Almanac Sections · Mark CXXIV
Auditions
The vocabulary of getting in the room: All-State, Region, Conservatory audition, Mock audition, Sight-reading. The terms students search when they're trying to understand what's about to happen.
All-State
A state-level honor orchestra that brings together top high-school musicians by audition. Each state runs its own All-State (TMEA in Texas, FMEA in Florida, NYSSMA in New York, etc) with its own audition rubric and repertoire rotation.
Region / District
Sub-state audition tiers that feed into All-State. Most state systems run a District audition first (a few hundred students), then a Region audition (50-100 students), then All-State (the top 10-20%). Repertoire is usually the same across tiers; standards tighten at each step.
Conservatory audition
Live audition for admission to a music conservatory or college music program. Usually 10-15 minutes total: a concerto exposition + Bach or other unaccompanied work + sight-reading + scales. Behind a closed curtain in some schools, in front of faculty in others.
Mock audition
A practice audition meant to simulate the real-room experience: timer running, panel listening (real or AI), full take with no restarts. The Simulator mode in Orchestra Kingdom puts you in front of three named AI panelists who deliberate live.
Sight-reading
Playing a piece of music you've never seen before, on the spot. A standard component of most orchestral and conservatory auditions. Tests fluency in note-reading, rhythm, stylistic intuition, and bow distribution under unfamiliar conditions.
Browse other sections: Rubric + scoring · Repertoire · Tools + technique · Theory + style