Bcrklce - Berklee College of Music
Transcription
Bcrklce - Berklee College of Music
Summer 1-¢I~95 Bcrklce t o y A Forumfor Contemporary Musicand Musicians 12 HerbPomero!l "52: I~leflectionson his Four Decadesat Berklee 17 L.A.’s Post-productionMusicScene variety to stri;~ SUMMER. 1995 VOLUME ¯ NUMBER VII ¯ 1 Contents LEADSHEETby Larry Monroe ’70 BERKLEEBEAT Honorary degrees for James Taylor, Natalie Cole, and Herb Pomeroy, newtrustees, faculty notes, visiting artists, and ~:nore THEORIGINALDEANby Charles Chapman ’72 A profile of 34-year veteran faculty memberDean Earl ON THE CDI/ER: Revered educator and jazz artist Herb Pomeroy ’52 reflects on his 40-year career at Berklee and elsewhere. Story on page 14. Cover photo by Bob Kramer. FIFTY ALUMNIOF NOTE A photo spread of 50 distinguished alumni . 12 HERBPOMEROY LOOKSBACKby Mark L. Small ’73 Herb Pomeroy’52: After 40 years as an educator, composer, and bandleader, Herb has a different perspective on music and people 14 POST-PRODUCTiON ROUND TABLEby Mark .L. Small ’73 Views from composers, music supervisors, and music editors about their roles in the industry and howthey got there 19 PRODUCING SCREEN MUSICby Stephen Webber A primer on the process of connecting film and music 22 ALUM NOTES News, quotes, and CODA:by Karl Bruhn The Value of Music Therapy recordings of note ............ 24 LEAD SHEET Good Foreign Policy Chair, Larry Monroe Performance "70 Division ~ Officeof InstitutionalAdvancement MarjorieO’Malley Directorof Develooment Beverly Tryon "82 Directo~ of Corporate Relatioas PeterGordon ’78 3irector of theBerklee Center in Los Angeles SarahBadge AsSistant Director of Development for Alumni Relations LauraLynn Kulba Assistant Director of the50thAnniversar,, Executive Leadershie Committee AS the alumni-o~iented music magazine of Berklee College of Music,Be~klee today is dedicated to in£0rming, enriching, a~8 serving the extended Be~kiee commun.ity. complishments, andmusicaltopics of interest, Ber~lee year all Ietters to the editor, andadvertis, Berkteetoda%Box333,BerkleeCollegeOf Muslc, MA02215-3693.(617) 266-1400, n details of ~ctivities sultable for feature coverage.Unsoliciteds~bmissionsaccepted. 2 Berklee today few weeksago, while I wastraveling with a faculty groupin Finland, a Helsinki taxi driver noted the Berklee stickers on our luggage and exclaimed, "Ah, Berklee!Great musicschool!"Afew days later, in northern Germany,I was discussing fund raising problems with the director of Landesmusikakademie, the site of a recent "Berklee in Germany"seminar. WhenI asked if using the nameBerklee was helpful in those government offices, the sourceof cultural funds in Germany, myhost smiled and simplysaid, "Magic."Overthe last decadeof international travel for Berklee,this type of incident has becomecommonplace.I’m continually surprised anddelighted to find howwidelyrecognizedthe college is. Berklee’s international commitment to music education wasestablishedin the very earliest days of the college’s existence. International recruitmentwasalwaysa priority for the college. Fromthose early years emerged alumni like Gabor Szabo, Joe Zawinul, and Toshiko Akiyoshi.Theycreated a tradition of musicalexcellence which has been maintained in recent years by Jacky Terrasson, WolfgangMuthspiel and MakotoOzone. Therecent development of a numberof initiatives has reinforced Berklee’s commitment to the musical needs of students fromall parts of the globe. TheBerklee"Onthe Road"seminars, begunin Japan in 1985, have been presented over 20 times in Europeand Asia with nearly 120 faculty and staff participating. International scholarship tours with auditions conducted in a dozen countries, havebecomea fixture in our admissionsstrategy. Three years ago, wecreated the Berklee International Network for ContemporaryMusic Education, a partnership of international schools of contemporarymusic. The networkprovides an opportunity for shared ideas in music andmusic education. Our participation in this dynamic group helps ensure that Berklee’s knowledgeof the many cultures embodiedin the world music communityremains current and complete. Clearly, that knowledge, along with our continuing commitment to the needs and talents of international students, is reflected in the consistent growthof our international enrollment, which nowrepresents 37 percent of our student body. Aswecelebrate our 50th anniversary, weshouldall be very proud that Berklee is respected and admired in every corner of the world, and that young musicians everywherecontinue to look to us for musical inspiration and guidance. Summer 1995 Berklee b e a t NATALIE, J.T., AND HERBHONORED Ne’Tdds of not8 from about town and around the world The 1995 Commencement was a most special one. Natalie Cole, James Taylor, and Berklee’s own Herb Pomeroy were honored before the largest graduating class in recent years. (The programlisted 591 names.) In celebration of Berklee’s 50th anniversary, past honorary degree recipients Roy Haynes, Phil Ramone, Karl Bruhn, Percy Heath, Ikutaro Kakehashi, and Armand Zildjian returned for the event. Also present were members of the Class of ’66, the first class to receive degrees from Berklee. The previous night, the Berklee Jazz/Rock Ensemble (featuring nine graduating vocalists and a string quartet) and the Berklee Concert Jazz Orchestra presented a tribute of 20 selections culled from the repertoires of each of the three honorees. A high point of the evening came 1995Commencement Honorees Natalie Cole, James Taylor, andHerbPomeroy withPresidentLeeEliot Berk. Summer 1995 when Natalie Cole joined the students onstage to sing her hit "Inseparable" in an impromptu vocal duet with senior Stefanie Kelly. After the NataliieColeandStefanieKelly"95 concert Cole remarked,"It is nice to get ident Berk spoke of her 15 this kind of tribute while albums with aggregate sales you are still alive--it’s of 26 million, and listed humbling too." An enthuawards she has earned such siastic JamesTaylor stated, as platinum and gold al"My songs are not widely bums, 11 Grammies, and a covered, so it was a plea- star on the Hollywood sure to hear these marvel- Walk of Fame. ous arrangements--they A teary-eyed Cole told were so full." the grads that she was very During the Sunday movedby the Berklee honmorning Commencement or and reflected, "I never exercises at the Hynes could have knownthe gift Convention Center, James I was born with would Taylor delivered an address mean so much to so many to the graduates describing people. Don’t ever lose music as "spiritual food." your feeling for music." "One point that was Before presenting Tayclear to me when I started lor his degree, President out," stated Taylor, "has Berk spoke of Taylor’s become more obscure as I spectacular career spanning have repeatedly taken my- nearly three decades, bringself to market. Music is a ing him platinum and gold gift, a blessing--we are the albums and singles, and lucky ones to have it in our three Grammies. "Through lives. Musicis the true soul his songs," Berk said, food. Play everyday and "James has been a spokestake it in front of the peo- manfor his generation." ple, they needto hear it and In presenting Pomeroy you need them to hear it. his degree, Berk cited Persevere. The Japanese Herb’s four decades of desay, ’fall downseven times, fining educational contristand up eight times.’" butions to the college, and In presenting the hon- noted that "it is a special orary doctor of music de- moment when one of our gree to Natalie Cole, Pres- ownreceives this honor." Berklee today 3 STARSTURNOUTFORHER8POMEROY TRIBUTECONCERT chestra, a 19- sitive quartet renderings of "Isfahan" and "Do Nothin’ ’til You Hear piece student from Me." Arif Mardin’s harmoniensemble comprising cally dense "Tone Poemfor Herbie," proved an excellent foil for solos by members drawn from Burton and Pomeroy. Joe Zawinul seven counand the student band performed his tries and sev- romantic "Rue Paula Freitas." en states, Zawinul played the melody and solo on "Pepe," his trademark wind-drivthrough the musically ad- en synthesizer controller. Greg Hopkins’ intricate and intense "Inner venturous =~ program. Voyage" closed the show with electrifying solos from bassist Laboriel The concert opened and guitarist Abercrombie. Interspersed between tunes were with AkiySaxophonists Tommy Smith"86 (leR) andSadaoWatanabe "65 oshi’s tourHerb’s humorous autobiographical werefeaturedwith the bandon Benny Golson’s "Stablemates." reminiscences and warmtestimonide-force "Harlequin als from President Lee Eliot Berk, Larry Monroe, Arif Mardin, and Tears," featuring her own quicksilThe night of April 29 was a historic one in the life of the college and ver piano lines and student saxophon- Gary Burton. An alumni reunion dinner at the in the life of Herb Pomeroy. The ist Bill Vint’s sure-footed tenor lines. Back Bay Hilton the previous night Gibbs’ ostinato-powered "The Time Herb Pomeroy Tribute Concert at launched the weekend. The Hilton t-Ias Come, The Walrus Said," folthe Berklee Performance Center graciously provided the dinner as lowed with shimmering solo work served as an unforgettable kickoff for their contribution to the Pomeroy from Abercrombie and Burton. KaBerklee’s 50th anniversary events. Scholarship fund. At the crowdedrerep’s rollicking arrangement of the The gala concert was produced by ception were alumni from across the Gary Burton to commemorate Herb Benny Golson chestnut "StablemPomeroy’sretirement after a 40-year ates," paired renownedsaxophonists country and from as far away as Jateaching career at Berklee. It drew TommySmith and Sadao Watanabe pan and the Czech Republic. The on tenor and alto respectively. The concert’s musical stars, Berklee some of Herb’s most distinguished "I RememberAmne- founder Lawrence Berk, his wife students from around the world to introspective Alma, Lee Berk and his wife Susan, sia" by Rob Mounsey changed the present compositions and perform DorothyShare, wife of the late Berkpace and showcased some concise with Pomeroy before a packed Berklee provost Bob Share, were among trumpet soloing by Tiger Okoshi. lee Performance Center audience. Pomeroy turned over the baton to the guests at the reunion. The event was made possible Trying to sum up the tribute through the lead sponsorship of Bank Magali Souriau for her piece "A Day events, Pomeroyreflected, "I’m sure on the Earth." She conducted the of Boston, and additional support from the Yamaha Corporation of band through the evocative chart in it is going to take me a while to asAmerica. Funds raised at the concert an animated, dance-like fashion, en- similate and comprehend the magnitude of this weekend and what has will establish a Berklee scholarship couraging great solos from students just happened here." !Pete Rende (piano) and Bill Vint (soin Pomeroy’s name. prano sax). The Amongthe concert’s guest artists were Joe Zawinul ’59, Toshiko Ak- first half closed iyoshi ’59, Rob Mounsey’75, Sadao "with Pomeroy’s own barn burner Watanabe’65, John Abercrombie’67, Michael Gibbs ’63, Abraham Labo- "No One Will rid Sr. ’72, Tiger Okoshi ’75, Arif Room With Me," Mardin ’61, TommySmith ’86, and with incendiary soMagali Souriau ’94. Faculty members loing by students Christopher HolTommy Kamp ’92, Greg Hopkins, lyday (alto sax) and and Herb Pomeroy also contributed Elliot Mason charts, and Gary Burton ’62 (vibes), (trombone). Joe Hunt (drums), John Repucci Pomeroy, Hunt, (bass), and Ray Santisi ’54 (piano), Santisi, and Repucand Pomeroy (trumpet and fl~gelhorn) performed. Herb directed his ci opened the sec- WeatherReportfounderJoe Zawinul’59 played "Rue andthe studentorchestra. premier Berklee Concert Jazz Or- ond half with sen- PaulaFreitas"with Pomeroy 4 Berklee today Summer 1995 TWOELECTED TO BOARD OFTRUSTEI-’S The Berklee Board of Trustees elected two new membersat its meeting of February 7, 1995. Mike Dreese and Neal Curtin were proposed by the Trustees Membership Committee chaired by trustee Richard Wilton. Mike Dreese has enjoyed a successful career in music marketing for nearly two decades. He is founder and CEO of the 11-store Newbury Comics music retail chain. He also cofounded Boston Rock magazine, a monthly tabloid covering Boston’s underground music scene, and oversaw publication of the magazine’sfirst 80 issues. In 1980, Dreese cofounded Modern Method Records, and released 26 titles with the company. Dreese’s new folk label, Black Wolf Records, has released two discs since its startup in 1993. Dreese is also on the boards of the Harvard Square Business Association and the Boston Institute for Arts Therapy. He lives in Sudbury with his wife Laura. Neal Curtin is a partner at the downtownlaw firm Bingham, Dana & Gould, which specializes in corporate law. Curtin is actively involved with the DanaFarber Cancer Institute as a trustee and serves ~ as secre tary of the board. He chairs Dana Farb e r’ s Nominating and Governance and Oversight PresidentLeeEliot Berk(center) with new CommittrusteesNealJ. Curtin(left) andMikeDreese. tees and cochairs the Events Committee. A memberof the Boston FiHarvard graduate, Curtin nance Commission. Neal, currently serves as a direc- wife Gall and son "N.J." tor of the Harvard Alumni live on BeaconHill. Association. For several Curtin and Dreese bring years, Curtin served as a trustee membershipto 18. BIN ADDSNEWSCHOOLS Berklee’s global reach extended recently when two European music schools, the Pop/Jazz Conservatory in Helsinki, Finland, and American School of Modern Music in Paris, joined the Berklee International Network of Contemporary Music Education (BIN). These schools are the fourth and fifth institutions to join BIN since Berklee established it in 1993to support and improve contemporary music education around the world. The Pop/Jazz Conservatory, founded in 1972, is Finland’s largest conservatory. Their staff of 87 fulland part-time teachers works with about 750 students, 200 of whomare students in the college-level conservatory program. The other students, someas youngas three years old, are enrolled in various non-conservatory music education programs. Several faculty membersare Berklee alumni, including Keijo Pennanen ’86, Klaus Suonsaari ’84, Frank Carlberg ’90, and Eero Koivistionen ’89. The curriculum of the Pop/Jazz Conservatory follows three tracks; one for performers, another for music educators, composers,and arrangers, and a third for dance majors. Berklee alumnus Stephen CarbonSurnmer 1995 ara ’76 founded the American School of Modern Music in Paris in 1982. The school offers a rigorous and diverse education in contemporary music, which strives to avoid the exclusivity of a traditional European conservatory education. The American School’s 150 students are enrolled in a four-year di-. ploma program providing a solid foundation in harmony,ear training, arranging, and instrumental skills. Like Berklee, it gives students performanceopportunities in jazz, funk, rock, Latin jazz, and reggae styles. The school’s eight-member faculty includes Carbonara’s fellow Berklee alumnus, Shannon Murray ’84. Cooperative efforts between Berklee and the new network schools will initially involve clinics, workshops, discussions of curriculum and technology in music education, and student exchange programs. Other BIN members are La Fundaci6n Aula de Musica in Barcelona; Rimon School of Jazz and Contemporary Music in Tel Aviv; and Centre of Music