Fall 2013 Issue of
Transcription
Fall 2013 Issue of
f a l l 2 0 1 3 Thoughts from the President An artist’s view of fundraising My life has been filled with the most propitious and surprising opportunities. And, as we all know, it is very hard, likely impossible, to know just how life plays out, based on one’s best assessments and consequent decisions. In my sixth year in the Boston Symphony, I was approached by the Juilliard String Quartet without ever having dreamt of having such a job. The exciting new position and the move to New York (where I hadn’t lived in 10 years) couldn’t have come at a better moment. My grandmother, who was 90 and a big part of my life, lived only blocks from Lincoln Center, was heading into her last years. The job at Juilliard afforded me the chance to be with her at odd times between rehearsals, before concerts and after work and created a bookend of giving back to someone who had given me so much. Perhaps the most treasured aspect of my years is, once again, the bookend quality of giving back. It was during a random phone call with my dear predecessor at CIM, David Cerone, that he asked whether I’d consider putting my hat in the ring for his job. After picking my jaw off the floor, I managed to say that, yes, I would think about it. Five years later, it has been my great honor to travel a joyous path with the Cleveland Institute of Music and its beautiful faculty, trustees and staff, a path of intensive learning on which I have treasured every minute. Perhaps the most treasured aspect of my years is, once again, the bookend quality of giving back. As performing or teaching artists, our energies are consumed by the care and devotion we expend in service of those few minutes spent with our listeners from the stage or with our students in the studio. We live for those minutes. And yet we rarely get to know (or even sometimes get to meet) the thoughtful and generous citizens who have sponsored our concert, our learning environment and their important cultural interactions. Bel Canto: A Healthy Approach for Beautiful Singing My greatest privilege during the past five years has been to get to know all of our trustees and donors. I have been privileged to learn each of their fascinating life stories, the stories that long ago or more recently brought them to us, and to find out what inspired them to decide to sponsor the important work of a world-class music conservatory in Cleveland. ABOVE As an artistic veteran of hundreds of performances over a long career, I now find myself deeply and constantly touched by the heroism of the citizen who, acting from a passion for beauty, for insight and for young people, has made the decision to give and to help create future culture for Cleveland and for the greater world through the artistic lives of CIM’s students. On behalf of CIM, I find myself standing and screaming “Bravo, Bravissimo!” Piano technician William Schoeffler setting backchecks on a Mixon Hall concert grand (story page 14) Each day, as I work to find ever new resources for our important work and for student scholarships, I find great joy. — Joel Smirnoff 2 12 Mary Schiller working with master's student Kate Kostopoulos (story page 12) ON THE COVER Departments features 4Noteworthy Khristenko Wins CIPC Fitz Gary Receives Fulbright Welcome New CIM Trustees Play Me I’m Yours New Officers of the Alumni Association 50 Years of Opera: David Bamberger Alumna Instills Confidence in Children 8 The Next Great Repertoire Notes interviews President Smirnoff about the Composer/Virtuoso. 16 Events: Season Preview 14Steinway Tuning CIM's pianos requires a knowledgeable touch and sensitive ear. 18Development Donor Profile: Jan Curry 12 Bel Canto: A Healthy Approach for Beautiful Singing CIM's voice program creates balance utilizing Italian method. 20Alumni Snapshot: Steven Greenman 21Listings Alumni Appointments Prizewinners Faculty New Faculty In Memoriam fa l l 2 0 13 3 Noteworthy Khristenko Wins Cleveland International Piano Competition Twenty-nine-year-old Russian pianist Stanislav Khristenko (AD’11) won the 2013 Cleveland International Piano Competition (CIPC) in August. The winning performance by the former student of Sergei Babayan “was the most distinctive by a wide margin,” said Cleveland Plain Dealer reporter Zachary Lewis. “From start to finish, the pianist had listeners on the edge of their seats.” The prestigious CIPC is a biennial, 12-day extravaganza celebrating the piano and those who’ve dedicated their lives to mastering it. Since 1975 it has attracted toptier candidates, ages 18-30, who compete before an international jury and audiences. Previous winners have included CIM faculty members Antonio Pompa-Baldi and Mr. Khristenko’s mentor, Sergei Babayan. CIM faculty pianist Paul Schenly is the artistic director for the competition. In addition to a monetary prize, Khristenko will record a CD, perform in recital at Carnegie Hall and receive three years of management. Khristenko is no stranger to the CIPC, having placed third overall in 2005. Photo courtesy of CIPC, credit: Roger Mastroianni New Trustees Include Previn, Tilson Thomas and Watts At the Annual Meeting in July, Brent M. Buckley, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees, announced the appointment of new members of the Board, including André Previn, Michael Tilson Thomas and André Watts to the International Council. In addition to a passion for classical music, all have made a commitment to the future of CIM. International Council New Trustees • Grammy Award-winning conductor, composer and pianist André Previn has been honored for his musical accomplishments with the Austrian and German Cross of Merit, the Glenn Gould Prize and Lifetime Achievement Awards from both the Kennedy Center and The Recording Academy. He holds chief artistic posts with such orchestras as the Houston, London and Pittsburgh Symphonies, as well as the Los Angeles and Royal Philharmonic orchestras. • Cynthia Bassett , senior vice president of UBS Financial Services, has been in the investment business for more than 40 years. She is also a published travel photographer, documenting her vacations around the world. • Founder and artistic director of New World Symphony, Michael Tilson Thomas is also music director of the San Francisco Symphony. He has gained international recognition both as a music director and guest conductor. In addition to numerous awards, he was the recipient of the National Medal of Arts in 2010, the highest award given to artists by the United States government. • Ann Buescher owns and operates Interstate-Mcbee, a Cleveland-based company that reaches around the globe to provide engine parts, fuel injections and gaskets for the heavy duty diesel and natural gas industry. • Classical pianist André Watts has played before royalty in Europe and heads of governments in nations all over the world. A 2011 National Medal of Arts recipient, his extensive discography includes works by Beethoven, Schubert, Liszt and SaintSaëns. He is currently on faculty at the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University. Read about more CIM prizewinners on page 22. 1 Fitz Gary Receives Fulbright Scholarship Alumnus Fitz Gary (BM’11) received a Fulbright Scholar grant for music study of the two Brahms Viola Sonatas in Luebeck, Germany with Barbara Westphal. “I believe CIM has fully prepared me for this next chapter in my life,” Gary said. “Choosing CIM to study with Jeffrey Irvine was one of the best decisions I ever made. I was challenged and encouraged by the nurturing and balanced environment CIM offers. Looking back at how ‘complete’ my education was, top training is provided for so many facets of the music field so it becomes easy to find one’s own interests and at the same time, remain a rounded and whole musician.” Established in 1946, The Fulbright U.S. Student Program aims to increase mutual understanding between people of the United States and the people of 4 more than 150 countries that currently participate. Scholarships are awarded to U.S. graduating seniors, graduate students, young professionals and artists selected through a national, merit-based competition for study and research abroad. Grantees’ fields of study span the fine arts, humanities, social sciences, mathematics, natural and physical sciences, and professional and applied sciences. Sponsored by the Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, approximately 1,500 U.S. students and 3,000 foreign students receive Fulbright scholarships each year. • Marjorie Moyar, a member of the CIM Women’s Committee for six years, has served on various boards, including Benjamin Rose, Hitchcock Center and the national board of the women’s philanthropy organization at her church. She is active in International Orthodox Christian Charities and has a private practice in clinical psychology. 