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MySydney奖学金在Sydney Con激发了金属吉他的热情

(MySydney scholarship fuels metal guitar passion at Sydney Con)

2023-12-18

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来自悉尼西部的mysydney学者alexanderandrevski正在悉尼音乐学院追寻他对金属吉他的热爱。 他用这笔奖学金购买乐器,并鼓励其他人探索大学教育的新途径。 在悉尼西部的一所著名的高等音乐学校学习金属吉他并不是亚历山大·安德列夫斯基高中时所期望或计划的。 他正在考虑攻读法律学位,但担心得不到所需的atar。 因此,他转向了自己的主要爱好&器乐进步金属吉他,并申请了悉尼音乐学院的音乐学士学位。 亚历山大说:“我的目标是成为一名职业音乐家,制作自己的音乐并现场演奏。”。 “同时,我想做私人教学。 我受到导师的启发,想教其他学生走上正轨。 亚历山大是一名19岁的学生,他已经完成了音乐学士(当代音乐实践)的第一年,能够通过mysydney在con学习金属吉他。 该计划是该大学唯一一个为来自社会经济地位较低地区的合格学生提供低atar入学以及财政和其他支持的计划。 亚历山大住在杜恩塞德,就读于布莱克敦的埃文斯高中。 他通过mysydney获得了一份大学录取通知书,每年获得8500美元的奖学金。 亚历山大说:“太棒了,我已经用这笔钱买了一个midi键盘,我正要买一把8弦strandberg吉他。”。 “其他大学的学生可能会买课本或笔记本电脑,但我能买到乐器。 亚历山大是家里第一个高中毕业的人,更不用说申请大学了,现在他想鼓励其他学生申请。 他说:“我的建议是试一试,把你的第一选择放在首位。”。 “有一些途径可以真正做到你想做的任何事情。 我考上了音乐1六级,但我的atar是66,这太疯狂了,因为我在悉尼大学。 我很高兴我可以做任何我想做的事,尽管我有atar。 在悉尼学习的conalexander说,他在大学的第一年与高中相比有了很大的变化,但他很容易交到朋友,并且喜欢在悉尼学习当代音乐。 他说:“最令人愉快的部分是结识新朋友,并最终能够表达自己。”。 “我居住的郊区和我上的学校没有多少人可以与我合作,音乐是我身份的重要组成部分,所以能够真正与人一起玩,而不仅仅是坐在卧室里练习,这是一个巨大的变化,感觉很有成就感。 他说:“这是一个相当小的学生群体,所以我们变得像一家人。”。 “这门课程本身就迫使你们相互交谈,因为我们总是合作制作音乐。 “当代音乐实践课程由当代专业音乐人杰迪·奥里根博士、托比·马丁博士、保罗·麦克德莫特博士和布里·范雷克教授。 学生们学习流行音乐和为独奏者和乐队创作的技巧。 亚历克斯说:“老师们都很好,我们都很喜欢他们。”。 “我非常喜欢所有的音乐,”他说。 “但我真的很喜欢器乐前卫金属,我最喜欢的艺术家是悉尼的吉他手普林尼。 能够用吉他表达自己真是太棒了。 “mysydneyscholarshipalexander是该校数百名完成首届mysydney奖学金第一年的学生之一,也是悉尼大学12名学生之一。 作为该计划的一部分,他全年都会得到定期的学术支持和与其他mysydney学生的社交活动。 他说:“我在学习其他课程时遇到了很多人,这太棒了。”。 “最重要的是在大学里找到了一份学生大使的工作,基本上就是在大学里四处参观,因为我是一个骗子,所以这对我来说是个骗局。 我为高中的孩子们做巡回演出。 我也在信息日工作。 “悉尼骗子的首选项上升了14。 2023年底为5%。 悉尼音乐学院院长安娜·里德教授表示,疫情严重中断了许多高中学生的音乐课程,这是一次反弹。 “在新冠肺炎封锁期间,青少年不能和老师一起参加室内音乐课,也不能在学校参加乐队或合奏团。 其他人不能在唱诗班唱歌。 这对他们的音乐教育是一个重大的干扰。 有些学生放下乐器,再也没有拿起。 “但现在我们很高兴音乐教育正在反弹,我们看到参加骗局试镜的学生激增,我们欢迎他们进入我们的学校。 在新冠肺炎之后,我们再次看到创造性的表达是如此重要。 里德教授说:“音乐是为了公平和理解教育中的文化多样性和差异,我们希望学生们能够亲身体验音乐生活的丰富多彩。”。 作曲家、悉尼音乐学院副院长马修·欣德森教授表示,音乐是一个价值数百万美元的产业。 他说:“这里提供的不仅仅是古典音乐,你还可以学习电影和电视作品,比如配乐、电子游戏配乐或流行音乐写作。”。 “音乐对澳大利亚的每一个人都很重要,这些学生将塑造我们的音乐未来。 欣德森教授补充道:“音乐天赋在布莱克敦和在邦迪一样普遍。”。 “全国各地都有这么多人才,就去争取吧。 如果你是9年级、10年级或11年级的学生,在12年级的中途,当我们举行试镜时,就开始考虑申请这个骗局。 ”。
alexander andrevski, a mysydney scholar from western sydney, is pursuing his passion for metal guitar at the sydney conservatorium of music. he used the scholarship to buy instruments and encourages others to explore new pathways to university education.studying metal guitar at a prestigious tertiary music school wasn’t what alexander andrevski was expecting, or planning, when he was in high school in western sydney. he was considering a degree in law but worried he wouldn’t get the atar required. so he turned to his major passion – instrumental progressive metal guitar –  and applied for a bachelor of music at sydney conservatorium of music.“my goal is to become a professional musician and make my own music and play it live,” alexander said. “in the meantime, i’d like to do private teaching. i’m inspired by my tutors and would like to teach other students down the track.”alexander, a 19-year-old student who has completed his first year in a bachelor of music (contemporary music practice) was able to study metal guitar at the con through mysydney. the scheme is the only one at the university to offer eligible students from low socio-economic areas entry on a reduced-atar, plus financial and other support. alexander lives in doonside and attended evans high school in blacktown. he received a university offer through mysydney with an annual $8500 scholarship.“it’s been great, i’ve used the money to buy a midi keyboard and i’m about to buy an 8-string strandberg guitar,” alexander said. “other uni students might buy textbooks or laptops, but i’ve been able to buy musical instruments.”alexander is the first in his family to graduate from high school, let alone apply for university, and now he wants to encourage other students to apply.