The Palm Beach Post

Performing artists are rehearsing ... at the gym

Conditioni­ng helps students meet demands of playing onstage.

- By Melissa Dribben Philadelph­ia Inquirer

PHILADELPH­IA — Like many classicall­y trained musicians who have been honing their talents since kindergart­en, Andrew Bogard never made physical fitness a priorit y.

“The emphasis in our education puts us in a small four-walled practice room for a majority of the time,” Bogard said.

A gifted singer, he took his body for granted. With a little help from Haagen-Dazs dulce de leche, by the time he turned 20 he had developed a respectabl­e gut.

Since opera singers command a large presence on stage, he didn’t mind, even believing that the heft around his belly probably helped project his voice.

But in 2009, he and his undergradu­ate roommates at the Juilliard School, in New York, challenged each other to a pull-up contest.

Bogard could barely hoist himself six times. He joined a local YMCA, changed his diet and lost 20 pounds. He felt physically fit. But to his horror, he discovered that the bulkier muscles in his neck and the strain of lifting weights had damaged his voice.

“My teachers said, ‘Do you want to be a body builder or an opera singer?’ ” Bogard recalled. So he quit working out after a year.

Now 26 and nearing completion of a master’s degree at the Curtis Institute of Music, Bogard is in the best shape of his life, and his voice is clearer and stronger than ever. He credits a relatively new course offered by the conservato­ry, “Fitness and Conditioni­ng for Musicians.”

Students who enroll in the noncredit elective attend exercise sessions at Zarett Rehab & Fitness, where they receive physical therapy and work out under the supervisio­n of trainers attuned to musicians’ special needs.

“Rather than going to a gym at midnight on their own, they receive much more supervisio­n and care and attention,” said Thomas Bandar, assistant dean of student affairs at Curtis.

Midway through a recent workout, Bogard strapped himself into a 25-pound weight vest, slipped cloth booties over his sneakers, and skated side to side across a slippery mat designed to strengthen abdominal and leg muscles and improve coordinati­on. Later, he climbed onto an apparatus that helped him build his back muscles.

“I want you to feel it here,” said Joseph Zarett, tapping Bogard between the shoulder blades.

Zarett, who owns the facilit y and supervises training, said he had used his experience and knowledge as a physical therapist to custom- ize the program for each student.

He chooses exercises, he said, that improve students’ posture and core strength, while — depending on the instrument they play — protecting their hands, wrists, forearms and necks.

“When I was going to the gym on my own, I didn’t know what I was doing,” Bogard said, wiping sweat from his forehead. “The pressure from tightening the sternoclei­domastoids” — long muscles on the side of the neck — “was destroying the qualit y of my voice. These guys teach you how to do it correctly.”

To Bandar, “musicians really are like athletes.” Rather than cardiovasc­ular strength, they develop Olympian-level fine motor skills, he said. And just like gymnasts or marathon runners, they often suffer injuries from overuse.

But the difference­s between the competitiv­e worlds are vast.

While athletes generally treat their bodies like Maserati engines, musicians tend to treat theirs like baggage in the trunk. Athletes are closely attended by physical therapists and other health profession­als, but musicians t ypically power through their pain alone.

“Athletes are told, ‘This is what you need to eat, do these exercises,’” said Bronwen Ackermann, a physiother­apist at the Universit y of Sydney School of Medical Sciences in Australia. “Musicians get told, ‘Just go practice and practice some more.’ ”

Instrument­alists in particular have felt ashamed of their injuries, viewing them as a failure of technique, said Ackermann, a leading researcher in prevention and treatment of injuries in profession­al musicians.

When she began work- ing in the 1990s with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, she said, “music was Darwinian. If you could make it through your trials and tribulatio­ns, then good on you.”

Gradually, that mindset is changing.

“We are finally getting musicians to realize they need to take care of their bodies,” said Clay Miller, former president of the Performing Arts Medicine Associatio­n. Miller said that only within the last t wo years have national guidelines for music teachers included a section on protecting students’ physical well-being.

 ?? TOM GRALISH / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Curtis Institute of Music piano student Daniel Hsu works out with kinesiolog­ist Alyssa Spangler at Zarett Rehab & Fitness. Most musicians work on their fine motor skills.
TOM GRALISH / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Curtis Institute of Music piano student Daniel Hsu works out with kinesiolog­ist Alyssa Spangler at Zarett Rehab & Fitness. Most musicians work on their fine motor skills.

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