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The musician will not be classified

Dear White Orchestras

January 9, 2017 by Alexander Laing 5 Comments

The field is having a moment right now about the lack of black and brown people in American orchestras - on stage, backstage and in the audience. Some of the energy in the current moment can be framed as being about resources: if orchestras don’t become more connected to more people - different types of people -  we will suffer for it. At the same time, some of the energy … [Read more...]

Orchestras, equity and disruption

December 19, 2016 by Alexander Laing 1 Comment

Interaction Institute for Social Change | Artist: Angus Maguire                   Thinking about orchestras and equity, two things have helped me frame a perspective: Angus Maguire's reboot of Craig Froehle's graphic (featured above) and Createquity’s article Making Sense of Cultural Equity. The Maguire/Froehle graphic is well known for good reason. With a simple image it … [Read more...]

The unstructured room where it happens

November 7, 2016 by Alexander Laing Leave a Comment

In my last post I noted that, when I look at an orchestra's structure, I don't see anything that parallels a musician's practice room. Scaled for an organization, what would a workshop like that look like? In the musician's practice room we have our abilities as musicians, but a practice room also has lots of tools available. Tools - like scales studies, etudes, warm ups, a … [Read more...]

Get a room!

October 26, 2016 by Alexander Laing 3 Comments

Looking at an orchestra through the four frames, I don't see any space designed for innovation, imagination and open questions. I don't see anything like a workshop. What do I mean by 'workshop'? I mean a room where you go to prototype ideas and solutions to problems. A room that can suspend 'real world' systems and relationships. A room where you get better at your craft … [Read more...]

What’s going on?

October 6, 2016 by Alexander Laing 3 Comments

A book that has been foundational for me making sense of orchestras is Reframing Organizations by Lee Bolman and Terrence Deal. I use their ideas all the time when I’m trying to figure out what's going on in orchestras. Bolman and Deal talk about looking at our organizations - and our choices for action - through four frames: the structural frame, the human resources frame, … [Read more...]

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An Archived ArtsJournal Blog

Alexander Laing

Alex Laing began studying the clarinet at age 11 in his hometown of Silver Spring, MD. In 2002 he joined the Phoenix Symphony as principal clarinet. A longtime believer in community engaged music making, Alex recently started The Leading Tone, a non profit, after school project dedicated to exploring music as a context for youth development. A graduate of Northwestern University, he received his master's degree in Orchestral Performance from the Manhattan School of Music, an artist's … ... [more]

SongWorking

At our best, orchestras move in ensemble like a school of fish. We use sound to unfold stories. We are an amazing display of human coordination. In that human coordination show I am a clarinetist. Of course, orchestral musicians are more than just our instruments. I’m also an artist, a biracial Black man, a person interested in organizational design and culture, culture writ large, symbols and meaning. The list could go on for a while without getting personal. I think orchestras will develop … ... [more]

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