All the more reason for musicians to have a doctorate's knowledge of it. -'...[not] a requirement for many clergy, why ought it be for....'
There were times and places where this was expected - St Mark's, Venice comes to mind as one of countless places at which the finest was expected and cherished.
If a person in high school with reasonable musical skills came up to me and said they wanted to do church music for a living...
Otherwise, one is a mere administrator who is a disappointment as a musician. (We have too many of these [sopping up jobs that their betters should have], and, sadly, this seems to be all that many churches want.)
For the working musician, often the AGO exams are more precisely aligned with the requirements of the job, and do include representative major works but within a balanced program.
Students graduate with no knowledge of short repertoire to play before, during and after Mass. Hymn playing is also is often not covered.
Not if you "dropped out" because in the composition master class (at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in the 80s) they were throwing ping pong balls into the piano and plotting guttural sounds on graph paper instead of writing notes with stems on manuscript paper. When I am asked (and that is not very often) why I don't have the 'sheep skin' I simply tell them the truth and show them a stack of real music manuscripts that I created on my own time or play my own works on the organ. Case dismissed.Prospective employers trust you more. I'd say having "some college" and an unfinished degree, ie: you dropped out-is worse than having no college experience at all.
Having a degree shows that you are mature, hard working, and willing to finish things
Having a degree shows that you are mature, hard working, and willing to finish things.
ouchThat being said, how many conversations have we had here about non degreed DoM's getting into places they have no right to be, they barely read music, have little to no musical knowledge? I should know, I work under one...
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