Studies Philippos Nakas, in Athens. Berklee plans to expand BIN to include schools in South America, Asia, and in other parts of Europe. ,JAZZ50th SALUTE The Boston Globe Jazz Festival, in association with Columbia Records, will present a special concert in honor of Berklee’s 50th anniversary. The Toshiko Akiyoshi Jazz Orchestra featuring Lew Tabackin, the Leroy Jones Quintet, and the Berklee Student Jazz Band featuring Adrian Ross, are on the bill for this special salute at 8:00 p.m. on Saturday, June 24, at the Berklee Performance Center. Proceeds will go to the BerkleeCity Music Scholarship Fund. Tickets for this benefit concert are $25 and $15, and are available at the Performance (;enter box office and all Ticketmaster locations. Tickets may be obtained by calling (617) 931-2000, or by sending a selfaddressed, stamped envelope with a check or moneyorder to the Berklee Performance Center, 136 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, MA02215. For complete information, call the Boston Globe Jazz Festival Hotline at (617) 523-4047. Berklee today 5 NEWSCHOLARSHIPS Ai~NOUNCED FACULTY NOTES Billboard magazine’s concert sponsored by the The reEditor-in-Chief Timothy Gillette Company. ceipts from the sold-out Whitewasin attendance at the May5 Commencement Berklee PerformanceCenConcertto present a check ter concertwill establish a for $100,000to President permanent endowedscholLeeEliot Berkestablishing arship called the Boys a Billboard Scholarshipat Choir of Harlem Endowed Berklee.Thefundswill cre- Scholarship Fund. The ate a permanentlyendowed moneywill benefit deservtrust from whicha schol- ing students from the Boys arship will be awardedan- Choir of Harlem who are nually to students in Berk- seekingto enter or continlee’s Performance Division. ue at Berklee. In supporting the ProThe awardwill be madeat a spring Singers Showcase fessional Music majors, concert or anothersuitable Fred Schmidt,chair of the occasion, and representa- Professional MusicDeparttives fromBillboardwill be ment,arrangedto establish invited to present the a scholarship fund with MBNAAmerica Bank, award. Fundstotaling $10,000 whichis Berklee’sofficial were raised froma perfor- credit card company.The mance of the renowned awardwili be madeto one Boys Choir of Harlemat a or twotalented ProfessionFebruary 25 fund raising al Musicmajorsannually. Songwriting DepartmentChair Jack Perricone arranged, produced, and composedselected tracks for the Gall Winter CDBoogie to Heaven. Featured faculty membersinclude WayueNausand GregHopkins (trumpets), TonyLada(trombone), BruceNifong(alto sax), and GregBadolato (saxophones), and was engineeredbyRobinCoxe-¥eldham. Instructor of Guitar Joe Stump has released Night of the Living Shred, for the Leviathanlabel. CompositionProfessor John Bavicchi traveled to Klaipeda, Lithuania, for a June concert devoted exclusively to his chamberworks. BruceSaunders,assistant professor of guitar, played on the CD,Strange Pursuit by the Zone. AssociateProfessor of Guitar MikeIhfle scored the PBSdocumentaryThe Sun Dagger. Associate Professor of Percussion JohnRamsay wrote Art Blakey’sJazzMessages.Thetext includes interviews, transcriptions, and recordedexamples. Associate Professor of Guitar 6arrisen Fewell released a second CD,AreYou Afraid of the Dark? Associate Professor of Piano JeanneBrackeen released a new CDof Brazilian music which is titled Takea Chance. MP&E Instructor doao Carlos Fr~ase produced the HermanesAbreu Group’s CDCria Mineira. AssociateProfessor of VoiceNag~i$eott, Assistant Professor of Bass DaveClark, duhnRamsay,and Assistant Chair of Guitar Sick Peckhamreceived OutstandingContribution to Jazz Educationawards at the January IAJEconference in Anaheim,CA. Instructor of Guitar BanBordenauthored Wes Montgomery--TheEarly Years a folio of Montomerysolo transcriptions published by MelBay. Instructor of Guitar Dauid Newsamcowrote MakingMoneyTeaching Musi~ a career guide for music educators. Brass Chair TomPIsek plays trombone on the CD Jump or Die, which features the music of Anthony Braxton. Professors JouDamian (guitar) and BobWinter (piano) perform with John Williams, NancyWilson, and the Boston Pops Orchestra on a SonyCD, It Don’t Meana ThingIf It Ain’t Got That Swing. Associate Professor of Woodwinds Peter Cokkinias plays tenor on a CDby the Boston Saxophone Quartet. Featured composersinclude ThemasMc(iah and Paul Wagner.Joe Hostetter engineeredthe disc. Assistant Professor of HarmonySteve 8ochiuski plays guitar on Until Further Notice. Faculty members Ionic Germain (piano), BarrySmith(bass), and JohnRamsay (drums)are featured. Associate Professor of Film Scoring BavidSpear scored the EmmyAward-winning National Geographic documentarySurviving Everest. Your Source for the Finest Names iln Brass XVoodwin~ls ¯ All MajorBrands New,Used& Vintage ¯ Full Lineof Accessories oTrade-lnsAccepted ¯ WeBuyUsedInstruments ¯ Complete Repairs& Restoration ¯ ExpertConsultation ¯ WeShipWorldWide Rayburn MusicalInstruments The"Hubof Musicin Boston" 263 HuntingtonAvenue Boston,MA02115 Tel. (617) 266-4727 FAX(617) 266-1517 Nextto Symphony Hall Contact:LeeWalkowich Classof ’81 6 Berkleetoday Summer 1995 THEORIGINAL DEAN It was through a Berklee correspondence course in jazz theory that I first encounteredDeanEarl in 1966. That experience led to mycoming to Berklee. As one of myfirst ensemble instructors, Deanhad a profound influence on me. A hallmark of his teaching style is his unique ability to pinpoint your musical inadequacies while making you feel good about yourself at the sametime. Dean’s gregarious personality and ready smile have endeared him to manyat Berklee over the 34 years he has served on the faculty. He is easy to spot--everpresent coffee cup in hand, cracking a joke on the elevator in the 1140 Boylston Street building as it chugsto the fourth floor. He has taught a number of successful musicians during his Berklee tenure. In his office there’s a dog-eared copy of a 1993 Keyboard magazine interview in which Bruce Hornsby cites Dean as an influential teacher. Born Everett Earl, it wasn’t until he came to Boston that he got the more familiar moniker. "Eddie LeVine, who owned a club called Eddie’s [later knownas Wally’s] on Massachusetts Avenuegave me the name Dean," says Earl. "He told me, ’We have Duke Oliver and King Cole--you need a new name.’ He started calling me Dean and it stuck." His Berklee colleagues dubbed him "The Original Dean." Dean states: "I can’t remembera time when I didn’t play piano. We had rent parties and house parties with everybody gathered around the piano taking turns playing. I first played by ear. I did everything in the key of C-sharp. The black keys fit the contour of myhand and felt comfortable. It wasn’t until I learned to DeanEarl: Vaudeville,Bird, Berklee Summer 1995 read that I played in other keys." Dean learned to read music from the older boys in his Brooklynneighborhood, and began learning popular tunes from sheet music that came out weekly in those days. One of his school teachers heard him play and convincedhis father to provide little Deanformal instruction. By the late ’30% he was working with a traveling troupe of vaudeville singers and dancers. In 1942 he enlisted in the Army Air Corps and was stationed at Chanute Field, out:side of Chicago. Dean was assigned to the Special Services Department, and performed for bond shows, soldier shows, and hospital tours, and played with the 505th Army Air Force Band. He received a commendation from the post commander when he was discharged and was elected to the Board of Governorsat Chanute Field. After the war, he madehis way to Boston and began working as a pianist. In 1953he took advantageof his GI bill benefits and entered Berklee,. He went year round, graduating in 1956. One of Boston’s top professionals, he shared the bandstand with the best local and touring musicians. He was house pianist at the Hi-Hat club, and played the Savoy and the Southland where he befriended Count Basle and sometimes subbed for the Count in the Basle Band. Jazz luminaries Dean has workedwith include Charlie Parker, Billie Holiday, Sonny Stitt, Ben Webster, Charlie Barnet, and countless others. Since he joined the faculty in 1961, he has been one of the college’s most beloved instructors. Deanstill commutes 60 miles each way from his home on Cape Cod twice a week to teach, and still plays two to four nights in Boston and on the Cape. In looking back, Dean states, "I guess I’ve been lucky, music is the only thing I have ever done. I never really knew tough times because was never out of work." And with a twinkle in his eye: "People seem to like me--it must be because I’m a little guy." --Charles Chapman’7;! associate professor, guitar - ¯ LUDMILA ULEHLA CONTEMPORARY HARMONY ROMANTICISM THROUGH THE I2.-TONE ROW (534 PAGES) ORDERIf400 $ 29.95 It is the purposeof this hookto trace the path of musicalgrowth from the late Romanticperiod to the serial techniquesof the contemporary oamposer.Throughthe detailed analysis of the musicalcharacteristics that dominatea specific sty].e of writing, a graduatedplan is organizedand presented here in the form of explanationsand exercises. Anewanalytical methodsubstitutes ~or the diatonic figured bass and makesexercises and the analysis of non-diatonicliterature more manageable. The explanationsdescribing each technique are thorough,Theyare designedto help the teacher and the student see the manyextenuating circumstauces that affect a particular analytical decision, ~Contemporary Harmony is one of the finest, mos~comprehensive texts ever written on the subiect. A uniqueandinvaluablecontribution~o both the studemtandthe professionalmusician.,( ~D. AnthonyRicigliano, ManhattanSchool of Music, NewYork) ,~Contemporary Harmony is surely th¢ best, mos~ informative, challenging,thoroughanddetailed explanationof the musicaltechniquesof composition from~9ooto the present. Filled with copious examples,exercises, references, including newand profoundanalytical programs,plus a summaryof 2oth Centuryprocedures.Ulehla’s book ¢s a mus~ [or all teachersandprofessionals.It fills the hiatus left by Sch6nberg’s *StructuralFunctions,.. (Jack Reitly, Composer/Pianist/Author~ Published by Advance Music Availablefromyour favorite musicsupplier or write to: ADVANCE Music Maier~ickersrr. ~8, 7z~o8RottenburgN.,Germany Phone {o747z) ~83z ¯ Fax (o747z) za6z~ VISITING ARTISTCLINIICS: MOMENTS WITHTHEMASTERS Jocelyn Cooper, president and CEO of Midnight Music, and Vivian Scott, president of Black musicfor Epic/Sony Music EnterRecordproducerPhil Ramone tainment, sat on an music This spring’s roster of industry discussion panel visiting artists included moderated by faculty greats from a wide range of memberCarl Beatty, covmusic industry professions. ering various aspects of music publishing. On campus were songwritVocalist and Berklee ers, publishers, record company owners, medical pro- alumnus Wil~ Downing,and fessionals, and an array of Novus RCAtrumpeter and recording artist Roy HaP virtuosic performers. Jazz pianist and com- grove were amongthe feaposer HoraceSilver shared tured artists at the FebruBlack Music insights about his 30-year ary Celebration. relationship with Blue Lyricist: and founding Note Records, and other career highlights. He also memberof the Carpenters attended the Singers Show- John Bettis, whose songs case concert where student have been recorded by vocalists performed sever- Whitney Houston, Dianna Ross, Madonna, and othal of his songs. Bluegrass fiddIer ex- ers, gave three seminars for traordinaire Vassar Clem- Berklee’s songwriters. Verve Records bassist ents discussed with students his career and the Christian McBridegave a evolution of his influential clinic demonstration about acoustic bass techniques. fiddle style. Gregg IVliller, director of Top Mexican songwriter Armando Manzanero regional sales for Broadcast shared insights about his 50 Data Systems, gave insights international hit songs. into the latest methodsfor gathering and analysis of radio airplay data. Percussion Week ’95 brought such top players as Marvin"Smitty" Smith, JohnRobinson, AlexAcufia, Adam Nnssbaum, Glen Velez, MarcQuinones,and Steve Houghton for a number of drum clinics and demonstrations. Dr. Suzanne Hanser, former president of the National Association for Music Therapy, spoke in deArmandoManzanero tail about stress reduction 8 Berklee today through music therapy. PaulSloman, director of operations for Sony Music Studios in NewYork, and DavidHewilt, president and chief engineer for Remote Recording Services of New York, spoke about careers in live concert recording, and studio engineering. Keyboardist, songwriter, and producer AI K00per was a guest during the March Piano Week. KoopPianistHorace Silver er spoke of his early experiences in the music busicontracts which are fair to ness, and his recording sessions with Bob Dylan the artist, running a label, and finding a niche in the and Mike Bloomfield. recording market. Composer and pianist DoClassical flutist and stumenicCicchetti also gave a dio musician Keith UnderPiano Weekseminar. wood presented a master MarkI{alloran, of the class and a duo recital with Alexander, Halloran, Nau pianist BarbaraLee. & Rose law firm, gave a Contemporary jazz guiseminar on the roles of pertarist and Berklee alumnus sonal and business managKurt R0senwinkeland stuers, and one on film and dio veteran Carl Verheyen TV music agreements. Pianist, arranger and were featured performers at composerAndyJaffe, a fac- Guitar Weekin April. Grammy-winning proulty member at Amherst ducer Phil Ram0neshared and Williams colleges, and his studio techniques and the University of Massaexperiences working on alchusetts, presented a surbums with Billy Joel, Frank vey of the compositional Sinatra, Barbra Streisand, style of DukeEllington. Paul Simon, and others. Trumpeter Clark Terry Daniel Orlansky gave a presented an open recorddemonstration of the wind ing session at the Berklee instrument, the digeridoo. Performance Center as he, MaxMathews,the "fapianist TommyFlanagan, ther of computer music," bassist John Lockwood, gave a seminar detailing the faculty saxophonist Andy future directions in comMcGhee, and drummer puter music. Terri Lyne Carrington recorded tracks for Terry’s upcoming Qwest album. Justice Records founder and president Randall Jamail presented lectures on recording AcousticbassistChristianMcBride Summer 1995 PLANSFORNEW FACILITY UNVEILED buildings--heavy concrete construcPlans have been completed for Berklee’s new educational facility at tion, ample floor-to-floor heights, 921-925 Boylston Street. The prop- and open, wide-span spaces. Co~erty, formerly owned by Newbury struction plans include the building College, was purchased by Berklee of two more floors atop 921 Boylston last summer. for increased space, addition of two The new facility will be named new elevators, and reconstruction of after Japanese entrepreneur and Berk- the building’s Boylston Street facade. lee Overseer Mr. Genko Uchida. He Ultimately, this mix of music trainhas sponsored a numberof programs, ing, performance,and student-orientroom/pe~fbrmance space, green scholarships, and Berklee residencies ed administrative functions will cre~o~m,~tage support; ~nstrument in Japan, and has madea major gift to ate a gateway to Berklee in this storage, Registraroffices support the new building. prominent location, across