It is perhaps not generally realized in the wider world of area classical music that Palm Beach County has a thriving music conservatory, that it is in the middle of building a $15 million concert hall that will be a major addition to the areaâs art scene, and that its dean, Jon Robertson, used to run the school of music at UCLA, one of the largest music schools in the country.
But Robertson (whose first name is pronounced âYonâ) is happy to be here, and in the five years since he has been dean of the Lynn University Conservatory of Music, the schoolâs public presentations have improved significantly. Its Philharmonia, the student orchestra, now rarely uses faculty members to flesh out its ranks, and tackles such literature challenges as the Tenth Symphony of Shostakovich. Its upcoming season is just as ambitious, and includes the Fifth Symphony of Prokofiev and the Five Pieces for Orchestra of Arnold Schoenberg.
Robertson, born in Jamaica in December 1942, was a piano prodigy as a child and moved to California as a toddler when his minister father needed specialized medical care only available in the States. By age 10, he had made his recital debut at Town Hall in New York in a program of music by Schubert (Sonata in E, D. 459), Bach (French Suite No. 4, in E-flat) and Liszt (Polonaise in E, S. 223). [The New York Times reviewer, probably Noel Straus, said that while the pre-teen pianist had not fully grasped all the music he was playing, âthere were times, as in the second Scherzo of the Schubert sonata, or the Courante and Air from the Bach suite, when the boyâs work ⌠became laudably smooth and clean, showing promise for the future.â]
He went on to Juilliard, ultimately earning his doctorate there in piano performance. But in the meantime he had tried his hand at conducting and education management, which were to be the chief occupations of his career. He ran music departments at colleges in Alabama and Massachusetts, furthered his conducting career by studying with Herbert Blomstedt, and then took the reins of the Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra in Norway for eight years.
Robertson became conductor of the Redlands Symphony Orchestra in California in 1982, an ensemble he still conducts, and took over the music department at UCLA in 1992, where he remained for 12 years. He came to Lynn in 2004, and currently lives in Delray Beach with his wife, Florence, who holds a doctorate in French studies. The Robertsons have three children and seven grandchildren.
Palm Beach ArtsPaperâs Greg Stepanich sat down with Robertson last month to talk about his career and the challenges and benefits of running a small conservatory. Here are excerpts from that conversation; questions and answers have been edited for length and clarity:
Stepanich: Before you got this job, had you ever heard of Lynn University?
Robertson: I had not heard of Lynn, but I knew Harid [Conservatory] very well. And the big attraction, of course, for me if I was to come here and do something with the conservatory, was that it was formerly Harid, and that the faculty had come over, the students had come over. And so I saw it more as a name change than it being something new.
This [Lynn] is not a music department. This is a genuine conservatory that was relocated. And there would have been no need to go to a music department and try to build a program. In this day and age, thatâs almost impossible, to build something from nothing. So when I wanted to attract world-class faculty here -- and fortunately we had a number of people who stayed that were world-class -- it was less difficult for me to say, âWell, you know, it used to be Harid.â
Our [conservatory] is very strongly focused on chamber music being something that you just donât get in the big institutions. Chamber music exists, but there are so many students, a lot of it you end up doing yourself. I went to Juilliard, and I had one semester of chamber music. And that was a two-piano thing.
Our size, quality of our faculty, and the level of our students, makes what we have very, very special.
Stepanich: You came from UCLA, which is a much larger institutionâŚ
Robertson: Itâs a monolith. Itâs a monster.
Stepanich: âŚso did you say to yourself: Hereâs a smaller thing where I can make a mark?
Robertson: Exactly. It was a situation at that point where there were students that were concerned about the future, even faculty: Whatâs going to happen if itâs not Harid anymore? Can the university sustain this level of program?
So the university said theyâd make that commitment, and it was just a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to do it, to do all the things that youâd wished all the major conservatories that youâd been to or knew of had the opportunity to do, but basically because of their size couldnât always do.
Stepanich: Is chamber music the key thing at Lynn?
