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Oboist Dwight Parry Wants You to Relax

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Dwight Parry, the principal oboist of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, recently visited SFCM for a master class. His advice, from grace-note articulations, to the art of relaxing, is below.

March 14, 2022 by Mark Taylor

By Alex Heigl

wants you to chill out, a musical motto appropriate for a Southern California native. Though he鈥檚 been in Ohio since his 2007 appointment as principal oboist of the Cincinnati Symphony, before that, he held the same position with the 含羞草传媒 Diego Symphony and believes his West Coast mindset can help with performance. 

Parry initially studied piano, voice, and jazz saxophone, only gravitating to the oboe as a high schooler. He went on to focus on music in college, where he studied with Allan Vogel and David Weiss 鈥 the latter of whom taught him how to surf, a skill requiring dedication, focus, and a sense of fun, qualities he continues to bring to his music.

Parry鈥檚 advice, from the art of relaxing to grace-note articulations, is below.

1. Relax

鈥淲e should not underestimate the impact that stress has on your cognition and attention. When we become nervous we don鈥檛 think clearly; we don鈥檛 perform at our peak.鈥

鈥淔ind a way to channel that energy, be more giving of what you have, and let excitement carry you, but not fall into yourself and feel judged and overly concerned with a hypothetical outcome of someone hearing you play.鈥 

鈥淐lear the table of that junk and all you鈥檝e got is your oboe and the music you鈥檙e going to play at that moment.鈥 

2. Think of the characters behind the music

鈥淟et鈥檚 remember that Mozart was an operatic composer first and foremost. That was his great passion 鈥 and any time we are playing anything in Mozart, I think of opera and the different characters that are involved. As a soloist, you can bring out those different voices.鈥

3. Subdivide to stay in time 鈥 even as a soloist

鈥淚t鈥檚 tricky to do when we鈥檙e playing by ourselves, right? Keeping that tempo consistent? Put all of those musical ideas into place with rock-solid tempo and rhythm.鈥 Subdividing, Parry said, is 鈥渢he secret sauce to playing in perfect rhythm.鈥

4. Tempo goes both ways

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 feel like you were giving us any forward inertia. Rubato is both, it鈥檚 not just meno mosso.鈥

5. Make every note count

鈥淭he first note of a slurred pair tends to get a little short-changed sometimes. Make it an expressive note, even though it鈥檚 fast.鈥

鈥淚 think grace notes should really sparkle, like 鈥榮tage jewelry.鈥 If you have something two-dimensional, then those grace notes are special in some way and should come out of the texture.鈥

6. Whatever you鈥檙e doing, commit to it

鈥淲hen you wanna bring something distinctive, commit to it. Hang on to that part of the character, then make a change.鈥

 

Learn more about studying oboe or woodwinds at SFCM.