3 1.André Watts 2.Michael Tilson Thomas 3.André Previn 2 CIM was named a Top Fulbright Producer in 2011. Previous Fulbright recipients include: • Julie Ann Link, bassoon (MM’11) • Louis Chiappetta, composition (BM’11) • Felix Ungar, viola (BM’07, MM’09) • Danilla Strasfogel, violin (MM’03) • Lee Hancock, piano (MM’04) • Eliesha Nelson, viola (BM’95) fa l l 2 0 13 5 Noteworthy Celebrating 50 Years of Opera in Cleveland International Art Project Encourages Spontaneous Performance David Bamberger has contributed nearly 50 years of service to the Greater Cleveland area as an arts leader, advocate, educator and artistic director—including 10 years with the CIM Opera Theater. The acclaimed art-meets-music project Play Me, I’m Yours, came to Cleveland this summer after touring internationally since 2008. Conceived of by British artist Luke Jerram, dilapidated pianos received a second, short-term lease on life before being retired. The pianos were tuned and given a creative paint job before being placed in public outdoor spaces throughout Cleveland’s University Circle to encourage spontaneous performances by passers-by. CIM’s piano joined the more than 800 others that have been installed in 37 cities across the globe, from New York to London. CIM’s art piano, designed and executed by CIM Graphic Design Manager Casey Ocasio and Piano Technician William Schoeffler, spoke to CIM’s mission of music education. Painted a classic black, portions of the upright piano were replaced with plexiglass, allowing a clear view of the impact fingers have on keys. A model and printed legend behind the plexi provided additional illustration of the piano-playing process. Alumni Association Introduces New Officers PRESIDENT | Liz Huff1 (BM’98, MM’99, Beverly Rinaldi) is assistant director of annual giving and alumni relations at the Cleveland Institute of Art. She is active in musical theater, concert work, improv and collaborative arts projects. She also performs in the trio Vocal Trespass and as the vocalist in the duo Dos Gatos with fellow CIM grad guitarist Robert Gruca. VICE PRESIDENT | Organist Chris Toth2 (BM’88, AD’89, Karel Paukert) handles five centuries of music as an active Cleveland-area freelance musician. He performs at many churches, is accompanist for the Cleveland Messiah Chorus and acts as music director of high school and college musical theater productions. His is an active member of the American Guild of Organists and the registrar for its Cleveland chapter. 1 3 2 4 SECRETARY | Soprano Tina Beltavski (BM’92, MM’94, George Vassos) has performed with Cleveland Opera, Lyric Opera Cleveland, The Singers’ Club of Cleveland and others, and shares her voice throughout Northeast Ohio in the Diocese of Cleveland and at private events. A fifth-degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do, she is co-owner of T&T Martial Arts, Ltd. 3 TREASURER | Greg Bonanno4 (MM’10, Margaret Brouwer, Paul Schoenfield, Keith Fitch) oversees the Performing Arts Program at Cleveland Clinic’s Arts and Medicine Institute where he coordinates more than 300 performances by CIM students and alumni a year. He served as president of the Ohio City Bicycle Co-op and chaired both the Governance and Finance/ Human Resource Committees. 6 He came to Cleveland in 1964 to provide essential support to a major production in crisis. While adept in the spoken theater—staging works such as Much Ado About Nothing and A Streetcar Named Desire—it was his 1969 Severance Hall debut of RimskyKorsakov’s Le Coq d’Or for the Lake Erie Opera Theater that foreshadowed the impact he’d have on the Ohio arts community. In 1976, with two colleagues and $25, Bamberger founded Cleveland Opera. Serving as both administrative and artistic leader for 28 years, he personally directed some 50 productions—ranging from the standard repertoire to creative interpretations of less familiar works. Through his imaginative programming and productions, he brought the company, and Cleveland, international media attention before resigning in 2004. It was then that Bamberger joined the CIM Opera Theater as artistic director, and began conducting workshops at CIM—coaching aspiring artists in blocking, staging, acting and character analysis. In his decade at CIM, Bamberger has seen many voice students go on to achieve success in professional opera, such as mezzo-soprano Irene Roberts (MM’08), who debuted at both The Met and the San Francisco Opera last year. CIM Congratulates David Bamberger on this milestone! Alumna Instills Confidence in Special Needs Children This summer, Pepper Pike Learning Center in Orange (OH), expanded their theater program Stagecrafters to include a new camp utilizing musical theater for children and young adults with special needs. The adaptive musical theater program Broadway Buddies was started in spring 2012 and is now directed by Claire Connelly (MM’10, Schiller) who also acts as a voice teacher and community show director. Although her position as music director isn’t an operatic part, Connelly said CIM more than prepared her latest role. “The community outreach program at CIM with Chris Haff Paluck showed me all the different avenues for music to enhance lives,” she explained. “I learned about opportunities for music therapy and instilling confidence in people through music. The rest is history!” program. To Connelly, “They reveal a new way to enjoy music each session. They hear a detail in a song I hadn’t heard before and jump into music with an unbridled passion that rejuvenates my soul.” Broadway Buddies campers learn music and choreography to upbeat, contemporary show tunes during weekly sessions and then perform final shows where they sing, dance and recite lines. All graduates of CIM are automatically members of the CIM Alumni Association. Want to get involved? Contact Char Rapoport Nance, Development Officer, Alumni and Parent Relations at [email protected] to learn more. “I see an increase in confidence and self-awareness in campers, ages 12 to 22, from the first day until the end,” Connelly said. But the campers aren’t the only ones benefitting from the fa l l 2 0 13 7 A new, young audience eagerly awaits great music reflecting the culture and life experience of today, played by composers themselves from the stage. This fall, CIM launches the Year of the Composer/Virtuoso, wedding the disciplines of interpretive performance and composition in the service of the next great repertoire. The Next Great repertoire U ntil mid-20th century, classical music’s most celebrated composers captured the culture of their time through the performance of, and advocacy for, their own creations. Opening their hearts, they performed their own music from the stage, maintaining lifelong connections with audience and community alike. As live performers, they felt both the pull of culture and the obligation to speak artistically in the voice of the community. As we begin the second decade of the 21st century, we must ask: who will be the audience for CIM’s graduates and what music will sustain that audience? Answer: a relevant next great repertoire that speaks in its cultural language and knows the culture in which that audience lives. CIM President Joel Smirnoff has declared this academic year the Year of the Composer/Virtuoso and CIM intends, throughout the year and in many ways, to re-focus the 21st century conservatory’s central mission on building the next repertoire, utilizing a tried and true formula, yet embracing the contemporary culture of today. This year in Notes, we will explore many aspects of the composer/virtuoso model, from its deep roots within our current repertoire to the current new efforts within CIM’s classrooms. This article presents a discussion with President Smirnoff concerning the strong presence of the composer/ virtuoso in our greatest past repertoire and how he or she will positively influence our musical future. Why is the issue of building the new repertoire important? As a faculty member, one feels deeply responsible for the future lives of one’s students. As president, I feel yet more responsible, as I have an understandably deep stake in the basic value of CIM for each of them. I constantly ponder: Where will these musicians be in 30 years and what music will they play? Interpreting a Beethoven sonata or quartet, becoming literate with the great repertoire is basic and necessary to our students’ education. However, they need to also commit to help create the next great repertoire, drawing their peers to the concert hall. Contrary to