from the MeZzanine The acquisition of this 40,000 Hynes Convention Center. Financial Aid offices, scholarship square foot space will increase the Acoustic quality is emphasized in and student ~mptOyment offices, college’s educational and administra- the architectural buildout recommenbalcony0f large classroom tive facilities by about 16 percent, dations. Specifications include the use Second FloOr of double walls, suspended ceilings and has prompted a campus-wide asLarg~ d~s~toom/rehearsal space sessment of current space use and fu- and floating floor systems in approture space needs. The college hired priate music rooms, mechanical sysBoston-basedarchitectural firm Mill- tem design improvements, potenti~,l electronic background sound masker Dyer Spears, who worked with ing, and a general tightening-up of both a steering committee (consist(75-100seats0, 5 guitar labs, guitar ing of the president, the deans, trust- the existing construction to alleviate ees), and a college committee (con- any sound transfer problems. The space plans will ultimately resisting of faculty, staff, and student representatives) to determine future configure the Berklee campus. Two examplesare: a newstudent activities space needs and plan accordingly. Fifth Floor center that will occupythe first floor The committees recommended that the 921-925 Boylston Street of the 130 Massachusetts Avenue property be used to provide three building, and a library expansion which will fill two floors of the 150 large classroom/performance spaces, and the large rehearsal, ensemble,and Massachusetts Avenuebuilding. lab rooms needed by the expanded Guitar and Percussion Departments and the new Ensemble Workshop Program. These buildings will houseall of the Student Affairs departments consolidated at one location to provide better student services. These uses take advantage of the unique physical features of the new buildings, not available in Thearchitect’srendering of the921Boylston Streetbuildiingas it will Ilookupon completion. existing Berklee Summer 1995 Berklee today TASCAM DA-88 DIGITALMULTITRACK KORGX3 SYNTHESIZER ALESISADATDIGITALMULTITRACK E-MUSYSTEMS EIV SAMPkER MACKIEDESIGNS S-BUSMIXER ~~~~ DIGIDESIGN SYSrEMS FORMAC& PC AKGC12 VR MICROPHONE CROWN POWER BASE3 AMPLIFIER KURZWEIL K2000 SYNTH/SAMPLER JBL SR-SERIES PA SPEAKERS GENELEC1031ASONYMDR-7506 HEADPHONES MONITORS AKAI DR8DIGITALMULTITRACK AUDIOTECHNICA KRKK-ROK MONITORS AT4050MIC APHEXSYSTEMS DOMINATOR II DIGITECH GSP2101 PREAMP/PROCESSOR FOSTEX RD8DIGITALMULTITRACK ROLAND JV-1080 SYNTHMODULE TANNOY PBM 6.5 II KAT TRAPKAT MARKOF THE OPCODE SYSTEMS DBXMODEL 266 COMPRESSOR/GATE UNICORN SOFTWARE SOFTWARE LEXICON PCMLeO DIGITALREVERB ~ ~""~’ ~ * MARANTZ PROFESSIONALCD RECORDER ICKLOKSL 200 PLUS TONS O~,F,,OTHER GREAT PRODUCTS AMEK/BIGAUTOMATED CONSOLE "’ ARE YOU KIDDING? Ofcourse I want toreceive afull year of Sweetwater Sound’s SWEET NOTES newsletter absolutely free! NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE PHONE( ) ZIP Mail coupon to addressbelowor call for yourfree subscription! 50 Alumni of Note... Duringthe 50-year life of Berklee College of Music, some30,00(3musicians from 75 countries across the globe have come throughthe college’s doors to gain knowledgebefore seeking their destinies in the world of music. The50 individuals pictured on the foil.owingpages are a but fewof the many gifted alumni who have brought their dreamsinto the blaze of daylight, and woventheir ownstrands into the tapestry of contemporary music. These 50 alumni represent countless others whose unique careers have also enriched manylives during the first half centuryof the college’shistory. Then...1958,clockwise from theleft, Lawrence Berk,Bob Share, DizzySaI,ArifMardin, TedCasher, MikeGibbs,Peter Spassov, GaborSzabo, andbassistSkipBeckwith in front of Berklee’s284 Newbury Streetbuilding. Now...1995,Berkleestudents give a salute to Berklee’s 50thanniversary fromthe balconyof the college’sFenway building. Summer 1995 Berklee today 11 JohnAbercrombie "67 Influential jazz guitarist, ECM recording artist, composer,bandleader. Toshiko Akiyoshi ’59 Jazz pianist, composer, bandleader, CBS/Sony recordingartist. JustoAlmario ’71 Latin jazz saxophonist, composer,sideman, Blue Moonrecording artist. GaryAnderson "69 Film and TVcomposer, former WoodyHerman saxophonist/director. AlanBroadbent ’69 Pianist, composer,Grammynomineeas arranger, memberof Quartet West. 12 Berkleetoday GaryBurton "62 Innovativevibist, recording artist, bandleader,3 Grammies,50 albums. Will Calhoun ’86 Drummerfor Living Colour, platinum albums, Grammy, MTVawards. TerriLyne Carrington ’83 Drummer,solo CDsfor PolyGram,tours witlh Hancock,Shorter, Jarreau. Cyrus Chestnut "85 Jazz pianist, Atlantic recordingartist, sideman for W.Marsalis, B. Carter. AIf Clausen "66 Composer/orchestrator, "Simpsons," "Moonlighting," movies,TVseries. ~/lelissaEtheridge ’80 BruceC0ckburn "65 Canadiansongwriter, 22 Singer/songwriter,multialbums(1 platinum, GrammyAward winner, 2 platinum albums. gold), 10 Junoawards. Vinnie Colaiuta ’75 l~evinEubanks ’79 Studio drummer, numer- Guitarist/bandleader, ous pop, jazz, rock cred- NBC"Tonight Show," its, StretchRecordsartist. 11 solo albumreleases. BillFrisell"77 RichieCole’67 Innovativejazz guitarist, Saxophonist, composer, bandleader,has released memberPaul Motian Trio, 11 solo albumreleases. 30 albumsas leader. AI DiMeola ’74 IVlikeGibbs "63 Influential poll-winning Trombonist/composer/ guitarist, 17 solo albums, arranger, S. Getz, Sting, former C. Corea sideman. J. Scofield, B. Hornsby. ElliotEaston "74 JuanLuisGuerra "81 Guitarist, producer. With Guitarist, songwriter, the Cars: 30 miIlon platinum merenguealrecords sold, 2 Grammies. bumswith Grupo440. JanHammer ’69 Composer,pioneering fusion keyboardist,platinumsoundtrack albums. Eulaulah Hathaway ’90 Vocalist, r&b/jazzstylist, 2 albumsand 5 singles on Virgin Recordslabel. GregHawkes ’72 Keyboardist and cowriter for the Cars, 6 platinum records, 2 Grammies. DavidHorn ’78 TVproducer, "Great Performances," "In The Spotlight," Emmy winner. Quincy Jones "51 Jazz artist, composer, platinum record producer, multimediaentrepreneur. Summer 1995 JoeyKramer "71 Drummerfor Aerosmith, 3 GrammyAwards, numerousplatinum albums[ Abraham Laboriel Sr. "72 Sessionbassist on over 3,000 top recordings, founder of Koinonia. JoeLovano ’72 Leadingsaxophonist, has released 8 solo albums, featured on another 75. MichaelManring "79 Innovativebassist, 4 solo albumsfor WindhamHill, has played on 100 more. Arif Mardin "61 Hit producer, composer, arranger, vice president of Atlantic Studios. Summer 1995 EricMarienthal ’79 Saxophonist with Chick Corea,sessions, 6 solo albumson the GRPlabel. Branford Marsalis "80 Grammy-winningsaxophonist, composer,Sony/ CBSrecording artist. TigerOkoshi ’75 Trumpeter, composer, leader of Tiger’s Baku, 6 solo albumsfor JVC. Makoto Ozone ’83 Pianist, G. Burtonsideman,8 solo albumson CBS,JVC, and Verve. Danilo Perez’88 Post-bop, Latin piano stylist, Novusrecording artist, touredwith Dizzy. Bill Pierce "73 Berkieefaculty, saxophonist for A. Blakey, T. Williams, F. Hubbard. HerbPomeroy "52 Trumpeter,arranger, Berkleefaculty, mentorto numerousjazz artists. John"JR"Robinson "75 Drummer, Grammywith Rufus, numeroussessions for hit records,films, TV. John Scofield "73 Jazz guitarist, composer, bandleader,21 solo albums,guest on :tO0 others. Alan Silvestri’70 Film composer,44 features, Forrest Gump,Who FramedRoger Rabbit? SteveSmith"76 Drummerwith Journey, Vital Information,Steps Ahead,Ponty, S. Clarke. Mike:Stern"75 Guitarist/composer, 6 albumson Atlantic, Miles, Jaco, Breckerssideman. Neil Stubenhaus "75 Bassist for 20 Grammy winne.rs,100 films, TV,40 gold and platinumdiscs. Harvie Swartz "70 Jazz bass sidemanon over 100recordings,7 releases as leader or coleader. SteveVat"79 Grammy-winningguitarist, platinumsolo album, sidemanfor Zappa, Roth. Sadao Watanabe "65 Japan’sleading jazz saxophonist, has released more than 53 solo albums. ErnieWatts"66 Saxophonist, 2 Grammies, manyalbum, film, TV credits, 12solo discs. Jeff"Tain"Watts "81 Former "Tonight Show" drummer,records, tours with Branford Marsalis. BradWhifford ’71 Guitarist for Aerosmith, multiple Grammiesand platinum albums. JoeZawinul "59 Grammy-winningkeyboardist, composer, WeatherReport founder. Bed<lee today 13 Herb Pomeroy Looks Back After 40 years, Berklee"stop jazz compositionprofessor has a different perspective on life andmusic T by Mark L. Small "73 hough his name is not a household word, Herb Pomeroy’s musical influence has been felt around the world. A busy professional trumpeter and bandleader since the ’50s, he has shared the stage with many of music’s greats--including Charlie Parker at someof Bird’s Boston appearances. Herb began teaching at Berklee four decades ago, and has made his most significant contributions as an educator teaching jazz composition and arranging, and leading the college’s premier jazz ensemble, the Berklee Recording Orchestra. During his 111 semesters at Berktee, Herb has provided guidance to a number of students who have gone on to become some of the music industry’s most prominent composers, arrangers, and instrumentalists. The list includes TVand film composersAlan Silvestri, Alf Clausen, and Rob Mounsey; Columbia recording artist and composer Toshiko Akiyoshi; saxophonist Ernie Watts; and Atlantic Studios Vice President Arif Mardin. Herb was raised in a home which fostered his musical development. His mother Alice Pomeroy, a pianist trained at the NewEngland Conservatory, worked professionally as a 1920s-style jazz player. Whenhe was 11, after he and his mother saw a movie which starred Louis Armstrong, Herb decided that he had to take up the trumpet. He immersed himself in Dixieland jazz and the early swing efforts of Armstrong and Benny Goodman.By the time he was in his freshman year of high school, he was playing professionally with dance bands around his hometown of Gloucester, Massachusetts. A turning point in his musical direction came when a friend loaned him some early bebop recordings by Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. At first, Herb could not accept the new music, but after a few more listenings, he perceived that this was the direction jazz was going, and became deeply engrossed in bebop. At Williston Academy,a prep school in Easthampton, Massachusetts, Herb met other students interested in music. He set his sights on becominga jazz musician despite the fact that his father and grandfather, both dentists, were prodding Herb to follow in their footsteps. While home during the summer of 1948, Herb took private lessons at Schillinger House (now Berklee). He studied piano with Berklee founder Lawrence Berk’s partner Harry Smith, trumpet with Fred Berman, and arranging with Dick Hogan. Most of his fellow students were PHOTO BY80B KRAMER 14 Berklee today Summer 1995 returned servicemen. The 18-year old Herb found the atmosphere exhilarating working among so many mature musicians. After the summer, Herb went back to Williston for his senior year. He graduated second in his class, with prizes in mathand trigonometry. That fall, Herb enrolled at Harvard in a pre-dental program. By the middle of the year, Herb felt like a fish out of water at the Ivy League college. After graduating second in his class at Williston, by contrast, Herbnowfound himself on academicprobation at Harvard. Music beckoned him more than German, philosophy, or the other subjects he was studying. He left Harvardfor Schillinger Houseand a career in music. After completing five semesters by 1952, Herb performed around NewEngland with a numberof acts before hitting the road with the Lionel Hampton and Stan Kenton bands, and the Serge Chaloff sextet. Berklee founder Lawrence Berk asked Herb to join the Berklee faculty in the falI of 1955. Over the course of his 40-year tenure Herb, developed three specialized courses: Line Writing, Jazz Composition, and Arranging in the Style of Duke El- tional Jazz Ensemble, and premiered at New York’s Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center in 1974. Widely noted as a specialist in big band jazz, Herb was sent by the U.S. State Department in 1962 to Malaysia as a music consultant to the Malaya Radio Orchestra. A similar assignment from the State Department in 1968 sent him on a cultural exchange to Finland to direct an orchestra at a Finnish governmentsponsored arts festival. Over the past decade, Herb has been in demand internationally to conduct concerts with the NewMusic Orchestra of Finland, the Stockholm Jazz Orchestra, North German Radio Orchestra, the NewMusic Orchestra of Copenhagen, and the H.E.D. Music Center Orchestra in Tel Aviv. Entering retirement, Herb doesn’t plan to slow his pace. He looks forward to getting a chance to practice his trumpet again, and continuing to travel internationally to play, conduct, and present seminars. It was fitting closure to Herb’s educational career that he received Berklee’s honorary doctorate at the May 7 Commencementfor his achievements. He can now go into retirement feeling that he excelled in the career he desired and carried on the Pomeroyfamily tradition of having the title "doctor" before his name. What was the musical atmosphere like at Berklee when you were a student? A few soloists around the school were bebop oriented but most everyone else was writing dance band and big band arrangements. There were not many faculty members who were primarily jazz musicians at that time. That changed over the next decade as the school evolved. I was in classes with people whowere jazz oriented-like [pianists] Ray Santisi ’54 and Bob Winter ’54, [saxophonist] Charlie Mariano’52, and [bassist] RayOliveri ’53. Whatare some recollections of your gigs with Charlie Parker? Ironically, in 1953, the weekI was on stage lington, which have drawnstudents to his classat the Hi-Hat Club with Bird, the class I would es from around the world. Herb continued an active performing career have graduated with at Harvard was on stage leading the 16-piece Herb Pomeroy Orchestra with caps and gownson. I felt there was some just due going on there. I remember walking throughout the Northeast. The group released four critically acclaimed albums for the Rou- into the club with myknees shaking, but Bird was great to me. Here was this man who had lette, United Artists, and Shiah record labels. Their first, Life Is a ManySplendored Gig, virtually been a god to me for eight or nine years whispering in my ear "Herbert, you’re stayed in the top 10 on the DownBeat jazz wailing." I knew I wasn’t wailing though. charts for nearly five monthsin 1957. He was always a gentleman to the musicians In the late sixties, Herb was commissioned to create two scores for the Boston Ballet. The on the stand. If he called a tune and the piano Road of the Phoebe Snow and Wilderness of player said he knewit, and then scuffled a bit, Bird wouldn’t pitch a fit. I have worked with Mirrors are based on the music of Ellington and Mingusrespectively. His original score to lesser name artists who would do a big ego Jolly Chocolate was commissioned by the Na- number when that happened. Bird would just 16 Berklee today Summer 1995 go stand next to the piano player and call out the changes to him. I greatly respected him for that. He counted off the "52nd Street Theme" so fast that the drummerhad to use two hands just to