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Youth Orchestras

Check this page regularly for a detailed Conference schedule from your perspective as a Youth Orchestra professional. We’ll tell you when Youth Orchestra professionals are meeting, include meeting agendas, and list Orchestra Leadership Academy seminars and Orchestra Toolbox sessions that are specifically tailored to you. We’ll also let you know when all other Conference events take place including Orchestras on the Hill, the Conference Luncheon, sessions, and concerts. Visit the calendar for a quick view of events.

Asterisk (*) indicates advance registration and additional fee required.

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Tuesday, June 14

Choose from four Orchestra Leadership Academy seminars that will enhance your skills and help you excel in this complex industry including:

9:30am – 5:00pm

Making Outstanding Education Concerts: What You Play and What You Say*

 

Deepen knowledge and experience, and create effective partnerships in designing concerts with artistic and educational focuses that are in alignment with contemporary audiences. (Continued Wednesday 8:00 am - 1:00 pm.)

9:30am – 4:30pm

Musically Speaking*

 

Articulate your passion for music with confidence and clarity, and gain support of those around you including the audience, musicians, donors, the press, and key community members. You may register for Musically Speaking AND any Wednesday seminar below.

 

Taking Aim Before You Fire: Strategic Planning for Orchestras*

 

Take home the tools to design and implement an effective strategic planning process for your orchestra, regardless of the size, complexity, or challenges you face. (Continued Wednesday 8:00 am - 1:00 pm.)

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, June 15

Choose from six additional Orchestra Leadership Academy seminars including:

8:00am – 1:00pm

Board and Organizational Assessment*
Design processes to help your orchestra take a look at the performance of individual trustees and how your board functions as a whole. Take home essential “dos and don’ts” of the self-evaluation process.

Creating a Fundraising Plan*
Design and implement a plan to maximize contributed income. Identify and cultivate the right individual donors through direct mail, telefundraising, and major gifts. Explore effective donor research and planning techniques, and engage potential corporate and foundation donors.

 

Making Outstanding Education Concerts: What You Play and What You Say*

 

Continued from Tuesday.

 

 

Taking Aim Before You Fire: Strategic Planning for Orchestra*

 

Continued from Tuesday.

 

1:00pm - 6:30pm

Orchestras on the Hill (Capacity is limited! Register now to participate!)
The policy decisions made in Washington, D.C. impact orchestras back home. Make the case to your Senator(s) or Representatives at Orchestras on the Hill. No matter your role or affiliation, this day is for everyone. Prepare for your meetings at a briefing, meet with members of Congress, and attend a Hill reception.

1:00pm - 2:15pm
Legislative Briefing
(Hilton Washington)
Never met with a policymaker? Worried about what to say? Don’t worry! We’ll tell you all you need to know to meet with your representatives in Congress including what to bring to your meeting, how to conduct your meeting, and talking points. You’ll also meet with other Conference attendees from your state, including your State Captain. Meetings with your Senators will be scheduled for you in advance. We’ll be sitting at tables so feel free to buy your lunch beforehand and bring it with you.
Speakers

2:15pm - 3:15pm
Buses to the Hill

 

Buses will leave from the T Street entrance on the Terrace Level (one floor below the lobby) of the Hilton Washington.

 

3:30pm - 5:30pm
Hill Meetings
(Capitol Hill)

 

You’ve been briefed – you’re now ready to meet with your members of Congress!

 

5:00pm - 6:30pm
Hill Reception,
(Cannon Caucus Room, Capitol Hill)

 

 




7:15pm



6:30pm - 8:00pm


9:00pm - 11:00pm

We’re inviting you and your members of Congress to join us in the beautiful Cannon Caucus Room after your Hill meetings. Hear Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg and Mark O’Connor perform. We'll also present the Gold Baton Award for distinguished service to music and the arts to National Symphony Orchestra Music Director Leonard Slatkin and to the Congressional Arts Caucus. Representative Slaughter (D-NY) and Representative Shays (R-CT) will accept on behalf of the Congressional Arts Caucus.

National Friends of the League Donor Appreciation Dinner
Sponsored by Steinway & Sons
(by invitation)


YOD Board Meeting/Dinner
Open to YOD Board Members only. Location TBD

Manager, General Manager, Artistic Administrator, Conductor and Exhibitor Reception
Network at this after-hours party in the Delegate Lounge.


Thursday, June 16

7:00am – 8:15am

Conference/League Orientation

 

For first-time Conference attendees and for those new to the League.

