Conducting as the art of leadership

A conversation about communication, clarity, imagery—and why leadership has more to do with listening than with volume.

A blog by Alessa Prochaska, featuring interview excerpts from a conversation with conductor Andreas Zöller.

What we can learn from orchestras

An orchestra is no coincidence

50 to 120 people, one moment, one breath – and yet each voice remains unique.

In conversation with conductor Andreas Zöller, it quickly becomes clear:

Music is only the surface here. Underneath lies something deeply familiar:

Leadership, communication, trust, and timing.

The Interview

Alessa

How do you actually become a conductor?

Andreas

You become a conductor because you have a good education—or because you find an orchestra, or even start one yourself.

There are many paths: the classic route through university studies, through music education, or—like me—part-time alongside a job through an academy.

Alessa

And what’s the most important skill you learn there?

Andreas

Communication.

Table of contents

Leadership doesn’t begin with competence—it begins with connection. Not technique, not authority, but relationship-building.
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Alessa 

Is communication more verbal or nonverbal? 

Andreas 

In rehearsal, it’s about half and half. 

You hear something, give verbal feedback—and then it has to align nonverbally: baton, movement, body language. 

In the end, what I say, what I show, and what I want to hear have to be one. 

Alessa 

That’s coherence. 

Andreas 

Exactly 

If I stand there calmly and say, “I’m incredibly excited,” it’s weird. 

And it’s the same in an orchestra: if I want to hear excitement, it has to show in my words and my movements too. 

On coherence: People trust what feels consistent. When words, body, and timing tell different stories, the nonverbal almost always wins.
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Alessa

You work a lot with images, don’t you?

Andreas

A lot.

For example, with legato we like to say:

“We don’t let a single ray of sunlight between the notes.”

That’s much clearer than “play connected.”

One image replaces a thousand corrections. Good leadership doesn't only speak to logic, it speaks to imagination.
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Andreas

Or tone color:

I imagine the orchestra as colors.

The oboe might be violet, the bass dark brown, the flutes yellow.

Then I communicate a mix—and everyone fits in with their own color.

Alessa

And still the oboe stays the oboe.

Andreas

Exactly

If the double bass sounded like the violin, we wouldn’t need it.

Not what is said, but how it sounds is important. Applied to brands and teams: tone, attitude, energy.
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Alessa

Do you ask the orchestra for their opinion too?

Andreas

Yes, very often.

For example: “At what tempo do you feel the piece?”

120 or 124 beats—a huge difference for us, barely audible for the audience.

But: I set limits.

A rehearsal isn’t a discussion circle. At most two questions.

Alessa

What was your biggest communication “aha” moment?

Andreas

That everyone first wants to be met where they are.

Positive language is extremely important.

Not: “You’re late.”

But: “I’d like you to be a bit more punctual.”

And: feedback.

The smallest—but super important—feedback is a smile.

On feedback: A glance. A smile. A short applause. Feedback isn't just an add-on. It closes the communication loop.
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Alessa

When does an orchestra become a top orchestra for you?

Andreas

When you can feel that everyone genuinely wants to be there.

That we feel safe, feel joy at creating something together.

The audience notices immediately.

Communication is more than communication.

It’s how you feel while you’re communicating.

Mini glossary

Solo · Orchestra · Tutti

  • Solo: One voice consciously takes responsibility
  • Orchestra: Many voices shape something together
  • Tutti: Everyone together—maximum impact

FAQ

That leadership has less to do with volume and more to do with clarity, timing, and listening.

Through a shared image, not through rules.

Because they reach everyone at the same time—regardless of role, experience, or perspective.

Takeaways

A great orchestra doesn’t happen because everyone plays the same. It happens because what shared image they’re creating together.

Leadership is not a solo. It is a finely tuned tutti, with space for every voice.