Sep/090
The SMS Interview: Michael Murphy’s view
We are delighted to welcome Michael Murphy, Director of University Concert Hall (UCH), which is on the campus of University of Limerick (UL).![]()
This is 2nd in a series of interviews we plan to publish about SMS around the theme of “SMS : Significance & Future” - showcasing views of key people in and connected with SMS.
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Michael Murphy’s CV :
- responsible for management, growth and development of UCH
- opened & launched UCH in September 1993
- finance director of Irish based high-tech electronics company with marketing, sales and distribution subsidiaries in the UK, Europe and USA
- chartered accountant @PricewaterhouseCoopers Limerick & London
- Educated @ Blackrock College Dublin & Crescent College Limerick
- born Limerick City
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Favorite sport: Rugby. I was @ Crescent College Limerick & Blackrock College Dublin. Support & follow Munster (& Old Crescent).
Favorite music: Eagles, Eric Clapton & Opera, particularly Verdi
Favorite performance ever: Maria Callas & Eric Clapton
Favorite food: I’m a Francophile. Love the weather, love the country, like most of the people – they can be a bit obnoxious at times. There’s a particular restaurant where you get seafood & fillet steak (served out in the open) followed by Crepe Suzette – truly lovely.
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What was your first contact with SMS?
We opened the Concert Hall (UCH) in 1993…. In 1996 it was brought to my attention that Clare Music Makers Association were inquiring about hiring the Hall for a concert in July. I thought “great stuff, this is our quiet period.” Said “keep dealing away with them”. Weeks later, I noticed we had an evening of classical music, Beethoven, Mozart and all that sort of stuff… “Where did all that come out of?“ I was told that was Clare Music Makers Association.
The joke here is that when I heard Clare Music Makers Association originally, I automatically, incorrectly, assumed they were a trad Irish group. And I’m going “CMMA play Mozart! What the hell is going on?”
Shortly after, I met Bob & Nancy Creech, and whoever they had at that time. I began to realise and understand what they were about.
CMMA is still there. They’re a separate organisation from Bob. He was involved with them; his daughter I think was teaching over there, and they used to have a summer festival, “Summer Music on the Shannon”.
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Where did you first meet Bob Creech?
It was here in Allegro Cafe in UCH. It was just before their performance. They were in: all of a sudden they were all over the place; rehearsing. I was introduced to him, probably by Henri (Box Office Manager) who’d been dealing with their concert arrangements & requirements.
Talking to Bob Creech, I discovered he’d been General Manager of Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra for 10 years. A Canadian, wonderful horn player, a man with a huge CV, played with so many orchestras. We were able to talk about Vancouver.
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What’s the connection between Vancouver, Bob Creech and you?
Suzanne Murphy, my sister, was singing in Vancouver. I was working as accountant for an international business. I had to go to Silicone Valley, San Francisco. I timed the trip so that I could travel up to Vancouver afterwards. Suzanne was performing Lucia de Lammermore. I thought I could hop up there, not realising how far it was. Suzanne sang with Dennis O’Neill. It was a stunning, brilliant performance. It’s one of my favourite operas. A magnificent evening. I was absolutely proud in that packed Vancouver hall: here was this girl from Limerick singing in on an international stage.
Next morning in Vancouver Airport, I went to find a newspaper, to see if there was a review. There were big headlines “Nothing Like This For 10 Years“. Vancouver Opera was the second home of Joan Sutherland [hear her sing here]. It was 10 years since she’s sung there. Talking to Bob Creech years later: he was the leader of the orchestra that night!
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What was your first impression of Bob Creech?
Small in stature, well able to listen. I found him an exceptionally interesting character. As you get to know him more and more, you realise he’s had an amazing musical career. He’s built up a wonderful network of contacts with whom he’s kept in touch. People like Carl Davis & Jose Louis Garcia (who’s come to UCH to give tutorials in the Concert Hall).
It’s the legacy he’s created, as musician & arts administrator, including the founding of a Summer School in Vancouver. Bob is forceful…. He’s worked with Paul McCartney, even had the idea of getting Paul to come to Limerick. I’ll believe that when I see it.
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What attracted you to the idea of giving SMS a home in UCH?
It fell into our lap. If you were to prepare a job spec for artistic director, Bob Creech would fit it ideally. What really attracted him was the acoustic of the Hall. At the beginning, I was simply renting a hall to Clare Music Makers. Year after year, Bob Creech came back. SMS were hiring school rooms in Ennis & Limerick. But it was splintered. That doesn’t make for a good festival
Bob was bringing staff in. It grew from one performance. Bob was pressing me for space for tutorials, and then residential student accommodation. It grew and moved in, to the point where there is almost nothing in Ennis. You could say SMS migrated in.
