the 2009 Da Capo - TCU | The School of Music
Transcription
the 2009 Da Capo - TCU | The School of Music
A Newsletter from the School of Music | Texas Christian University November 2009 NOTE FROM THE EDITOR MESSAGE FROM THE DIRECTOR Isn’t technology wonderful? Instead of waiting for a week or more TCU School of Music Alumni and Friends: for our hand-written letters to reach their destinations, we now Each August we are privileged to welcome new students know that our quickly typed e-mails and text messages will reach and new faculty members into our TCU School of Music their intended recipients in seconds. Or we can snap a photograph, family. This is truly a special time for us because we literally download it to a computer, and send it to anybody we want in a infuse the school with new life on every front. This year matter of one or two minutes. Compare this to waiting until we finish we welcome a total of seven new faculty members (four a whole roll of film, developing it, and sending a print in the mail. full-time and three part-time) and perhaps our largest Today, with new technology, we can do things much more easily and new student class ever—approximately 60 new freshmen faster than before. music majors, 21 new graduate majors, and 8 new artist diploma students. However, this comfort comes at a price! Our e-mails no longer bear Da Capo | TCU School of Music a print of our personalities, like hand-written letters did. We have lost New faculty and new students blend quickly with continuing I would like to draw special attention to our Faculty and some of the romanticism of waiting for a reply by post, finally getting faculty and students, at once coming up to speed on Friends Chamber Music Concert scheduled for November Richard C. Gipson, Director Misha Galaganov, Editor Paul Cortese, Production Manager Laura Samuel Meyn, Copy Editor Design by Ardent Design Contributing Photographers include: Glen Ellman, Jon Uzzel, Kimberly Grogan, Paul Cortese it, and reading and re-reading it many times. The electronic storage who we are, how we do things, and generally what we 23, 2009. That evening, seven of our faculty members will of our photographs and messages is not as reliable as old-fashioned are all about. The act of communicating this information be featured in a preview performance of their forthcoming boxes full of letters or albums full of photographs and negatives. to this new infusion of faculty and students results in a concert in Shanghai Concert Hall. I hope you can join us healthy rethinking of our mission, goals, and values. The on that special evening. Be sure to visit us regularly on These thoughts were going through my mind as I received electronic combination of their new ideas and fresh perspectives the web at www.music.tcu.edu. This is a great time for the Please submit your announcements online via www.music.tcu.edu/dacapo.asp or send your correspondence to: forms with your submissions for inclusion in the 2009 issue of Da creates an ongoing cyclical renewal that helps keep us all School of Music and a great time for TCU. TCU alums and Capo. On the one hand, I love the electronic format because it makes vibrant, challenged, and rewarded. friends can be justifiably proud of their university and their the other hand, I hate technology when it malfunctions. Some of This year we welcome new full-time faculty in the areas of colleagues on the faculty to represent you and work with your submissions arrived incomplete, and some of the forms arrived musicology, music education, and trombone. You will read our outstanding students. blank. While I followed up with many of you, I could not locate people elsewhere in Da Capo about these and other new faculty whose forms were missing contact information. I hope that I included members, but please know that these musicians are stellar materials from everyone who made submissions; all the same, I am and represent a wonderful addition to an already superior very concerned that some of the material got lost in the electronic faculty base. jungle. If you notice that your news for this issue (or previous issues) was not included or was severely shortened, please let me know. The School of Music student body has grown by 67 Meanwhile, we will work on improving our electronic form. percent over the past seven years, and this coming year we Sincerely, Richard C. Gipson Director, TCU School of Music estimate enrolling close to 300 music majors—our largest One of the things I love about being editor of this newsletter is that I enrollment ever. The new doctoral program begins this fall acquire really broad knowledge about everything that is going on at with our first doctoral class of five students. In addition, TCU’s School of Music. I feel honored to be a part of our school, and the recent expansion of our faculty has resulted in record I hope you enjoy reading this edition of Da Capo. enrollments in a number of applied music areas. As I mentioned in my note to you last year, this could not have Dr. Misha Galaganov been possible without the support of every office at TCU, Editor from the chancellor and provost to the Admissions Office, to Financial Aid, and to the Physical Plant. 3 | Da Capo Da Capo TCU School of Music Dr. Misha Galaganov, Editor TCU Box 297500 Fort Worth, TX 76129 School of Music. It remains a privilege for me and all of my my job of collecting and editing the materials so much easier. On November 3 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Guest Recital Series Jessica Matheas, violin Misha Galaganov, coordinator November 4 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series New Music Ensemble Gerald Gabel, director November 6 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Saxophone Chamber Ensemble Joe Eckert, conductor November 9 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series Percussion Ensemble I TCU Steel Drum Band I Brian West, conductor November 10 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Jazz Combos + Brass, featuring Morris Repass Curt Wilson, conductor November 18 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Percussion Ensemble from Cali, Colombia TCU Percussion Ensemble November 19 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Maria Luisa Harth-Bedoya, guitar November 20 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Latin American Music Festival TCU Wind Symphony Bobby Francis, conductor November 20 - 22 Latin American Music Festival Caminos del Inka Phase II Bass Hall November 20 – 21 TCU Band Weekend November 13 - November 19 Latin American Music Festival www.latinarts.tcu.edu November 21 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Collegium Musicum H. Joseph Butler, conductor November 13 7:30PM Ed Landreth Hall Latin American Music Festival Colombian Typical Trio Colombian Tenor November 22 2:00PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Cello Studio Recital Jesús Castro-Balbi, artistic director November 15 3:00PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Columbian Piano Duo November 22 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Double Bass Studio Yuan Xiong Lu, director November 15 4:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Colombian Bandola, Guitar and Tiple Trio November 16 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Caminos del Inka Phase I Guest Artist 4 | Da Capo o November 18 3:00PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Latin American Electronic Music Recital November 17 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Latin American Music Festival Caminos del Inka Phase II TCU Chamber Groups Guest artists, Miguel Harth Bedoya, guest conductor November 22 7:30PM St. Stephen Presbyterian Ensemble Concert Series TCU Concert Chorale Ron Shirey, conductor Janet Pummill, piano November 23 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Faculty & Friends Chamber Music Series, Jesús Castro-Balbi, artistic director, $10 ADMISSION; $5 students and seniors Free with TCU ID www.music.tcu.edu/facfriends Fall 2009 November 24 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Chamber Music Recital Curt Thompson, director November 30 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series Percussion Ensemble II Brian West, conductor December 1 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Vocal Jazz Ensemble Allison Whetsel Ward and Ron Shirey, conductors December 2 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series Jazz Ensemble Concert Curt Wilson, conductor December 3 7:30pm PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Cello Ensemble Concert Jesús Castro-Balbi, conductor December 4 3:00PM and 7:30PM Music Building South, 3050 Rogers Ave. TCU Opera Studio Scenes Admission FREE December 6 5:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Harp Ensemble Concert Laura Logan, director December 7 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Choir and Wind Symphony Christmas Concert Ron Shirey and Bobby Francis, conductors December 8 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Symphonic Band Brian Youngblood, conductor Spring 2010 January 25 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Faculty Recital Series David Begnoche, trombone March 23 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Mitchelmore Master Series Cavani Quartet Januray 29 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Guest Recital Series Carol Williams, organ H. Joseph Butler, coordinator March 26 & 27 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall & Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series Jazz Festival Curt Wilson, conductor February 1 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Faculty Recital Series Harold Martina, piano February 8 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Guest Recital Series Jackie Lamar, saxophone Joe Eckert, coordinator February 15 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Faculty & Friends Chamber Music Series Jesús Castro-Balbi, artistic director; $10 ADMISSION; $5 students and seniors Free with TCU ID www.music.tcu.edu/facfriends February 22 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Wind Symphony Bobby Francis, conductor February 28 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Faculty Concert Series John Owings, piano March 1 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Faculty Recital Series Colleen Mallette, voice March 2 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Recital Series Chamber Music Ensemble Curt Thompson, director March 8 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Double Bass Studio Luan Yu, director March 11 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Recital Series TCU Symphonic Band Bobby Francis, conductor March 29 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Percussion Ensemble II April 5 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Choral Union Ron Shirey, conductor April 6 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Jazz Combos Curt Wilson, conductor April 7 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Recital Series Student Composers Gerald Gable, director April 8 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Guest Recital Series John Solomons, piano Harold Martina, coordinator April 9 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Women’s and Chamber Choirs Sherri Neill, conductor April 10 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Recital Series Trombone Symposium David Begnoche, coordinator April 19 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Faculty & Friends Chamber Music Series Jesús Castro-Balbi, artistic director; $10 ADMISSION; $5 