play time on the ride cymbal.Bird played four or five choruses and then went back into the head. The piano player and I were very grateful he didn’t have us solo. He was very considerate that way. Shortly thereafter, you went on the road with Lionel Hampton. What was road work like back then? In 1953, I might have earned as muchas $80 a weekplaying in Boston. But if I made$40-50, we got by. I lived with my family in a coldwater flat in Charlestown with no heat, rent was $21 a month. Times were hard, so when I auditioned for Hamptonand he said I’d earn $150 a week, it sounded great. I quit mylocal gigs and went to NewYork to rehearse with the band. Lionel’s wife Gladys came in and told us we’d be getting paid pro rata, $21 each night. So if we worked seven nights, we would get about $150. Frequently we only worked four nights. After taxes, and $35 a week for food and rooming expenses, I would send what was left home. Lionel mostly played one nighters. Sometimes we wouldnot check into a hotel for four nights while we traveled 700 miles to the next city. Wewould finish a gig, and travel night and day to the next one. Often we didn’t check into our hotel until after we played. The band was fun, but it wasn’t easy working with Hamp. WhenI quit in the spring of 1954, I was pretty disillusioned. I started thinking about college again and took out my books from Harvard. wouldsee i~he drive some musicians brought to their music and see an imbalance. Thereis so muchmorein life. teaching experience and keep their playing career alive without having to go on the road. I worked with faculty memberslike Ray Santisi [piano] and John Neves[bass], trumpeters Greg Hopkins and Lennie Johnson. Also, without the school, perhaps m~lsicians like Arif Mardin or MikeGibbs might have stayed back in Istanbul and Southern Rhodesia. Howdid the Line Writing. course develop? The first few years I tauglht, I knew in my heart that I was a poor teacher. Mythoughts weren’t organized for presenting the material in the classroom. Someof n2.y students knew more than I did. I began by putting examples on the board which I knew worked, and excerpts from various aritsts’ scores. I began to note principles for whycertain things worked in these arrangements. As a trumpet player, I knew well that the second, third, and fourth voices in a section were usually unmusical. They were just harmonynotes from a vertical structure under the melodystrung together with little concern for their melodic content. Playing those wouldturn Howdid you join the Berklee faculty? me off. The melody would be soaring while the After leaving Hampton, I went on the road second trumpet part would have a bunch of again with the Kenton band and then with repeated notes, or would have wide interval [baritone saxophonist] Serge Chaloff’s sextet. leaps while the melodywas smootlh. I started In the summerof ’55, at Joe Viola’s recommen- to look at ways to makethe ttnder parts musidation, Larry Berk called and asked if I would cal and have melodic shape. like to start teaching that fall. I’d had enoughof After working leading bands from scores the road by then. It was not too difficult to say for thousands of hours, I have developed a yes to him. good eye-ear relationship. Unless it is someI have often thanked Larry Berk for provid- thing very unusual, I can see music on paper ing me the opportunity to do my thing in an and knowhowit will sound. This eye-ear realacademic environment, unaffected by any as- tionship was very important in developing the pects of the commercial world. I was able to course materials. write the musicI felt was honest, and to be in a school where so many great students from Can you mention any students who really around the world to have come study. grabbed the concepts you were teaching and ran Over the years, manyof the membersof my with them? band were Berklee faculty members. I could There have been so many,and I don’t like to not have had a band of that caliber without take a lot of credit for what they have gone on Berklee existing. The school has madeit possi- to do. Alf Clausen [’66] was one. He was also ble for a number of musicians to have a great the first to play French horn :in the Recording Summer 1995 Berklee today 17 Band. Alan Broadbent [’69] was another. He took a number of courses with me, played piano in the recording band, and wrote a lot of music for the group. Jaxon Stock [’71] became a great jazz composer,he is one of myall-time favorite former students. He is a gloriously talented musician, and a very down-to-earth person. Hal Crook[’71] was another great student who is a wonderful writer and now a faculty member.Mike Gibbs [’63] also studied with me. While he was a student here, he was going to NewYork once a week to study with Gunther Schuller. He has broadened his horizons beautifully. But it was a two way street-these people really enriched mylife too. Is it true that you are not really a fan of big band jazz? I tell myclasses, tongue-in-cheek,that I hate big bands [laughs]. Of course I say this after they have taken mythree arranging classes, in the last week of the semester. Those whohave come to knowme knowI’m sort of jiving, but the others will be taken aback. I always loved playing in a small group. I reacted as a young person to the physical excitement of a big band--the rich harmonies, intricate sax solis, and high trumpets. But I enjoy the interaction of a small group better. Do you have any anecdotes about the students you have taugh;t who later becamegreats ? I rememberthe first day I met Arif Mardin. He is a classy humanbeing. ]~ rememberseeing him at the corner of Gloucester and Newbury streets with a hat on. He didn’t look like the typical Berklee student. He came here without having any of the scores he’d written played. The first arrangement he brought for my orchestra was top professional-level writing. Havethere been people in your classes whose talent developed and surprised you ? Thefirst year I taught here, Larry Berk wanted the school to be involved with the local community. He started a high school ensemble which I directed. A young fellow came in to audition for the piano spot, and I didn’t choose him for the group. Hie let me knowhow disappointed he was. That was Roger Kellaway. I hated to audition people for the recording band, but when we didn’t have someoneto fill a certain chair, we wouldhold auditions. Someone who I didn’t choose was the great drummer Steve Smith. In ihindsight, that was probably a mistake seeing howhe has developed. Can you speak about the two years you were the host of a TV show on jazz? 18 Berklee today It was for WGBH in Boston from 1965-67. I would interview major jazz artists like Earl Hines, Jimmy Witherspoon, Stan Getz, and Lee Konitz live on the air. Live TVis risky-sometimes it was great, sometimes you would bomb. Sonny Rollins came on wearing a New York Yankees baseball cap. No matter what I asked him, he would steer the conversation back to the Yankees. Someof the shows were wonderful though. You often state your feeling that people are more important than music. Howdid you come to feel this way? It is easy for meto espouse that philosophy, but it is not so easy for me to go back and say what brought me to it. After the death of my secondwife in 1982, I looked at a lot of things in mylife. I had been working really hard to provide a decent life for myfamily. I was teaching five days at Berklee and two at M.I.T., leading my ownband in 45-50 dates a year, contracting the Boston Garden and the Wilbur Theater, and working at the Colonial Theater as a trumpeter 20-30 weeks a year. It was ludicrous. I would look at mybook and tell mywife that I wouldn’t have a day off for the next 42 days. After she died, I did somesoul searching. In other musicians, I would see the drive they brought to their music, and I wouldsee an imbalancethere. It is healthy for a person from their teen years into their 20s to do that, but there is so muchmore in life. I didn’t start comingout of that until I was in my40s. Don’t misunderstand me, I still love music. I am very fortunate to have found a new wife at age 60 who is a glorious woman.Being in her presence is a richer experience than music ever was. I have made many musical acquaintances. I’ve played gigs with them, we’ve sat in the band room at intermission, and driven to and from gigs together. Faculty memberGreg Hopkins has played trumpet in my band for 20 years. I keep telling him we have to find time to get together at myhouse and sit and talk a bit. Comingto feel these things has made me realize howimportant people are. Next to the love I have for myfamily, is the love I feel for the musicianI’m standing next to on the bandstand. To be giving as openly as you do in jazz is very special. I want to know more about those people. But we were all so involved in our work that for manyyears those relationships stayed on the surface. In myearly years, I had put music on a pedestal--to me, music was the most important thing. It felt good to love music for all those years, but cameto realize that I was wrong.., it is people that are most important. Summer 1995 Post-productio:n .,Round Tabl~ Aninside look at TVand film musiccareers in L.A. and thoughts on breaking in from those whohave ([~r f you need a job done, ask a busy person to do it," goes the old adage. Another says "Timeis money."But in the post-production music business, time is more valuable than moneywhentrying to meet the movieand TVschedules set in stone long before the busymusicprofessionalsare evenhired. Amidthe heavy rains that disrupted many L.A. businesses this winter, I foundthe postproduction music people at their posts. Five key players in the industry found time to talk about howthey got their breaks, and to offer their take on the current workingsof Hollywood’spost-production music machine. I by Mark L. Small "73 the instrumentation. I start writing on Monday, and finish late Thursdaynight or Friday morning.After the spotting session for the next episode on Friday afternoon, we go to the soundstage and record the cues I completed that week. "IV[any TVcomposerslike doing the work, hearing their musicright away,and getting the feedback.It is an interesting challengeto rise to the deadline pressure. Somepeople, including myself, thrive on tlhat. I’ve knownTVcomposers whogo into feature film writing and havea hard time accommodating the slower pace. With mycurrent TVschedule--having to record 30 cues in a three-hour session--I would welcomethe opportunity to spend an hour on a single cueas is often the casewithfeature films. "I’ve alwaysfelt that if you can start as an orchestrator it is the best career move.Some people want to avoid getting pigeonholedas an orchestrator only, and would rather do two low budgetfilms yearly instead to get established as a composer.I think it is better to be practicing yourcraft on a weeklybasis." LivingbytheClock WatchingAlf Clausen ’66 conduct a 35-piece orchestra at a "Simpsons"scoring session is a lesson in grace under pressure. Alf begancomposing and orchestrating for TVand moviesin the ’80s. He has workedon 28 films, 24 TV series, and 24 TVmoviesof the week, and is one of Hollywood’s most respected TVcomposers. All is quite accustomedto working under the gun. Hecurrently writes all of the songs and the underscore for weeklyanimated Establishing Relationships series "The Simpsons"and "The Critic." HummieMann ’76 came to Los Angeles in Betweentakes, Clausen mused, %can han- 1978, and found workorchestrating for Clausdle the deadlinesabout 85 percent of the time, en on TVshowslike "Fame,""Moonlighting," but the other 15 percent is sheer terror. We and "The Simpsons." Hummiemadethe tranusually spot [decide wheremusical cues will sition into films as conductorand orchestrator go] on Friday afternoons. I get the breakdown for composerMarkShaiman,and also believes notes [detailed notes with timings and annota- the route for a composeris to be an orchestrations for each cue] by Sunday,and determine tor first. Summer 1995 Berklee today 19 "I did Misery with Shaiman, and conducted for him on The Addams Familyand City Slickers. I feel being a conductor gave me more visibility than just being an orchestrator." Hummiescored his first film 10 years ago, but considers his 1992score for Year of the Comet the one that opened doors to his film composing career. To date he has scored 16 feature films. Last year, he scored eight one-hour films for the "Rebel Highway Series" on Showtime cable TV. While that series offered the advantage of working with many top film makers, there was only enough budget for MIDIscores. "Before I took it, I did a lot of soul searching," states Mann."I wondered if I’d be out of the mainstream by doing electronic scores. I decided to do it because of the great directors-like Norman Jewison, John Milius, and Joe Donte--I’d be working with. Formingrelationships with directors is really the basis of many composers’ careers. John Williams works with Spielberg, Alan Silvestri works with Zemeckis, Danny Elfman works with Tim Burton." Although he broke into the business as an orchestrator, Mann, like most other busy composers, rarely orchestrates his ownscores any more. "For Robin Hood: Menin Tights, they didn’t lock the majorfight scenes in the film until 10 days before we scored. All of the four and five minute cues were written in the last days. Whenwe started recording the score, I’d come homeand stay up until six a.m. writing music. At three a.m., a whole team of people was there orchestrating. Parts were copied and we recorded that afternoon. This went on for three days. If I had to orchestrate, I never would have gotten back onto the podium." A DistinctiveVoice Like Mann, Lawrence Shragge ’77 initially found work in L.A. as an orchestrator. He arrived in Hollywood in 1989, with writer credits from the 250 television episodes, 15 TV movies, and 10 feature films he wrote in Toronto. "I came to town with a feature film I’d just finished," states Shragge. "That enabled me to get an agent. I 20 Berklee today than trying to do everything," he advises. "I knowI wouldn’t be hired to do light comedy;I’m better suited to action adventure movies. Pursue directors whose projects your music will fit with. Thereare a lot of people in L.A. whoare very talented. I think that it’s best to identify whoyou are as a composer." All Clausen "66:’1 canhandle the deadlines about85 percent of the time, but theother15 percent is sheerterror." sent tapes out on a regular basis. Things started opening up sooner than I thought they would." Shragge first scored a TVseries called "Street Justice" for two years, which led to TV movies. He has scored a numberof Hallmark’s larger budget "Hall of Fame" TV movies. In composing,his main objective is to create a thumbprint score. "I am always looking for sometlhing different," states Shragge."Film music is about defining the heart of tlhe story. I like to do that with an interesting tone or character in the score. I learn somethingon a project by choosing to write for instruments I have never dealt with before. One reason I ihave gotten somegood work is because I am always looking for something that will sound unique. Onmylast project, I used five singers with the basic instrumentation as part of the underscore. By not doing the expectedthings, I feel I’ll get noticed and moveout of television into