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BENSCHILDGEN
Since: 1/30/2005
From: Sherrill USA
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MattStevens Technician
Joined: January.19.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 3
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Posted: May.06.05 at 12:13pm | IP Logged
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I was curious about how everyone has learned their craft. Who here was
trained through a school? Apprenticeship? or self-taught? I spent four
years training side-by-side with a fantastic repairman, and now after a
couple years on my own, I'm wondering how everyone else did it.
Thanks,
Matt.
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KarlPratt Technician
Joined: January.21.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 0
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Posted: May.08.05 at 7:04am | IP Logged
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I went to Red
Wing,drove 182 miles/day for 9 mos, then I worked in a small Overhaul
shop for about 1 yr, then I moved to a store that was 3x volume and got
a real education. I have attended most of the regional clinics in my
area, and also 6 NAPBIRT Annual Conferances. Next year the annual will
be in my home state.
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ChrisKane Technician
Joined: January.26.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 0
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Posted: May.11.05 at 7:58pm | IP Logged
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I started as a salesman in my store after college(BM). I did that for 3
years, but just I was about to quit they offered me an apprenticeship
in the shop. Now after 3 years of shop work, I know just how lucky I
was.
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nathanwallace Technician
Joined: February.06.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 0
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Posted: May.17.05 at 11:10pm | IP Logged
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I went to work at the local music store at the urging of my high school
band director. I thought I'd be doing retail, but the guys in back
taught me how to clean and then repair clarinets. I did that almost
exclusively for a couple of years (we had a lot of clarinets!). Then I
decided I wanted to go to school. So I went to Renton Tech. for a year,
riding busses for 2 1/2 hours each way, with an hour long trip to get
to work on top of that. It made for a long year. Now I work on my own
in a family run shop! It's pretty neat to be building a shop from
scratch!
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LarryMueller Technician & Clinician
Joined: January.20.05 Location: USA
Online Status: Offline Posts: 24
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Posted: May.28.05 at 5:44am | IP Logged
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My private oboe teacher in high school encouraged me to do any minor
repairs and adjustments I could, since oboe repair specialists are so
rare. Many top oboists do their own tone hole and bore reaming (using
files and sandpaper on a stick!) You'd be surprised by the amount of
repairs and tuning adjustments I was shown by other performers (even if
they can't level a pad or solder a key). I started working in music
stores in college, as an apprentice. Many stores will apprentice an
oboist, it's a good way to work into it. I have no repair school
training. I learned half of what I know from major orchestra players,
and half from experienced repair shop guys. After 20 years of dabbling
with it, I got serious and studied with an oboe maker, and studied
machining on my own. I keep it interesting by always studying
techniques, or trying something new, always "moving forward".
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motomom Newbie
Joined: April.08.07 Location: United States
Online Status: Offline Posts: 28
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Posted: April.09.07 at 6:51pm | IP Logged
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I apprenticed at Wiese Music Bandstand in Fort Worth, TX. The main woodwind tech that was there at the time, Roger Marsh, taught me. He was such a craftsman, I feel very lucky to have had the experience. He was a heavy drinker, and not much to have around in other respects, but put him at a bench and it was amazing what he could do. I also got to watch him make a 2-piece-custom-made pool cue at the lathe, it was beautiful when he was done.
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