prevailing wisdom, the challenge facing today’s composer is not that of creating music that is easier or more pleasant to listen to, but rather to speak in the musical language of the listener. Is the composer/virtuoso a new idea? This is not a recent invention, but rather a long held tradition. The long and strong history of pianists who dominated classical music composition, Vivaldi, Bach, Beethoven, Rachmaninoff, Bartók, Prokofiev and Shostakovich contrast sharply with the celebrated non-performing composers of more recent times. Creating music without performing it is a recent model, antithetical to that through which our most beloved composers found creation. CIM has its own wonderful history of composer/virtuosi. There was a golden period here when a community of composers led as faculty and as administrators of the school: Beryl Rubinstein, Arthur Loesser, Victor Babin and Marcel Dick, all complete musicians, all composers and performers who enjoyed playing each other’s music. How wonderful! This community of composers set a strong example for their students, reminding them of the nature of conservatories of the 19th century. We hope, in the Year of the Composer/Virtuoso, to somewhat retrieve this past tradition of CIM. What were the characteristics which helped produce our current repertoire? Certainly the 19th century musician was always expected to compose and to show up in a foreign town with something of his own to play. When linked together, one’s playing and compositions communicated a powerful, dramatic and complete musical picture of the composer/virtuoso for the audience. One likes to imagine Mozart at age five, already traveling the musical capitals of the world, sitting in rooms filled with adults, improvising and successfully communicating something meaningful in that context. His improvisations and creations, those of Beethoven and many others, were, in a manner, a musical response to their nightly audience and this environment was the template, perhaps, of the best training of a great composer. What is the importance of improvisation in creating new work? Nearly all great composers improvised. The very famous 1964 live jazz performance, My Funny Valentine by Miles Davis, is an improvised masterpiece. In January, we get to witness a great improviser at work when Gabriela Montero visits CIM as our next performer in the Mixon Hall Masters Series. This important pianist and composer will play Brahms, Schumann and then engage the audience in a series of improvisations from the stage. Contrary to prevailing wisdom, the challenge facing today’s composer is not that of making music that is easier to listen to or pleasant. It is to speak the musical language of the listener. fa l l 2 0 13 9 Composer/Virtuosi of CIM's Past Beryl Rubinstein (1898–1952) Years at CIM: 1921–1942, 1944–1952 Positions held: piano faculty, head of the piano department, dean, director How do new compositions succeed and become a masterpiece, or part of a great new repertoire? Art of all kinds must connect to the community and to culture. One must speak the language of an audience to have an audience. Culture is the language of your audience—the culture they share. To be relevant to them, you must speak their language and interact with them. The artist’s true job is to take raw culture, chop it up, boil it down, cook it, and serve the community art that reflects the universal essence of life itself. Great art utilizes culture, reflects on it and brings forth art with insight and commentary. Gershwin, Bernstein, Copland, our most celebrated American composers, used culture well. For a time, a cultural expression has been viewed as being more visionary, but it is time to, once again, find, hear and enjoy familiar cultural content and exult in identifying cultural sources within a musical work. There should be both the expectation and purpose of hearing familiar musical messages, phrases we might already know and recognize. A lesser-known but wonderful work of Copland, Music for a Great City, has a movement entitled Subway Jam, a thrilling threeminute ride on a New York subway. Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, his most dramatic piece, grapples successfully with our conflicted lives as individuals and citizens. The very somber 4th Symphony of Sibelius describes the melancholy stoicism of life in wintry Finland and its challenges. These are just three examples of the composer powerfully capturing a very specific moment in time, the zeitgeist or spirit of their time. What is CIM doing to teach composers of the next great repertoire? It is my hope that the 21st century conservatory will once again encourage players to compose and composers to play. Here at CIM, we are hard at work nurturing the composers of the next great repertoire through improvisation ensembles, composition for non-majors, the new program under development for the composer/virtuoso, a Mixon Hall Masters Series comprised entirely of composer/virtuosi, prizes for compositions by noncomposition majors and, with the help of Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Museum of Art, cultural seminars furnishing a wider view of culture for our students. 10 Young people today have a nose for culture and its diversity and they will to dig to find it. In our global village, cultures overlap and we constantly sense the pulse of other cultures. As we have asked in the past “Music, where will it take you?” Our students can now work internationally and with an international cultural palette of expression. Classical music can, once again, reflect our world’s compelling cultural dialogue to build a new, young, vibrant international and multicultural audience. Donors Embrace Composer/Virtuoso Philosophy Trustee Carl Baldassarre was inspired to create and fund THE BALDASSARRE COMPETITION for composer/ virtuosi. In the spirit of challenging creative abilities, applicants must both write a composition and perform it in a solo or small ensemble format. In addition to submitting their scores and a recording of the piece, applicants must write a short explanation of the work—not about the X factor (the performance), not about the Y factor (the piece itself) but about what Mr. Baldassarre calls the Z factor— the inspiration, why it's compelling and how it will reach new audiences in a special way. Winners will be selected from three categories this spring: junior Preparatory, senior Preparatory and Conservatory students. The Women’s Committee also recognized composer/virtuosi with a new annual prize, awarded to a returning student who has been recognized for both composition and performance. The inaugural recipient of this award is second-year student Colin Laursen, who studies violin with William Preucil and composition with Keith Fitch. He was presented with the award prior to a performance of his own work with Rubén Ernesto Rengel Cardona at CIM’s Fall 2013 Opening Exercises. In addition to several American and European tours, Beryl Rubinstein also toured as an assistant pianist for the Duncan Dancers, a troupe headed by Isadora Duncan. He wrote an Outline of Piano Pedagogy (1929) and his compositions included two piano concertos, a string quartet and numerous pieces and studies for piano solos. Rubinstein took a two-year sabbatical from CIM to enlist in the U.S. Army. As captain in the Fifth Service Command, he traveled 20,000 miles, participating in 75 concerts for servicemen in North Africa, Sicily and Italy as the coordinator of the unit’s wartime musical activities. Arthur Loesser (1894–1969) Years at CIM: 1926–1969 Positions held: piano faculty, head of the piano department An international solo performer, he was part of the piano team with Beryl Rubinstein during the 1920s and 30s. He was the author of several books including Men, Women and Pianos: A Social History, which portrayed the piano as the center for writing the social history of the last 300 years. He also penned program notes for The Cleveland Orchestra, liner notes for recordings by Vladimir Horowitz and other musicians, and was a music critic at the Cleveland Press. In 1943 he served the U.S. Army, working in the Japanese intelligence department. When the war ended, he gave recitals with lectures in Tokyo. He retired from the army as a major. Victor Babin (1908–1972) Years at CIM: 1961–1972 Positions held: director, piano faculty His duo with wife Vitya Vronsky (also piano faculty), was described by Newsweek as “the most brilliant two-piano team of a generation.” Despite a break from performances during World War II, when Babin served in the Armed Forces and Vronsky worked with war casualties in Washington, DC hospitals, they still managed to perform more