Clare Music Makers is run by a committee. The SMS summer school grew out of it. CMMA found SMS was becoming too big; they were exhausted by it, and wanted to discontinue the relationship. This had financial implications for SMS.
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What were the implications of SMS moving from Clare Music Makers to UCH?
SMS was in receipt of funding from various agencies, including the Arts Council, in the name of CMMA. SMS is not a limited company, limited by guarantee. Bob came to me. We discussed what to do. The obvious thing to do was for UCH to assume SMS as a project of ours, run by Bob Creech.
I was happy, having observed the growth of SMS over many years.
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What’s become the relationship of UCH to SMS?
There was no perceived change. Bob Creech ran SMS. We’d discuss it. Bob Creech would tell me about, say, John Perry. I’d say “I don’t mind what you do artistically, you’re in charge of that area. But I need SMS to break even.”
Then there was the development of the Youth Opera Theatre Programme. Bob Creech’s contacts again. With the production of Noah’s Flood, SMS developed an Arts Programme for two weeks. I was excited by it: kids making the art for the opera staging, rehearsing and learning alongside professional musicians. It’s the discipline of the process, including individual solo performance.
But opera is very expensive to put on… Bob Creech is an artistic entrepreneur.
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Has the expansion of SMS created any challenges for you?
SMS has grown because of the number of students, needing more and more rooms. Bob says “get rooms for me”. I’ve had to go to university departments to acquire rooms for rehearsal, and try to keep up with the expansion. SMS is now a 4 week event. That excites me… but has brought its own challenge.
The campus, in the ’90s, was like a desert all summer, all idle. SMS fitted in neatly with my ambitions to have activity here on the campus. In recent years, the UL campus in summer has become a destination for all sorts of students, many here for language study. Now it’s become difficult to find accommodation on campus. SMS doesn’t have the same freedom as before.
Aug/090
End of week 3 almost
It’s almost the end of week 3 of Summer Music on the Shannon. Just one week to go!
Everyone is exhausted. You can see it in their eyes, in their stances as they lug their weary bodies round the Foundation Building, or prop themselves against the nearest vertical surface for a moment’s respite. The amount of work put in by everybody is phenomenal. The faculty is unstinting in their dedication to their students as they give private tuition, take groups of students for class, or sectionals (I must ask Bruce Dunn to explain what exactly that is), do rehearsals for both the student-faculty concerts and the professional concerts, stay up late at night transposing from C to b flat (or visa-versa), meet with colleagues to see how to improve things, endlessly day in day out for 2 whole weeks!
The students (especially the more dedicated serious ones) also put in long hours learning new pieces, practicing scales, honing newly acquired skills and tips, and rehearsing endlessly (so it seems) in sectionals, quartets, quintets, trios, and full orchestras.
The behind the scenes staff work tremendously hard to keep everything running smoothly as far as possible. There is the office staff who manage the accommodation allocation (always a difficult and time-consuming task), do the printing and photocopying of transposed pieces for the faculty, print off lunch and dinner vouchers, posters informing everybody of bus times, schedules, informal concerts, rehearsals, organize activities such as the daily Options period, co-ordinate the one-a-week private lessons and the master classes, sell tickets for the annual Barbeque, and generally provide a communications centre for the programme. Then there are the supervisors who ensure that curfew is observed by the under-18s in residence and make certain that they get up in time to catch the SMS shuttle bus to UCH each morning, manage the shopping for breakfast supplies including delivery to new arrivals and replenishment for those already in residence, accompany those who have chosen the swims option to the 50m swimming pool, help out with the art option, sell programmes at the nightly concerts, and generally be available as extra transport when somebody needs urgent picking up or dropping off.
And then there is the transport staff of drivers who ferry everybody from accommodation to UCH each morning, and back in the evening, as well as transporting the players to the different concerts, be they in UCH or St. Mary’s Cathedral, or the Georgian House, or in Kilmallock, Bruff, Kilrush or Kilkee, and delivering the students and parents to same. There is also the weighty matter of transport of equipment and props for the concerts.
And I haven’t even mentioned the UCH staff who provide the essential support in the background without which the programme could not run at all.
So it’s not surprising, given the amount of hectic activity, that everybody without exception is very tired this Friday night/Saturday morning. No doubt some are in bed asleep, but I can guarantee that most are still discussing what needs to be done to ensure that tomorrow’s concert is a success.