Robertson: That is probably what sets us apart. Look, we only take four flutes, four oboes, four clarinets, four bassoons. We only take a certain number, and we have figured it out; we sort of backed into what numbers we need. And weâre at about 94 students now.
So right under 100 gives you enough students to have a first-rate orchestra, and for your various ensembles, keeping these various ensembles at set numbers, allows you to group them into these ensembles in a very real way, not catch as catch can.
Thereâs something else, I think, about our conservatory that is kind of special. And that is the amount of performing that we do. It is not uncommon for a student to go to a conservatory and the only real performance opportunity they get, basically, is their recital, their junior or senior recital they give. Here, in our forum, every week one is performing in front of their colleagues. Deanâs Showcase, youâre performing for the public.
And because South Florida is the depository of retirees from New York, Chicago, the world, people who attended concerts, people who went to the New York Philharmonic, and [the] Philadelphia Orchestra, we have 1,200 to 1,400 people attending our orchestral concerts.
At UCLA, if we had 300 people come to an orchestral concert, we were overjoyed. Four hundred people: Letâs build a new hall! And the people who were attending these concerts are not people who have nothing to do. Theyâre coming because this is what theyâre used to. Thereâs a standard, and if a community imposes upon you a standard that you must reach, thatâs when you start to grow. If they give you a standing ovation because you showed up, youâre not going to grow.
Stepanich: If youâre going to be an orchestral musician, a violist, say, a lot of your professional life is going to be in chamber music.
Robertson: The beauty of chamber music is that, and this is really true of course for orchestral musicians, but for those who take a solo career very seriously, your way of playing solo is going to change for the better if you play chamber music. You listen to yourself, you listen to the parts that youâre playing yourself in a very different way. Your ear is trained in a very different way, thereâs a sensitivity, thereâs a sense of phrasing and musical intelligence that comes to light when you play chamber music. This quality enhances your musical growth in a very, very special way.
Something else about our program: We are a genuine conservatory, but the bachelorâs degree you get from this university is an honest-to-goodness bachelorâs degree. I think back to my years at Juilliard: Fortunately for me, opportunities opened for me to enhance my musical background, I came in as a child prodigy, so Iâd had a history prior to coming to Juilliard, what happens if a person decides, you know I think Iâd like to make some alterations in my musical life? Or, Iâd like to go in a slightly different direction within the arts, but not necessarily that of performing?
Well, your bachelorâs degree is not worth the paper itâs written on. Youâve had one course or two in the humanities or something like that, itâs not worth anything. And if you want to make a change along the way, youâve got to go back to school. Now, the kids that come out of her have an honest-to-goodness bachelorâs degree, yet theyâre still studying with world-class faculty, they still are playing at an exceptionally high level.
Stepanich: So where are you from originally?
Robertson: I was born in Jamaica, and came to the United States when I was 4 years old. I had the great opportunity to study with one of the worldâs great teachers, Ethel Leginska [1886-1970], starting at 7 years old. By the time I was 10, I made my debut at Town Hall in New York.
By the time I got to Juilliard, the amount of literature that I had covered, and the whole idea of where people go there to get opportunities to perform four, five, six or 10 years later, this is something that had been a part of my life, all of my life, just about.
Stepanich: Do you come from a musical family?
Robertson: My father was a very fine musician, even though that was not his profession. He was a minister, but he played piano and organ exceptionally well. Really amazing. He could play anything in any key.
Itâs been in my blood all this time. This is what Iâve been doing with most of my lifeâŚ.
Stepanich: Now Leginska was a student of [Theodore] Leschetizky, who was a student of [Carl] Czerny, who was a student of Beethoven.
Robertson: There you go. There was that lineage. And I had lessons every day. I was supposed to have one a week, and so forth, and sheâd call my father and she said, âSomeone isnât coming. Bring him over.â It was a life-consuming way of going about the art form that was really very special.