than 1,200 concerts in North America alone. His compositions, in a conservative, post-Romantic language, include two concertos for two pianos and orchestras, other compositions for one and two pianos, chamber music and many songs. Marcel Dick (1898–1991) Years at CIM: 1946–1973 Positions held: viola faculty, head of theory and composition department Marcel Dick was the principal violist of the Vienna Symphony Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra and The Cleveland Orchestra. Most of the 29 works in Dick’s catalogue were composed after emigrating from Europe to the United States. He conducted The Cleveland Orchestra in premieres of his works, Adagio and Rondo for Orchestra (1951) and Capriccio for Orchestra (1955). One of his most accomplished students was Donald Erb, who eventually went on to become CIM’s head of composition. In addition to forming the Contemporary Music Series at CIM, Dick received an honorary doctorate in 1978. fa l l 2 0 13 11 bel canto A healthy approach for beautiful singing A sign in Dr. Southern’s studio echoes this sentiment, “Rigidity is the enemy of beautiful singing.” He explains that even he is guilty of holding on (to the muscles.) “I caught myself holding my shoulder up a little bit, and there’s a dichotomy because you feel it, which is what you think you want in singing—to feel it. But when you DON’T feel it is when you’re singing correctly and it sounds even better. It’s free sound.” Students need to engage the entire mid section and see expansion all the way around, keeping the chest free. Lower sides and back muscles need to be involved in proper breathing, not just the stomach. It’s How You Say It “Vocalists have something that our instrumental friends don’t,” said Dr. Dean Southern. “We have words.” For American vocalists, these words are often in a language that is not their own. By the time they graduate, CIM students must have taken one year each of French, Italian and German at Case Western Reserve University. They also take diction classes at CIM, learning to translate the language into the international phonetic alphabet. “Free, loose, fast diction is the goal for singing,” said Dr. Southern. “Not the robotic pronunciation that occurs when most people think of diction. Consonants should be released naturally, not pushed out.” Above: Dean Southern works with master's student Preston Masters. “It seems as if it’s in vogue to pressurize the voice, make it too large too soon,” said Dr. Schiller of singers she sees when she’s away at summer festivals. “Trying for that big sound can upset breath flow and causes the vocal folds to press too tightly together. It’s just not a healthy way of singing. It causes that ‘red in the face’ moment.” Returning to the idea of free, unforced sound, Dr. Southern said “I was trying to explain this concept in Graz [Austria] this summer, and I paraphrased Clifford [Billions]. He said that you want to radiate a beautiful tone, rather than drive it.” M uch like Goldilocks, CIM vocalists are always striving for just right. Not too loud, not too soft, not too dark, not too light, not too strong, not to subtle, not to slow or too fast, just balance. Voice Department Head Mary Schiller explains that she wants CIM to be a haven for Bel Canto, an Italian method of singing that focuses on free, unforced sound known for its balance, beauty and seamlessness of tones. Free sound happens when the breath is perfectly coordinated with the muscles that control it. Dr. Schiller, Dr. Dean Southern, Clifford Billions and Vinson Cole work with 50 to 55 students each semester. The size of the department also speaks to balance—it’s both small enough that all the faculty members know all the voice students and large enough to support two fully-staged opera productions each season (and a scenes program in the spring). 12 Above: Mary Schiller coaches senior voice student Carson Dorsey to achieve free, unforced sound. There is an open and constant exchange of ideas among faculty members, all of whom focus on Bel Canto principles such as appoggio (Italian for “to lean”) and legato (a seamlessness of tones) to ensure students have the building blocks for successful careers and vocal longevity. To achieve Bel Canto, a vocalist has to get rid of the muscular tensions. “We need to find those holds and tensions, the muscular garbage,” Dr. Schiller said. “When there isn’t free, unforced sound, one finds those tensions in the neck, jaw, throat, back, tongue, shoulders. All those muscles are trying to stabilize the larynx but having the opposite effect.” Dr. Schiller and her colleagues work with students on building a physical awareness of where their tensions manifest. Like athletes, vocalists must constantly train in a balanced way to maintain control. It can take a lifetime to perfect all the different pieces of the body working together in just the right way at just the right time. Even the most famous singers, such as Placido Domingo and Joan Sutherland, have said they must find their voice anew each day. Just as an instrumentalist must provide proper care for his instrument, so must a vocalist care for her voice. Good health, nutrition and proper amounts of rest and hydration also help to rid the body of these tensions, while physical fitness helps with muscle control and breathing. “All the tools we teach are about painting the mood, illustrating the story, the poem and the character. Creating a work of artistry,” said Dr. Schiller. Read how these tools inspired one donor to give to the CIM voice program on page 18. “Students are often surprised by how fast they move their mouths to speak, but yet they go into slow motion when they sing. It is a major component of our teaching to get those two speeds to match,” he continued. Dr. Schiller strongly encourages students to attend festivals, workshops and competitions abroad for immersion into other languages. The exposure helps them pick up regional dialects and increases comprehension. “Ideally, we want them to be able to THINK in the language they are singing,” Dr. Schiller said. “…you want to radiate a beautiful tone, rather than drive it.” fa l l 2 0 13 13 Steinway. Steinway’s reputation is that of unsurpassed quality and sound, making it the Rolls Royce of pianos. Tuning these pianos requires a knowledgeable touch and sensitive ear. CIM is an All Steinway School, a distinction given to educational institutions where students perform and are taught exclusively on Steinway pianos. Three tuner technicians are given the grand task of maintaining CIM’s 161 Steinways, the oldest of which was built in 1893. The team manages everything from the daily tuning and voicing of the concert grands in the halls, to the tuning and regulation of the studio and practice room pianos, the rebuilding of actions, repairing of soundboards and the restringing of instruments. Although their efforts are mostly behind the scenes in CIM’s piano workshop, the quality of their work takes center stage every time a pianist performs. A Period of Free Motion Composers wanted to be able to repeat notes very quickly but that wasn’t possible on early pianos. Surprisingly, the solution was found not in a period of rapid contact with the keys, but instead, during a period of no contact at all, created by the “double escapement action.” In simpler terms, towards the end of the keystroke, the hammer escapes from the key and is in free motion, at which point it strikes the string, rebounds and is caught by the backcheck. It is at this point of free motion that the double escapement resets and makes ready to restrike the string. If the hammer didn’t escape, it would just rise, strike the string and deaden it, both creating and dampening the tone at the same time, the felt of the hammer muting the string. Tuning By Ear Technicians need to be good listeners and translators in order to understand what the pianist wants for tuning, voicing and mechanical issues. But, in addition to listening to a piano’s musician, CIM technicians must listen to the piano itself. Much like snowflakes, no two pianos are the same. Each piano is unique in tonal quality and dynamics, making each tuning different. Many factors, such as changes in humidity, can cause a piano to go out of tune. High humidity causes the soundboard to swell, stretching the strings and causing the pitch to rise. The tuner works with and accommodates these factors each time he tunes the piano. A time honored tradition is followed, adding to the artistic level at CIM. “The history of tuning is tuning by ear,” Schoeffler explained. “We tune by ear, we listen and adjust based on what we hear. It teaches you to hear very minute differences and is extremely