students and seniors Free with TCU ID www.music.tcu.edu/facfriends April 20 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Cello Studio Recital Jesús Castro-Balbi, conductor April 22 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Double Bass Studio Recital Yuan Lu, conductor April 23, 24 & 25 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Opera Richard Estes, director April 26 7:30PM PepsiCo Recital Hall Ensemble Concert Series Chamber Music Recital Curt Thompson, director April 27 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series Percussion Ensemble I Brian West, director April 28 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series Concert Chorale Ron Shirey, conductor All events are subject to change. Please visit www.music.tcu.edu for up-to-date information. April 12 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Wind Symphony Bobby Francis, conductor April 13 7:30PM Ed Landreth Auditorium Ensemble Concert Series TCU Symphonic Band Bobby Francis, conductor 5 | Da Capo UPCOMING PERFORMANCES AN EVENING WITH THE TCU SCHOOL OF MUSIC: ANOTHER FULL HOUSE AT BASS PERFORMANCE HALL For the second time, TCU School of Music students had the pleasure and privilege to perform not only in one of the most stunning performance venues in Texas, Bass Performance Hall, but also to give an outstanding concert to a sold-out audience of thousands. On the evening of February 9, more than 300 students, alumni, and community members were part of this unforgettable event that brought the audience to their feet. The concert included performances by the TCU Jazz Ensemble, TCU Wind Symphony, and the combined forces of the Fort Worth-TCU Symphonic Choir, TCU Symphony Orchestra, and Texas Boys Choir. The TCU Jazz Ensemble started the evening with two toe-tapping tunes “Kenton Kollage” and “Jumpin’ at the Woodside” led by their conductor, Curt Wilson. This rousing performance was followed by a contemporary piece by David Maslanka, “Give Us This Day: Short Symphony for Wind Ensemble” performed by the TCU Wind Symphony and led by its conductor, Bobby Francis. The music was both powerful and filled with emotion, which paved the way for the evening’s closing composition—Carl Orff’s legendary Carmina Burana. This piece is easily regarded as Carl Orff’s most notable and monumental work for soloists, chorus, and orchestra. The performance featured three alumni from the TCU School of Music: soprano Ava Pine, baritone David Grogan, and tenor Jay Smith. For this performance, the Fort Worth-TCU Symphonic Choir and TCU Symphony Orchestra were also joined by the Texas Boys Choir. Germán Gutiérrez led the impressive gathering of musicians on one of the most dramatic musical portrayals of life’s many pleasures and perils. With its challenging vocal solos, barbaric rhythm, and seductive melodies throughout, the audience immediately rose to their feet at the close of the powerfully recognizable “O Fortuna.” 7 | Da Capo | Articles 6 | Da Capo | Articles The night was an overwhelming success. Numerous people made the event achievable; special gratitude and appreciation go to Provost Nowell Donovan for his support and for making this concert a true accomplishment for TCU and the School of Music. UKRAINIAN MUSIC FESTIVAL AT TCU The School of Music was host for a Festival of Ukrainian Chamber Music October 28–31, 2008. Three guest composers from Ukraine attended rehearsals and concerts of their compositions, as well as participating in a panel discussion and meeting with classes. There were also five concerts of music featuring the TCU Symphony Orchestra and the TCU New Music Ensemble, in addition to faculty and student soloists. The following three guest composers were featured at the festival: MYROSLAV SKORYK is a leader of the older generation of Ukrainian composers. He presented a film for which he composed the soundtrack. Entitled Shadows of Ancient Ancestors, the film has been hailed as a classic of Slavic film production. Skoryk was recently given the title of Hero of Ukraine, the highest honor bestowed on its citizens by the government of Ukraine. LUDMILA YURINA is one of the leading female composers from Ukraine, whose music has been performed extensively in Europe, Canada, and United States. In addition to having four of her compositions performed while at TCU, Yurina also presented a lecture in two parts on recent music of Ukrainian composers. SERGEY ZAZHYTKO is an officer of the Kiev branch of the Ukrainian Composers Union and represents the avant-garde of younger composers from Ukraine. His theatrical work Zbigniew Batjuk was extremely well received, as was one of his orchestral compositions. 9 | Da Capo | Articles 8 | Da Capo | Articles Festival Director Gerald Gabel called the event a great success artistically. It served its purpose of exposing the TCU community to the music of a country with which we were most likely unfamiliar. CHAMBER MUSIC ROUNDUP AND ROUNDUP ACADEMY TCU CELLOFEST TCU Cellofest took place March 3–7, 2009. This event featured distinguished artist cellists and faculty in five concerts and eight master classes, including cellists Chris Adkins (Dallas Symphony Orchestra), Andrés Diaz (Southern Methodist University), Mu-la Na (China Central Conservatory, Beijing), Eugene Osadchy (the University of North Texas), Aldo and Elizabeth Parisot (Yale University), Dennis Parker (Louisiana State University), Carlos Prieto (Mexico), and Bion Tsang (the University of Texas at Austin) in concerts and master classes. Also featured were the New Conservatory of Dallas Chamber Orchestra and its director/violinist Arkady Fomin, the SMU Cello Ensemble, the TCU Cello Ensemble, and the TCU String Orchestra, as well as TCU faculty members German Gutierrez, Yuan Xiong Lu, and Harold Martina. For more information please visit www.cello.tcu.edu/cellofest. Chamber Music Roundup Festival is an annual weeklong event that gives amateur players and students of all levels the opportunity to rehearse and perform chamber music pieces in the same ensembles with professional artists; to attend and participate in classes, lectures, and master classes; and to attend a faculty chamber music performance. The accompanying Chamber Music Roundup Academy offers amateur players regular chamber music coaching from TCU faculty members throughout each semester. The biggest news of the festival is that starting in 2010, the Chamber Music Roundup Festival will always take place during the second full week of May. The very next festival will start on May 10, 2010, and will conclude on May 15. The biggest news of the Chamber Music Roundup Academy is that now it includes a summer semester, so it has truly become a year-round program. For more information and to sign up for the programs, please visit: www.music.tcu.edu/roundup.asp www.musicprep.tcu.edu/chamberacademy.asp or contact Misha Galaganov at 817-257-6619. SPANISH ART SONG SUMMER INSTITUTE we had rodeo, and instead of tapas we had Tex-Mex, but for a week the soul of Andaluz pervaded Ed Landreth—la musica d’España. Watch for news of the next year’s version. Olé! 11 | Da Capo | Articles 10 | Da Capo | Articles The first TCU version of Project Canción Española, a summer institute in the interpretation of Spanish song, took place July 25–August 1. The TCU program, directed by Sheila Allen, was an outgrowth of her attendance at the program held in Granada, Spain last summer. Participants at TCU’s Summer Institute of Art Song in Spanish enjoyed a concert of flamenco guitar and song presented by Juan Miguel Giménez and Antonio Vallejo of Granada, Spain, and a recital of piano music performed by Jorge Robaina from Madrid, Spain. Arden Hopkin (retired TCU faculty) taught voice, Spanish diction, and repertoire. Participants spent the week in intense coaching and took daily classes in flamenco dance. The final concert by the participants included the second “Miguel Zanetti” International Competition in the Interpretation of Art Song in Spanish. Daniela Guzman ’08 was a finalist in the competition. Jenifer Mahler ’77, ’84 also participated in the institute. Instead of bullfights, SCHOOL OF MUSIC’S INTERNET2 INITIATIVE MAKES PROGRESS By Paul Cortese Perhaps you’ve heard that there’s more than just great music-making going on in the School of Music. In addition to its growing program, the school has become a leading developer in the global Internet2 Initiative that promises to change the way in which educational institutions communicate. This powerful new technology allows users convinced and was eventually able to rewrite a section of the program’s code to provide uncompressed, stereo CDquality audio while sending a compressed video stream. This substantial software tweak has been included in the new version of Microsoft ConferenceXP 5.0, and is currently the only video conferencing program with this advanced to send and receive DVD-quality video and audio in realtime across a dedicated, high-bandwidth network. This network is a worldwide pipeline that’s much faster than the conventional Internet and is reserved for scientific research and educational use. Championed by School of Music Director Richard Gipson and his visionary spirit, José Feghali’s technological expertise and wizardry, and my own project planning and management, the TCU School of Music continues to collaborate with the I2 community and help move this exciting technology forward. audio capability. Members of the performing arts community that share this limitation have been waiting for a hardware/software solution that would provide a compressed video stream while offering high quality audio. This is especially important to convey the nuances of classical music. Feghali had been in talks with Microsoft Research for over a year, trying to persuade them to adapt their ConferenceXP program to meet the needs of professional musicians, but Microsoft maintained that CD-quality audio was impossible to implement in their software. However, Feghali wasn’t Equipped with this enhanced software and several new pieces of equipment, including two powerful video cameras permanently installed in PepsiCo Recital Hall, the School of Music is prepared to cover a variety of event scenarios. In addition to Internet2, the school can also webcast events over the conventional Internet, thus making its concerts and master classes available to the public at-large. Last October, almost all of the events for the Ukrainian Music Festival were webcast, allowing people to watch the festival worldwide including in Boston, New York, California, and Brazil. Of course, the strength of this technology is in its interactive video presentation and conferencing capabilities. One of the highlights of the Ukrainian Music Festival was a panel discussion in which students and faculty from the Juilliard School in New York were able to participate remotely in the discussion with the guest composers on stage in PepsiCo. Similarly, the School Of Music was involved in a virtual videoconference last spring between six different music schools on the topic of Hearing Conservation for Musicians. This, too, featured an interactive question-andanswer session that allowed TCU School Of Music students and faculty to partake in the event using our Internet2based technology. These interactive distance-learning collaborations are beneficial and enhance the students’ educational experience. Going forward, with the invaluable assistance of TCU’s Technology Resources, the School of Music anticipates using Internet2 technology for both long-distance master classes and remote auditioning on a regular basis. There have already been successful master classes between TCU and the Cleveland Institute of Music, the Juilliard School in New York, and the Royal Academy of Music in London. Two of TCU’s percussion students successfully auditioned for the Royal Academy’s graduate program without leaving the TCU campus, saving them both considerable time and money. The possible uses of this technology are vast and are only limited by the current resources available in the school. With more student and faculty involvement, the Internet2 Initiative will become an even more viable and integrated part of the TCU School of Music. 