feature films." Like Mann, Shragge stresses the value of forming relationships with other composers. A lot of his initial work came from composers who were unavailable for a job and told him about it. He also recommends that composers find directors whose vision is esthetically similar to theirs. "Know what you do best rather Crucial BreakAway Todd Homme’76 is manager of music production at Disney’s HollywoodPictures division. He is responsible for shepherding about half of the studio’s live action pictures through the production process to the point where the music is dubbed on the soundstage, and prints are struck. Homme is the liaison between Disney, the filmmakers, the composer and his staff, the engineers, and various sound stages. He oversees the progress of the music and reports the monetaryissues to the film studio. "Last year we did 22 pictures," states Homme. "From August to December we seemed to complete a picture every two weeks--an inordinate amount of work. I was involved in making an endless number of production related deals--setting up studio time, finding out what orchestra would be there, dealing with music preparation with the orchestrators and copyists, and arranging to mix for three days with the right engineer. If there were to be soundtrack albums, we’d have to be involved with recording those as well." Homme’s business and musical education and experiences had prepared him for the job he has done for four years, but it was his avocation that landed him inside Disney. "The typical ways to try to get into this business involve calling people at their office, sending your tape around, and networking. These people get a fair numberof calls like that, so it is easy to see whythey might get calloused. By doing other things from our regular lives we can make contacts that are far moreeffective than the beaten paths." Hommejoined an amateur hockey league upon arriving in L.A., and soon discovered that some of his teammates were in high positions in the entertainment industry. Through Summer 1995 some agents he coached in shooting the puck, Hommewas put in touch with a vice president of music at Warner Brothers. That person recommendedhim for the Disney job. ’Tin amazed at how many film makers, writers, actors, and others I meet out there who have a genuine interest in something not related to their work," says Homme."I think a lot of business is conductedthat way. The odds are against all of us getting anywherein this business. You have to figure out how to become an exception to the rule." whether we will be able to acquire the proper rights for the music. Then,, I make suggestions. Regarding demos, Grossman prefers them 10-12 minutes long, with a beginning, middle, and end--"like a good book." He suggests submitting for specifof Segue Music.Segue’s ic proiects after learn- DanCarlin,left, andJeff Carson as 100 films annually. ing via the trades or musiceditorsworkon as many is the first choiceof many studios. by networking about Theircompany FollowThrough a production your David Grossman ’79, vice president musicmight fit. signal tlhe conductorfor musical hits, of Paramount Pictures’ Television "Newcomers should learn about beginnings, and endings]. The comMusic Production Division, started the producers of these shows," he puter can place that information on his career in the ’80s as a drummerin advises. "Sometimes they are look- video and it is simple to makechangL.A. When drum machines started ing for people whohave not had a lot es. Since this workcan be done fastcutting into his work, he decided to of film experience--they figure they e~;, movieproducers frequently allow become a music supervisor for TV might get something different that production to creep into post-proand films. Grossman worked as a way. This business is built on rel[aduction time. This creates stress and freelance music supervisor for about tionships which you have to nurture. deadline pressure for the music edione year before being hired by Co- So manypeople will establish an im- tor and the composer." lumbia Pictures Television when a portant contact and then wait two Musicediting is a union trade, and job opened up in there 1986. He years to follow up on it. In the intera stumbling block to newcomers is joined Paramount in 1989. ira, a lot of things have happened. getting into the union. One way to "We have about 28 shows proDon’t expect busy people to remem- get in is by working at a nonunion duced for Paramount’s network and ber details of your conversation or a editing facility first. After 100days at domestic television which we are package you sent if you didn’t fola nonunion shop, a music editor can working on simultaneously," states low up." apply for entrance to the union by Grossman. "Viacom and Paramount presenting the pay stubs which prove are nowone, so beyond network teleNoSteppingStone work experience in the field. Oncein vision, I haveresponsibilities in cable Daniel Carlin Jr., a memberof Berk- the union, one can work anywhere. and direct-to-video projects. I amin- lee’s boardof visitors, is president of Carlin has a caveat about viewing volved with helping the producers Segue Music in Burbank, one of the music editing as a stepping stone to identify what we need to do creativetop music editing and supervision other post-production careers. ly, what talent we need to bring on companies working in film and TV. "We discourage people who want board, and how we should treat His music editors’ duties include to become composers from entering scenes. I have a fabulous staff here to working with the composerand fihnthe business as music editors. I get help in researching period music for maker to decide where music witl go, commentsfrom composers that I not shows, licensing music, supervising creating a temporary score from ex- pair them with a music editor who sessions, and overseeing budgets." isting music until the composer’s wants their job. Musicediting is the In his office, Grossmanhas thou- score is dubbed, and preparing the wrong route for composers. While sands of CDsand tapes from estabfilm so the final score may be con- working at that, you are not polishlished and aspiring artists and com- ducted to picture. Carlin estimates ing your compositional skills or meetposers. From this library, he makes there are fewer than 100 music ediing the right people. Musicediting is suggestions to the producers about a tors working in L.A. these days. a great career in itself and good mushow’s music needs. "Whenthe technological revolusic editors get paid well." "I do not makethe final decision," tion first began," Carlin says," I was Summarily, the post-production says Grossman,"it is a collaborative a music editor for the ’Lou Grant’ music business will no doubt undereffort. Sometimes the producers show. Wehad three film editors, three go further unforeseen changes. While knowexactly whoor what they want, assistants, and two apprentices. Com- no one predicts the workwill get less other times they seek advice from puters now allow us to work much pressurized or competitive, it is certhe music department. I have to in- faster, but ultimately eliminated jobs. tain that the lure of artistic and proterject howthe direction we are look- Weno longer physically punch holes fessional payoffs these careers offer ing at affects the musicbudgets, and and scrape streamers on the film [to will always be an attraction. [~ Summer 1995 Berklee today 21 Producing Screen Music Predicted increases in demandfor audio-fo>video promise "lone wolf" composer~producersexpandedopportunities p by Stephen Webber roducing musicfor the screen poses unique and sometimes very thorny challenges. Done well, it can be some of the most rewarding work in the business. With the proliferation of personal project studios, it is a job that can be done by a solitary composer/producer. The placement and style of the music is agreed upon during a spotting session with the director. It is important that the director and composer share a commonvision about what the music is going to say. TheSpottingSession Today, manyspotting sessions are done with a video copy of the project which has a SMPTEtime code burnin. This will showelapsed hours, minutes, seconds, and fra~nes in a rectangular windowsuperimposed over the visual. Spotting notes created from this session assign each musical cue a number, a name, a short description of the action or the music to be written, and the location of the cue’s beginning and ending points. A SMPTE time code burn-in facilitates locating events to within a 30th of a second. TheHits After the spotting session, the next task is to locate the musical "hits." These are sync points on the screen that will be translated into specific Available tech- musical events. Choosing what to hit nology enables and what to leave alone will make a the solitary com- big difference in the final score. The poser/producer/ act of musically "hitting" everything instrumentalist to possible is knownas "Mickey Mousprovidecomplete ing," after the early animated films musicservicesfor where every tip-toed step or wink of film productions. the eye was reflected in the score. Stephen Webber,assistant chair of the Music Production and Engineering Department, has composed and produced scores for two dozen PBSdocumentaries, an award winning feature film, and a CD-ROM. 22 Berklee today Summer 1995 Associate Professor Eric Reasoner, whorecently finished musicediting chores on Don Juan DeMarco and Die Hard With a Vengeance, explains that these sync points can range "from a dialogue scene where the hits would be very subtle, to an action adventure scene where sword hits, punches, kicks, and other movements may be caught by the music. They are all selected by the composerand become the framework or starting point for the tempoof the musiccue." Oncethe hits are selected, translating theminto a cue sheet or hit list is next. Each hit is numbered and named, with an indication of where it is to be placed downto the exact frame. This can be done with a VCR with a jog/shuttle wheel and a copy of the tape with a SMPTE burn-in. Findingthe Tempo The moodof a scene, the way the film or video is cut, and the timing of the hits all affect the selection of the cue’s tempo. Sometimes a tempo is suggested by the pace of footsteps or other repetitive action, or the timing of short, hard cuts in the video. Before the proliferation of computers, composers used a click book to determine the tempo of each cue. These books were filled with columns of numberstelling exactly where each beat falls timewisefor every conceivable tempo. Composers and music editors now use software programs like Cue, Click Tracks, or Oracle to find tempos and design click tracks to meet hits and sync points. Oncethe hit list is entered in, the computerwill scan a range of tempos and report which one nails the most hits. For example, if a mediumtempo is desired, the computercan scan a range from 116 bpm to 132 bpm and report howclose each hit falls to the nearest quarter, eighth, or sixteenth note. The computer then reports on all given tempos, perhaps indicating one which accurately nails all of the hits. Sometimesit is necessary to "ramp" or "slope" the tempos, speeding them up or slowing them down, or to slightly alter the tempo for a certain number of measures so that all sync points align. These programs then provide a hit map showing in what measure and Summer lg95 beat in a given time signature each sync point will fall. It gives the subdivision of the beat that will be closest: to meeting the hit exactly, and howmanyframes off that note real][y is. This hit mapcan be printed out or imported into a sequencing program like Vision, Performer, or Master Tracks. The computer can also provide a click track which can synchronize to picture via a SMPTE-capable M3[DIinterface. Once music is written to fit the cue, a variety of techniques may be used to record the music. Sequencers have madeit possible for one person, acting as composer, producer, and principle instrumentalist, to provide complete music services to directors. It is also possible to add somelive instruments to the mix without even leaving the computer via sequencers which enable recording digital audio tracks directly onto a hard disk. Sta~ying in Sync After leaving the computer for a tape-based multitrack recorder, other type of SMPTEsynchronizer is required to slave the audio machine to the video master. Many open-reel analog machinescan do thi[s with a Time Line Lynx, Zeta Three, or some other synchronizer. iModular digital multitracks are now widely employed in the world of post-production music. The Ale..sis ADAT uses its own external syn.chronizer, while the Tascam DA-88 uses an internal plug-in card. Both the Fostex version of the ADATand the Sony version of the DA-88include built-in synchronization. Hard disk-based systems such as Pro Tools have a niche in recording music for visual media. The lack of rewind time, instant nondestructive editing capability, and a visual inter’face are some of the manyadvantages of these systems. TheFuture The expected explosion of cable channels and other technologies will likely increase the demandfor music for visual media.It is an exciting time for those who write and produce music for the screen. Technologyhas madeit less expensive to participate in this expanding market. The TRUE Spirit oF Jazz ~ ~ BruceGertz5et THIRD EYE Bruce Gertz- acousticand electricbass JerryBergonzi - tenorsax JohnAbercrombie - guitar JoeyCalderazzo - piano AdamNussbaum - drums (DigitalLiveRecording) DDD- RMCD4509 MickGoodrick 4et SUNSCREAMS MickGoodrick - guitar JerryBergonzi - tenorsax BruceGertz- bass GaryChaffee - drums DDD- RMCD4507 Fasoli/Goodrick DallaPorta/Elgart ~ CITIES Claudio Fasoli- tenorand soprano sax MickGoodrick - guitar Paolino DallaPorta- bass Bill Elgart- drums ADD- RMCD4503 Claudio Fasoli TENTRIBUTES Claudio Fasoli- tenorand soprano sax Kenny Wheeler - trumpet MickGoodrick - guitar BenriTexier- acousticbass Bill Elgart- drums DDD- RMCD4517 U.S.A. distribution: SPHERE MARKETING &DISTRIBUTION, INC., CargoBuilding80, Room 2A, JFKInt’l Airport,Jamaica, NY11430 Tel. 718/656 6220- Fax718/244 I804 Worldwide distribution(except U.S.A.): IREI3 S.p.A. via SanG.B.DeLaSalle,4 - 20132 Milano - Italy Tel. andFax39/2/259 2326 AVAILABLE AT Alum n o t e s Compiled by Clayton Doty and "95 Negui Capriles "96 Multi-instrumentalistJohn Carlini "73 hasa newalbum withhis bandOverthe Edge, whichblendsjazz, bluegrass,andclassicalstyles. Carlini is alsofeaturedon RiverSuite for TwoGuitars withflatpickinglegendTony Riceonthe Sugar Hill label. 