accurate.” Fun Steinway Facts How Music Is Made • Five members of CIM’s faculty are Steinway Artists, which means they have chosen to perform exclusively on Steinway pianos and each owns a Steinway. Segei Babayan, Antonio Pompa-Baldi, Paul Schenly, Sandra Shapiro and Gerardo Teissonnière are among the 1,600 concert artists who bear the title. The following descriptive "poem" was written by Schoeffler for inclusion on CIM’s Play Me, I’m Yours piano. (Read more about the project on page 6). • Steinway held 126 patented inventions to improve the production of their pianos. • During World War II, the Steinway factory in New York built the G.I. Piano, one small enough to be lifted by four men, painted olive or gray, carried aboard ships or dropped by parachutes from an airplane to bring music to soldiers. The Inner Workings of the Piano by William Schoeffler (MM’87, DMA studies’87-91) • In 1994, the world’s first academy for concert technicians opened its doors, The C.F. Theodore Steinway School for Concert Technicians (also known as the Steinway Academy). The pianist depresses the key The key activates the capstan The capstan engages the repetition The repetition carries the jack The jack throws the hammer The escapement releases the hammer The hammer strikes the string The back check catches the hammer The string creates the tone The bridge carries the tone to the soundboard The soundboard transmits the tone to the listener The listener is moved and music is made “There’s a period when the pianist is not in control because the hammer is in free motion,” said William Schoeffler, a 10-year tuner technician at CIM. What many people don’t realize is that period of free motion is just as critical as the period of contact―and it’s one that Schoeffler has to adjust when regulating. To do so, Schoeffler focuses on the heart and soul of the piano, known as "the action." The action, which consists of more than 4,000 parts, can be considered to include the keys which extend 18 inches into the piano and the stack which holds the double escapement. “Optimizing the action and making it work best for the musician is my holy grail,” he said. ABOVE Piano technician William Schoeffler setting backchecks on a Mixon Hall concert grand: one of a myriad of regulations that must be accurately and evenly performed to bring a piano into peak performance. LEFT The major overhaul of a CIM concert grand in the piano shop: the plate was pulled, soundboard repairs were made, the instrument was restrung and the keyboard was fully regulated, keyweighted and voiced. 14 fa l l 2 0 13 15 2013 | 2014 Concert season preview CIM’s 2013-14 Concert Season promises to be one of the most exciting and innovative so far. Billed as the Year of the Composer/Virtuoso, this season rounds out the definition of the complete musician, the artist who understands community, hears culture in its diversity and creates new music based on that inspiration. The culturally informed composer/virtuoso has always created our most cherished repertoire and, in the 21st century, finds enthusiastic audiences. The robust season focuses on this theme, but also includes classic favorites, such as the beloved opera theater and more than two dozen faculty recitals by world-renowned musicians and orchestra performances both at CIM and Severance Hall, home of The Cleveland Orchestra. Visit cim.edu for details about CIM’s 2013-14 Concert Season. mixon hall masters series Return of the Composer/Virtuoso In an academic year dubbed CIM’s Year of the Composer/Virtuoso, it is no surprise that the artists CIM has invited to the critically acclaimed Mixon Hall Masters Series are not only masterful musicians but innovative composers as well. Culturally informed— like the composer/virtuoso of old (think Mozart and Liszt)—this generation of talented artists is creating the next great repertoire, redefining the modern classical music experience. The series kicked off with Lera Auerbach . This pianist/ composer has made a name for herself with uniquely personal interpretations of standard repertoire as well as composing bold 1 1 2 Ishii-Eto in rehearsal with the CIM Orchestra works for symphony, opera and ballet, including the 2012 ECHO Klassik Award winner The Little Mermaid. CIM, in collaboration with the Cleveland Museum of Art’s Performing Arts Series: Masters of the Violin, co-presents the O’Connor String Quartet , with violinist, composer and pedagogue Mark O’Connor2 . O’Connor is a product of classical music training and America’s rich aural folk tradition. The Series continues in the New Year with pianist Gabriela Montero3 , who has a devoted following of her own thanks to her visionary interpretations of classical repertoire and her improvisational gifts. Wrapping up the Series is composer, singer, choreographer and director Meredith Monk4 , a pioneer of what is now called “extended vocal technique.” Monk is known for her groundbreaking exploration of the voice as a unique instrument, expanding the boundaries of sound and musical composition. 3 4 CIM@SEVERANCE Faculty Recitals The CIM Orchestra performs five times in the splendor of Severance Hall, home of The Cleveland Orchestra this season. Conductors include Carl Topilow and guest Kimbo Ishii-Eto (above). These events feature new faculty such as HaeSun Paik, guest artists and students as soloists. (October 9 | November 20 | February 12 | March 28 | April 19) More than two dozen events showcase CIM’s renowned faculty performing with students and guest artists, including other members of The Cleveland Orchestra. CIM@Severance: A Celebration of Community This spring, President Joel Smirnoff leads the Orchestra in a Celebration of Community, featuring ensembles from the Cleveland School of the Arts, Antioch Baptist Church and The Singers’ Club of Cleveland for Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. This is the second such celebratory concert for the CIM Orchestra, showcasing a commitment to community and paying homage to CIM’s special relationship with CSA—where CIM students and faculty coach young performers. (March 28) Opera Theater: The Magic Flute Under the artistic direction of David Bamberger, this season offers two fully staged productions and the everpopular scenes program in the spring. The season opens when Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) returns to Kulas Hall (where it was last seen in 2008). The event is filled with magic, adventure, laughter and the enchanting music of Mozart’s final operatic masterpiece. (November 6–9) 16 Daniil Trifonov Premieres Work for Piano and Orchestra On the heels of winning the XIV International Tchaikovsky Competition and the 13th Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition, pianist and CIM student Daniil Trifonov (AC'12) made his CIM professional debut in November 2011. This season, he takes the stage at CIM for another unprecedented debut, performing a benefit concert for the institution that helped shape him into a composer/virtuoso. The CIM Orchestra will premiere one of his original works in April. (April 23) New Music: Special Events In addition to the New Music Series with special guest composers, CIM’s focus on composition this year is highlighted with two special new music performances. CIM continues its partnership with MOCA Cleveland in their new building this March. The special evening is inspired by the act of “giving up the ghost,” with each work reflecting the composer’s experience with death—a fitting counterpoint to MOCA’s exhibition Dirge (March 20). In February, the New Music Series features the premiere of 360-degree films by Cleveland Institute of Art students, scored by CIM student composers, debuting on the planetarium dome at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History (February 25). fa l l 2 0 13 17 Development Want to make a difference in a way that is meaningful to you? Contact Development Officer Steve Pike at [email protected] or call 216.791.5000 x706. $2.3 million A Year of Growth Annual Fund Shows Nearly a 10% Increase in Support The Development Committee extends its heartfelt thanks to the entire CIM team of trustees, volunteers, donors, alumni, parents, students and employees who have given to CIM. Each teacher knows each student. They aren’t trying to push a voice too fast in order to get it someplace that maybe someone else wants it to be. Jan Curry with husband Richard Rodda. credit: Daniel Milner Donor Profile: Jan Curry Love of Opera Leads to Voice Scholarship Jan Curry didn’t grow up with music in her household, but she fell in love with the classical genre after college. She’d moved to a town in Nebraska “that loved its college football,” and she jokes that she