On that note, I’ll sign off and go to bed.
Aug/090
Early rise for me and Colie
Colie Tubridy, our Director of Transportation, had a very early rise this morning with a run to Shannon Airport to pick up five Canadian students and their chaperone, Lori Burns, whose flight arrived from Ottawa at 6.30am. I got a text from Colie at 7.30am to tell me he was leaving Shannon. It woke me. I still had some final room allocations to do before they arrived so I spent the next half hour at that.
A second batch of students – two young Canadian women – were delivered to Brookfield Hall at 9.45 by Dermot O’Meara, who is acting as backup driver for the moment.
Jul/090
More arrivals, and accommodation sorted
Well, I’ve finally sorted the accommodation out for next week. No more changes will be entertained to the room allocation, I don’t care who it is that is asking.
Gene Ramsbottom, Clarinetist has just arrived from Vancouver with his wife and two lovely children. Also just arrived are David Stewart, Violin and his wife Paule Prefontaine, Violin.
Bob Creech is down at the Castletroy Hotel awaiting the arrival of Carl Davis who wants to meet the Opera people.
It’s now time for dinner, a quick shower and change of clothes and off to tonight’s Mozart Plus at the Georgian House at which I will be performing some poetry at Elinor Moran’s request. I can’t wait.
Jul/090
Piano programme up and running
The Piano Programme is now up-and-running and in full swing at Summer Music on the Shannon.
This week there are 19 students, with a further 3 to come on Monday for the second week of the two week programme.
All of the Piano Faculty, except for John Perry (University of Southern California) who is due to arrive tomorrow, is on campus – Mina Perry, Regiane Yamaguchi, Sara Okamoto, and Michelle Hennessey.
Have to rush off to Brookfield now to finalize room allocations for the big influx of faculty and students over the bank-holiday weekend.
Jul/096
Problems encountered so far
It’s almost the end of the first week of Summer Music on the Shannon 2009 and time, I feel, to share some of the problems, many of them perennial, we have encountered in the last four days. I would like to emphasize that this is not a grudge list, rather is it a factual account of the problems the programme faces year in year out. The order I list them in is random
- Photocopier jammed yesterday evening at the worst possible time – machines seem to have a knack of doing this.
SMS is given the use of a photocopier upstairs in the Foundation Building by the University via UCH. - Still awaiting internet access – the delay is down to O2 I believe, as UCH has done its utmost, in the person of Marie Healy, to get an upgraded Broadband USB stick delivered asap. This is a perennial problem also. Perhaps we will finally get it sorted this year so we have broadband access from the outset in future.
- Problems contacting Brookfield Hall manager, as set out in a previous post. This is a temporary thing, but no less frustrating for that.
- Office equipment is barely adequate. The programme could do with a couple of properly specced laptops – preferably a mac and a PC running Windows, as well as a couple of printers, a mini-photocopier, and a telephone line (we have always had to rely on our own mobile phones during the programme!). It is thanks to Michael Hennessey of Ennis that we have a computer and printer this year, as he kindly donated his old PC to the programme. It runs Windows 2000, has adequate RAM (500Mb), and a reasonably sized hard drive (16Gb) for the purpose. The printer, however, would not work, despite all my cajoling, and a reinstall. Marie Healy kindly came to the rescue once more by donating her own printer as she recently upgraded to a newer model.
- One of our supervisors, Nicola Moroney, fell ill on her second day and is not now coming back to the programme. This lead to a mini-crisis on Tuesday afternoon when there was nobody to pick up Sara Ripoll and her father who have come to the programme for the first time all the way from Alicante, Spain. The result was that Ana Marques had to drive to Shannon to pick them up as Colie Tublidy had both of his buses in for their NCT test., and we had to postpone a meeting to mid-afternoon as a result. Another consequence of Nicola’s absence was that Deirdre Stack Marques who was helping her with the supervision of the Ennis students on the return train journeys each day has had to do it by herself. As there are only 6 students this week, it hasn’t proved to be a problem.
- We need an adult volunteer to do the train supervision for Week 2.
- Dearth of information – some faculty members who are due to arrive the first weekend in August have still not confirmed their dates of arrival, or indeed their accommodation requirements. Bob Creech has e-mailed them and is still awaiting replies. This makes it more stressful for us in the SMS Office to arrange accommodation, airport pickups, and supply accurate meal numbers to the Paddocks Restaurant ahead of time.
