Category: Help Yourself

Application and Guidelines Now Available for Music Alive Composer Residencies

A joint program of the League and Meet The Composer, Music Alive offers financial and administrative support for orchestra composer residencies. Residencies must begin in the 2011-2012 season for two year residency proposals, but may begin in either the 2011-12 or 2012-13 season for one year residency proposals and can be organized in one continuous stay or in periodic visits over time. Orchestras apply jointly with their selected composer(s), and applications are due April 12th. Click here for more information, including guidelines/application.

Posted February 25, 2010

ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming: Deadline March 15, 2010

We are now accepting applications for the 2010 ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming. This year’s application deadline is March 15, 2010. Please click here for guidelines and applications.

Each year the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) and the League offer American orchestras Awards for Adventurous Programming, recognizing concerts that stimulate the audience, build the repertoire, and strengthen support for new work in this country and abroad. The awards recognize orchestras of all sizes whose most recent programming demonstrates a strong commitment to contemporary music.

If you have any questions, please contact: James Barry, jbarry@americaorchestras.org , t: 646-822-4092.

Posted February 25, 2010

Closing in on all 50 states participating in Orchestras Feeding America 2010!

We are very proud to report that more than 100 orchestras big and small have stepped up to help those most in need in their communities. Thank you to the staff, musicians, and board members at these orchestras who have made this extraordinary effort such a success.

We are just shy of having all fifty states represented – if you are in Alaska, Delaware, Idaho, Kansas, West Virginia, or Wyoming sign up now to make sure your state is represented in Orchestras Feeding America 2010.

Even if your state is already represented, please don’t hesitate to add your orchestra to the growing list… every pound of food collected makes a huge difference!

Ready to sign up? Just click here.

Want to see who is already signed up? Just click here.

Posted February 17, 2010

NEA Report – Regional Research Note

The NEA has released a new report which highlights regional and statewide differences in arts participation, which is based on the Survey of Public Participation in the Arts.  To view, the Regional Research Note or the entire NEA’s Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, please click here.

Posted February 16, 2010

More ideas for Orchestras Feeding America!

Here are a few more ideas from last year’s orchestras to make your drive a huge success!

The Elgin Symphony Orchestra gave away more than 100 tickets to their concerts for those who brought food items. They also created a press release to spread the word about Orchestras Feeding America. Need help writing a press release? Here is the Elgin Symphony’s from last year.

The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra held their LACO 5 concert weekend and had a great turn out of cans and goodies. Here are some of the things they did to spread the word:

1. They encouraged people who called to order tickets to participate in our food drive
2. Their marketing director also teaches at the Los Angeles Ballet Academy in the San Fernando Valley who helped collect food by keeping a box and LA   Foodbank brochures set up at the studio.
3. They tweeted about the food drive on our twitter page (twitter.com/lacotweets)
4. They created a virtual food drive on the LA Regional Foodbank’s website to collect monetary donations for the foodbank for patrons that are not able to attend concerts
5. As part of the preconcert announcement for turning off cell phone, they included a blurb about the food drive
6. They set up a table at their concerts for the food drive and played the "Faces of Hunger" DVD provided by the LA Foodbank.
 

Have an idea you want to food drive share? Email Margaret at fooddrive@americanorchestras.org.

Posted February 16, 2010

Orchestras respond to the crisis in Haiti

Within a few short hours of the earthquake in Haiti, the League started hearing stories from throughout the field about orchestras’ efforts to help with the dire situation in Haiti. We think it’s important to share what our field is doing in this time of crisis. Please let us know about any activities that your orchestra is engaging in to aid survivors of the Haitian earthquake. The League will be tracking the orchestra community’s response to this disaster on The Hub and in other appropriate communications. This list will be updated regularly, with most recent items at the top, and is not meant to be comprehensive.

Delaware Symphony Orchestra – Cheryl Everill (cellist) and Lisa Vaupel (violinist) organized two chamber music benefit concerts in response to the urgent need in Haiti. On January 21st, Delaware Symphony Orchestra members and friends performed at a Brew Haha, a local coffee shop in Wilmington, and on January 24th, performed at Janssen’s Market in Greenville, DE. All donations from the community and musicians were made to the Red Cross International Response Fund.

Princeton University Orchestra
– The PUO will offer its performances of Mahler’s Sixth Symphony on April 23 and 24 as a memorial to the victims of the Haiti earthquake, and will solicit special contributions as well as donate a portion of the proceeds from those concerts to appropriate relief agencies.