13 | Da Capo | Articles 12 | Da Capo | Articles Recently, one impressive contribution made by José Feghali is an update to Microsoft’s ConferenceXP program. ConferenceXP is one of the software programs used to broadcast audio and video from one computer to others across a network. The program’s strength is that it can do this over both Internet2 and the conventional Internet. Since there are institutions without access to the very high bandwidth necessary to view an uncompressed video stream, this program provides the ability to watch a compressed version of the broadcast. In January Feghali was invited to present his ConferenceXP findings to the Internet2 Conference held at the New World Symphony in Miami, Florida. Accompanied by Richard Gipson, the duo demonstrated the advantages of the updated ConferenceXP audio-enhanced program by conferencing with me as I participated remotely from TCU. It was a showcase for the innovative work Feghali has accomplished and a proud moment for TCU’s Internet2 Initiative. COUNTRIES CONVERGE AT TCU AND THE CLIBURN COMPETITION PianoTexas International Academy & Festival concluded its 28th year this June. As with each and every year, the applicant pool included talented young artists, amateurs, and teachers from across the globe. In the end, 23 young artists, 12 teachers, and nine amateurs were invited to attend. Participants represented 13 countries, including Australia, Canada, China, Czech Republic, Israel, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, and the United States, among others. The 2009 PianoTexas also included the much-anticipated quadrennial collaboration with the Van Cliburn Foundation and the 13th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. In collaboration since 1981 with the Cliburn Competition, PianoTexas (formerly the TCU/Cliburn Piano Institute) has endeavored to allow participants the opportunity to not only receive superior hands-on instruction from distinguished guest artists, but also acquire daily doses of inspiration from the Cliburn competitors and their outstanding performances. Participants young and old immersed themselves daily in piano music—both at TCU and at Bass Performance Hall. 14 | Da Capo | Articles This year’s PianoTexas guest artists featured some of today’s most inspiring performers and pedagogues, including Dmitri Alexeev, Michel Beroff, Hung-Kuan Chen, Frederic Chiu, Joseph Kalichstein, Yoheved Kaplinsky, Menahem Pressler, and Jin Zhang. Maestro Miguel Harth-Bedoya served not only as juror for the Young Artist Concerto Competition, but also gave a master class to the winners of the Concerto Competition on their repertoire selections and how best to collaborate with both orchestra and conductor. TCU’s notable piano faculty offered numerous private lessons, as well as master classes, on not just the piano, but, in the case of José Feghali, in a lecture entitled “Hands-On Advice on Audio & Video Recording.” In addition,TCU’s piano technician James Williams presented an informative lecture entitled “Communicating with your Piano Tuner.” Despite the densely packed schedule, participants prepared and presented several free recitals to loyal and eager audience members in PepsiCo Recital Hall. The 29th PianoTexas International Academy & Festival will be held in June 2010. Save the date for incredible distinguished artist recitals, concerto performances with the Fort Worth Symphony, master classes with legendary pianists, and evenings filled with your favorite piano music from outstanding talents from across the globe. MIMIR CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL The 2009 Mimir Chamber Music Festival, its 12th anniversary, was once again a successful season. Each of the five sold-out concerts featured exciting performances of well-known masterpieces and some surprises for the audience. Among them was a contemporary work by R. Murray Shafer, “String Quartet No. 4,” which featured violinists Curt Thompson (TCU) and Nathan Cole (Chicago Symphony), violist Kirsten Docter (Cavani String Quartet), Brant Taylor (Chicago Symphony), Stephen Rose (Cleveland Orchestra), and Allison Whetsel Ward (TCU alumna and current master’s student). Thompson, who began off stage, gradually worked his way on stage to join the quartet; at the end of the work, Rose and Ward closed the piece with surprising (considering it is, after all, a string quartet) and breathtaking sonorities off stage in PepsiCo Recital Hall. Works by Haydn, Smetana, Beethoven, and others rounded out the festival, which has become an audience and media favorite event during the heat of the Texas summer. Other Mimir news includes our first runout concert to Granbury, at the Granbury Convention Center. Thanks to the initiative of TCU alums Ronald Moore and Max Jones, the Granbury concert is likely to be an ongoing event. In its first outing, Mimir enjoyed an enthusiastic audience of 400. From the student front, Mimir is proud to announce the arrival of freshman bachelor of music student Rachel Arcega (Seattle, WA), who attended Mimir for the second time this summer and can now be seen regularly in the halls of Ed Landreth. Please mark your calendars for July 5–16, when Mimir will celebrate its lucky 13th season. 15 | Da Capo | Articles PIANOTEXAS: 16 | Da Capo | Music News POLAND The Chopin Music University in Warsaw, Poland, invited Dr. Sheila Allen (voice) to present a lecture and master classes on the American art song in March. The cultural bridge was made possible by the joint efforts of TCU and the Chopin University. Allen was accompanied on the trip by soprano Kathryn Haney ’09, mezzo-soprano Micaela Davila (junior BM), tenor Matthew Valverde ’07, ’09, baritone Derrada RubellAsbell (junior BME), and pianist Dean Peiskee, Jr. (artist diploma), who presented a program of American song covering representative repertoire from 1778 to 1996. The recital was greeted with enthusiastic rhythmic applause, and Allen’s 16 hours of master classes were eagerly received. The students of the Chopin University closed the residency with an effective recital of American arias and Polish songs. While in Warsaw, the TCU students visited Chopin’s birthplace and explored the city in the company of Chopin University vocalists. Following the residency, the group travelled to Krakow, where they were joined by Christa Bentley (junior BA studying in Vienna). They visited AuschwitzBirkenau, and toured the old city, Jewish quarter, Wawel castle, and St. Mary’s Basilica with its magnificent altarpiece by the Polish artisan Wit Stwosz (Veit Stoss). Completing the group’s Polish experience was a concert by the Krakow Philharmonic Orchestra, performing an all-French program including Stravinsky’s Le Sacre du Printemps. In addition to reinforcing the knowledge that music is the international language, the trip made history palpable—including ancient and modern, political, religious, and musical. Any trip where one flies into Fryderyk Chopin airport and out of Pope John Paul airport can only be memorable. ANN GIPSON TAKES OFFICE AS MUSIC TEACHERS NATIONAL ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT Ann Gipson, associate professor of music and director of piano pedagogy studies at TCU, is now president of the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA). Her term began April 1, 2009, and will continue until 2011. Gipson has been an active member of MTNA since joining as a collegiate member in 1978, while attending Eastern Illinois University. She has actively supported collegiate members by serving as faculty advisor of MTNA collegiate chapters at Oklahoma Baptist University, Baylor University, and now at TCU. As a member of the Oklahoma MTA, she became active at the state level holding the offices of president, vice president of membership and certification/president-elect, and vice president of local associations and collegiate chapters. She has held positions in local MTAs, including serving as a director on the Fort Worth MTA board. Nationally, she was conference program chair for both the 2004 and 2005 MTNA national conferences and served on the task force for collegiate certification and as chair of a program sub-committee for the 2007 conference. Music Teachers National Association is a nonprofit organization of independent and collegiate music teachers committed to furthering the art of music through teaching, performance, composition, and scholarly research. Founded in 1876, Music Teachers National Association is the oldest music teachers association in the United States. MARILYN HORNE AT TCU Legendary mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne was the Green Chair Artist in Residence March 31 through April 2, 2009. The voice division of the School of Music at TCU hosted Horne for a series of master classes, private lessons, and other public events. Among her activities at TCU were a book signing of her autobiography Marilyn Horne: The Song Continues, a recital of the students she coached, and a reception and gala dinner in Horne’s honor. Students were selected at fall juries to participate in the classes. Vanessa Becerra, Corrie Donovan, Micaela Davila, Laura Gastinel, Kathryn Haney, Hui Jin, Paige Myrick, Derrada Rubell-Asbell, Ekaterina Stetsyuk, and Allison Whetsel Ward were coached by Horne and performed in the closing recital. Special guests at the gala dinner included Jonathan Pell, artistic director of the Dallas Opera; and Darren Keith Woods, artistic director of the Fort Worth Opera. The Concert Chorale under the direction of Ron Shirey brought the event to a close with selections including Bernstein’s “Make Our Garden Grow” from Candide, an ensemble Horne has often performed. GARY WHITMAN IS PRESIDENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL CLARINET ASSOCIATION Professor of Clarinet Gary Whitman is currently serving a two-year term, from 2008 to 2010, as president of the International Clarinet Association (ICA). The ICA has a membership of 4,000 clarinetists representing 36 countries worldwide. In August 2009, Whitman returned from Porto, Portugal, where he presided over ClarinetFest, the annual conference of the ICA. Whitman is happy to report that ClarinetFest 2010 will be held July 21–25 at the University of Texas in Austin. The ICA sponsors competitions for young artists, orchestral performers, high school students, research, and composition. More information can be found at www.clarinet.org. TRIO CON BRIO IS FEATURED IN A PAINTING TCU School of Music’s resident ensemble, Trio Con Brio (John Owings, Misha Galaganov, and Gary Whitman), has been depicted in a new work by Don Ray, one of the best-selling artists in the United States (visit www. donrayartist.com). The painting was finished this summer, and unveiling ceremony for this reputedly very large artwork will take place during a Faculty and Friends concert on November 23. 17 | Da Capo | Music News DR. SHEILA ALLEN IN SPRING ’09 ENROLLMENT Last spring our music majors came from 16 foreign countries and 22 different US states. The majority came from Texas, representing 67 different cities. 