Recently, a “Facebook post dialogue” of sorts went viral amongst music educators between Juilliard professor Geoffrey Keezer and James Falzone. Professor Keezer made a relatively short post related to the problems he is seeing in his teaching position related to reliability and accountability for students. It resonated with thousands of people as it got shared and discussed. But, it kind of had a “kids these days” feeling to it, so not everyone responded sympathetically. Enter, James Falzone. He crafted an essay in response encouraging a much more introspective approach to the very real issue that Professor Keezer was speaking to.
That’s where this episode comes in. I was clued in to this discourse when I saw it shared by this week’s guest, Dr. Jonathan Talberg. Jonathan has decades of experience teaching at the post-secondary level, so I asked him to join me to parse out some nuance in this discussion. We wrestle with questions about “tough love” and “holding students accountable.” How do these ideas mesh with this generation of students and their changing needs, values and sensibilities? And maybe most importantly, how do we navigate all of this while NOT lowering our academic standards?
Tune in, and have your thinking stimulated and challenged. Then, weigh in yourself on Facebook in the Choralosophers group or over on choralosophy.substack.com.
For future rehearsal clips, find me on TikTok, Insta and FB!
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Recipient of the President’s Award from the California Music Educators Association honoring “extraordinary accomplishments in music education,” Dr. Jonathan Talberg serves as Director of Choral Activities at the Bob Cole Conservatory, where he is conductor of the international award-winning Bob Cole Conservatory Chamber Choir and the CSULB University Choir. Recent career highlights include leading the Chamber Choir to first place at the Austrian Spittal International Choir Festival and the “Choir of the World” competition in Wales. Additionally, he and the choir have performed with groups as diverse as the Kronos Quartet, the Los Angeles Master Chorale, the Pacific Symphony and the Rolling Stones.
A passionate advocate for choral music education, Dr. Talberg is regularly engaged to conduct honor choirs across the US, including numerous all-state choruses, and National Association for Music Education conference choirs. His choirs from Long Beach State have performed in venues throughout Europe and Asia, including the Sistine Chapel, St. Peter’s Basilica, and the Great Hall of the People in China.
His professional experience includes appointments as Director of Music at the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles and the Los Angeles Bach Festival. He also served as Conducting Assistant to the Cincinnati Symphony and the Aspen Music Festival and as principal choral conductor at Arrowbear Music Camp in Southern California. A past-president of the California Choral Directors Association, he serves as an editor at Pavane Music Publishing, where a choral series dedicated to outstanding quality, collegiate-level music is published under his name. He taught high school choral music and drama for five years before moving into higher education.
Of the many hats he wears each day, the one he is most proud of is mentor to the next generation of choral musicians. Alumni of the Bob Cole Conservatory Choral Studies program are teaching at elementary, middle and high schools, churches, community colleges and four-year universities throughout the country. Scores of alumni are professional singers—in opera, musical theater, choirs, church music, jazz and pop.
Bob Cole Conservatory choral studies graduates are currently earning—or have finished—their doctorates at some of the finest institutions in the country, including the University of Michigan, the College-Conservatory of Music at the University of Cincinnati, Indiana University, the University of Kentucky, the University of Iowa, the University of Houston, the University of Southern California and UCLA.
Dr. Talberg received his BM in Choral Conducting from Chapman University, where he received the Outstanding Alumnus in the Arts award in 2014. He earned his MM and DMA in Choral Conducting from the University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music and completed a post-doctoral fellowship with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Pops, and the May Festival Chorus. His conducting teachers include Roger Wagner, William Hall, Earl Rivers, John Leman and Elmer Thomas.
Episode 53: The Enneagram As a Tool for Harmonious Rehearsals with Kailin Kane
BONUS Virtual Unit on Resonance- VIDEO VERSION RECOMMENDED.
COVID and Social Justice: A Look Back at Audience Favorites of 2020
Episode 52: Better Choirs with Less Work After Hours with Guest Host John Sargent
Choir Director Probs: Rose Colored Glasses on Virtual School
Episode 51: Diversifying Repertoire is a Personal Journey with Dr. Janet Galván
Composer Exposer: David Von Kampen
Episode 50: An Eagle’s Eye View with Dr. Eph Ehly
Episode 49: Cutting Through the Hype of Covid in Schools with Dr. Tracy Høeg
Episode 48: The Choral Marathon with Dr. Emily Williams Burch In the Studio
Navigating Post-Election Conversations at Thanksgiving Dinner with Angel Eduardo
Episode 47: The Mental Gymnastics of COVID Rehearsals with Dr. Kyle Nielsen
Who Does This Guy Think He Is?
Episode 46: Teaching With Heart with Dr. Jason Max Ferdinand
Episode 45: It’s Time to Transfer the Deed to Our Singers with Dr. Betsy Cook Weber
Choir Director Problems: The Psychology of Growth vs. Achievement in Assessment
Episode 44: Prioritizing Technique. Not Style with Andrew Crane and Jami Rhodes
Episode 43: The Tools for Our Time With Troy Robertson of Chor Amor
A Conversation and Concert With Michael McGlynn and Anuna
Episode 42: Tips And Tricks for Vocal Health. Masked or Online. With Lori Sonnenberg
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