Nashville Symphony
– During February Nashville Symphony musicians and staff members will participate in a drive to provide shoes to Soles4Souls, a Nashville-based charity that collects new and used shoes and distributes them to people in need.

Lang Lang, Christoph Eschenbach, and the Schleswig-Holstein Festival Orchestra come together at Carnegie Hall on March 21 for a benefit concert aiding UNICEF’s efforts to bring relief to the children surviving the devastating earthquake in Haiti.

Tulsa Symphony Orchestra – The TSO hosted the Red Cross response team and solicited donations before and during its January 16 concert.

Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra – The SLSO donated to the American Red Cross 5 percent of its single-ticket revenue from orchestral series concerts on the weekends of January 16 and 23. 

Cambridge (MA) Symphony Orchestra – The CSO gave out information and collected donations at its January 17 concert.

Seattle Symphony – The Seattle Symphony collected donations on behalf of the American Red Cross International Response Fund at its free performance of Samuel Jones’ “Elegy” on January 19.

National Symphony Orchestra – The NSO donated proceeds from its January 22 concert to relief efforts.

Portland Symphony Orchestra – The PSO teamed up with Maine-based Kombit Sante Cap-Haitien Health Partnership to raise funds for disaster relief in Haiti. Donations were collected on January 24 at a special open rehearsal in the morning and at the concert that followed at 2:30 p.m.

The Green Mountain Mahler Festival – The festival hosted a free performance of Brahms’s German Requiem on January 23.  Donations were be solicited for the Haitian relief efforts of Partners in Health and Catholic Relief Services.

Greater New Orleans Youth Orchestra – The GNOYO is collecting money and formulating a plan to bring music back to Haiti. 

Portsmouth (NH) Symphony Orchestra – The PSO’s benefit concert on February 1 will be a joint effort between the orchestra and the North Church in downtown Portsmouth, designed to raise money for the Red Cross.

Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra – Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra patrons donated to the Red Cross before and at the intermissions of all concerts during the weekend of January 23. Music Director Manfred Honeck announced those efforts from stage before the concerts started.

North Carolina Symphony
– Orchestra musicians Karen Strittmatter Galvin (assistant concertmaster), Jeremy Preston (violin), David Marschall (associate principal viola), and Lisa Shaughnessy (cello) performed on Sunday January 17 at Helios coffee shop in downtown Raleigh. Donations and all of the income from the day (including coffee and food) went to the American Red Cross and UNICEF.

Longwood Symphony Orchestra’s Symphonic Relief for Haiti – Longwood has called on classical musicians here and abroad to hold benefit concerts for Partners in Health, which is providing medical care in Haiti. The orchestra has set up a blog dedicated to its Haiti relief efforts here. Among the organizations who have signed up to participate so far are:
Vermont Symphony Orchestra: The VSO will encourage audience members to contribute to Partners in Health at concerts on January 29 at the Bellows Falls Opera House; on January 30 at the Flynn Theater in Burlington; and on January 31 at the Paramount Theatre in Rutland.
Longwood Symphony Orchestra and New England Conservatory: Boston-based Longwood Symphony Orchestra and New England Conservatory will present “Symphonic Relief for Haiti” at NEC’s Jordan Hall on January 31 at 12:30 p.m.
Symphony Pro Musica: SPM will perform two benefit concerts entitled “Romantic Lives.” The first will take place at Hudson (Mass.) High School on January 30; the second will be at Hudson the Mill Pond School in Westborough (Mass.) on January 31.

The Cleveland Orchestra and New World Symphony – These two orchestras will join forces in a “Musicians for Haiti” concert on January 27 at the Lincoln Theatre in Miami Beach, Florida. All ticket sales, sponsorship money, and donations will benefit Partners In Health.

Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra – The LPO will be collecting donations at its concert on January 28.  Jean Montes, who is artistic director of the Greater New Orleans Youth Orchestra and is from Port au Prince, will conduct the Haitian national anthem.

Symphony of Dreams:  Haiti Memorial Benefit Concert – In New York City, Joseph Jones will lead an ad hoc orchestra in two performances of Brahms’s Ein Deutsches Requiem, the first on February 5 at Riverside Cathedral in Manhattan and the second on February 6 at Our Lady of Refuge Church in Brooklyn; both performances will take place at 8 p.m. Vocal soloists will be soprano Michelle Trovato and baritone Austin Larusson. Proceeds will go to IFCO/Pastors for Peace, which provides medicine and relief supplies to doctors and medical personnel in Haiti. Pastors for Peace is a special ministry of the Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization, founded in 1988 to deliver humanitarian aid to Latin America and the Carribean.