18 | Da Capo | Music News STATES (22): Arizona Arkansas California Connecticut District Of Columbia Florida Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Massachusetts Michigan Missouri New York Ohio Oklahoma Pennsylvania South Dakota Tennessee Texas Washington Puerto Rico FOREIGN COUNTRIES (16): Bulgaria Canada Chile China Colombia Costa Rica Estonia India Indonesia Jamaica Korea, Republic of Liberia Peru Russian Federation Taiwan, Province of China Vietnam TCU/FORT WORTH SCHOOL OF MUSIC ADMITS The TCU/Fort Worth Opera Institute, held May 12–June 3, 2008, featured the addition of stage movement instruction provided by Webster Dean and voice instruction by Metropolitan Opera tenor Allan Glassman. The 16 young singers from six states also received daily training in acting, music business, and character development while attending master classes given by Fort Worth Opera singers and artistic staff. The program closed with a presentation of arias and ensembles at the Scott Theater in Fort Worth. It has long been a goal of the school to develop a doctor of musical arts program. With the strong growth of our master’s degree program, and the addition of new faculty in both applied and academic disciplines, we have finally been able to make the dream a reality. Several years of planning has produced a series of degree plans, policies, and procedures that have been approved by the university and accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. Degree plans are in four major areas: performance, pedagogy, composition, and conducting. The DMA Task Force, which developed the program, included Sheila Allen, Blaise Ferrandino, Ann Gipson, Richard Gipson, German Gutierrez, Michael Meckna, Brian West, and Joseph Butler, chair. OPERA INSTITUTE FIRST DOCTORAL STUDENTS Our plan for this program is to admit only a small number of the most qualified students, so that the prestige and value of the Texas Christian University DMA will be unquestionable. Following a rigorous application process, four students have been enrolled from a field of 25 applications. DISTINGUISHED GUEST PROFESSOR OF CONDUCTING RECEIVES GRAMMY AWARD ® Miguel Harth-Bedoya, music director of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and distinguished guest professor of conducting in the TCU School of Music, was involved in a project that received a 2009 GRAMMY® Award and two other nominations in a recent annual competition sponsored by The Recording Academy. The album titled Traditions and Transformations: Sounds of Silk Road Chicago won in the category of Engineering Album, Classical. The project was also nominated in two other categories: Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with Orchestra), and Producer of the Year. The recording features Harth-Bedoya conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and soloist Wu Man, according to Trish Ciaravino, press and publications manager of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. Established in 1957, The Recording Academy is an organization of musicians, producers, engineers, and recording professionals that is dedicated to improving the cultural condition and quality of life for music and its makers. 19 | Da Capo | Music News TCU SCHOOL OF MUSIC Alice H. McDaniel 1911–2008 Alice H. McDaniel, 97, passed away at her home Monday, November 3, 2008. McDaniel was a child prodigy and a violinist since the age of 5. She was a part-time teacher at TCU and instructed private students at her home. She was a 40-year member of the Fort Worth Symphony and played the Dallas Summer Musicals and Casa Manana. McDaniel was loved by students from the late ’60s to the ’70s—a whole generation. She was well known in Fort Worth for her long association as a principal violinist with the Fort Worth Symphony and Fort Worth Opera for over four decades. She studied with Leopold Auer (to whom Tchaikovsky dedicated his violin concerto) in the ’20s when he taught at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago. Jo LeRue Black Todd 1940–2009 20 | Da Capo o | News Jo LeRue Black Todd, 68, passed away Thursday, June 25, 2009. Todd began studying violin and playing with school orchestral groups in elementary school. She graduated from Texas Christian University with a degree in music education in 1962. She was a concertmaster with the TCU Symphony Orchestra and violinist with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. After college, Todd taught orchestra in the Spring Branch ISD in Houston and was director of the Spring Branch All-Region Orchestra. She married Gary O. Todd July 1969 in Fort Worth and had two daughters. In 1985, she resumed her teaching career in the Arlington ISD as director of orchestras at Shackelford Junior High School and Hutcheson Junior High School, and conducted the string orchestra of the Junior Youth Orchestra of Greater Fort Worth. Todd was a finalist in 2000 for Outstanding AISD Teacher of the Year. Her Shackelford orchestra performed a concert for the prestigious Midwest Clinic in Chicago in 2002. Todd became director of Lamar High School Concert Orchestra in 2004. She was assistant director of Lamar High School Symphony when the group was named Honor Orchestra by the State of Texas Orchestra Directors Association. She retired from AISD in 2005. In 2007, she began teaching orchestral studies at TCU. Todd was a former president of Cecilian Club (of Fort Worth Junior Woman’s Club), Interbrook Woman’s Club of Arlington, The Arts Organization of Fort Worth, and Ridglea Hills PTA. She was a member of Mu Phi Epsilon sorority at TCU; Texas Orchestra Directors Association and its honor fraternity, Mu Omicron; Texas Music Educators Association; TCU Fine Arts Guild; Fort Worth Woman’s Club; and Whitlock Club. Published in Star-Telegram on June 28, 2009 This past spring, Martin Blessinger (theory and composition) was named second-prize winner of the 30th annual National Association of Composers, USA Young Composers Competition for his Duo for Saxophone and Piano. A press release can be found at www.newmusicbox. org/article.nmbx?id=5914. The same piece has been accepted for publication by Reed Music of Australia. This piece (as well as music by Gerry Gabel, Till Meyn, and Bob Garwell) was performed at the National Academy in Kiev, Ukraine last April. Jesús Castro-Balbi (cello) received tenure and promotion to associate professor in April 2009. He served as artistic director to the Faculty & Friends Chamber Music Series’ 2008–2009 season, featuring TCU artist-faculty and musicologists, as well as distinguished guests, in four concerts. The Miro Quartet, guests for the April 6 concert of the series, also conducted master classes in violin, viola, cello, and chamber music for TCU students. Find out more about the 2008–09 season and about the upcoming concerts at www.music.tcu.edu/facfriends.asp. On April 5, 2009, Castro-Balbi performed a program of Shostakovich, Schubert, and a NY premiere by Mike Barnett in Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall with Clavier Trio (with Arkady Fomin, violin, and David Korevaar, piano). Castro-Balbi served as artistic director to the TCU Cellofest, from March 3–7, 2009. Also, he received the Dean’s Award for Scholarship and Creative Activities at TCU in December 2008. Paul Cortese (assistant director) had a diverse and interesting year. In October, he participated in the Ukrainian Music Festival by performing the US premiere of Ludmila Yurina’s “Perseus-Beta-Algol” for electric guitar and synthesized/electronic soundscape. In the spring, Paul traveled to Pennsylvania for a reunion with his high school rock band, Tokyo Red, presented a lecture entitled “Using Film Music in Music Education” to the Mid-Cities Music Teachers Association, and mentored a HEB high school senior interested in pursuing a career as a film composer. Nancy Elledge (voice) has been very busy this year at TCU and with her private voice studio in Dallas. Not only did she have four students at TCU doing senior and graduate Recitals, but she also was busy with four private students who did recitals. Rachel Rice, who performed the role of Cassie in Chorus Line graduated and spent the last summer performing at Theater by the Sea, and she participated in three different shows with lead roles in a couple of them. Paige Myrick headed off to Seagle Colony, sponsored by Fort Worth Opera. She joined eight other of Elledge’s students who had parts or sung in the chorus for the Fort Worth Opera Festival season that closed this past May. Also, a former voice student of hers, John de los Santos, directed Carmen with Fort Worth Opera Festival and will do other directing with Fort Worth and Dallas Operas. Stephanie McCranie was chosen to attend Opera Works, a summer program for opera singers by audition only, and she performed as one of the singer/dancers in Regal Opera’s production of The Merry Widow. On the European front, Laura Anne Ayres has been chosen to be a singer with Zurich Opera Studio, and Christine Zimmerman performed Suor Angelica, as well as Suzuki in Madame Butterfly. Jennifer Chung just performed with the Garland and Las Colinas Symphonies, doing a musical review; plus, Elledge’s long-time student Jenni Till performed the soprano solos in December with The Plano Civic Chorus. In Dallas, Elledge has six singers who are members of the Dallas Symphony Chorus, two students in The Dallas Opera Chorus, and many other students doing parts in local theater companies. When Theatre III presented Light in the Piazza, Elledge was proud of her five students who performed in that show. 2008–2009 was a very active year for Director of Bands Bobby Francis. The year began as he served as the clinician/ presenter for all the band directors in the CarrolltonFarmers Branch (CFB) School District for their annual inservice training session. The invitation was extended by a TCU alum and director of fine arts in the CFB district, Jim McDaniel. In addition to conducting many concerts in Ed Landreth Hall, Francis conducted the TCU Wind Symphony as part of the Bass Hall Gala. A few short weeks later, the TCU Wind Symphony, for the first time in TCU’s history, performed at the prestigious American Bandmasters Association Convention that took place in College Station, Texas. At the previous convention in 2008, Francis was a guest conductor for the Frost School of Music/University of Miami Wind Symphony in Miami, Florida. In January, Francis conducted the Honor Band at the Annual Band Festival at the University of Missouri in Kansas City’s Conservatory of Music. In addition, he presented a clinic for area band directors in attendance and received invitations to conduct several honor bands in the state and elsewhere. In July, he traveled to Arkansas Tech University in Russellville to conduct the top level band in a band camp and to lead a master class on conducting for band directors. On campus, he served on three search committees as well as serving on the University Advisory Committee. Finally, he has been invited to serve as artistic director of the Harmony International Music Festival in Sidney, Australia in 2011. He lives in Colleyville with his wife Teresa and two girls: Tamsyn, age 11, and Breelyn, age 3. Gerald Gabel (technology and composition) was busy in the summer with a 17-day tour of Europe with the rock-and-roll group Gonn. Gabel has been a member of the group since 1966– 68. Their music has found a large following in Europe, which has led to three tours on the continent. Gonn performed for large and enthusiastic audiences in London and Doncaster (England), Amsterdam (The Netherlands), Geneva (Switzerland), and Turin and Salsomaggiore (Italy). The performance in Salsomaggiore was for the annual summer “Festival Beat,” 21 | Da Capo | News