24 Berklee today Herbert113ale"52 of Studio City, CA, is owner of Dale Enterprises, a wholesale music distribution company in Los Angeles. Both Louis Desault ’57 (a.k.a. "HappyLouis") and StephenKaminski’87 were nominatecl for a 1994 Grammyfor Polka Album of the Year. Saxophonist FredLipsius "61 released Dreaming of Your Love on the MJAlabel. He produced and composedall selections. TrumpeterJohnLaBarhera’67 is musical director for the 15-piece, all-female progressive jazz band Diva which includes Carol Chaikin"80 on tenor sax, Claire Daly’80 on baritone sax, and Ingrid Jensen’89 on trumpet. The group has performed with a number of noted jazz artists. Elliot Childs"70is living in Dennis, MA,and is leader of the Bourbon Street Paraders Jazz Band. Composer/pianist Randy Klein "71 and Jazzheads appeared at the NewYork/ San Francisco Swing Series last March, and performed selections from their selftitled debut CD. CharlesMymit’71has released Tu Eras Mi Corazon: The Romantic Piano of Chuck Mymit. Multi-instrumentalist Joseph SabloneJr. "73 won the 1993 Billboard Songwriter’s Awardfor his song "I Don’t Wanna Lose You." He is signed with a NewYork publisher. BerthaWilson’73 of Billerica, MA,teaches music at NewNarragansett Regional Elementary School, and was appointed to the Research Board of Advisors of the American Biographical Institute. don Hammond ’74 lives in NYCwhere he hosts a jazz cable TV show. Flutist/composer Christine Poole ’74 moved to Copenhagen, and has released two CDsfor a Danish label. She received the Bay Area Critics Circle Awardin ’93 for best score for a drama. Michael Simon’74 is head chef at his own res- ChrisPoole’74 taurant Italian Colors in Oakland, CA. He also plays guitar with bluesman Freddie Roulette. Harry Chalmiers ’75 was namedexecutive director of the MacphailCenter for the Arts in Minneapolis, MN. Vocalist deannieDeva’75 was invited by the Art Companyof Caracas, Venezuela, to conduct a clinic called Expresate (Express Yourself). Pianist Domenic Cicchetti ’76 has written and performed music for "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous," "Tales from the Darkside," and the film d Bronx Tale. Keyboardist Dorothy Wang ’76 is living in Essex, MA, and was profiled in the January issue of Marie Claire magazine. David Mester ’77 of Elkhart, IN, is a customer service representative for the Selmer Company. Guitarist RicardoSilveira ’77 is a memberof the Summer 1995 NewBrasil All-Stars, with of 1994by Beat magazine. Trombonist/arranger LeoGandelman ’79 (sax), CLASSCONNECTIONS RiquePantoja"82 (key- DennisWilson ’79 was The Fats Waller tune "This boards), MarcioMontar- nameddirector of jazz royos"72(trumpet),Micha- studies in the Department Joint Is Jumping"describes the el Shapiro "84(drums), and of Music at Kansas State Bluebird Care this past March University. when7."t BerkleesongwritingstuAlfonso Johnson (bass), dents joined alumniand guests for andsinger KevynLettau. JoeAntoun "80andJohn tlq.e sixth annual NashvilleAlumMulti-instrumentalist Schumacher "80 and Zach Kenneth Field "78 of Cam- Pitt-Smith’96 completed a ni Singer/Songwriter Showcase. GaryCulley"88, EveGoodman "89, bridge, MA,and Birdsongs fourth seasonof OneIs, the Lynn Biddick’80, Lynette Asheim "92, of the Mesozoicreleased Other Isn’t, presented by Betsy Jackson "84, Debbie Adams their eighth CD, Dancing the Centastage PerforAlumni Chapter on A’A" on Cuneiform mance Group. "81El,Hunter Moore ’77, GillianWelch Presidents "92, DavidRawlings ’88, RichAdRecords. Kenalso composVeseliza Clair"80(a.k.a. New York ams’83, AlanPowell"89, April es and producesmusic for Clair Marlo) released her Steve Ward’87 McLean ’87, Kathy Greier’94, Rob"SesameStreet." latest CDentitled BehavMuMusic Int’l. Composer/producer ior Self on Wildcat e~t Nasatir"93, andDavidSherman (212) 929-1161 William Garrett ’78 is living Records. She also produc’94 each played. Recognition in Park City, UT,and com- es such artists as Michael Orlando awards were presented to Hunter Stan Kubit ’71 Moore andJoeDoyle"87. Sparrow posed and performed the Ruff andPat Coil. Music: Flutist SteveThompson’s Orlando score for the film Backin recording artists ChrisandScott Teachers Inc. "80 album, .My Romance, Dente "87, originally scheduledfor the Days. (407) 352-9702 Vibist SteveHobbs ’78, was voted one of the top art award, had to bowout due to recording commitments.Veteran signed to a three-record three albumsby Northwest Chicago Damon deal with CandidRecords, artists in 1994 by Joey jazz saxophonist Richie C01e’67 Booth ’91 andhis group played for the rest released the first CDwith Cohn, programdirector at ASCAP pianist KennyBarton, per- KPLU-FM. of the evening. (312) 481-1194 LilianCarmona ’81is livGeorgeWein’sFestival Produccussionist Victor Lewis, andbassist Peter Washing- ing in Brazil and teaches tions andthe Boston GlobeJazz Nashville Festival will presentour next Boston. The group toured the drums at Unicamp in Rich Adams’82 (615) 297-8967 U.S., and was featured in Campinasin Sao Paulo. She ton-area special event featuring Jazziz magazine. toured Denmark,Uruguay Toshiko Akiyoshi ’59 andher big Gerard Huizinga ’79 lives and Argentina with the band on June 24. Also slated are Boston Jeannie Deva’75 fellow Columbialabel mate Lein Parow, South Africa, Leny AndradeTrio. The Voice Studio wherehe openeda recordMichaelCox’81 (a.k.a. roy Jones, and a student ensem(617) 536-4553 ble. Proceedswill fund scholaring studio to do jingles and Megazoid)composed and albumsessions. produced dance music and ships for Boston-area students. San Francisco Saxophonist Eric Marisome underscore for the On August 6, the Boston Jazz Gary Boggs ’82 enthal ’79 released Street film BarGirls. Society will present a Salute to Guitar Studio Dancefor the GRPlabel. Glenn Harvitz ’81is living (415) 731-6455 Berkleeat their 19th annualafterBobby Sanabria’79 and in Abiquiu,NM,and is conoon barbecue and concert at his band Ascension had founderand audio consultStonehill College. The program Los Angeles will feature Danil0Perez’88, Andy their album NYCAche/ ant for Attic Studios, anda Leanne Summers ’88 namedone of the top discs memberof the Main Line McGhee,and Phil Wilson with a Vocal Studio Symphony. big band. This will be a great op(818) 769-7260 Singer/SongwriterReisa portunity to picnic, enjoythe surroundings,and hear great music. Mehlman ’81 (a.k.a. Reisa Denver Marlowe)arid her husband Thanks to all whohave taken David Andrewcreated and prothe time to complete the Alumni Hammoud ’81 Denver School duced "Reisa and the Directory questionaire, and reof the Arts Dream," which was prespond to Harris Publishing’s (303) 733-5481 sented at the ArlingtonReplhonecallers. Thenewdirectory will greatly assist networkingacgent PerformingArts Center in Arlington, MA. tivities amongalumni. Tokyo Alumni Pianist JamesStewart Watch the mail for upcoming Coordinator ’81, whohas engineeredfor eventsin yourarea. Michiko such artists as Alice CooYoshino ’90 ---Sarah Bodge, Assistant Director of per, Robbie Neville, and 042-24i-4347 Development for AlumniRelations ReisaMehlman ’81 LamontDozier, released a Summer 1995 Berklee today 25 The cantata War,Peace, Anger, and Love, by Mike VANQUISH VINCEGILL Woods ’82, was performed Countrymusicstar and golf devotee VinceGill by the North Arkansas issued a challengeto fellowgolfers of all levels to Symphony Orchestra. try to "VanquishVince" on the links. Proceeds Woodalso played bass in a fromthe event, part of Berklee’s 50th anniversary production of Lady Dayat celebration, will establish a VinceGill Songwriting Emerson’sBar and Grill in Scholarshipat Berklee. Syracuse, NY. Participation is simple. Sendfor a participation DrummerKathyBurkly form at "VanquishVinceGolf Challenge"at Berk"83 and her band Girls lee Collegeof Music,Box48, 1140BoylstonStreet, Night Out, featuring Sandy Boston MA,02215, or call the "Vanquish Vince" Martin’83 on bass, Marianhotline at (617) 266-1400extension8860. naPontopidan "74 on saxo- Leigh Pilzer"84 Thegolfers then plays a round of golf on their phone,Wendy Sobel’71 on ownfavorite course anytimeduring t[he monthof guitar, Alizon[issance "78 August 1995. They return the form to Berklee, on piano, and vocalist Didi graphics for several interalong with a $20 contribution to the "BerkleeColStewart ’73, playeda sold- active CD-ROMprolege of MusicVince Gill Scholarship Fund" with out reunion concert in grams, and is working on their score card, showingtheir gross score, their Somerville, MA,in March. an interactive programfor handicapand the net of handicapscore. Guitarist RichieZellon Homer’s "Odyssey." Berklee will comparethe participants’ net of ’83 releasedhis debutalbum Chris Florio ’84is currenthandicapscore to Vince’sscore net of his handicap Care Con Leche. Sidemen ly the director of Jumpcut for his round played on Monday,August 28 in include JerryBergonzi ’68 Orchestra with Jonathan Nashville. Those whose scores are lower than "82on guitar, Rodand Paquito D’Rivera on Keezing Vince’swill receive a signed %VanquishedVince" saxophone,DaniloPerez’88 neySmith ’81 on percussion, certificate. Thosewith scores higher than Vince’s Cobb "81onbass, Craig on piano, and percussion- Kevin will receivea certificate reading,"I wasVanquished ist Alex Acuna. Marble’94 on alto sax and by Vince." Participants mayalso purchasetickets Robert"Red" Forrest’83 flute, and DavePek on tenat a cost of $5 each to Berklee’s annual Country founded songwriting and or sax. The band will reMusic Night concert, scheduled for November9, music publishing compa- lease a CDthis summer. LeighPilzer’84of Silver 1995,at whichtime the scholarshipwill be presentnies in the San Fernando ed to the College. Spring, MD,was featured Valleyin California. Sandy Martin"83is tour- on woodwinds on the ing the Ne~vEngiandarea Chuck Brown CD Hah The album Among the with her Patsy Cline trib- Man, and on Bruce Gates’ CDon YMPRecords entiRuins by guitarist Lauren ute show,and will openfor Jazz ConsortiumBig Band tled Underthe Pyramid. DrummerZoro ’81 of Passarelli ’82 andTwoTru, Willie Nelson on several CD,ForcedAir Heat. BarryRocklin "84orchesSylmar, CA has played was namedone of the most dates. She released a live unique indie albums of the CD of the show with her trated the musical comedy with LennyKravitz, Jody Watley, Vanessa Paradis, AmericanMusicSeries for band which includes Adam Riddle with a Fiddle which ’79, piano,EdFried- played in Cambridge, MA, Lisa-Marie Presley, Sean 1994by the DXRadio Net- Feldman Lennon and Yoko Ono, work (syndicated Europe- land’79, bass, andKathy and in Fort Lauderdaleand Burkly ’83, drums. Palm Beach, FL. The orand is touring with Frank- an radio). ie Valli &the FourSeasons JoeSanterre ’82 released JamesCarpenter ’84 chestra includedDavidSass a solo CDentitled Straight plays keyboardsand sings ’87 (reeds and violin) and this summer. Shooter featuring drum- with the Voodoosin Hills- Russ G01d’84 (drums). mers SteveWilkes"80 and ville, VA,and is featured Rocklinalso conductedthe AlanHall, guitarist JonFinn on the debut CD by Slice of Saturday Night ’82, andDinoGovoni ’83 on Smokin’ Oak. band at the Charles Playwoodwind.,;. David Masher’84 of house in Cambridge. DrummerPaul Stowell Swampscott, MA,is curJohn Axelrod ’85 of L.A., ’82 and the BlueHill Kick- rently animationteamlead- credited with discovering ers won the WCLB-FM er for the PBSchildren’s and recording MarcCohn, Battle of the Bands, and show"Wherein the World Jellyfish, WarrenHill, and were hailed 1995 band of is CarmenSan Diego?"and Smashing Pumpkins, comthe year by the National is a contributor to "Nova" posed and orchestrated Country Music Associa- productions at WGBH-TVHow Do I Love Thee-tion. Theywill performat in Boston.Hehas also de- Love Songs for the RomanFoxboroStadiumin July. veloped animation and ticAt Heart. The CDcomJoeSanterre "82 26 Berklee today Summer 1995 bines classical poetry with operatic vocalizing. DrummerRick Beligni ’85 of Las Vegas is audio visual technician at the Aladdin Hotel and Casino, and a first-call drummerin the area. Saxophonist RodneyCaron’85 of Smithfield, RI, joined the r&b group Steve Smith and the Nakeds. The band has backed saxophonist Clarence Clemmons. Composer Roland"R" Katz "85 of Sepulveda, CA, recently completed an albumtitled Likin’ the Trees featuring Freddie O’Doddon drums. JohnAxelrod’85 RalphPetrarca’85 is living in Warren, RI, and is co-owner of Normandy Sound which has produced several platinum records. MichaelSemanick "85 is an engineer at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, CA, where he mixed Freddy Cole’s new CDand the soundtrack for Boys on the Side. He will work on the film To Die For and an album by Jerry Gonzolas and the Fort Apache band. DrummerDanielCantor’86 is featured composer, performer, and producer on Virtual Guitar, a CD-ROM of interactive guitar lessons. Daniel was also cited by Keyboard magazine for his composing and production work on the film Strong City. Guitarist/composer JohnDirac ’86, of Poughkeepsie, NY, performed a jazz guitar concerto written by Ken Schaphorst at Lawrence University in Appleton, WI. Michael Evans’86 of Greensboro, NC, is working on a quantitative model for predicting album success based on its early performance. Summer 1995 L.A. NEWSBRIEFS I write this columnafter re:turning from Boston where I attended the Herb Pomeroy Tribute events. The entire weekend was quite remarkable. The cockcert provided many memorable momentsas did the reception for alumni from past decades. It was an impressive kick-off to a yearlong series of events celebrating the college’s 50thanniversary. Ar.~other 50th event will be held in L.A. in November. The NARAS and MusiCares foundations will host a tribute to Berklee and Lawrence Berk at the House of Blues. Moredetails will come. After the April 15 spread on Berklee in Billboard, I have re.ceived calls from companieswanting to know more about the college. Several new internships were Monica and will feature a discussion and[ demonstrationof the latest in integrated digital audio and MIDItools. This session is designed to help composers become familiar with what is rapidly becoming essential technology. Another ASCAP/Berklee showcase is also in the works. This one will focus on jazz and it is being planned for September--so send in those tapes! As for alumni in the news . . . drummerBobHarsen"82, has been playingwith guitarist Frank Gambale, touring with Eric Marienthal ’79 and is heard on the new CDby Melissa Manchester, which also features guitarist Peter Hume ’78. Curt S0bel "78 coproduced the soundtrack to Dolores Claiborne, with Danny Elfman. He also served as music consultant on The Perez Family, scored by AlanSilvestri"70. Hummie Mann’76 wrote the theme for, and is scoring episodes of the Showtime series "Picture Windows," and also scoring the new Mel Brooks Backrow, fromthe left, Peter Gordon,Grammy win- film Dracula: hersAII-4-One,andJimBerk,executive directorof the Dead and LovNARAS Foundation with four L.A. regional"Grammy in ing It. CompoTheSchools" Berkleescholarship winners(front row). sition credits for StevenStern ’90 include Sweet created as a result. It is encourag- Nothing and Outer Limits. He was ing to see a growing awareness of al:so assistant recording engineer Berklee in the music industry. on The Lion King, Renaissance The second seminar in the Man, and Speed. ChristopherKlat"Taking Care of Business" serie.s man’80 recently orchestrated for took place in May. The guest was The Pebble and the Penguin, I composer All Clausen’66 ("The Love T~ouble, and "Murder, She Simpsons," "The Critic," "Alf," Wrote." TimJones’94 and James and "Moonlighting"). It was Sale ’~ provided orchestrations great evening. All shared lots of for the TVmovie Keys. career anecdotes and practical adThat’s it for now.Stay in touch. vice. Anotherseminar, planned for July, will be held at the Apple Peter Gordon’78, Director of the Computer headquarters in Santa Berklee Center in Los Angeles Berklee today 27 co "86, of Parma,Italy, operates Bass Studio, and has just put out a CDentitled Moods,featuring guitarist Raimondo Meli Lupi"88. Vocalist Julie Gibbons "86 of Somerville,writes for New England Performer