A R Conducting Becomes Her A peripatetic orchestra leader wins wide applause for the way she teaches and wields her baton ust reading excerpts from Kay George Roberts's appointment cal- endar is exhausting. June 1987, New York City: guest conductor at Lincoln Center ... August, Lowell, Mass.: prepare to resume teaching and con- ducting at the University of Lowell's College of Music ... September, Glouces- ter, Mass.: start second season as music director of the Cape Ann Symphony ... October, Bangkok, Thailand: return for second guest-conductor appearance with the Bangkok Symphony Orchestra ... De- cember, Cairo, Egypt: conduct the Cairo Conservatoire orchestra. Her boundless energy alone might make Roberts a standout in her chosen profes- sion. But she is also a black American fe- male in a field historically dominated by white European males. Roberts, 37, re- ceived her doctorate in orchestral conduct- ing from Yale in 1986-the first woman and second black to do so. A full professor at Lowell, Roberts has performed with or- chestras around the world, winning critical acclaim both here and abroad. She is "ex- ceptional," says D. Antoinette Handy of the National Endowment for the Arts. Without early exposure, this maestro might never have pursued a musical ca- reer. An elementary-school teacher in Nashville, Robert Holmes, placed a violin in her hands and provided a performing outlet through his black-youth ensemble, the Cremona Strings. By ninth grade Rob- erts qualified for the Nashville Youth Sym- phony. She later joined the Nashville Sym- phony and, while still an undergraduate at Fisk University, toured with the World Symphony Orchestra conducted by Arthur Fiedler. She might have focused only on the violin. But her conducting talent was no- ticed and encouraged during graduate work at Yale and honed by training with such musical giants as Leonard Bernstein. "The orchestra becomes your instrument. You shape the balance, the dynamic levels, through your interpretation," she says. Arduous path: In the United States, success in conducting requires a unique confluence of talent, training and opportunity. Donald Thulean of the American Symphony Or- chestra League says there are only about 1,570 orchestras nationwide. Compensa- tion for directors varies from personal sat- isfaction to six-figure salaries. Training From Thailand to Massachusettsi Roberts, with a music student at Lowell Maestro: Roberts leading the student orchestra at the University of Lowell can be arduous and expensive, with a limit- ed number of highly rated programs. What counts is extensive experience on the podium and at administrative tasks. Affiliate Artists Inc. (AAI), the nation's only program providing three-year profes- sional appointments, has only a few open- ings each year. And the evaluation of can- didates is highly subjective: David Alpert of AAI says he seeks "the X factor-unusual compassion and ability to communicate music with a baton at a level that is inde- scribable. You just feel it." The music world can expect to hear more and more from Roberts. Whether she pur- sues a full-time position with a professional orchestra or devotes her major energies to teaching seems entirely her choice. Either way, she's already achieved what most con- sider the ultimate career success: earning fame and money for doing what you love. DIANNE H. McDONALD in Lowell, Mass. NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 39