by an MU approved orchestral fixer. It's not possible to play in a West End show otherwise (in fact, it's not legal). Therefore you have to be known not only to the player but to the fixer as well. Check out the list of fixers (the Musicians' Union can give you a list), and contact them too. If your name comes from different directions (personal approach, and recommendation by other players), you're more likely to get onto the dep ladder. In my own case as a pianist, things were slightly different in that I got my name around without a fixer as a solo and rehearsal pianist - but once I got onto two fixers' books, I was in work for six years without playing for anyone else.
5. Do you know the show, the style, the feel of the music? It's not only competitive, the jobs are RARE! Do anything you can to know more than the other potential deputies. Take every opportunity can to see the shows you are interested in (and those you're not), get to know the music, the style, the players. When I first worked on Les Miserables, I was asked back because I'd spent time learning the show before I arrived on the first day, and I knew it better than any other dep they'd had before.
6. What is your playing like? The sponsoring musician needs to know your playing. You're up against other potential deps who have probably been taught by the chair holders themselves. The chair holder already has knowledge of their playing ability and their personality. Rather than taking your instrument in to a show and asking someone to hear you, booking a lesson from the resident player might be a good move. A coaching session or two on pieces, techniques and (maybe) pit-playing advice would give the player a chance to hear and work with you (and be paid for it).
7. It's essential that you play a range of instruments. Almost all woodwind pit parts are for doubling and trebling, and if you can do flute, picc, sax AND clarinet, you've got a headstart. Even with the traditional musicals like Oklahoma, the wind parts are for treblers (usually clarinet/sax/flute, but occasionally for clarinet/bassoon or even flute/oboe).
And finally, expect to do some touring before working on a West End show. It's a fairly tricky career to break into. I had been touring the UK and Europe for some time gaining experience as a pit performer before I received regular invitations to play in a West End show.
If you are determined, focus and dedication go a long way to getting where you want to be.
Jeremy Fisher trains singers and performers to find and maintain their best. He's the author of Successful Singing Auditions, and creator of the Voicebox Videos (featured on the BBC and broadcast to an estimated 44,000,000 people). Sign up for Jeremy's free newsletter containing original interviews, pre-release offers and receive your BONUS free copy of "86 things you never hear a singer say" at http://www.vocalprocess.co.uk/
-------------
The Vocal Process "opening your throat" techniques appear on the new sell-out Constriction and Release DVD
The Vocal Process website has 280+ pages, including a series of free articles on vocal technique and style, memorising and different musical genres.
Visit http://www.vocalprocess.co.uk/ for the latest downloads:
the Vocal Process eZINE (free electronic magazine)
86 things you never hear a singer say (free ebook)
Labels: keyboard MD, musicians' union, orchestral fixer, rehearsal pianist, West End pit musician
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home