the auditionhacker podcast

rob knopper
the auditionhacker podcast

hi, i’m rob. i'm a percussionist in the met opera in new york city, and my goal is to help you win an orchestra audition quicker and easier than i did. during my decade-long career of (mostly) failed auditions, i've struggled through disappointment, rejection, intense nerves, and hopelessness. but i've personally overcome each of these to win my job. i've also helped musicians all over the world break through their struggles to get to finals and win auditions. with the right work ethic and preparation methods, i truly believe that anyone can win an orchestra job like mine.

Episodes

  1. SEP 29

    008 - 4 ways to get better audition comments

    getting audition comments is incredibly frustrating. you’ll get an email from the personnel manager and it’ll say something like: Hi ___,  A judge from your audition committee gave you this feedback: “some good things. voted no” I hope that is helpful for you. ok dude, great. now WHAT am i supposed to do with that?! audition comments are hard to get. when you do receive them, they’re cryptic. they’re too short. a lot of musicians i’ve talked to have given up even trying to get audition comments. but it’s essential to know how the committee heard your playing. you have to know exactly what to fix to earn more yes votes.  if you feel frustrated, it’s probably because you’re going about it all wrong. you kiiiiiind of have to work the system a little bit.  i’ve been through it all. i’ve gone through the audition circuit myself, and at this point i’ve worked with hundreds of musicians on their audition preparation over the past decade. so in today’s episode i’m sharing my 4 best methods to get better audition comments.  to learn the 5-step audition preparation process i used to win my met opera audition, download the audition cheat sheet at robknopper.com/auditioncheatsheet from the episode: video: comparing microphones (self-recording gear guide): https://youtu.be/ysiaIdw0RBE video: how to improve your time for auditions: https://youtu.be/3lT8jbagJQI blog: the productive, healthy way to analyze audition comments: https://www.robknopper.com/blog/2019/11/4/the-productive-healthy-way-to-analyze-audition-comments Editing by Delia Black Theme Music: Log Cabin Blues by George Hamilton Green, performed by Rob Knopper (xylophone) and Howard Watkins (piano). Editing and mixing by Brandon Johnson.

    20 min
  2. SEP 16

    007 - how i recorded the delécluse album

    how would you actually prepare yourself to record an entire classical music album in one session? it’s been 10 years, but i still have the detailed, day-by-day practice schedule i used to prepare for the recording of my debut album, delécluse: douze études for snare drum.  it was a funny time. it had been two years since winning my met opera audition, and i was kinda bored. i just got tenure in the orchestra and felt like i needed an audition-level project to sink my teeth into.  (i missed auditioning. can you imagine?!) so i decided to prepare the entire book of 12 études like i was preparing for an audition. they were my best friend and my nemesis, all at once. they had been the cause of so many audition rejections. they are still the crazy-hardest snare drum pieces that have ever been written, and they’re on every percussion audition.  but since i figured out how to play them, they became my strength in auditions. so i spent half a year practicing them. i showed up at the recording session, which lasted for 2 days, and i recorded the hell out of them. and after releasing them, i suddenly went from no-name section percussionist to a major international percussionist, known all over the world for conquering these études. i prepared in the exact same way i did for prescreening audition tape recording sessions. i used my successful audition preparation process to make sure they were as super-polished as humanly possible. and yes, you can absolutely steal this process and use it to record amazing, high-level prescreening audition tapes. so in today’s episode i want to walk you through the exact steps i used to prepare for this recording. i’ll go over: how i spent 6 months perfecting the 12 delécluse études, the special strategy i used in preparation, called “the magical shrinking self-recording workflow”, how preparation needs to be structured for a recording vs. a live audition, and my best tips and strategies to make a recording session go smoothly. to learn the 5-step audition preparation process i used to win my met opera audition, download the audition cheat sheet at robknopper.com/auditioncheatsheet listen to the album, delécluse: douze études for snare drum at robknopper.com/delecluse learn more about: how to learn notes using the ROAM method https://youtu.be/EcNZsN0MRtE how to self-record for auditions https://youtu.be/TU_GkUBzdJk Editing by Delia Black Theme Music: Log Cabin Blues by George Hamilton Green, performed by Rob Knopper (xylophone) and Howard Watkins (piano). Editing and mixing by Brandon Johnson.

    31 min
  3. SEP 2

    006 - how to design an audition-winning lifestyle

    my first day at interlochen summer camp, i was placed dead last in the lowest orchestra. BOOM. a gut punch, right at the beginning of camp.  the great percussionists of the world had gone through interlochen. chris lamb. scott stevens. greg zuber. based on my orchestra placement, it was clear to me that i was NOT one of them. i was just an inexperienced doofus from rural michigan, and a minor character in the inspirational story of other people becoming great and legendary percussionists. it created a chemical imbalance in my brain, which caused me to completely transform my life. it’s where i learned to live like an audition winner.  it was the beginning of my 9 year journey towards winning a full time position in the metropolitan opera orchestra. and today i want to help you understand exactly what needs to transform in your life to also become a future audition winner.  it’s episode #6 of the auditionhacker podcast, and i’m going over:  the legendary and now-defunct practice of challenges,  adopting the olympian mindset as a musician, and  the most accurate indicators of future audition success.  to learn the 5-step audition preparation process i used to win my met opera audition, download the audition cheat sheet at robknopper.com/auditioncheatsheet. Editing by Delia Black Theme Music: Log Cabin Blues by George Hamilton Green, performed by Rob Knopper (xylophone) and Howard Watkins (piano). Editing and mixing by Brandon Johnson.

    29 min
  4. 01/07/2021

    002 - how i won the met audition

    i'll remember the day forever: may 20th, 2011. i started the day waking up on molly yeh's couch on 96th street, and ended the day carrying two bottles of dewar's scotch whisky into a friend's apartment to celebrate something i never thought i could achieve. that day changed my life. it still boggles my mind that it happened. well, to be honest, it actually didn't start that morning. it started in mid-january of that year, when i received the repertoire list in the mail about 4 months before audition day. i remember opening the packet of music. it was LONG. there were 54 excerpts on the list including 3 solo works. between january and may of that year i worked harder than i ever have before. over 4 months, i went through a carefully designed series of steps meant to learn and polish the excerpts, and trained myself to perform them consistently at a high level. auditions aren't a mystery. they're not a magical art. auditions are something that you can learn and master. the key to mastering audition preparation is to build and develop a better set of steps between the day you get the list and the day of the audition. i truly believe that i don't have any kind of innate talent. what sets me apart is that i developed an audition preparation process that brought my playing to a high level on that one day. my process consists of 5 major steps, and it's what i'll go over in detail on today's episode. if you'd like to follow along while you listen, download my audition cheat sheet at robknopper.com/auditioncheatsheet. in this episode, .you'll learn about: what happened the moment i heard that i won the audition, my biggest audition struggles (including nerves) and how i overcame them, and the 5 steps of my audition preparation process that led to my winning audition. i also answered an awesome question submitted by richard. thanks richard! if you want to ask a question to be answered on a future episode, go to robknopper.com/ask. and please leave a rating and review! i'd love to hear your feedback and ideas for future episodes.

    34 min
5
out of 5
40 Ratings

About

hi, i’m rob. i'm a percussionist in the met opera in new york city, and my goal is to help you win an orchestra audition quicker and easier than i did. during my decade-long career of (mostly) failed auditions, i've struggled through disappointment, rejection, intense nerves, and hopelessness. but i've personally overcome each of these to win my job. i've also helped musicians all over the world break through their struggles to get to finals and win auditions. with the right work ethic and preparation methods, i truly believe that anyone can win an orchestra job like mine.

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