8:15am – 9:30am

Opening Session/Keynote Address

 

Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee delivers this year’s Opening Session Keynote Address on why he chose to focus on the arts during his chairmanship of the Education Commission of the States.

Youth Orchestra Performance
Members of six Washington D.C. area youth orchestras perform under the direction of Emil de Cou, Associate Conductor, National Symphony Orchestra: American Youth Philharmonic, D.C. Youth Orchestra, Maryland Classic Youth Orchestra, Washington Metropolitan Youth Philharmonic, Potomac Valley Youth Orchestra, The Youth Orchestras of Prince William.

Opening Session sponsored by Classical Movements Inc.


9:45am – 11:00am


Opening Forums

 

Choose from one of the following sessions available to all Conference delegates:

 

Making the Case
Question: What will persuade a prospective donor, convince a key policymaker, earn the community’s trust, and win the hearts of your audience? Answer: Knowing your facts, and communicating them in a compelling way. Learn why four leading public figures are advocates for music, and how each make the case from a different perspective: economic, education, artistry, and community impact. Receive a new collection of our best statistics, arguments, and quotes about American orchestras, and take home effective strategies to make the case for your orchestra at home. Speakers

Don’t Mess with My Concerts
We know that each audience member attends concerts with different expectations and degrees of sophistication. But what do we know about our audience, really? And how do we apply what we do know about them to the concert experience? We’ll explain – and challenge – some assumptions that have, until now, influenced orchestras’ approaches to concerts, and examine some new approaches as well. Speakers

11:15am – 12:30pm

Youth Orchestras League Strategic Planning discussion

 

 

12:45pm – 2:00pm



Lunch
Buy your lunch in the deli just outside the Delegate Lounge, then sit down and relax in the Delegate Lounge while you eat!

 

 

2:15pm – 3:30pm

Managers and Trustees Plenary
Ethics and Nonprofit Accountability
Reports from ICSOM, Jan Gippo and ROPA, Barbara Zmich

 

 

3:45pm – 5:00pm

Orchestra Toolbox Sessions

 

Choose from six compelling sessions, including:

The Best Defense: A Guide for Orchestra Advocates
You have the power to create meaningful relationships with policymakers – at all levels. Want that state arts agency budget and those tax-exempt benefits kept intact? Work in coalitions and form personal connections. Build a foundation of local, state, and federal government support now, so when it’s time for those critical votes, your policymakers know what to do. Speakers

Strengthening Roots, Branching Out: Orchestra Residencies Across America
What makes a successful orchestra residency? Why might you implement one as a form of community engagement? Take a look at the National Symphony Orchestra’s American Residencies, the Oregon Symphony’s Community Music Partnerships, and the quartet residency of the Western Piedmont Symphony, and take home strategies to make your orchestra’s residency possible, powerful, and sustainable. Speakers

In Tune With the Public Trust
Now, more than ever, it’s important to develop a transparent culture on issues such as financial record-keeping and human resource policies. The IRS is stepping up its enforcement of nonprofit accountability requirements, and Congress is considering tougher laws. Orchestras depend on support from the public, and must operate ethically and effectively to maintain the public’s trust. Learn what your orchestra board and staff need to do to satisfy new requirements and keep the public’s trust.  Speakers

Be a Winner
Pops Roundtables
The Rise and Fall of Classical Music in America

5:00pm – 6:15pm

Buses to the Kennedy Center

 

Buses to the Kennedy Center will leave from the T Street entrance on the Terrace Level (one floor below the lobby) of the Hilton Washington.

7:00pm

National Symphony Orchestra Concert* and Tune-Up Party

 

The National Symphony Orchestra performs under Leonard Slatkin at The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Concert Hall. Guest artists include Mark O'Connor and Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, violin.
Tune-Up Party hosted by the National Symphony Orchestra

9:00pm - 9:30pm

Tour of the John F. Kennedy Center Concert Hall

 

Take a Jaffe Holden Acoustics Tour featuring the acoustical design of the John F. Kennedy Center Concert Hall immediately following the concert.

11:00pm

Gone, But Not Forgotten

 

Enjoy a chat with orchestra veterans – those risqué, devil-may-care, caution-to-the-wind, impresarios – as they reveal all they couldn’t say…on the job.


Friday, June 17

 

 

7:30am- 8:45am

Youth Orchestra Division Annual Meeting

 

Coffee and bagels will be served.

 

 

9:00am - 10:15am

Music Education Advocacy

 

This is a cross-constituency meeting for Education/Community Relations; YOD; and Managers, Groups 5-8. Orchestras have the expertise and clout to be powerful advocates in support of music education in their local schools. What can your orchestra do to lead local policymakers to step up their support? Learn how best to align with community partners in support of music education in the schools, and use compelling arguments from an orchestra perspective.