In Memorium FACULTY AND STAFF NEWS Robert Garwell (composition and musicology) received the 2009 Achievement in Music Award from the Ohio University School of Music on May 28, 2009. The award is presented annually to an alumnus of the School of Music, and is voted on by the faculty and Alumni Board. Garwell was named “Outstanding Alumnus” this year by Mike Parkinson, director of the School of Music at Ohio University. In March 2009, Ann Gipson (director of piano pedagogy) co-presented a session with TCU’s two graduate students, Kara Bailey and Maya Cameron, at the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) National Conference in Atlanta, Georgia, entitled “Motivating Group Piano Students with Familiar, Favorite Literature.” Recently, Gipson has also presented sessions at the Texas Music Teachers Association State Conference, the Piano Texas International Festival and Academy, the Fort Worth Piano Teachers’ Forum, and the Mid-Cities Music Teachers Association. She is currently serving a two-year term as president for MTNA. David Grogan (voice) has had a busy spring. On February 9, he joined the TCU orchestra and choir at the Bass Hall for a performance of Carmina Burana. The next week, on February 15, he sang Bach and Handel with the local early music group, Texas Camerata, at St. Stephen Presbyterian Germán Gutiérrez (director of orchestral studies) was on a sabbatical leave in the fall of 2008 to attend several invitations as a guest conductor. On June 7, 2008 he returned for the twelfth consecutive time as guest conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra’s Hispanic Festival at the Meyerson Symphony Center. In September, he directed two concerts with the Tolima Conservatory Symphony Orchestra in Ibague, Colombia. On October 10 he performed with the Orquesta Sinfonica del Valle. Gutiérrez was also guest conductor of the Peru National Symphony and offered a conducting seminar for Peruvian conductors at the National Conservatory of Music in Lima, Peru. On December 2, he returned to conduct the TCU Symphony Orchestra with vocal group Opus Cuatro as soloists. A commercial recording of the program with TCU Symphony and Opus Cuatro celebrates the fortieth anniversary of this successful vocal quartet. The CD has been produced both in Fort Worth and Buenos Aires, Argentina, and it is available for purchase at the TCU School of Music. This summer, Gutiérrez conducted Shanghai Symphony Orchestra in Shanghai, China, with TCU’s bass professor, 22 | Da Capo o | News Yuan Lu, as a soloist. It was a sold-out concert. Both Lu and Gutiérrez received standing ovations and had to return four times to the stage after the Dragonetti and the Bruckner. The publicity was incredible: There were TV stations making notes of rehearsals and interviews for the daily news, and almost all newspapers in Shanghai had concert announcements. It was a great night for Lu, for Church. Grogan was heard on March 9 at the “Heroes of TCU” concert, sponsored by Mu Phi Epsilon. The next day, he was a guest lecturer on vocal pedagogy at the University of North Texas. Later that month, on March 28 and 29, Grogan sang the role of Jesus in the St. John Passion with the Dallas Bach Society. On April 10, he sang Dubois’ “Seven Last Words of Christ” with the Hurst First United Methodist Church (Leslie Detrick ’91 was the soprano soloist). On April 13 and 15, Grogan sang the Carmina Burana with the Arlington Master Chorale. This May, he sang Mozart’s Requiem with the Columbia Chorale in Missouri, Beethoven’s Mass in C at Texas Wesleyan University, and he had a guest appearance with the Planobased Texas Voices. Grogan was also inducted into the academic honor society, Phi Kappa Phi. Gutiérrez, and for TCU. In August, Gutiérrez was included in the Colombian national magazine Revista Poder as one of the 50 most important Colombian educators abroad. His guest conductor invitations for 2009–2010 include Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra, Peru National Symphony, Puerto Rico National Symphony, and San Luis Potosi Symphony in Mexico. Yuan Lu (double bass) and German Gutiérrez performed with the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra. This historic performance featured two of our own TCU faculty members as special guest artists with the Shanghai Symphony Orchestra, China’s oldest and finest orchestra, on June 7, 2009 in the Shanghai Concert Hall. In the orchestra’s 130year history, Lu is the first guest bassist to be offered the opportunity as a soloist with the orchestra. Lu also had the privilege and honor to be named visiting professor of double bass at the Shenyang Conservatory on November 12, 2008. This significant honor had not been given since the founding of the school in 1938. In addition, he received a guest professorship of double bass from the Shanghai Conservatory of Music on March 8. This is the highest honor and award given to a double bass artist and was the first appointment ever given by the renowned Shanghai Conservatory of Music. Lu is organizing and hosting the Texas Double Bass Symposium, held at TCU on October 23–25, 2009. He expects over 100 bass students, professors, professionals, and colleagues from all over Texas and the world to attend this exciting event. Due to Lu’s efforts, all of the TCU’s string faculty, plus John Owings and José Feghali, as well as Gary Whitman will perform in a chamber music concert in the prestigious Shanghai Concert Hall on December 19, 2009. All of the performers are also going to visit the Shenyang Conservatory to set up a relationship between the two schools. Michael Meckna (music history) contributed entries on Maynard Ferguson and Frankie Laine to the Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives; published “Satchmo the Reader” in the Dippermouth News (the official newsletter of the Louis Armstrong House Museum, Queens College), reviewed books on American music and the history of musical instruments for Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries; wrote program notes for the Bass Hall performance of Orff’s Carmina Burana and for the Faculty and Friends Chamber Music Series; continues to serve as contributing editor of the revised edition of The Grove Dictionary of American Music; and saw his 2004 Satchmo Encyclopedia reissued in a handsome paperback edition. Till MacIvor Meyn (theory and composition) had his composition ZZZZing! accepted for publication by C. Alan Publications; the premiere was performed in April 2009 by Brian West and the TCU Percussion Ensemble. Meyn’s Jubilate Deo for SATB chorus and organ was published by E. C. Schirmer Publishing, and was premiered by the St. Stephen Choir under the baton of the composer for the Easter service last spring. Meyn spent the summer composing a work for TCU professors Misha Galaganov and John Owings entitled Celestial Mechanics, and has recently completed Urban Ragas for Jesus Castro-Balbi and the TCU Cello Ensemble. Meyn’s composition Dominant Curve was performed at the Kiev Music Academy in the Ukraine last summer, and was also performed at TCU this fall by Joe Eckert and Janet Pummill. His piece Red/Blue was also performed at TCU this fall, by Gary Whitman and Janet Pummill. Preludio Y Tango was performed in New York City this summer at the National Flute Convention by the Professional Flute Choir, directed by internationally recognized flautist Carlo Jans of the Netherlands. Last fall, Meyn’s composition Orion was premiered by the Trio con Brio (Gary Whitman, Misha Galaganov, and John Owings) at TCU; this winter the Trio con Brio will be performing Orion in Shanghai, China. Meyn also continues to perform with Schola Cantorum of Texas as a bass singer; this year’s performances include Mozart’s Requiem at Bass Hall and Orff’s Carmina Burana at Meyerson Hall in Dallas. Sue Ott (administrative assistant) completed her master’s of liberal arts degree at TCU and graduated in May of 2009. Her undergraduate, a BS business/psychology degree, is from Texas Wesleyan. In September, John Owings (piano) played an all-Chopin recital in Seoul, Korea, on the Kumho Art Hall Master Series. He gave master classes at Munho Art Hall and the Korean National University of the Arts. In October, he gave a master class for the World Piano Pedagogy Conference in Dallas. He also played a solo recital at St. Stephen Church in Fort Worth to dedicate their Boesendofer Imperial piano. In November, Owings performed Verge by Sebastien Currier with Curt Thompson and Gary Whitman on the Cliburn at the Modern Series at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. In April 2009, he played a solo recital and gave a master class at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. At TCU, Owings performed on the Faculty & Friends Chamber Music Series in September (Messiaen “Quartet for the End of Time”), November (Orion by Till Meyn), February (Bartok Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion with Harold Martina, Brian West, and Paul Rennick and Dvorak Piano Quintet), and April with members of the Miro Quartet. He also has been teaching in the Chamber Music Roundup Academy every semester since the fall of 2008 and has been on the faculty at the Chamber Music Roundup Festival for the last several years. Janet Pummill (coordinator of collaborative piano and staff accompanist) continues to perform in many recitals and concerts at TCU, including faculty, student, guest artist recitals, ensemble performances, as well as new faculty audition recitals. She also continues to perform with Clavivoce, the four-piano/four-voice ensemble with her three daughters, Sallie ’93, ’95; Amy ’96, ’00; and Julie ’02, ’05. They were featured on the annual TCU Fine Arts Big Band Gala, as well as the Fort Worth Symphony Concerts in the Garden for the big band night in June. 23 | Da Capo | News for which Gonn headlined the first night. They completed the tour with performances in Munich, Stuttgart, and Frankfurt (Germany), and Nancy and Paris (France). 24 | Da Capo o | News Ron Shirey’s (choral music) performances included the following: 1) A Poulenc Festival with Gloria and Organ Concerto on October 26th, 2008, in Ed Landreth Auditorium with Janet Pummill, organ soloist; the Fort Worth-TCU Symphonic Choir with Allison Whetset Ward, soprano; and a professional orchestra. 2) A St. Stephen Presbyterian Church performance on November 23 with Concert Chorale, guest conductor Sheri Neill, and student conductors. (This concert took place during Shirey’s recuperation from spinal surgery.) 