I was privately tutored until I went to Juilliard. I never went to regular school, because [of] the hours [I spent] touring, playing. Now in that process, too, there was that old-school [idea of] the amount of hours you put in, so when I came to Beveridge Webster [1908-1999], he was really one who got me to start thinking [that] there are a lot of other things that you have to know.
Stepanich: Leginska came from the core repertory, while Webster is famous for his work with Ravel. How did those two teachers work?
Robertson: What Leginska gave me was a fundamental approach to piano playing that was so phenomenal [that] I can go a year and not touch the piano, and within a week get my technique back up to speed. It was so fundamentally based, this playing in a relaxed way. So many kids today are having tension problems and hand problems. There is this, you know, trying to get a bigger sound and so forth, theyâre approaching the piano with so much tension, itâs killing them.
When I went to Webster, that was all in place. His idea was, of course, because of his French background, thinking about music in terms of colors. Because you canât play French music unless you have a color palette in your head somewhere.
Now, with Leginska, youâd go to play, and youâd be about to start, and she would say, âOh, itâs way too loud.â And she would know. That the angle of what youâre doing, and what youâre about to do, itâs going to be too loud. You canât get that sound from that distance. And weâd work on a measure, a bar of music, for an hour.
So when I went to Webster, I remember he gave me something to play, and I came in and I started playing, and I kept waiting for him to stop me. You know: whatâs going on? And he said, âNo, it sounds great, keep playing.â I hardly had much prepared, because I never got past half a bar [with Leginska].
So, the volume of repertoire changed. His premise was: I donât care how you play. If you want to play with your toes, and itâs beautiful, I couldnât care less. So that was a completely different approach to making music, the product more so than the process. With her, it was the process and the product. With him, it was the product.
Stepanich: At some point, you got interested in conducting. How did that happen, and what appealed to you about it?
Robertson: You know, by the time I got to Juilliard, I was concertizing a lot, but way back in the most secret inner sanctum of my soul was this desire to conduct, to be a conductor. And every season with the L.A. Philharmonic, my father would take me. Every week we had a [ticket] for the entire thirty-some, 43 weeks, every Thursday up in the nosebleed section there, listening, and just watching the conductor.
And I remember when I went to Juilliard, I talked to my father about conducting, and he asked me a question which kind of stunned me. He said: âDo you know of any black conductors?â Well, I had not thought of conducting as being whether youâre black, white, red or purple, but he was making a point. The opportunity to get to that podium â I remember when [Seiji] Ozawa became [conductor of the Boston Symphony] â God, an Asian on the podium! What does he do differently? Well, nothing. Absolutely nothing.
So, that kind of caught me in my tracks. And it wasnât that I shouldnât do it, but how do you get there? Whatâs the process?
Well, when I was at Juilliard I decided to study choral conducting because that was a lot easier way to get into it. And I had the opportunity to work with a really fabulous conductor, Abraham Kaplan, who had the Collegiate Chorale in New York and taught at Juilliard.
And when I went back for my doctorate at Juilliard in piano, one day my wife said to me â and this is one of these earth-shattering moments â âThereâs something I donât understand about you. When your manager calls you to do a concert tour for the piano, you say, âWhat are you going to pay?â If a conducting opportunity comes by, you walk naked in the streets to do it. What do you want to do with the rest of your life?â It was one of those things where you donât want anybody to ask you that, particularly not your wife.
And Iâll never forget: She asked me that around 10 oâclock one night, and it was not until about 1 oâclock, that I finally, with tears in my eyes, just said: âI want to conduct. I want to conduct an orchestra. Thatâs what Iâve wanted to do all my life.â And of course, saying that is really treacherous, because if youâre not able to do it, then youâve failed, youâve failed at a dream. And she said, âWell, letâs start managing our life in such a way that this might be possible.â
And Iâll never forget, when I finished my doctorate at Juilliard, I was asked to join the faculty at Oberlin [College], in piano. And at the very same time that came up, there was an opportunity for me to go to a small department in Lancaster, Massachusetts, at Thayer Conservatory [Atlantic Union College]. But they had an orchestra, which I would have the opportunity to conduct.
