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7.29.2005 8th
Annual BMI Conducting Workshop Kicks Off Aug. 5 in
LA
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Lucas Richman Photo: Pittsburgh
Symphony | The BMI
Conducting Workshop will kick off its eighth year on August 5
at the American Federation of Musicians Local 47 in Hollywood,
Ca. "Conducting for the Film Composer" is a two-week course
taught by conductor/composer Lucas Richman and coordinated by
BMI's Ray Yee, Director of Film/Television Relations.
Designed for composers who wish to refine their
conducting skills, the Workshop is free and limited to eight
BMI-affiliated professional film and television
composers. This year's students include Bill Brown (CSI:
NY, Trapped), Stephen Cavit (Blue Vinyl, Chuck &
Buck), Mark De Gli Antoni (Cherish, member of Soul
Coughing), Camara Kambon (Diary of a Mad Black Woman, Biker
Boyz, theme for Girlfriends), Brian Langsbard
(Johnny Skidmarks, City Confidential), Mick Muhlfriedal
(Animalicious, Adventures of ARK), Eric Speier
(Complete Savages, Mission Hill, Mullets) and
Christopher Tin (Jacob's Gift, Babysitting).
The course will focus on developing conducting technique
and participants will be working with live players ranging
from piano duet to a full chamber orchestra. Curriculum will
include conducting free form as well as to click track, both
with and without picture. The musical repertoire for the
workshop will range from classical selections to music from
commercial films. Each session will be videotaped and
critiqued.
A highly touted lab, past participants include composers
Cliff Martinez, Stewart Copeland, Danny Pelfrey, Richard
Gibbs, Bennett Salvay, Rolfe
Kent, Julie and Steve Bernstein, Anthony Marinelli, Alex
Wurman, Pete Scaturro, Dominic Messenger, Gary Kuo and Laura
Karpman.
"The conductor's workshop is an incredible experience for
composers partially because of the brilliance that Lucas
brings with him as a teacher, performer and creator," said
BMI's Doreen Ringer Ross, Vice President of Film/TV Relations.
"The participants get the opportunity to work with some of the
top musicians in the world while they're conducting, and the
actual hands-on experience is one that cannot be duplicated in
such a condensed period of time. We've heard time and time
again how instrumental this workshop has been in adding skill
sets to composer's repertoire."
Richman is an accomplished conductor and composer of music
ranging from classical concert music and opera to musical
theatre and film. He is presently Music Director and Conductor
for the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra. He served as the
Pittsburgh Symphony's Assistant Conductor from 1998-2002,
during which time he was also a Cover Conductor for the New
York Philharmonic. From 1988 to 1991 he was the Assistant
Conductor for the Pacific Symphony Orchestra.
Mr. Richman has appeared as guest conductor with numerous
orchestras throughout the United States including the Los
Angeles Philharmonic, San Antonio Symphony and New Haven
Symphony; in Canada with the National Arts Centre Orchestra;
and in Germany with the SWR Radio Orchestra of Kaiserslautern.
As a composer, Richman has had his music performed by over 100
orchestras across the United States in the last five years
alone. The Pittsburgh Symphony most recently premiered his
one-act musical, A Christmas Wish, with the
participation of the Mendelssohn Choir, the Children's
Festival Chorus and the Pittsburgh Youth Ballet.
In 2002-2003 Richman made his conducting debuts with the
New York Philharmonic and the symphony orchestras of
Baltimore, Knoxville, and Wheeling. He has received numerous
awards including the Geraldine C. & Emory M. Ford Award
Guest Conductor, Catherine Filene Shouse Foundation Conduct
and the Dramalogue Award for his musical direction of the
revival of Leonard Bernstein's Candide, directed by
Gordon Davidson at Los Angeles' Ahmanson Theatre.
In recent years, he collaborated with numerous film
composers as their conductor, recording scores for such films
as the Academy Award-nominated As Good As It Gets,
Face/Off, Seven, Breakdown, Anastasia and The
Village. He received a Master of Music in orchestral
conducting from the University of Southern California, where
he was a student of Daniel Lewis. He studied privately with
Fritz Zweig and Victor Yampolsky, and worked with Leonard
Bernstein and Michael Tilson Thomas at the Los Angeles
Philharmonic Institute. He was also selected as a conducting
fellow in master classes with Pierre Boulez, André Previn,
Herbert Blomstedt and Kurt Sanderling.
A limited number of class auditors will be welcomed on an
advanced approval basis. Email Ray Yee to request
approval. |
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