- There seems to be a problem with some promised bursaries not coming through, but I can’t say any more about this at present.
There you have a typical first week at Summer Music on the Shannon.
I must pay tribute to the wonderful work done by UCH staff in particular by Marie Healy who is a colossus in the work she does, and Emma Foote who does the PR.
Jul/091
Most residents of Opera Programme now registered
I’ve had a very busy day with SMS preparation stuff.
First thing this morning I went to Aldi to do the breakfast shopping for the 17 residents we will have for week 1 of SMS 2009.
I must say I got some quizzical looks from the people in the checkout queue when they saw the multiple boxes of Cornflakes, Rice Krispies, jars of jam, coffee, tubs of margarine, cartons of milk and orange juice, teabags, packs of sugar, and a whole load of toilet paper and kitchen roll.
After lunch I drove down to Brookfield Hall, with my son Naoise as a helping hand…
and sat in the pool and TV room beside reception for 2hrs and 15mins to give people their keys and food as they arrived.
The three girls from Kilrush who have come back for the Opera Programme again this year were already waiting with one of the mothers.
Shortly afterwards the only boy in residence for week 1 arrived with his mother.
Then some time later Bob Creech arrived in the company of John O’Dwyer who was driving.
A few minutes after that Toni Rose made an appearance with her flatmate Danella Sing who flew into Shannon on the very early flight from the US this morning.
Elinor Moran had already arrived on the 9.45 flight from London to Shannon.
Dermot O’Meara, who works for the instrumental programme, as a stage hand, did us the favour of collecting both Danella and Elinor from the airport and chauffeuring them to Brookfield Hall.
As I waited I worked on the accommodation requirements for Week 2…
while keeping an eye on the Connaught Football final between Galway and Mayo. Mayo won in a thrilling finish.
Nobody else came in the time allotted time for registration. So at 17.40 we made our way over the the accommodation block and stocked up the 5 remaining apartments with packs from the car boot. I left the remaining keys with Bob Creech.
Then it was down to Dunnes Stores on the Childers road with Toni Rose and Danella Sing, so they could purchase other things they needed. We eventually left Brookfield for home at 19.05 where we arrived shortly before 20.00.
Tonight…
After dinner tonight, it’s time to print off the lists we need for the registration of the Opera day students. I have to be in UCH (University Concert Hall, Limerick) at 8 am in the morning.
Ana Marques is also coming, as she is dropping off Deirdre Stack Marques and Nicola Moroney at the train station. They are supervising the Ennis Opera students on the train to Limerick, and back again in the evening, for the rest of the week. We already purchased the tickets at Ennis Station on Friday evening.
I’ve had a couple of calls from Colie Tubridy, the transport co-ordinator, who has arrived at Brookfield in the last hour.
Jul/090
Less than 24 hours to go to registration for residents
By this time tomorrow evening Ana Marques and Patrick Stack will have completed the registration for the resident Opera faculty and students, purchased and delivered breakfast supplies to their rooms, and given them their keys. I can’t believe that it’s so close.
I’ve spent the day trying to finish one of three projects I’m working on. Although I haven’t finished it I’ve made very good progress.
The ever helpful Nancy Creech will deliver the printed sheets of badges this evening and tonight we will need to cut them out and put them in their plastic holders for the Opera faculty and students. It’s going to be a busy night.
Jul/091
What’s going on today @ SMS @ UCH Limerick?
“Not much…”
“The usual calm before the storm… People meeting to ensure the administration will work…”
I thought I’d probe a little:
Imagine 2,500 bed nights to be sorted:
The accommodation’s in place… How do you ensure the system to track who goes where is understood by all? This is one of Patrick Stack’s roles.
Loads of rooms for music lessons & rehearsals:
All the right music rooms are allocated…. You wouldn’t want violinists stumbling into the piano room, or flautists blundering in on top of percussionists…
David Collopy & Marie Healy @ UCH are working away doing “pre-season” work:
- sorting the final accounts & registrations
- dealing with Parental Leave & other forms
- selling tickets
- pushing the concerts
- fostering relations with local media, especially Lyric FM
- arranging for visiting musicians to be interviewed
There’s also the on-going work of longer-term thinking about how best to link the image & substance of SMS together into a more powerful brand.
(Forgive the marketing speak. I haven’t time to write that in plain English.)
Ana Marques is running around
- communicating about master classes,
- organising student options
- doing liaison with teachers for private classes
- organising classes in “English as a foreign language” for some.
I think today’s been a fairly quiet day… The Opera Gang will be here soon.