magazine and plays with Julie Gibbons and Family. The band features Ralph Kinscheck ’96 on keyboards, wlhom Gibbons will marry :in August. Mordy Ferber"86 Drummer Todd Glacy "86 presented his latest work entitled Rhythms of Guitarist M0rdyFerber Illumination at Brandeis ’86 has released Mr. X on University in April. AnnelyseReneeColon the OzoneMusic label. Sidemen include Jack De- ’87 (a.k.a. ReneeCologne) Johnette (drums), Eddie of Hoboken, NJ, received Gomez(bass), Dave Lieb- a composition grant from man (saxophone), Nana the NewYork Foundation Vasconcelos (percussion), for the Arts and released GeorgeGarzone"72 (saxo- her debut recording on phone), and BradHatfield Back Door Records with ’80 (keyboards). Aromatherapy. The band DrummerLarry Finn ’86 includes MiikeStanzilis’85 recorded with KenSelcer on guitar and drummer Elliot ’87. ’81 and Jill Stein on their Hugh Flashpoint CD and also Gordon Beadle "87(a.k.a. played with Tiger 0koshi’75 Sax Gordon) of Boston, in the Boston area. Larry has played with numerous will be recording with blues artists. He recently Heart and Fire led by Berk- toured with Matt "Guitar" lee faculty member,trum- Murphy and toured with Roomful of Blues across peter Wayne Naus"78. BassistScagliaGianmar- Canada. Aromatherapy, fromtheleft, MikeStanzilis’85,PaulPimsler, Renee Cologne ’87, andHugh Elliot ’87. DennisMitcheltree "87 had his Suite No. 1 for jazz sextet and string quartet performed at the Weill Recital Hall at CarnegieHalt. Dennis has performed with such artists as Bob Moses, Charlie Persip, Jim McNeely, and Ralph Lalama. His debut recording is titled Transformation. HeidiJ. Vierthaler’87 of Portland, ME,received her bachelor’s degree in geography and anthropology from the University of Southern Maine. She is pursuing work in broadcasting, multimedia production, and performance. Flutist/composer Rate Down’88 is music director of the Arts Coalition For Humanitarian Relief in Boston, which produced a concert for Bosnian relief featuring vocaIist Mill Bermejo ’84 and pianist Laszle Gardony ’85. Pianist Adamski Piotr "88 is living in Poland and won the Fifth AmericanJazz Piano Competition in Jacksonville, FL, and gigs regularly in NYC. Vocalist Nola Rose Shepherd "88 and her country group Nola Rose and The Thorns, which includes ClarinetistHarrySkoler’88andhis band,featuringdrummerguitarist Phil Lipman "86, are TimGilmore’78, vibist EdSaindon "76, andbassistRoger playing regularly in the Kimball,releasedConversations in the Language of Jazz. Boston area. 28 Berklee today Bassist Jim Whitney’88 is a memberof Crosscurrent with Bertram Lehman "94 on drumsand Carl Clements "87on tenor sax. Faculty member Lucy Holstedt’88 had her threeact play Dinner staged at the Emerson Playwrights Festival. Itwon her the Rod Parker Fellowship for Play Writing. HarrySkoler"88recently released his CD Conversations in the Language of Jazz with his group Adventures in Jazz, featuring vibist EdSaindon’76, bassist Roger Kimball, and Tim Gilmore"78 on drums. Brazilian vocalist/composer LucianaSouza"88 and her quintet are playing in the Boston area and have been profiled in publica- ScagliaGianmarco ’86 Summer 1995 Wes Montgomery/ The Early Years Transcribed by DanBowden DanBowden is a guitarist and musiceducator whoresidesin Brookline,Ma.with his wife; and son. Havinggraduated from BerkleeCollegeof Musicin 1980, he joined the Berkleeguitar faculty in 1989whereheteachesblues, jazz and rock styles. Danhas, and continuesto pedorm extensively aroundNewEngland. HeidiJ. Vierthaler "87 Other transcription books available; by Dan Bowdenare: Lightnin’ Hopkins/Blues Guitar Legendand ManceLipscomb/Texas BluesGuitar Solos. tions like the Boston Globe and O Estado de Sao PauBook$9.95. lo. Her quintet includes Fernando Huergo "92 on bass and BertramLehmann "94 on Cassette $10.98. drums. WesMontgomery/ TheEarly Years (95315). The artistry exhibited by Wes Montgomery ultimatelyled to a redefinitionof jazz: guitar. Thesetranscriptionsfrom Lello Molinari "89 reWes’early recordedworkcapturehimin contrastingsettings androles--assideman, leased On a Boston Night leader,andwith variousgroupconfigurations.All ,.solos transcribedby DanBowden featuring Assistant Chair of in notationandtablature. Guitar Rick Peckham, and saxophonist George GarOrder TollFree1-800-8-MEL BAY (1-800-863-5229) zone’72. MelBayPublications, Inc. ¯ #4 Industrial iDr. ¯ Pacific, MO 63069 Patrick Skvoretz"89 is marketing manager for the blues/roots label Blind Pig. Patrick’s band Moonshine Lizette Zitzow’89 is the CD entitled Down the PaulDosier"90 released Willy recently released a lead singer of the band World, which was copro- his album Made In the self-titled debut CD. XIXXO,which released a duced with Chris Halqles Shade, featuring Berklee "94. Band membersinc].ude student Nathan Cook on Yuri Zbitnoff ’92 on drums, tenor sax and vocals, Crick CoreyRedonnett ’93 on gui- Diefendorf’91 on guitar and tar, JasonCarr "93 on pi- banjo, DanFox ’92 on tromano, and EdLanolette"95 on bone, JohnMcLellan"92 on bass. drums, and Mike Peipman Andrea Bensmiller’9Cl has ’80 on trumpet. written lyrics for Berklee JohnGreiuer’90released student Eve B.’s new CD, the CD From A to B on f r~nocence. Altenburgh Records. In RobertBonfi!]lio ’9,B is April he toured Japan with guitarist and co-leader of MakotoOzone’83 and the the Philadelphia-based Newport Jazz Orchestra. rock band Wanderlust who Harald Hanisch"90 rereleasedtheir self-titled de- cently completed his disbut album last November. sertation titled the Songsof Guitarist TomCostanza Youssou N’Dour, to earn "90 is nowliving in Mass- his master’s degree in ethapequa, NY, and is presinomusicology from the dent of Diesel Records. University of London. He Tomis also the guitar play- also released Who’s the er for the band Scapegoat Third Man on Sony whose upcoming album Records/Austria. ThedebutreleaseTata(Grandmother) by jazz guitarist/com- will be produced by singer Douglas Murphy’90 is livposerJuanCamacho "91 of Madrid,is on the Severallabel Daryl Hall. ing in Westchester, IL, and Summer 1995 Berklee today 29 poser/arranger Yumiko Murakami"91 of Osaka, Japan and released a self-titled CD with her Yumikonian Orchestra. The disc was produced by EustavoGregeri0 "91, who also played bass and composedone cut. Diego Urcola ’91 played trumpet. EnikoKonye-Platteel "91 is living in Quincy, MA, where she teaches piano and voice. She was featured in a jazz special on the AndersMogensen ’91 Quincy cable channel. JeffreySeptoff ’91 is cur’70. rently living in Morris tarist LanceGunderson Saxophonist Robert Township, NJ, and is assistant engineer at Sync Schulz "92 of Newmarket, Sound, an audio-for -video NH, received his master’s Mia Olson’92 post-production company. degree from the UniversiSusanTedeschi"91 and ty of NewHampshire. Drummer/vocalist her band were profiled in is percussionist for Big Los Homeboys released Blake Windal’92 and guithe Boston Sunday Globe. What’s Up? What’s Up? for John Howell ’82, a DJ for RobHall ’92 is featured tarist AndrewGermain’92 the EMILatin label. the Chicago radio station of L.A., released their own Jeff Thatcher ’90 and the on a new CD on Hotwire US 99. Records with Mike Stern CD Leelanau, featuring Composer Mark Nem- NewYork-based a cappelSomers ’88, "75, drummer Danny Gott- vocalist keanne c0ff "90 has had his music la group Rockapella rebassist Wes Wehmiller "92, selected for the Winter leased a second CDfor the lieb, and guitarists BretWilmott’77, PhilippvanEnded and SanderSelover’80 on Japanese label For Life Olympics, three national trumpet. Sander’s original "87. network series, a PBSdoc- Records, and toured Japan "94, andA~exGnnia song "Should’ve Known" Flutist Mia Olson ’92 of in November. Rockapella umentary series, and a Mais heard in the movie Dumb Boston, released a classical will provide music for the cintosh adventure game. fifth season of the TVshow CDtitled Images with gut- and Dumber. Multi-instrumentalist/ songwriter GarySchutt"90 "Where ill the World Is has released his first CD Carmen San Diego?" The Jimmy Weinstein entitled Sentimetal on the X Zero label for release in Group, featuring saxophonist Chris Cheek"91, Japan and Europe. ’91, Pianist/arranger Henry guitarist Elie Massias bassist Masa Kamaguchi "92, Jimenez ’90 and his band and drummer JimmyWeinstein’90, have released the CD Nostalgia on Accurate Records. Drummer Anders Mogensen ’91 released his debut CD Taking Off for Storyville Records with saxophonists Rick Margitza and Gary Thomas, bassist Ron McC, lure, and pianist Drummer BlakeWindal’92 andguitarist Andrew Germain "92 Composer YumikoMurakami "91 and Neils Lan Doky. released teelanau,a CDof their originalsongs. bassistGustavo Gregorio "91 Pianist/corn30 Berklee t 0 d a y Summer 1995 COI/E "90 PAULA The first few years of Paula Cole’smusic career have been unfolding like a teenager’s ultimate pop star fantasy. She released a critically acclaimed debut recording and is presently writing songs for a new one; toured and recorded with Peter Gabriel; and performed in a host of sold-out arenas on a recent national tour. But while acknowledging the hard work and occasional breaks that have started transforming her dreamsinto reality, the 1990alumna prefers to reflect on the selfdiscovery and self-acceptance that she says is critical to her success. "I’ve learned that the more I becomemyself, with all of myeccentricities, the better I amfor it," Colesays. "It’s great to let all your barely look at one person in the audience. Myeyes were shut the whole time because I was so shy," she recalls. "But Peter Gabriel’s [Secret World] tour forced me to become a more extroverted performer because he was always trying to push me out front." On subsequent tours, Cole traveled with Counting Crows, Jeffrey Gaines, Jules Shear, and, last spring, Sarah McLachlan. McLachlan was advised to avoid touring with another woman, but insisted on having Cole as her openingact, according to Cole. "I guess people were afraid of upstaging or comparisons between us, but Sarah didn’t bow down," Cole says. "I really respect her for that." NOW AVAILABLE FROM M PUBRHYTHM CHANGES VOLUME II RHYTHM CHANGES UPTEMPO PICKSTYLE GUITAR ACCOMPANIMENT VOL.II ALL KEYS PaulaCole’90:Self-discovery andself-acceptance werecritical elements. quirkiness--your thoughts and feelings--into your music. That makes it much better, much more original." Cole’s personal approach to music is evident in her Imagodebut, Harbinger, whose 14 songs run the gamut from high school angst to a tribute to her mother. Her agile and powerful voice is the most stunning element of her music, dipping and soaring over a blend of contemporary pop and soft rock that has proven popular on adult alternative radio stations. Performing her music without self-concern in front of audiences, at first, proveddifficult. "WhenI got to Berklee I could Summer 1995 This summer, Cole and her band--percussionist Jay Bellerose ’87 and guitarist Gerry Leonard-will open for Melissa Etheridge "80 on a summertour. Cole predicts her next recording will be just as introspective as Harbinger, but won’t feature as many "dark and brooding adolescent things. I’m a little morerelaxed and self-confident now, so I think the music is going to flow forth a little moreeasily this time. Plus, after all this touring the band’s sound is really focused." Cole hopes to release her second record early next year. --Rob Hochschild Playtime at the fastest of tempos using guide tones and small voicings - you’ll glide through the changes. Contemporaryand traditional examples.Studies in all keys, includingfour in B flat. If you play picksWlerhythmyou’ll love this book! WithTAB.$! 1.95 RHYTHM CHANGES PICKSTYLE GUITAR ACCOMPANIMENT VOL.I - ALL KEYS ’%~7alking Zime" swingstyle studies in all keys. Withvoice led triads and harmonizedbass lines. All studies are connected and move throughthe cycleof fifths for ease of practicing. Perfect for medium or slow tempos. ReadingRequired. $11.95 P.O. Box 1234 Starnford, [306904-1234 USA LI.$. ordersadd$1.50S &Hper book. Canadian $2.00,Foreign$3.00. All checksin U.S.dollars.CTresidentsadd6% sales tax. Make checkspayableto MPub-BT Drummer Mark Vadnais ’92 is currently choral music director for Barrington Middle School in Barrington, RI. Guitar player Niklas Winter’92 and his Scandinavian Jazz Quartet which features Emil Hess ’92 on saxophone and Neils Werner Larsen’89 on drums, and bassist Jesper Bodnilsan,released the CDNewDeal. Hermanes Abreu’93 and THEY’RE COIMONG Our Berklee College of Music Alumni Directory project is nearing completion and soon the directories will be shipped. This comprehensive new volumeis a compilation of the most current data available on over 18,844 Berklee College of Music alumni. The information was obtained from questionnaire mailings, telephone verification, you wish to place an order, please conand from the college’s alumni records. tact the publisher at the address below. Nowthat the editing, proofreading, and CustomerService Department BernardC. Harris Publishing printing are almost finished, the distribution of this impressive edition will 16 KogerCenter, Suite 103 Norfolk, VA23502 begin. The directories are scheduled to be Phone:(800) 877-6554 released some time around August 15. Our new directory is an excellent All alumni whoreserved a copy of the way of reliving your school days and directory during the verification phase getting reacquainted with former classshould be receiving their copies two or mates. To those who returned their three weeks after the release. If you questionnaires--many thanks for all of have a question on your order, or if your cooperation. the distinction of being the The Scandinavian Jazz only female radio engineer Quartet,fromthe left, Emil in the city of Boston. John KendMI "93 of Hess’92, JesperBodnilsan, Nicevile, FL, is an instrucNiklasWinter’92,andNiels tor in jazz studies at OkaVernerLarsen’88 1oosa Walton Community College. Engineer JamesStare the Hermanes Abreu ’93 enrolled[ in the InstiGroupreleased Cria tute of Audio Research in neira--A Fetus in the Womb.The group plays in NYClast year. He has worked at Giant Recordthe NewEngland area. Carol Huffman ’93 is an ing Studios in NewYork engineer at WMJX-FM, and Emerald City Studios in Boston. and WBCS-FM.Carol has Guitarist StefanHiller’94 and his quartet featuring drummer Goetz Gruenberg ’91, played 10 shows throughout southwestern Germany during January. Pianist RoyPerez"94 is living in Naguabo, PR, and is recording with the band La Dominante. ComposerBobblePittleman’94 of Hyde Park, NY, scores the TV show "Doing Business Internationally" for the USANetwork, works as an engineer/corn- poser for Pharaoh Audiobooks in Phoenicia, NY. ZachRichards ’94 of Santa Fe, NM,is an assistant engineer at Stepbridge Recording Studios and Mismaster Sound, and has worked with Buckwheat Zydeco, Tito Puente, Rita Coolidge, Three Dog Night, Bo Diddley, and Junior Wells. Sander Wolf "94 owns Sander’s Conspiracy, a publicity company and is representing several Bos- THINKABOUTTHE BARPROGRAM Berklee AlumniRepresentatives (BAR)visit dozens of high schools, conferences, and college fairs each year, talking about their Berklee experiences and answering questions about the college from talented young musicians. If you are interested in sharing your time and talent to help us reach the next generation of music industry leaders, call