3) Performance of Orff’s Carmina Burana on February 9 with the TCU Symphony and TCU Symphonic Choir in Bass Hall. Soloists for this performance were Ava Pine, David Grogan, and Jay Smith. The performance was a culmination of many weeks of rehearsal with the combined choruses, totaling 125 singers on stage. His summer activities included another three-week residency with the Oregon Bach Festival (OBF), with Helmut Rilling as artist director, for performances of the Mass in B Minor and St. Matthew Passion by Bach. Some of our TCU alums now sing with the 65 voices of the OBF chorus, and Shirey watched student-conductors work with the several masterworks in classes with Maestro Rilling. Shirey thinks that we also should mention the move to Jarvis Hall digs this fall, as students who read this Da Capo should know where to find a number of our academic faculty on the third floor of Jarvis. This includes Shirey, Blaise Ferrandino, Martin Blessinger, Till Meyn, Michael Meckna, Robert Garwell, and Sheri Neill. We are on that high floor of the oncefamous dorm where the ‘Jarvis Broads’ used to reside for so many years,” writes Shirey. Brian West (percussion) had a busier-than-usual performance schedule this year. In February, the TCU percussion faculty, Joey Carter, Jeff Hodge, Paul Rennick, West, and Brian Youngblood, presented a chamber music recital. In addition to several percussion-only chamber In addition to his annual faculty recital at TCU, Gary Whitman (clarinet) was a guest performer at the Cliburn at the Modern series, presenting music for clarinet, violin, and piano by Sebastian Currier with John Owings, piano, and Curt Thompson, violin. He was involved in two world premieres during the TCU Faculty and Friends Chamber Music series. The first was performance of Orion by Till MacIvor Meyn with Trio Con Brio, including Misha Galaganov, viola, and John Owings. The second premiere was “The Rapture of the Year” by Janet Pummill, with a woodwind quintet and four singers made up of TCU faculty. In the summer 2009, Whitman traveled to New York City, where he was a guest of Buffet Crampon USA, Inc. at the retirement reception for Stanley Drucker, principal clarinet of the New York Philharmonic. He also begins a consultation project for products improvement and new reed design with Rico International in Los Angeles. As president of the International Clarinet Association, he traveled to Porto, Portugal in August 2009 to perform and assist with ClarinetFest 2009. Whitman also continues to perform as bass clarinetist with the Fort Worth Symphony. As a member of the orchestra, he will participate in a fourCD recording project, Caminos Del Inca, showcasing the music of South America. In addition, he participated in the Texas premiere of Dead Man Walking by Jake Heggie during the 2009 Fort Worth Opera Festival. At TMEA 2009, Whitman was clarinet sectional clinician for the All-State Concert Band, and he continues to administer and teach at the TCU Summer Clarinet Workshop for high school students with Andrew Crisanti and Victoria Luperi. Director of Jazz Studies Curt Wilson has had the following works published this past year by REALLY GOOD MUSIC LLC of Eau Claire, Wisconsin: “Blue Rondo Ala Turk” (Dave Brubeck), an arrangement for clarinet ensemble; Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra; “A New Homeland” (from Ukrainian Dances) for wind ensemble; Duke Ellington Centennial Medley for concert band; and “FantasyFare” for brass and timpani. Notable performances of some of his compositions include the world premiere of his Rhapsody for Violin and Orchestra on October 7 with violin soloist Curt Thompson and Maestro John Giordano conducting the TCU Symphony Orchestra. On that same program were Wilson’s Ukrainian Dances for Orchestra conducted by Andres Franco ’02. These were performed later that same month on the Ukrainian Music Festival. Director of Bands Bobby Francis conducted the world premiere of Wilson’s “A New Homeland” with the TCU Wind Symphony on December 5. This piece was also performed at the prestigious American Bandmasters Association conference in College Station, Texas, by the TCU Wind Symphony conducted by UT Arlington Director of Bands Emeritus Ray Lichtenwalter. Wilson continues his engagement as director of the Fort Worth Symphony Concerts In The Garden Swing Orchestra, and he has received his thirteenth ASCAPlus Award for the writing and promotion of serious music. Brian Youngblood (director of the Horned Frog Marching Band) had a very busy fall, adjudicating and consulting with more than 20 high school marching bands. He judged marching band contests throughout the last season and served as on-site clinician for many of the bands that he consulted with for drill design. NEW FACULTY Emily Ahrens serves as an adjunct instructor in music theory at TCU. She received a BM degree with a major in music theory and composition and a minor in Spanish and Latin American studies. She also holds a MM degree in music theory and composition from TCU. She has been awarded several merit-based scholarships, grants, and awards. In 2006, she was awarded the T. Smith McCorkle Award for composition. Ahrens was named the Jonathon Durrington Student Composer of the Year in 2007. She participated in the color guard for the university marching band and was a member of the Texas Christian University Wind Ensemble and Symphony Orchestra as a bassoonist and contrabassoonist. Ahrens has also been a member of several praise and worship bands as a singer/keyboardist. She is a paid member of the Christ Chapel Bible Church orchestra in Fort Worth as a bassoonist and has been teaching bassoon in the Dallas/Fort Worth area since 2004. David Begnoche is assistant professor of trombone. Previously on the faculty at the Longy School of Music, Begnoche has also served as artist-in-residence at Northeastern University and chamber music coach at Harvard University. Begnoche maintains an active performing career with groups throughout the US and abroad. His extensive professional performing experience includes titled positions with the Joffrey Ballet Orchestra (Chicago), Sarasota Opera (FL), Albany Symphony (NY), Spoleto Festival Orchestra (Italy), Charleston Symphony Orchestra (SC), and AIMS Festival Orchestra (Austria). He has performed with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and has recorded with the Boston Pops under John Williams. His commercial credits include performances in a variety of styles and venues, including appearances with Chet Atkins, Bill Watrous, and Barry White. A recipient of the Priddy Fellowship in Arts Leadership, Begnoche is a frequent and eager performer of new music and a strong advocate for American music in particular. He can be heard on premiere recordings of works by John Harbison, Gian Carlo Menotti, Steven Stucky, Virgil Thomson, and Charles Wuorinen, to name a few. Contemporary music ensembles Begnoche has performed with include Essential Music (NY), Fulcrum Point (Chicago), and, as soloist, with the Tanglewood Festival of Contemporary Music. Reflective of his advocacy of new music, Begnoche has been active in the commissioning of solo and chamber works. His work with Pulitzer Prize winner John La Montaine resulted in the final version of the composer’s “Trombone Quartet” (2006). Begnoche is a founding member of trombone quartet Stentorian Consort, whose debut CD Myths and Legends, released on Albany Records in 2007, is comprised of world premiere recordings of original compositions for trombone quartet by American composers, including La Montaine’s quartet. The consort’s second recording will again feature original works as well as collaborations with guest artists Joseph Alessi and Peter Ellefson. The Mystic, Connecticut native has served as International Trombone Association affiliates manager and AIM membership coordinator for two years, and he serves on the ITA Competitions Committee. He has written articles and conducted interviews for the ITA Journal, the Brass Herald, and the American Composers Forum. In addition to doctoral studies (University of North Texas), Begnoche holds degrees from Manhattan School of Music (MM) and the New England Conservatory of Music (BM). His principal teachers include Douglas Yeo (Boston Symphony Orchestra), John Swallow (New York Brass Quintet), Steven Norrell (Metropolitan Opera Orchestra), and Jay Friedman (Chicago Symphony Orchestra). Stuart Cheney joined the TCU School of Music in 2009 as assistant professor of musicology. His BM degree in composition and MM in musicology were earned at the University of North Texas, and he completed the PhD. in historical musicology at the University of Maryland, where he also directed the early music ensembles for four years. His areas of research and teaching include the French Baroque, the viola da gamba and its repertoire, and rock music. He has presented his research at national and regional meetings of the American Musicological Society, the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music, the International Biennial Baroque Conference, and at symposia in Versailles and Limoges, France. Cheney’s articles on French Baroque music have appeared in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (revised edition), The Journal of the Viola da Gamba Society of America, Consort: European Journal of Early Music, and, most recently, in A Viola da Gamba Miscellanea. He also has published editions of 17th- and 18th-century chamber music for Éditions Minkoff and Dovehouse Editions. A recipient of the Pomeroy Prize for contributions to early music at the University of Maryland as well as a one-year Chateaubriand Grant from the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Cheney has served since 1999 as editor of The Journal of the Viola da Gamba Society of America. He has performed on viola da gamba, baroque 25 | Da Capo | News Her composition, “Rapture of the Year,” was featured and premiered on the November Faculty and Friends concert. Pummill had many performances as pianist and organist in other parts of the country throughout the year, and she has had several of her compositions premiered and performed, including performances by the Corpus Christi Symphony. She was featured as organ soloist for the Poulenc Concerto for Organ, Strings, and Tympani as a part of the fall Poulenc Festival. In September, she accepted the position of associate organist at the University Christian Church in Fort Worth, Texas. music pieces, West and Rennick performed Bartok’s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion with guests John Owings and Harold Martina on piano. The Bartok sonata was also performed on a Faculty and Friends recital this past spring. In March, Carter, Hodge, Rennick, and West performed with world-renown percussionist Bob Becker on a concert of his music. Additional performances this year included appearances with the Fort Worth Symphony as section percussionist. West also adjudicated two of the areas top drumline competitions: the Crowley Drumline Contest and the Lone Star Classic. His percussion arrangement of Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony, movement IV, was published by Drop Six Media this year. 26 | Da Capo o | News Jessica Fulkerson serves as adjunct instructor in music theory. Fulkerson received her BM in flute performance and music theory and her MM in music theory from Texas Christian University. She studied flute under Karen Adrian and theory under Blaise Ferrandino and Gerald Gabel. Fulkerson has taught music theory courses at the Fort Worth Academy of Fine Arts, Dallas Baptist University, Texas Christian University, and Columbia University. Her interests are varied and include performance/analysis of modern flute music, Schenkerian and linear analysis, and diatonic set theory. An avid performer, Fulkerson is a member of the Ravus Trio and principal flutist of the Sinfonietta of Fort Worth. Dave Hall serves as adjunct instructor in percussion. He currently is pursuing a doctorate in percussion performance at the University of North Texas, where he is a teaching fellow. He holds a MM in percussion performance from TCU and a BM in percussion performance from the University of Nebraska. Hall’s experience in music is highly diverse, beginning with piano at the age of 7 and later taking up violin and horn before starting percussion. This diversity continues today as he performs actively in the Dallas/ Fort Worth area as a marimba soloist, drumset player, and timpanist. He has also performed abroad in Spain, Puerto Rico, and at the Umbria Jazz Festival in Perugia, Italy. He has played snare drum for the Phantom Regiment and Crossmen drum and bugle corps, the TCU PASIC Champion Indoor Drumline, and the Dallas Mavericks Drumline. At TCU he played piano and drumset in the Jazz Bands and also performed in