discovered the Metropolitan Opera while flipping channels in a conscious effort to avoid broadcasts of the game. “I believe I connected with the voice because I have one,” she said. “I never had access to musical instruments and I don’t know much about music, but my true passion would be voice.” She warns that she can’t sing herself, nor carry a tune, but that doesn’t stop her from singing all the time. She laughs, saying she pities her husband Rick Rodda (a lover of music who holds two degrees in trombone performance) for having to listen to her. “He tells me it’s okay though because my heart is in the music,” she said. Jan and Rick are already avid supports of CIM. Both are members of the Legacy Society. Rick, who used to teach a graduate seminar at CIM on program annotation, has amassed a collection of books, albums and CDs that will continue to enrich CIM after he is gone. Jan has been an active member of the Women’s Committee for 12 years and served as president. Understanding that the need for tuition assistance is strong at CIM, her latest show of support is through a voice scholarship. “There are so many wonderful ways to support CIM,” she said, “but when selecting an area for scholarship, I chose my passion—opera.” “Opera is kind of like all of the arts rolled into one,” she said. “The drama! You have the theatrics, the musical…singing, instruments. I get carried away by the sound and the beauty of the whole thing, the costuming and the general magnificence of it.” Wanting to learn more, Jan met with faculty member Dr. Dean Southern and department head Dr. Mary Schiller. Her in-depth look at the voice department helped cement her resolution to support the voice program. 18 “The things I learned from them, about how CIM’s program is shaped really impressed me,” she said. “Each teacher knows each student. They aren’t trying to push a voice too fast in order to get it someplace that maybe someone else wants it to be. They develop the voice in the most healthy way possible to maximize the natural ability. Voice faculty like Mary and Dean so carefully prepare the building blocks for a student’s career.” Jan already attends all of CIM’s operas, but now that she’s a scholarship donor, she intends to attend more voice recitals, too. Her interest in vocal performance will be nurtured while she enriches a student’s education. Clichéd as it may sound, Jan insists that as a donor, she benefits far more than the students she supports. “It’s such a rewarding experience, especially in a place like this where people are just open and willing, excited to share their gift,” she said. “And what’s more, the musicians recognize that they need an audience. And they respect you as someone who appreciates their music. I’m happy to play that role.” Read more about CIM’s voice program on page 12 increased engagement was raised for scholarships, endowments, special projects, estate gifts and special designated funds. 55% was for the Annual Fund, a 9.7% increase from last year. New Tactics 30% growth in parent and employee giving 24% growth in alumni giving 19% growth in foundation support The Women's Committee Cuyahoga Arts & Culture held their biennial benefit in support of CIM, featuring Grammy-winning songstress Roberta Flack and the CIM Orchestra. Additionally, they presented musical luncheons and small benefits. continued to provide public support, helping to enrich and preserve the region’s artistic and cultural heritage. CIM’s current funding from CAC is $716,270. CIM organized its first multifaceted appeal this spring. The SayYES! appeal utilized video, social media, direct mail, phone and handouts. In addition to raising awareness of the critical need for scholarship funds, the appeal raised nearly double its financial goal. (Read more about this appeal in previous issues of Notes.) $100,000 Raised Through Challenge Donations Donor Group Growth The Legacy Society, celebrating individuals who have included CIM in their estate planning, increased by 19, growing to 294 members. The Ernest Bloch Society, honoring donors of $1,500 and above, welcomed 12 new members, bring its total to 117. The Opus 10 Society, recognizing donors who have given to CIM for 10 or more years, welcomed 15 new members, bringing the total to 295. The Annual Fund’s success was due in part to the generosity of Board Chair Mal Mixon, who presented a match-challenge to his fellow Trustees. Twenty-six members accepted, raising nearly $50,000, which Mr. Mixon matched dollar-for-dollar. The Alumni Association also presented a fund challenge. CIM Women's Committe Invites You to Join CIM’s strongest supporters include members of the Women’s Committee. The 200+ members provide time, talent and treasure, making sure students feel at home at CIM from the moment they audition through graduation. • Musical Luncheon Series: lunchtime concerts which include a performance by students and faculty. This season includes A Taste of Opera (Nov. 13), The Magic of Three—Piano Trios (Feb. 19) and Preparatory Division Showcase (May 21). The Committee conducts several signature activities that directly benefit the students, such as Audition Day Lunches, travel assistance to competitions and festivals and a Thanksgiving meal for students who can’t go home for the holidays. Other special activities include the following events. • Benefit Concerts: This season’s fundraising events include Rockin’ Bach (Oct. 4) and Time to Tango (June 7). I encourage you to join us and find out for yourself why CIM inspires our support. Membership is open to women and men for an annual fee of $45. For information or to join, visit cim.edu/support. –Linda Harper, Women’s Committee President fa l l 2 0 13 19 Alumni Snapshot { submit A lumni N ews Instrument: Violin Degree and years at CIM: BM’89; M M’91 Instructor: Linda Cerone, Eugene Gratovich, Alan Bodman, Bernhard Goldschmidt Current occupation: Violinist, composer, educator Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in klezmer and other East European Romani (Gypsy) music. What is it about this music that resonates with today’s audiences? Audiences are attracted to the passion and exoticism of the music. The rhythms and the accompaniment patterns plus the energy of the musicians and virtuosic performances really draw people in. For klezmer music, audiences are either drawn to the exuberance and liveliness of the dance melodies or the soulfulness and artistry of the listening repertoire. There is a deep religious and spiritual aspect that is inherent in klezmer music as well. Dancing is integral to both styles in their own ways. With all “folk” music, there is an enticing community element. The experience brings people together and the music has a specific community function usually for a traditional wedding or other joyous occasion. I am most honored when people say that my violin “spoke.” To communicate in this way is the goal we all have as musicians. This is the Year of the Composer/Virtuoso at CIM, which certainly describes you. Which came first, which one do you prefer, or are the two inseparable for you? I see myself as a “musician” who is a violinist, a composer and an educator. All three roles intertwine at times. I was a violinist and performer first, then after years of study of traditional Yiddish instrumental folk music, I became a composer of the style in a serious way. The beauty of being a violinist/composer is that I have had the honor and pleasure of performing full concerts of my own compositions. What a thrill! How did going to CIM affect you as a musician? As a person? I am grateful for everything I learned at CIM. CIM gave me the tools I needed to become a professional musician. Although my original goals were to become an orchestral musician (and I still do some of that with the area orchestras), I realize now that I utilize everything I learned at CIM in my work today. The regular violin lessons greatly improved my technique and musicality. Eurhythmics classes helped with my rhythm. Music theory and arranging classes helped me to transcribe and arrange music. Secondary piano classes enabled me to teach student ensembles while accompanying them on the piano. Violinist Steven Greenman is recognized internationally as one of today’s finest practitioners, composers and teachers of traditional East European Jewish Klezmer music and for his passionate performances of East European Gypsy music. He was originally attracted to the violin from listening to Isaac Stern play violin solos for the movie soundtrack to Fiddler on the Roof. How did you come to study this type of music? I had a serendipitous summer after my senior year at CIM that changed my whole career direction. In 1989 I attended