And Iâll never forget talking to the head of the music department at Oberlin, and heâs saying: âI donât understand. Youâre going to do what?âBut I made that decision, to go that route. So I had an opportunity to conduct an orchestra, and about a year or two after that, I was still concertizing as a pianist, but a year after that, Herbert Blomstedt was doing a workshop out in California. And my wife says, âWell, why donât you go? Are you afraid to go?â
Well, the answer was Yes. I was afraid to go out there and have somebody who was really of his stature say: âWhy donât you stick with the piano.â So she literally challenged me, and I went out, and I was selected to be one of the 12 conductors to work with him.
And at the end of which, he said to me: âYou know, I really think youâve got some talent to do this. Iâd be willing to have you come live in Sweden, where I live, and work with me personally. Youâll be the first person Iâve ever taken under my wing. Iâll set up housing, Iâll make all the arrangements.â And I remember looking at him and I said, âDo you mind if I call my wife and ask her to fly out here so you can tell her this, face to face?â We had three children, and this meant literally packing up and going off to [Europe]. And he said, âSure. Iâm serious!âAnd my wife literally got on an airplane and flew out, and he said, âYes, this is what I will do.â
And that following September I was in Sweden, working with him, traveling with him to Dresden, sitting in rehearsals with the Dresen Staatskapelle, day after day after day.
Stepanich: Sounds fabulous.
Robertson: And it was so serendipitous in a way, that this was supposed to happen. Because this kind of thing just doesnât happen. You couldnât plan this, you couldnât make this happen. You couldnât pay him enough money to do this. And from that point on, opportunities came, and my whole conducting career just took off.
Stepanich: What was the most important thing about conducting that Blomstedt taught you?
Robertson: Technical discipline. Being able to express your musical ideas with your technique. And when you think of really great conductors who donât have really good technique, they know how to rehearse, they have great musical ideas. And he used to say that good technique does not make you a fine musician. If you are a fine musician, it helps you express it.
The other thing he did for me was one of those statements that someone makes that just changes your life. We were walking, and we were in Dresden at the time, and one of the things, one of the most exciting moments in my life, is when weâd go walking in the forest. And weâd walk, and we loved to walk, and thatâs when weâd talk about music. Or heâd talk about music and Iâd listen.
One day we were walking and he said to me, âYou know, Jon, you have a lot of passion in your music-making. But thereâs something you need to do. You need to sift your passion through your intellect, and what comes out will be just right.â Listen, I can remember the spot [where he told me that].
He always used the term âorganicâ: âDo an organic ritard here.â Which, in turn, has a lot to do with how you interpret, because you tend to connect things more naturally together than this big ritard. Then something new comes here. And something new comes here.
The bigger picture begins to [come out], which to me is what itâs all about, being able to step back and see, which is not to get rid of detail. Quite the opposite, because those details will make the bigger picture all the more real.
What a wonderful experience in my life!
Stepanich: Youâve been very fortunate.
Robertson: Blessed, blessed. [Blomstedt] said to me, when I went to live with him in Sweden: âHere is my library. Itâs at your disposal. And so I would go and take some scores, look to see how heâd â and I remember one day he said to me, âDo you notice anything about my scores?â And I said, âYeah, there are no markings in it.â He said: Exactly. At the top he would have maybe three or four recordings timed. And I said, âWhy are your scores empty?â He said, âBecause when you go to study it again, youâll only see your old markings. You wonât see whatâs new. And everytime you go to conduct, you have to start all over again. Because youâre going to see things that youâve never seen before.â So my scores are clean now.
Stepanich: Youâve conducted all over the world. How did audiences in all those places take to you?
Robertson: In all places, it was a novelty; when I was conducting in China, wherever, there just are so few black conductors in the business. Obviously, in the final analysis, really fine orchestras, within two bars, three bars, they know [whether the conductor is any good]. In fact, Blomstedt used to say, in the old, great orchestras, they knew watching you walk out if they were going to play for you or not.