us at (800) 421-0084,or mark the BARinfo box in the alum notes form on page 35. We will send you more information on the BARprogram along with an application. Join us. Berklee today TheJimmy Weinstein Group,fromthe left, ChrisCheek "91, Elie Massias’91, MasaKamaguchi ’92, andWeinstein "90 Summer 1995 IMPROVE YOUR SAX ]LIFE ,.Brass "Woodwind ,,Strings ,,Percussion .Sales -Repairs *Rentals Worldwide Professionaland personalserviceby EMILIO LYONS JonDowling’95 Your Source For the Finest Namesin Brass & Woodwinds Servingprofessionalmusicians,students, musicschoolsanduniversities since 1939. ton-area bands including Spinning Jenny featuring Tony Felos "89 and Jay 263 HUNTINGTON AVE., BOSTON, MA 02115 Fitzgibbons’90. The band (NEXT TO SYMPHONYHAL:L) 617-266-4727 has recently released a debut CD, Love and Da-Da. Pianist Cornelius Kreusch Philharmonic Hall. with the Shanghai Phil]ha> in Nashville, TN. "94 recorded his fourth alViolinist Sakurako monic. Drummer Jon Dowling bum Black Mud Sound for Waseda ’94 played with Saxophonist Steve INeiz- ’95 is conductingclinics for Enja Records, and gave a Stevie Wonderon his tour man "94 and his band Love the Sabian cymbal and piano duo concert with Las- of Japan, and is currently Pollution, with guitarists Cappella stick companies. zlo Gardony ’85 in Munich’s touring Japan and China MikeCanty"91 and FernDeChris Jones’95of HampMello "96, drummer Brian ton Bays, NY, scored the McEIroy"95, keyboarciist film Going Home. Jones Jeremy Jones"93, and bass- also plays ChapmanStick ist TroyJones"90 released with the band Ajna Chakra. their debut CDin March. Renate Thomas’95 of Roy Folguera "94 is curBoston is percussionist Alumni Student Referral rently living in Los Ange- with Sol y Canto, a Latin Help give an interested, deserving young musician les and was music superviband on Rounder Records more information on Berklee by filling out this form sor for the film A Walk in which just released Sancoand sending it to the address below. the Clouds. cho. The band includes FdilClaytonDoty’95 is work- io Bermudez ’92 on violin Name ing for singer JimmyBuf- and bass, and EduardoTamfet’s Margaritaville Records credi "93 on piano. Address Berklee City State ZIP Instrument Your Name Send the completed form to: Berklee College of Music Office of Admissions 1140 Boylston Street Boston, MA02215-3693 ETOD Sumrner 1995 0695 ChrisJones’95 Berklee today 33 SPIRITUALFOOD "safe" career choice to becomea us of the truth that lies beneathand musician.Thereare risks involved, beyondthe illusion that welive in. James Taylor’s May7 Commence- and I think it’s important to re- It gives us relief fromthe insanity of constantly trying to invent ourmentAddressto the Class of 1995 :memberwhywetake those risks. Mywife Katherinerefers to this selves. Andin this way, musicis Ladies and gentlemen of the period of time that we’rein nowas true spiritual practice. I thankGod graduatingclass of 1995,President "high late capitalism," andI agree for music, and I thank music for Berk, assembled faculty, family with her that it’s characterizedby a God. So, render unto Caesar that members,well-wishers, and hang- general, ongoingattempt to put a which is Caesar’s, but keep the ers-on, congratulations!I feel deep- dollar value on pretty mucheverymoneychangers out of the temple, thing. In fact, as a culture we seem ly honored to be with you here and keep music to yourself. to feel uneasy and skeptical about today and in such distinguished I would advise you to keepyour anything that doesn’t have a numcompany.It’s a beautiful day and overhead down; avoid a major drug ber attached to it that represents it was a lovely performancelast habit; play everyday; andtake it in night; very movingand wonderful moneyin the bank. I wouldjust like to makeone front of other people -- they need to feel includedin it. I get the feeling that peopleall simple and obviouspoint that was to hear it, and you need them to over the countryare graduatingand clear to mewhenI started out, but hear it. Andpersevere. The Japathey’re leaving one phase and mov- that has becomemore obscure as nese say, "fall downseven times, ing on to another with a combined I’ve repeatedlytakenmyselfto mar- and stand up eight times." So, remember why you chose feeling of anxietyandelation. I feel ket. Andthat’s simply that it’s a this risky enterprise. Well,Classof gift. It’s a blessing, and we really it too; as weapproachthe millen’95, carry on. are the lucky ones to have music in nium,the worlditself is in a state of profound transition. And, in our lives andat the centerof things. Because, as you know,music is these timesandon this day, there’s bound to be a lot of talk about the true soul food, and not that musicas a career, musicas an in- other stuff. Youcancriticize it, you dustry, and the "entertainment can put a spin on it, you can analyze it and interpret it in termsof business." Andthat’s fine. But I want to talk about music its cultural significance.But, basias spiritual food. I applaudandad- cally that doesn’taffect music.Mumire your decision to makemusic sic is beyondthe fashion of conthe focus and the center of your sensusreality, andbasically,it either lives, becausein spite of the in- connectswith us, or it doesn’t. Andbecauseit follows the laws creasing presenceof corporatepriorities in musictoday, it is not a of the physicaluniverse, it reminds TOP HONOR Composer Michael JudeBergeman ’96 took first place in the Music and Humorcategory of the 1994 Computerand 34 Berkiee to day Electronic MusicInternational Competitionin Bourges,France. Over 562 compositions from composers from 41 countries were submitted,to the contest, whichis the most prestigious one in the electronic musicfield. Bergeman’s winning piece, "Hershey Tube Rundown," was featuredin tlhis year’sfestival in May,andwill appear on a CD to be released anddistributed internationally. A FRIENDIN NEED David Bergell’88 graduated with honors from Berkiee and immediately found workas a bassist at the Trumpcasinos in Atlantic City. In 1992, he sustained a tragic brain injuryas a result of the misdiagnosis of an illness he had contracted. After monthsin a coma, David revived, but remainsin a rehabilitation NewJersey center. Music has a healing effect on David. Anyof his Berklee friends who could offer inspiration or encouragementalong the road to his recovery maywrite or call himat: DavidBergell 41 Gulph Mill Road Somerspoint, NJ 08244 (609) 926-9720 Summer 1995 FINAL CADENCE eight grandchildren. PeterDiCarlo Sr. "71,of Gene Cherico "59, former Stoneham,MA,died April bassist with BennyGood- 5, 1995. He was72. man,GeorgeShearing, Stan After years as a bassist Getz, PeggyLee, and Frank with big bands (including Sinatra, died August 12, the Basle Band), Peter en1994, in Santa Monica,CA, tered Berkleeat age42, and from non-Hodgkin’s lym- earnedhis musiceducation phoma.He was 62. degree. He taught in eleGene’sfirst trio includ- mentary schools in Iped pianist Toshiko Akiyoshiswich,MA,until he retired. ’59 anddrummer JakeHan- Heleaves his wife Philomna’56.Geneleaves a daugh- ena, and three children: ter Amyand a stepdaugh- Mary,Peter, and Roseanne. ter Ann. Terry Richmond ’79 of Robert"Bobble" Alston Gettysburg, PA,died Feb’69, of Columbus,OH,died ruary 7, 1995. Hewas 35. August1, 1994. Hewas 49. Terry was a guitarist at A trumpeter, Alston led Berklee.Heleaves his wife the Bobble Alston Quin- Jodi, and two children: tet, and wasa faculty mem- Heatherand Scott. ber at Capital University, Lillian"Lily"Kushi ’81of and the Jazz Workshop.He Brooklin, MA,died Januleaves two daughters and ary 8, 1995of cervical can- cer. Shewas41. gree in professionalmusic. A keyboardist, Lily Upto his last days, Eric earned her degree in film was dedicated to teaching scoring. She wrotethe mu- musicto children at Ecole sic to the independentfilm Bilinguein Boston,and had TheLast of Alpt.,a, andhad plans to pursuehis master’s written music to accompa- degree.In addition to his ny audio tapes of lectures wife, he leaves his children by her father, macrob:iotic Sophie, 5, and Thomas,3. dietitian MichioKushi. Daniel Gavini "93,of HolLily had also workedas liston, MA,died of a brain an extra in movies, TV tumorin March,at 21. shows, and commercialsin His family has estabLos Angeles. She is sur- lished the Dan Gavini vived by her mother and Scholarship Fund at Berkfather and four brothers. lee. Contributionsin Dan’s EricBaboin ’88of Arling- namemaybe sent to Berkton, MA,died o~ lung can- lee’s Office of Developcer on April 5, 1995. Eric ment,1140BoylstonStreet, was30. Boston, MA,02215. Aguitarist and pianist, Richardtatham’93 of Eric and his wife Sabine MenloPark, CA, died May movedfrom Paris to Bos- 5, 1995,of cancerat 34. Riton so Eric could study at chard majoredin jazz comBerklee. Heearned his de- position at Berklee. ALUMNOTESINFORMATION FORM Full Name Address City State ZIP HomePhone # ~ This is a newaddress. YourInternet address: Last year you attendedBerklee Did you receive a ~1 Degree Diploma? Professional Identity Professional Address City State ZIP Work Phone # Yourtitle/role Please give details of newsworthy performances,recordings, musicprojects, awards, recognitions, or other events youwouldlike us to knowabout (please print or type, use a separate sl~eet if necessary): ~ Send me more information on the Berklee AlumniRepresentativeprogram. ~ Send me more information on becominga Berklee CareerNetworkadvisor. Pleasesendthis form,alongwithanypublicity,clippings, photos,CDs,or itemsof interestto: Berklee today,Berklee Collegeof Music,1140Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02215-3693. Internetaddress:sbodge@it.berkiee.edu Summer 1995 Berklee today 35 CODA The Value of Music Therapy Karl Brahn ~ Berklee’s announcement that it will soonbe hometo a s some of you mayknow, I am the presidential advisor to the NationalAssociationfor MusicTher- newmusic therapy curriculum is a well-timed landmark py (NAMT) located outside of Washington, D.C. One decisionfor the college, for the professionof musictherfacet of myjob as presidential advisor is to encourage apy nationally and internationally, and for society at partnerships betweenthe music therapy communityand large. Berklee will be one amongsome70 institutions nationwidewhichwill be offering approvedmusictherathe musicindustry. py curriculums. Coursework at these institutions ranges I’ma recent convertto a belief in the value of music from the baccalaureate through the doctoral level. therapy. I first becameawareof the scope and depth of Berklee’s timing is particularly opportunein that there the profession several years ago when, as director of market developmentof the National Association of Mu- has beena recent explosionin the interest and needfor sic Merchants (NAMM), I was contacted by NAMT music therapy. The U.S. Administration on Agingfundprovideassistance in a U.S. Senatehearingon the thera- ed six research and training grants investigating music peutic effects of music on elderly persons whichNAMTtherapyfor elderly persons. Musictherapyalso benefited fromsociety’s increased interest in health care reform was coordinating. Musictherapy is an allied health profession in which and concernabout alternative treatments. Evidentof that musicis used to addressphysical, psychological,cogni- concernis a newoffice within the NationalInstitutes of tive, andsocial needsof peopleof all ages. After assessing Health, the Office of Alternative Medicine,whichhas the strengthsandneedsof eachclient, the qualified music fundeda musictherapy and brain injury study. Berkleeis in a position to makea uniquecontribution therapist provides treatment in muchthe samemanneras a physical or occupationaltherapist would.This treat- to the musictherapy profession becauseof the college’s mentincludes creating, singing, moving to, and/or listen- focus on contemporarymusic education with emphasis on jazz improvisation, pop music, and musictechnology. ing to music. Musictherapy also provides avenues :for communica- Musicalcreativity or improvisationis the foundationof tion that can be helpful to those whofind it difficult to effective musictherapytreatmentof patients. Since Berkexpress themselves in words. Some6,000-10,000 music lee’s missionis to train creative musicians,a combination of this creative training and music therapists worldwideprovide servictherapy training bodes well for the es to those with psychiatric disornew program. ders, mental retardation and develThe music therapy profession is opmental disabilities, speech and currently expandingto include ideas hearingimpairments,physical disabiland support from the music enterities, neurologicalimpairments,cantainment industry, the musicprodcer, and AIDS,amongothers. Over ucts industry, and the medicalprofour decadesof researchin musictherfession. This expansionwill provide apy substantiate the effectiveness of exciting opportunitiesfor Berkleeto music therapy in manyareas such as develop contemporarymusic therafacilitating movementand overall pists equippedto provide a wide vaphysical rehabilitation, motivating riety of servicesin the field. people to cope with treatment, proThe 21st century will see a need viding emotionalsupport for clients for music therapists knowledgeable and families and providingan outlet in contemporary music, technology, for expressionand feelings. and entrepreneurship. As Berklee celebrates its 50th anniversary, the announcement Karl Bruhnserved as a visiting lec- Karl Brehn:"Berklee’s a music therapy decisionto offer a musictherapycurturer in Berklee’sProfessionalEduca- thatit will implement ~ is a landmark decision." riculumis another milestone. tion Divisionfor the springsemester. curriculum 36 8erklee today Summer 1995 Here’s five hot|~iugs & JamMan: Dav~ffl has been extending the guitar’s sonic boundaries forman IntheT~ i994 Readers’ Poll inGuitar Player M~ooT~.o n................ y ye!rs Guitarist". Lexicon processors have always been anessential ingredient ofhisunique soundscapes andaree~dent onhisnew album,"Tripping Over God." ’~am~an become one ~ my ve~ be~t trienfl~, an~ Vo~ex i~ a benignly paye~cne visitor ~rom another planet. " ~c~a~ell I~rfi~ag shocked thehe bass world in’Bassist r994 with hisdaring release, Thohk, This record ped him win the oftheYear" honors inBass Player Hagazine ~Readers’ Poll. AIongtime finofLexicon processors, ~anring hasrecently begun toexperiment. with JamMan and Vortex, taking hissolobass Hights intoh~erspace. Anew album isdue in~995. "Vo~exana JamMano~er an immense rangeo~excitingnewcreative~o~sibilitie~.,, plugone gnyourself. It’s no secret that Lexicondfi~Zal systems are used by most of the world’s recording studios, and by manytop performers. Lexicon’s Pezqo~ma~ace effects processors are also affordable, and they’re also used by the world’s leading-edge musicians. Like *hese players and many, manymore. So whynot check ’era out for ~~ yourselO ~~/~ T~ Vo~ex -- the most radical ~EA- ~ the m~ket. Or ~Man -- *he hot samplin~delaylooper. Conta~us for a set of A~fica~ N~ze~or visit yo~ authorized dealer now. Le~5~.e~.ra is wtdely regarded asoneofthefinest composers on,thescene today. Her pristine guitar sound has been called remarkable" and "fluid" byMusician Magazine. ~new soloalbum Words~ is due~nmid.~995. ’YamMan h~ become an e~entia~ Composing tool, a~ well ~ a Welcome aaaition $vr live Pe~V~ancen ~ aria I~ ~e~ing 5Vme 9reat new ~ounas Srom Vo~ex."