the AIMS festival in Graz, Austria, to play in the opera orchestra. I ended up playing Jewish music on the streets with two of my close colleagues and an American student who played the accordion. I was so excited by the intense experiences I had that summer that when I returned to CIM to start my master's program, I started playing in a local folk dance ensemble called “Shalhevet.” In 1991, I joined a klezmer band in Cleveland and attended “KlezKamp”—a Yiddish folk arts festival followed by the “Buffalo on the Roof” festival. In 1993, my colleague Walt Mahovlich and I started the East European ensemble Harmonia. In Harmonia, I regularly played for 20 Hungarian, Slovak, Ukrainian, Romanian and Balkan ethnic festivals, concerts and events. By 1995 I was teaching at klezmer festivals and also performing concerts in Europe. From 1997-2003, Carl Topilow gave me the opportunity to solo with the Cleveland Pops at Severance Hall playing my own arrangements of East European Gypsy violin showpieces. During this time, I also became a composer of traditional East European Jewish folk music. Overall, I’ve been fortunate to perform and teach throughout North America and Europe. Locally, I have started several student klezmer groups, and I’m an artist with The Cleveland Orchestra’s “Learning Through Music” program. If not for that experience in Graz, I may not have had the opportunity to do all the things I am doing today. What makes you unique as a musician and educator? What are your hopes for the future? I can perform with a symphony orchestra, solo with an orchestra, perform with Eastern European folk ensembles, play with Jewish ensembles, be a strolling violinist, lead a wedding, compose and arrange music, lead klezmer master classes to participants of all ages, organize a concert tour, create storytelling programs with Jewish and East European music and dance for students and more. I often have to do several of these things back to back on some days! For the future, I hope to make new artistic collaborations and create new music in different ways than I am doing now. I have a dream of starting a klezmer ensemble course at a university or college, forming a professional Cleveland Jewish Chamber Ensemble and continuing to develop my Jewish-Chinese collaboration with my esteemed colleague Gao Hong, a world-class Chinese pipa-player. I am most honored when people say that my violin “spoke.” To communicate in this way is the goal we all have as musicians. Have some news for the CIM community? Visit cim.edu and click “Alumni.” You can download the News Submission form as an MS Word document. Complete it and then return it to us at [email protected] for publication in a future issue of CIM Notes. News is accepted on an ongoing basis and will be held until the next issue. Alumni Dr. Joseph A. Baldassarre (DMA’86, Harlan) retired from his position as professor of music at Boise State University (ID). He still performs nearly 10 times a month. Domenico Boyagian (MMʼ09, Topilow), music director of the Ohio Philharmonic Orchestra (OPO), released a new album on the Centaur Records label. Recorded live in May 2012 at the Cleveland Museum of Art, it features Boyagian conducting the OPO with CIM faculty pianist Antonio Pompa-Baldi. Cellist Mary Costanza (BM’85, Geber) released a two-disc set of The Complete Unaccompanied Bach Cello Suites on MSR Classics. Chelsea Coyne (MM’09, AD’10, Schiller) contracted with Holland America Line as the featured Female Legit Lead Vocalist on their elite vessel the MS Statendam. Coyne’s 201314 tour includes destinations throughout the South Pacific, Central America and South America, including Bora Bora, the Panama Canal and Half Moon Cave. In November 2012, Coyne made her acting debut at an equity house at Stage West in Fort Worth (TX) as Ilona Ritter in She Loves Me. In early 2013, she played Catherine’s First Lady in the revival of Frank Loesser’s Pleasures and Palaces at Lyric Stage in Irving (TX), returning in June as Mrs. Squires in The Music Man. Most recently, she made her music director and conducting debut in ONSTAGE’s production of Assassins in Bedford (TX). S u mfm a er l l 2 0 13 21 Daniel Grambow (MM’13, Billions) debuted as Miro in The Emperor’s Ears at Cleveland’s Talespinner Children’s Theater under the direction of Alison Garrigan, while serving as music director and arranger of several Serbian folk songs for the production. In July, he debuted in Italy at the Tuscia Opera Festival as Papageno in Mozart’s The Magic Flute. In September, he performed the role of Betto in Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi with Main Street Opera in Arlington Heights (IL). A work by Yuriy Leonovich (MM’08, DMA’12, Geber) was recently released by Cleveland Orchestra members Brian Thorton and Spencer Myer, commemorating Thorton’s teacher Lev Aronson (read more under Faculty). In June 2013, the cello section of the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra featured Dr. Leonovich’s cello-ensemble arrangement of Bach’s Prelude from the Fifth Cello Suite. This fall, he serves as an adjunct cello professor at Bob Jones University in Greenville (SC). Works by composer/pianist/cellist Dolores White (MM’74, Edwards, Erb and O’Brien) were released by Albany Records in November 2012, including Rock A My Soul and Rhythm of the Claves. In February, White spoke about breaking barriers from spirituals to tangos to electro acoustic in her cello compositions at the Athena Festival at Murray State University (KY). Her works have recently been performed in both the Chicago and Cleveland areas. Cleveland owned Five/Four Productions, Ltd. successfully captured the world’s highest resolution audio recording. Producer Thomas Moore (BM’86, MM’88, Mack), assistant engineer Ian Dobie (BM’11, Egre and Mack) and engineer Robert Friedrich recorded Martin Pearlman and Boston Baroque performing Haydn’s Missa in Angustiis Hob XXII:11 and Symphony No. 102 in B-flat Major Hob. I/102 in Mechanics Hall (MA). The recording will be released on the Linn Records label this fall. Appointments Dale Barltrop (PS’03, Preucil) was appointed concertmaster by Australia’s Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, beginning in 2014. In his first year, Barltrop will share concertmaster responsibilities with Wilma Smith, who recently announced that she would be retiring from the MSO at the end of 2014. Barltrop, a native of Brisbane, 22 is currently concertmaster of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra in British Columbia, Canada, and will continue to hold that position. Scott Burgess (BM’87, Goslee and Knab) was appointed manager of recording labs and live sound at the University of ColoradoDenver, one of the longest-running audio engineering education programs in the U.S. He continues to produce recordings for White Pine Music, the label he founded while at Central Michigan University. Previous projects include debut recordings for the Harlem Quartet and soprano Alyson Cambridge, with upcoming projects including the Catalyst Quartet and the renowned duo Bolcom and Morris. Jean-Sébastien Roy (PS’06, Kantor) was named concertmaster of the Columbus Symphony. The Montreal native will lead the CSO for one year, working closely with music director Jean-Marie Zeitouni. Prizewinners Freshman Nate Doucette won the 2013 National Tenor Trombone Solo Competition for the Under 20 Division at the Eastern Trombone Workshop held at Fort Myer in Arlington (VA). The annual competition is sponsored by The United States Army Band “Pershing’s Own.” Doucette’s musical composition The Rider won the “Original Composition – Orchestrated Work” in the High School Outstanding Performances Category in DownBeat Magazine’s Annual Student Music Awards, published in June. He studies with Massimo LaRosa. Keith Fitch (head, composition) was named an April 2013 Composer Assistance Program award winner by New Music USA. Twice a year, the organization accepts applications from composers to help support preparation and travel expenses for premieres of their new works. His newest work, In Memory (chamber orchestra), was premiered by the Orchestra of the League of Composers, Louis Karchin, conducting, in June at Miller Theater in New York City. The League commissioned the work in celebration of its 90th anniversary season. The New York Times called the work “worthy… (with) interesting things to say and intriguing ways to say them.” The work will receive its CIM premiere as part of the New Music Series in January. Nineteen-year-old NingYuen Li, student of Sergei Babayan, received the third prize in the Second Paderewski International Piano Competition. Of the 54 applicants from all over the world, 