“my advice is to just give it a go, put your first preference first,” he said. “there are pathways to literally do whatever you want. i got a band 6 in music 1, but my atar was 66, which is crazy, because i’m at university of sydney. i’m just happy i can do whatever i want despite my atar.”studying at sydney conalexander said his first year at university has been a big change from high school but he made friends easily and loves studying contemporary music at the con. “the most enjoyable part has been meeting new people and finally being able to express myself,” he said.“the suburb i live in and the school i went to didn’t have many people i could collaborate with and music is a big part of my identity, so being able to actually play with people and not just sit in my bedroom practising has been a huge change – it feels very fulfilling.”“it’s a fairly small group of students so we become like family,” he said. “the course itself kind of forces you to talk to each other because we’re always collaborating to make music.”the contemporary music practice course is taught by professional contemporary musicians dr jadey o’regan, dr toby martin, dr paul (mac) mcdermott and ms bree van reyk. the students learn the craft of pop music and writing for solo performers, and in bands. “the teachers are so good, we all love them,” said alex.“i thoroughly enjoy all music,” he said. “but i am really into instrumental prog metal and my favourite artist is sydney-based guitarist, plini. just being able to express yourself through guitar is so great.”mysydney scholarshipalexander is one of hundreds of students completing their first year of the inaugural mysydney scholarship at the university, and one of 12 at sydney con. as part of the scheme, he was offered regular academic support and social events with the other mysydney students throughout the year.“i met so many people doing other courses, it was great,” he said. “the biggest thing was getting a job working at the university as a student ambassador, it’s basically giving tours around the university, and since i’m a con student, it’s at the con for me. i give tours for the high school kids. i also worked at info day.”sydney con preferences upfirst preferences for the con are up 14.5 percent at the end of 2023. professor anna reid, dean of sydney conservatorium of music said this is a bounce back after the pandemic significantly interrupted music lessons for many students during high school. “teenagers couldn’t attend in-person music lessons with their teacher or play in bands or ensembles at school during the covid lockdowns. others weren’t able to sing in choirs. this was a significant interruption to their musical education. some students put their instruments down and didn’t pick them up again.“but now we are thrilled that music education is bouncing back and we’re seeing a surge in students auditioning for the con and we are welcoming them into our school. it’s so important that we are seeing creative expression again after covid.”“music is all about equity and understanding cultural diversity and differences in education, we hope students want to come to the con to experience the richness of a musical life,“ professor reid said.professor matthew hindson, composer and deputy dean of sydney conservatorium of music said music is a multi-million-dollar industry. “it’s more than classical music on offer here at the con, you can study film and television composition for soundtracks or video game scores or pop music writing,” he said. “music is important to every person in australia and these students will shape our musical future.”“musical talent is just as prevalent in blacktown as it is in bondi,” professor hindson added. “there is so much talent throughout the country, just go for it. if you’re in year 9, 10 or 11, start thinking about applying for the con midway through year 12 when we hold auditions.”.
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