the Percussion Ensemble, Symphony Orchestra, Opera, Wind Symphony, and Steel Band. Hall appeared as a performer and teacher on the reality TV show Tommy Lee Goes to College and has also performed with Motley Crue. Hall is an active composer, published through C. Alan Publications. His work has been commissioned by and performed at various universities and high schools around the country. His percussion quartet Escape Velocity was performed by the TCU Percussion Ensemble at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention (PASIC), and it is featured on TCU’s second Percussion Ensemble CD. His marching percussion arrangements have been played by the TCU and University of Nebraska Drumline/Front Ensembles as well as several high schools. In addition to serving on TCU’s Percussion Staff in 2008–2009, Hall served as assistant band director and coordinator of percussion at Paschal High School in Fort Worth. He says that he has been blessed to study with some of the greatest percussion teachers in the world, including Leigh Howard Stevens, Mark Ford, Christopher Deane, Paul Rennick, Richard Gipson, Brian West, Joey Carter, Al Rometo, and Tony Falcone. Dave Hall is an educational artist for Innovative Percussion sticks and mallets. Amanda Musser is an instructor in string music education. After receiving a BME in 1975 from TCU, Musser began a teaching career in the Arlington Independent School District (ASID) that spanned 34 years and included the supervision of more than 30 student teachers. She retired in June 2009 after supervising the last two, who were both from TCU. Nine of her former students are orchestra directors in AISD. Musser’s orchestras were consistent UIL Sweepstakes award winners, TMEA Honor Orchestra, and Best in Class at national competitions. She is a Baylor and UTA camp faculty member and a frequent adjudicator/clinician throughout Texas. Musser is a member of TMEA, TODA, TMAA, and a charter member of the honorary music fraternity Mu Omicron. She resides in Arlington with her retired band director husband, Steve Musser. R. Eric Simpson is an assistant professor of music education (instrumental), teaching graduate and undergraduate music education courses, supervising student teachers, and assisting with the university bands. He received a PhD in music education from The Florida State University, a MM from the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM), and a bachelor of music education from Stetson University. His primary research interests include temporal aspects of musical evaluation, teacher misconduct, and sociological influences on music education. Simpson’s articles have appeared in The Instrumentalist and The Florida Music Director. Prior to his appointment at TCU, Simpson served as director of bands/chairman of fine arts at William R. Boone High School (Orlando, FL), associate director of bands at Dr. Phillips High School (Orlando, FL), and director of bands at Fort King Middle School (Ocala, FL). His ensembles consistently received recognition for outstanding performances at various festivals in Florida. In addition, Simpson has served as an administrator for FSU Summer Music Camps, and as a guest clinician for numerous bands throughout Florida. Jeremy M. Strickland is the assistant director of bands at TCU, where he serves as the director of the Basketball Band and the University Concert Band, and assists with the Marching Band, Wind Symphony, and Symphonic Band. Before coming to TCU, Strickland was the director of bands at Springtown High School in Springtown, Texas. Bands under his direction consistently received superior ratings at concert contests and appeared at the UIL State Marching Contest in 2003 and 2005. The Sound of Springtown received recognition for their performances at festivals across the North Texas area as well as performances for audiences at Walt Disney World, the Fiesta Flambeau Parade in San Antonio, and the Bobby Vinton Theatre in Branson. Several of the students in Strickland’s bands have gone on to major in music and now hold positions as successful music educators across the state of Texas. He earned his BA in music studies from The University of Texas at Austin (in 2002), where he was a member of the internationally acclaimed Wind Ensemble and the Showband of the Southwest. Strickland is an active member of the Texas Music Educator’s Association, the Texas Bandmasters Association, the Texas Music Adjudicators Association, and the College Band Directors National Association. Timothy D. Watkins is an assistant professor of musicology at TCU, where he teaches music history, literature, and world music. Prior to coming to Fort Worth, Watkins taught ethnomusicology and world music as well as music history and literature at Rhodes College, Florida State University, and Furman University. His research interests include topics in Renaissance and Baroque music as well as the music of Latin America, centering on the musical consequences of the encounter between European and indigenous cultures in the Americas. Watkins regularly presents scholarly papers at regional and national meetings of the American Musicological Society, the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music, the Society for Ethnomusicology, and the College Music Society. His publications have appeared in the monumental Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, Garland Handbook of Latin American Music, and The Journal of Musicological Research. His book, Performance Practice: Issues and Approaches, is published by Steglein Press. Angela Turner Wilson, instructor in voice at TCU, has garnered critical acclaim and international attention for her poignant and lyrical performances. She performed the title role in Lucia di Lammermoor for the first time with the Lyric Opera of Kansas City and was immediately re-engaged by the company to return this past autumn as Leila in Les Pecheurs des Perles. She has also performed to acclaim with the following opera houses: New York City Opera as Norina (which the New York Times described as “acted well and sung with an admirably pure and light soprano, particularly in her upper register”), Lisette in La Rondine, and Yum-Yum in The Mikado; the Washington Opera as Susanna in Le Nozze di Figaro, Rosina in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, the Infanta in Le Cid (as seen on PBS), Adina in L’Elisir d’Amore, First Flower Maiden in Parsifal, Papagena in Die Zauberflöte, and Yvette in La Rondine; the Dallas Opera as the Sandman and Dew Fairy in Hansel and Gretel; New York City Opera, the Dallas Opera, and Boston Lyric Opera as Musetta in La Boheme, and many others. Next season includes performances of Musetta for the Fresno Grand Opera. Wilson will also join the roster of the Lyric Opera of Chicago as Konstanze in the Abduction from the Seraglio. She attracted attention as a finalist of the Metropolitan Opera National Council 1996, New England regional auditions; winner of the Central City Young Artist Award in 1995; and as the understudy of Norina in Don Pasquale for the Glimmerglass Opera. Wilson is also a winner of a grant from the Sullivan Foundation and Washington Opera’s Artist of the Year for 2000. On the concert stage, Wilson has appeared as featured soloist with the National Symphony Orchestra, Dallas Wind Symphony, Mississippi Symphony, Fort Worth Symphony, Colorado Symphony at the Vail Valley Music Festival, Binghamton Symphony Orchestra, and Southern Methodist University Meadows School of the Arts. She has also performed at the Clinton White House as a featured soloist for a state dinner honoring the prime minister of Italy. On film, Wilson performed Caroline Jefferson in Cosair Productions’ Miss Firecracker, which starred Holly Hunter, Mary Steenbergen, and Tim Robbins. ALUMNI NEWS Charlie Patterson ’48 and his orchestra, Charlie Patterson’s Dance Orchestra, play big band music two or three times a week at ballrooms, country clubs, senior centers, dance clubs, and other venues. Patterson is still very active at the age of 86. He loves music and the happiness it brings to people. Soon after graduating from TCU School of Music, William Connor Grusendorf ’54 went on active duty as a second lieutenant in the US Army. He served most of his twoyear term in Fort Bliss (El Paso, TX), in Special Services, organizing and directing the Fort Bliss Soldier’s Chorus. He also was president of the Post Theatre Guild and served as the musical director for the Ft. Bliss production of the musical Kiss Me, Kate. For his work with the Soldier’s Chorus, Grusendorf received a direct Commendation Medal from Secretary of the Army Wilbur C. Bruckner. From 1957–1972, he was band director for the Rockdale ISD in Rockdale, TX. Under his direction, the bands grew from 41 members when he arrived to more than 300 students in grades six–12. The ensembles received many awards and accolades with a series of First Divisions and Sweepstakes honors during this time. The high school band also presented several stage musicals beginning in 1964. During this time in Rockdale, Grusendorf also served as choir director of First Christian Church, and he played trumpet professionally in the Central Texas area. Grusendorf received a master’s of music degree from the University of Texas at Austin in 1967, and he continued post-graduate work in administrative education and curriculum and instruction. Later, he earned the supervisor’s certificate, mid-management certificate, and superintendent’s certificate all at UT Austin. With this new direction in his professional career, he became curriculum director in the Lampasas ISD (Lampasas, Texas) in 1972. Grusendorf moved to San Saba, Texas in 1974, when he became superintendent of the San Saba ISD, serving for 20 years before retiring in 1994. During his time in San Saba, he completed his theological education by extension from the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee, and was ordained priest in the Episcopal Church in the Diocese of 27 | Da Capo | News cello, vielle, and mandolin with the Smithsonian Chamber Players, Orchestra of the 17th Century, Maryland Handel Festival, the Bach Sinfonia, the Peabody Renaissance Ensemble, and many others. Prior to coming to TCU, Cheney taught at Southern Methodist University, Goucher College in Baltimore, the University of Maryland, and Vanderbilt University. 