27 pianists were admitted to the competition, and 7 made it to the finals. Dr. Gary Olmstead (DMA’76, Duff) is one of four inducted into the Percussive Arts Society Hall of Fame in 2013. Dr. Olmstead is a percussion educator who built the Indiana University of Pennsylvania percussion studio into a leading educational organization. He has performed with the Westmoreland Symphony Orchestra and the Pittsburgh Symphony Chamber Orchestra, and has recorded with The Cleveland Orchestra. He has served in many positions within the Percussive Arts Society, including president for five years. CIM Distance Learning received a 20122013 CILC Pinnacle Award from the Center for Interactive Learning and Collaboration (CILC). The award is presented annually to organizations delivering outstanding K-12 standards-based interactive videoconferencing programs. Faculty Dr. Marshall Griffith (BM’59, MM’61, AD’69, MM’54, HD’84, DMA’83) was a lecturer for the Cleveland International Piano Competition in August, where he gave a Competition Conversation on Classical Improvisation and the Cadenza. His Jazz Trio, including CIM faculty and alumnus Brian Sweigart (BM’05, Yancich, Weiner, Brown), performed as part of the Competition’s opening ceremonies on July 30. Jeffrey Irvine (Fynette H. Kulas Professor of Viola) spent the summer teaching high school students (including freshman Bethany Hargreaves and Chloe Thominet) at the Perlman Music Program on Shelter Island. He also taught at the Karen Tuttle Coordination Workshop in June at New York University. Gerardo Teissonnière (Preparatory piano) presented a master class in Monticello (NY) at the Nesin International Music Academy, as part of their collaboration with The Amati Musical Festival, the International Piano Academy of China and the Jinan Foreign Languages High School. Brian Thornton (cello) launched a project to honor his teacher, Latvian cellist Lev Aronson. Aronson survived internment in a concentration camp during World War II, later coming to America where he became a principal of the Dallas Symphony and a teacher. Thorton’s tribute project includes a new album (released on May 29 and funded through a Kickstarter campaign), an annual festival in Dallas and a concert series. Thornton organized the First Annual Lev Aronson Legacy Festival Week this summer in Dallas. Jason Vieaux (head, guitar) performed at venues such as the Bridgehampton Music Festival, the Krannert Center, La Guitarra California Festival and the St. Louis Guitar Society this summer. Amidst a busy performance season, he married fiancée Erine in July. Fall season highlights include performances at Radford University, the Asheville Chamber Music Series, 92nd Street Y, University of Georgia and the John E. Marlow Guitar Series in Washington, D.C. Richard Weiner (co-head, percussion) presented master classes at the National Orchestral Institute in June, at the Oberlin Percussion Institute in July, performed at the Grand Teton Music Festival also in July and, although retired, continued to perform with The Cleveland Orchestra this summer. New Faculty Marc Damoulakis (percussion) has been a member of The Cleveland Orchestra since 2006. Before coming to Cleveland, he served as principal timpanist of the Long Island Philharmonic, assistant principal percussion of the Harrisburg Symphony Orchestra and was former co-principal percussionist of the New World Symphony. Samantha Damoulakis (Feldenkreis), founder of Cleveland Movement LLC, is a Guild Certified Feldenkreis Practitioner with 17 years experience in movement studies as a professional ballet dancer and teacher. Rebecca Hurd (Eurhythmics) is a graduate of CIM with degrees in oboe performance and Eurhythmics. She is a member of Mu Phi Epsilon and acted as festival coordinator for the inaugural season of ChamberFEST Cleveland. HaeSun Paik (piano) is one of the most sought-after pedagogical influences in Korea, and was the youngest pianist of her generation to be appointed to Seoul National University, where she taught for ten years. Yasuhito Sugiyama (head, tuba) began his tenure as principal tuba of The Cleveland Orchestra in 2006. A native of Japan, he was a member of the Vienna State Opera Orchestra prior to coming to Cleveland. Ashley Summers (improvisation) is also a double bassist, composer and educator with a master’s degree in Jazz performance from the Jacobs School of Music. Derek Zadinsky (bass) is a member of The Cleveland Orchestra and previously served as principal bass with Symphony in C (formerly the Haddonfield Symphony) in Camden (NJ). In Memoriam Ron Bishop, retired from CIM’s tuba faculty and The Cleveland Orchestra, passed away in July after a long illness. He was 78 years old. This past spring, he was recognized for his many contributions to the school and to music when CIM bestowed him with the title Faculty Emeritus at the 2013 Convocation ceremonies. “Ron was loved and respected by all as someone who selflessly dedicated his life to music, to his students and to their success,” said President Smirnoff. “He was at once a mentor and a colleague, someone who could guide and yet also nurture.” A memorial fund has been established in Bishop’s honor at CIM. To donate, visit cim.edu. Anthony Hopkins (BM’09, Witser, Stout, MM’11, LaRosa), principal trombonist for the Akron Symphony Orchestra, passed away suddenly in July. He was just 26 years old. He performed with various orchestras including the Springfield, Youngstown and Canton symphonies, as well as the Civic Orchestra of Chicago. He attended the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival Orchestra in Germany for two summers, as well as the Spoleto Festival in Charleston (SC). Hopkins knew the importance of mentoring within the community and taught lessons to positively impact younger musicians. He was honored at a memorial concert in August. A fund has been established in his honor at CIM. To donate, visit cim.edu. Bruce A. Conrad (BM’70, MM’73, Adelstein) passed away in August at the age of 64. A member of the Soaring Society of America and the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, he regularly competed in soaring events and pursued interests in history, classical music, investing and chess. He enjoyed careers in music as a trumpeter for the Osnabruck Germany Opera House, in aviation, in real estate and in computer technical support. Dr. William Martin (BM’51, voice, Distinguished Alumnus’12) passed away in August. He served the Alumni Association with distinction for many years, and as recently this summer, was still an active member. Russel Hall (Feldenkreis) practiced physical therapy for more than 30 years before transitioning fully to Feldenkreis in 2012. He trained with Paul and Julie Casson Rubin, graduates of the first American training. fa l l 2 0 13 23 Notes is published four times a year by the Cleveland Institute of Music. A pdf of the current issue of Notes is available on cim.edu. 11021 East Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio 44106 Address Service Requested Katie L. Kucera Communications Manager / Editor, Lead Writer c a sey oc a sio Graphic Design Manager / Design Leigh - Anne D ennison Marketing Manager / Photography s u s a n i ler Director, Marketing and Communications / Editor CLEVELAND INSTITUTE OF MUSIC 11021 East Boulevard Cleveland, OH 44106 P: 216.791.5000 F: 216.791.3063 E: [email protected] Preparatory classes at the main building and branches. | cim.edu The Cleveland Institute of Music is generously funded by Cuyahoga County residents through Cuyahoga Arts and Culture. About CIM Founded in 1920, the Cleveland Institute of Music (CIM) is one of eight independent music conservatories in the country and is known for superior orchestral, solo, chamber music, composition and opera music programs at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. CIM graduates play important musical roles in mixon hall masters series Return of the Composer/Virtuoso our world as composers producing meaningful new repertoire, as eminent instrumental and vocal soloists, as world-renowned chamber musicians and as members of premier orchestras around the globe. More than half of the members of The Cleveland Orchestra are connected to CIM as members of the faculty, alumni or both. Located in University Circle, Cleveland’s cultural hub, CIM is easily accessible to all music lovers—providing hundreds of concerts annually, most free of charge. Visit cim.edu for more information. GABRIELA MONTERO January 23, Thursday MEREDITH MONK February 21, Friday TICKETS: $28 & $40 Adults | $14 Students (with ID). Call 216.795.3211 Mixon Hall | 11021 East Boulevard, Cleveland
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