I remember I did Beethovenâs Ninth in Cape Town, and people literally packed the place and came after and said: âWe came because we have never seen a black conductor.â The chorus, working with them, I had people who wrote me letters, who said, âAs Afrikaners, to have a black man make music with us at the level we did â it was an experience.â I had people come to me with tears in their eyes, hug me ⌠and it wasnât just because I was black. It was the artistic level: thatâs what made being black special.
Stepanich: In Los Angeles, you were noted for your music outreach programs in the inner city. How did that come about, and do we have something similar going on here?
Robertson: We donât, and itâs something I want to do.
At UCLA, we chose two high schools, predominantly black schools, and weâre talking the deepest part of the ghetto.
Stepanich: Compton.
Robertson: Exactly. Thatâs exactly where it was. Where teachers fear to tread. Some floors of the school you donât go to, because youâre scared to death.
But there was this one school that had a young guy who headed up the music, and thatâs why we chose that school, because he was just phenomenal. The guy was like a Moses, the guy was a trailblazer. And we also picked a predominantly Latino school, and a middle school, again predominantly black, and one Latino.
And my students would go into these programs and give free lessons. Because that was the component they couldnât have. I mean, you take a band program, you learn to play an instrument but you donât get a private lesson. And I got funding from Toyota, and another foundation that thought this was the best thing since sliced cheese, and we went in and my kids â and I said, God, please, donât let this program end in a bloodfest in the streets. Thereâs this white kid from some nice family and so forth that gets killed in Compton doing this program. And I tell you, that part of it scared me almost more than anything else.
But these kids loved it, and the kids they worked with, they were like sponges. Theyâd leave a lesson drained. Do you know, that after we invented that program â I was there 12 years, we started it in my second or third year, all those years it ran â 98 percent of the students at the black school went to college? And at least four of them got into UCLA. You know what I did? In the 10th grade, I bused them into UCLA to teach them how to take the SAT.
And that was probably among the more exciting things Iâve been part of in my life. Iâd like to do something similar here, but what I first have had to do, though, is to consolidate the conservatory and get it where I wanted it to be. And I think our brochure, four years in the making, you will see when you look at the faculty, you look at the programs, that we have come into our own.
Now I would like to start doing some outreach things here that are well thought-through and can make a meaningful contribution.
Stepanich: Technology is a much bigger part of being a musician today, both for classical and pop musicians. Are you taking advantage of that here?
Robertson: Absolutely. Thereâs a course we teach that goes in depth into this.
We bring in people to counsel [the students]. For example, next year, the next time we teach this, weâre going bring in a tax consultant. There are all kinds of rules and regulations, youâre going out here, youâre self-employed. Do you know what youâre doing?
During our J-term, which happens during January, itâs a month where we do things that we normally couldnât do, or donât do, during the regular school year. There are no classes, we bring people in, weâre bringing in an Alexander technique specialist [bodily coordination] to work with the kids who are having tension problems and so forth. And weâre bringing in a woman from San Diego State who has a tremendous program there that I want her to duplicate here, where she goes into depth into the whole business of how to use the computer to do things for you, ways and means that are available to get your career started in the 21st century.
She actually has a program there where she goes to booking conventions, and where they have a talented string quartet, gets them performances in different places, a booking agency. Which I want to have here, with the talent we have here: Oh, my God. The whole running the gamut, when you come out, you are prepared: How to make a brochure, how to craft a fine resume, how to use a blog, how to advertise what youâre doing, specifically, in detail. Itâs made a huge difference with our kids.
We are trying to really package something that is practical. You come out of here with some real-world knowledge, real-world experience, and if we havenât done that, we have ripped you off.
Stepanich: Whatâs the final bill going to be on the new concert hall?
Robertson: Oh, gosh, itâs going to be almost $15 million.
Stepanich: And how many seats?
Robertson: 750.
Stepanich: And itâs got good acoustic engineering, I imagine.
Robertson: Oh, weâve been all over it, man. Itâs going to be sweet.

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