Moderator:
Leni Boorstin, public affairs director, Los Angeles Philharmonic

Panelists:
Mike Blakeslee, deputy executive director, MENC; board member, American Youth Philharmonic Orchestras
Mary L. Luehrsen, director of public affairs and government relations, NAMM-International Music Products Association
Richard L. Early, executive director, Charlotte Symphony Orchestra
Susan Miville, director of education, outreach & community partnership, Charlotte Symphony Orchestra

 

 

 

 

10:30am – 11:45am

 

 

 

 

 

 


12:00pm - 1:30pm

Youth Orchestra Division Meeting – Community Partnerships
Join us for a moderated conversation with Michael Blakeslee, Deputy Executive Director, MENC; Board Member, American Youth Philharmonic Orchestras, about developing a mutually supportive relationship between your youth orchestra and your local public schools’ orchestra programs. We’ll discuss the unique challenges and opportunities of the relationships of youth orchestras to their in-school counterparts, and get some ideas about how to foster strong relationships in our own community.

Moderator:
Melody Welsh-Bucholz, Executive Director, Louisville Youth Orchestra

Panelists:

Michael Blakeslee, deputy executive director, MENC; board member, American Youth Philharmonic Orchestras


Conference Luncheon*

 

Drawing from his recent book, The Four Pillars of High Performance, Paul Light will explore strategies for attaining maximum effectiveness in a future of unprecedented change and uncertainty. Light is the Paulette Goddard Professor of Public Service, Robert Wagner School of Public Service, New York University.

Sponsored by: Clarion Associates, Inc., IMG Artists, Artsmarketing Services Inc.



1:45pm – 3:00pm

Networking

 

Gather with colleagues and business partners in the Delegate Lounge/Exhibit Area for informal discussions and networking.

3:15pm – 4:15pm

Youth Orchestra Division Meeting – Growing Pains

 

The Good News: youth orchestras are booming. The Bad News: growth brings new challenges. This session will offer strategies for managing three aspects of growth--artistic expansion, staffing and space issues, and board development--for any youth orchestra finding itself moving "to the next level."

Moderator:
Caroline Whiddon, Executive Director, Vermont Youth Orchestra Association

Panelists:
Aviva Segall, Music Director, Omaha Area Youth Orchestras
Ann McKinney, Executive Director, Interschool Orchestras of New York
Kristine Purrington, Executive Director, Albuquerque Youth Symphony


4:30pm – 6:00pm

Awards Celebration and Reception

 

Celebrate the field's achievements at the Awards Celebration and Reception with emcee Marvin Hamlisch. We'll award the League/ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming, the MetLife Awards for Excellence in Community Engagement, the Bank of America Awards for Excellence in Orchestra Education, The Volunteer Council Gold Ribbon Awards, and the Helen M. Thompson Award. You will also hear remarks by NEA Chairman Dana Gioia, and performances by “The President’s Own” United States Marine Band, led by director Lieutenant Colonel Michael Colburn. 


8:00pm

Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Concert*

 

The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra performs under Yuri Temirkanov at Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall in Baltimore with guest artist Vadim Repin, violin.

Buses will leave promptly at 6:00 pm from the T Street entrance on the Terrace Level (one floor below the lobby) of the Hilton Washington.

8:00pm

National Philharmonic Performance-Demonstration*

 

Experience a concert hall as you never have before at a demonstration of the visible and invisible features of the design responsible for making the new Music Center at Strathmore a concert hall for the 21st century.

To get to the Music Center at Strathmore, take the Metro from the Dupont Circle Station to the Strathmore/Grosvenor station, (8 stops on the Red Line towards Shady Grove) and walk to the Music Center through a covered skyway. This trip will take approximately 45 minutes from door to door including a ten minute walk down Connecticut Ave. to the Dupont Circle Station. Round trip tickets may be purchased at the Metro station for $4.50.


Saturday, June 18

8:00pm

Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Concert*

 

The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra performs under Yuri Temirkanov at the Music Center at Strathmore in North Bethesda with guest artist Vadim Repin, violin.

To get to the Music Center at Strathmore, take the Metro from the Dupont Circle Station to the Strathmore/Grosvenor station, (8 stops on the Red Line towards Shady Grove) and walk to the Music Center through a covered skyway. This trip will take approximately 45 minutes from door to door including a ten minute walk down Connecticut Ave. to the Dupont Circle Station. Round trip tickets may be purchased at the Metro station for $4.50.