San Francisco Symphony: Music Without Borders:  A Tribute Week for the People of Haiti – This week San Francisco Symphony concerts will be dedicated to the people of Haiti. The musicians, chorus and staff have joined together in support of Doctors Without Borders. Musicians will perform chamber music in the Orchestra Lobby before each concert and during intermission to encourage support of the relief efforts.   Information will be available in the lobby on how to give to Doctors Without Borders, and other relief organizations, including the American Red Cross. Representatives of both relief organizations will attend the concerts this week. The concerts take place on February 3, 5, and 6 at 8:00 and on February 4 at 2:00.

Longwood Symphony Orchestra and New England Conservatory of Music – The LSO and NEC’s Symphonic Relief for Haiti efforts have raised more than $70,000 to date.  Their January 31st concert aired on WSKB TV38 on February 7th at 10PM.  The concert featured NEC faculty Paula Robison and Richard Stoltzman, A Far Cry chamber orchestra, the Boston Children’s Chorus, and student musicians from NEC, Longy School of Music, Boston Conservatory, and Boston University.

Please contact John Bence, director of public relations at the League, with information concerning your Haitian relief efforts at jbence@americanorchestras.org.

Posted February 11, 2010

Free League civic engagement tool with new resources available now

Your Orchestra, Your Community: Roadmap to Success is a civic engagement tool designed by orchestras for orchestras eager to reach out and make a difference to their community’s future as well as their own. Whether you are already engaged on several fronts or preparing to take your first steps, this vital resource will help guide the conversation and ensure that your organization is thinking about the contributions it can make to the community in which it exists.

The League offers member orchestras:

– Free downloadable civic engagement tool
– Free one-on-one consulting on how to use the tool through access to the League’s consultant, Thomas Cabaniss
– Free podcasts – an online guide on how to customize the League’s assessment tool for civic engagement in ways that are doable and successful (with scripts)
– Videos of orchestras in their communities
– Testimonials from executive directors

For more information or to access the Your Orchestra, Your Community tool & resources, please visit americanorchestras.org.

Posted February 11, 2010

National Arts Marketing and Development Conference: Special Offer Deadline Approaching

This year, League members are invited to bring a colleague for free this year’s National Arts Marketing and Development Conference. In addition, members are eligible for up to $160 in registration discounts. This year’s conference will be held in New York City, March 13-16.

The deadline for the 2 for the price of 1 offer is March 6. To receive this special discount, simply check the box next to League of American Orchestras on the registration form. For more information on the conference or to register, visit artsreach.com.  
 
Posted February 4, 2010

2010 Orchestras Feeding America Materials Now Available

Though it would be hard to top last year’s Food Drive total of over 200,000 pounds of food, collected by over 250 orchestras in all 50 states, the League is up to the challenge. (Reminder: March 2010 is Orchestras Feeding America month)

To assist you in preparing for your orchestra’s Food Drive, the League has assembled a collection of promotional materials; including logos, flyers, guidelines and other general information that will help you publicize the Food Drive in your communities.

Visit Orchestras Feeding America 2010 to find all these newly created materials.

Posted January 22, 2010

 

Submit your Summer Festival Listing Today!

Don’t miss the opportunity to promote your summer festival in Symphony’s May/June 2010 issue and make your festival visible to thousands of musicians, conductors, board members, volunteers, administrative staff, orchestra subscribers, news media, and many others! The listing includes a brief 30-word description, names of artists, ensembles, conductors, festival locations, dates, phone/fax numbers, and email and website addresses. And with the launch of SymphonyOnline, the League’s new free online magazine, each issue has the potential to reach thousands of new readers.

Please submit your listing at 2010 Symphony Magazine Summer Festivals Listing by February 5, 2010 to be included in this year’s listing. As always, if you decide to purchase a display ad in Symphony’s Festival issue, your festival listing will be complimentary!

If you would like a sample copy of last year’s festival listings, or if you have any questions, feel welcome to contact Meghan Whitbeck at mwhitbeck@americanorchestras.org or 646 822 4083.

Posted January 21, 2010