28 | Da Capo o | News After a long career in the music department at Hiram College, Damaris Peters Pike ’54 continues to stay busy with one-person shows, The Women of Note, in which she impersonates women with a connection to music. Beginning in 1988 with The Second Mrs. Bach, she now has 11 different shows with characters ranging from twelfth-century nun Hildegard of Bingen to Doris Day (in the photo). Last winter, she performed 20 times in eight weeks in Florida. Peters Pike continues to teach two courses each year in Hiram’s Weekend College and directs the Hiram Women’s Chorus. She doubts that many of her classmates are having as much fun as she! Larry Peterson ’64, ’69 retired in January 2009, but he still teaches one course per semester on the main campus of University of Delaware. He also teaches one opera course per semester at the Academy of Lifelong Learning at University of Delaware’s Wilmington campus. Peterson is now active for the first time in politics: He is vice president of one Democratic Party Club, chair of his representative district, and state delegate in the Democratic Party. He is also organist at Hanover Presbyterian Church in Wilmington, Delaware. After five years of preparation, he is developing a university website on queer music that should be online this fall. Check it out at www.udel.edu/WomensStudies/ SexualityGender/QueerMusic. L Edward Sizemore ’68 has moved back to Texas and lives in McKinney now. His columns and articles have been published by Dallas Morning News. Inspired by Harriet Woldt, his cello professor at TCU from 1966–1970, Thomas Morehouse ’70 established the UConn Cello Society at the University of Connecticut in 1992. After retiring from UConn, he learned to fly a plane, and now serves as an archivist/researcher at the New England Air Museum (www.neam.org), and as a teacher/ interpreter of 1830s New England history, agriculture, and horticulture at Old Sturbridge Village (www.osv.org). This year he has also added to his activities a community garden in Pomfret, Connecticut. At People’s Harvest, they raise vegetables for local food pantries and community service organizations, as well as educating people about the importance of growing, preserving, and consuming local foods. Continuing his interest in classic sports cars, in the last few years Morehouse has restored a 1976 MGB and a 1959 Triumph TR3. He plans to restore a classic Mercedes Benz and drive coast to coast, visiting the lower 48 as well as family, friends, and former students. As once Professor Woldt told him: “It’s delicious to be busy!” Larry Brumley ’72, who, in addition to his TCU degree holds a MFA in conducting (with distinction) from California State University at Fresno, taught high school and orchestra in California for 10 years and retired after 24 years as director of choirs at Panola College in Carthage, Texas. He continues to teach at Panola in an adjunct capacity. He also has completed 24 years as the founding conductor of the Shreveport Chamber Singers, and he is now the assistant conductor and a member of the Marshall Symphony. Brumley is a choral adjudicator for Heritage Festivals and Choice Music Events, and he has judged vocal competitions in Texas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois, and Florida. He has sung with the San Antonio Mastersingers, Schola Cantorum of Texas in Fort Worth, the Riverside Opera in California, the Tyler Civic Chorale, and the San Francisco Festival of Masses under Robert Shaw. Brumley has been a member of the Bakersfield Philharmonic, the Riverside Symphony, the Tulare Symphony, the Shreveport Summer Music Festival Orchestra, and the Fourth US Army Band. He has played percussion in the pit orchestras for Broadway musicals at Shreveport Marjorie Lyons Theater and Performing Arts Center and at the University of Texas in Tyler. He serves as the president of the board of directors for the Marshall Symphony; he is also on the board of directors for the Shreveport Summer Music Festival and the Panola County Project String Power, and he is a past president of the Texas Community College Choral Directors’ Association. Brumley is listed in Who’s Who in America and three editions of Who’ Who Among American Teachers. In 2008, Kelly Webb Ferebee ’73 performed five concert recitals with her accompanist, April Stivener. These concerts were held at The Coppell Conservatory of Music in Coppell, Texas; the First Unitarian Church in Dallas, Texas; Chapel in the Hills in Wimberley, Texas; and The Price Center in San Marcos, Texas. The title of her concert was “White Wigs to Feather Boas: Songs Across Time and Genres,” and it included songs by Faure, Handel, Puccini, Gershwin, Sondheim, Lloyd Webber, Webb Ferebee, and others. She is preparing another exciting concert for the near future and plans to perform in New York City, among other stops. The Texas Association for Play Therapy awarded her the prestigious Nancy Guillory Award for outstanding contributions and service to the field of play therapy at their conference in April 2009. Her sister-inlaw, Dayna Ferebee (also a TCU graduate) and she are collaborating on publishing a set of children’s Halloween songs this fall. Dayna is illustrating the poems that Kelly set to music for voice and guitar. They will also have a CD to go with the book. Kelly Webb Ferebee is also the proud grandmother of Eamon Francis Griffin, son of Heather McLeod and TJ Griffin. Carol Cappa ’74 worked from 1997–2005 at the software help desk for Sabre Holdings, a company that supported calls from travel agents who used the American Airlines computer system. In 2005, his department was outsourced to South America, and he was laid off. Cappa chose to re-train for a career as a respiratory therapist at Tarrant County College, NE Campus. He graduated in May 2008, and he is working full-time in that field. Music is still an important part of Cappa’s life. He just completed his tenth season as a member of the Dallas Symphony Chorus. He is also a member of a hand bell quartet, and he does some occasional freelancing on flute. While he was back in school as a full-time student, he enjoyed teaching flute lessons for the Azle ISD for two years. Fellow classmates and friends may contact Cappa via e-mail at ccapo925@sbcglobal.net. He looks forward to hearing from them. Susan (Barrow) Carter ’74 is the 2007–2010 AT&T Chancellor’s Award recipient. In May 2009, she graduated with a DMA from Texas Tech University and, in August 2009, began her appointment as associate professor, director of vocal studies at Missouri Western State University, St. Joseph, Missouri. Arlene Anderson Jones ’74 completed her first year as principal of Reicher Catholic High School. Her daughter, Lauren, graduated from TCU in May ’08 with a BBA in supply chain management and marketing. Marilyn Merle ’76 has been called as the senior pastor of First Christian Church, Kingfisher, Oklahoma. Along with the role of pastor, she continues to use her education and love of music by conducting the Chancel Choir at the church she serves. Merle lives with her husband, John, in Guthrie, Oklahoma. V. Laura Bozeman ’78 is an adjunct professor in the Department of Music and Dance at Tyler Junior College. She continues to teach applied piano and class piano this year. She has been on the faculty of the Choir School of East Texas as a piano instructor for the past two years in addition to teaching private piano students. Bozeman attended the 13th World Piano Pedagogy Conference in 2008 as an adjudicator for the “Most Wanted” Piano Competition and was a presenter for a town hall forum entitled “Realistic Expectations for the Adult Student.” Pianist John Salmon ’78 has had a busy year. He performed at the Festival for Creative Pianists in Grand Junction, Colorado; for the California Association of Professional Music Teachers in San Mateo, California; and at the Wilton Public Library in Wilton, Connecticut. He also played the jazz piano part in the world premiere of Libby Larsen’s opera Picnic at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. NPR’s All Things Considered broadcast portions of his piano transcription of Dave and Chris Brubeck’s symphonic work, Ansel Adams: America during an April 2009 feature. Alfred published his edition of Dave Brubeck at the Piano. Two of his articles, “No Time to Take Five” and “Dave Brubeck’s ‘Remembrance of Madeleine Milhaud,’” were published in Piano Today’s summer 2008 issue. His three CDs of Dave Brubeck’s piano music (from Phoenix and Naxos) were broadcast on 12 stations in six states in the US, and in Australia, Brazil, Canada, and New Zealand, on 95 separate days. Salmon’s CD of Nikolai Kapustin’s piano music (Naxos) was broadcast on 22 stations in 12 states in the US, and in Australia and Holland, on 42 separate days. Critical reaction to Salmon’s recording has been widespread and enthusiastic: “Ideal, in its range and scope, for introducing the rarefied music of Kapustin to newcomers...” (allmusicguide.com); “A jazz pianist blessed with virtuoso classical chops … accomplished and committed performances.” (classicstoday.com); “CD Of The Month … Salmon tosses these difficult pieces off with an ease as if he himself had composed them.” (Stereoplay, Germany); “I was thoroughly enchanted from beginning to end. This is highly listenable, very engaging music. John Salmon’s enthusiasm for this music is evident.” (American Record Guide); and “With this Naxos release, the brilliant pianist John Salmon steps up to the plate with virtuosic performances. Kapustin may have met his ideal interpreter.” (Fanfare). Johnnel Wright Hench ’79 resides in Annapolis, Maryland. With her relocation to the east coast she began a vacation from her 30-year career in information technology and enjoys sailing with her husband, Steve, on the Chesapeake Bay. She now has time to work with local musicians as an accompanist and substitute organist; teach piano lessons; sing in the Naval Academy Chapel Choir under organist/ director Monte Maxwell, ’86; and practice on one of the most beautiful pipe organs in the world. Her daughter, Stephanie Park, is a senior at Texas Tech University and is a captain on the Texas Tech Pom Squad. Fellow classmates and friends may contact Hench via e-mail at jjhench@me.com. Former School of Music alums Brenda Brown Perez ’80, soprano soloist; Fr. Greg Labus, conductor; and Robert Cruhm, bass soloist, performed Durufle’s Requiem with the Basilica Schola Cantorum at the National Shrine and Basilica of the Virgin of San Juan del Valle in San Juan, Texas on November 2, 2008. The organist was also a TCU alum, Tom Helms of Florida. Labus is the music director and 29 | Da Capo | News West Texas on his 50th birthday, June 23, 1981. He is still serving as vicar of St. Luke’s Church in San Saba. Shortly after moving to San Saba in 1974, Grusendorf became involved in the legislative process and served as a school finance consultant to several members of the Texas Legislature. This led to him being selected by the Comptroller Bob Bullock to serve on an Equity Coalition that rewrote the public school finance articles, which later became known as House Bill 72. This legislation is the foundation of the current Public School Finance Code for the State of Texas. He served as a plaintiff intervener in the school finance lawsuits of the 1990s, and he organized the Texas Association of Rural Schools (TARS) in 1990 as founding president. Grusendorf has continued with TARS since that time, serving currently as executive director, school finance consultant, and lobbyist for approximately 668 small Texas school districts. He has been able to secure several special legislative initiatives for small schools, including the small school adjustment for the diseconomy of scale in small schools. Now 78, he has no plans to retire from TARS or St. Luke’s Church. As for TCU, he is thankful for the music education he received and the financial gift that helped him achieve that goal. He shall always appreciate Dean McCorkle, who gave him a scholarship without an audition. He repaid the scholarship several years ago with a gift, and he plans to give another one this year. Terrie McKenzie Preskitt-Brown ’80 recently finished her fifth year at Highland Park United Methodist Church in Dallas as coordinator of children’s music and voice teacher. This year she coached five voice students to become Texas All State Choir members, bringing her total number of allstaters to 30. Five of her students are attending TCU next fall: four will be music majors, and one (her son, Brian) is a Chancellor’s Scholar and will be majoring in engineering. (She’s a very proud purple-blooded mom!) In her spare time, she is one of the conductors of the Children’s Chorus of Greater Dallas and serves as soprano section leader for the professional chorus, Orpheus Chamber Singers. Al Dee Holcomb ’84 is associate professor at the University of Central Florida. He is active as a presenter, clinician, and conductor, and he is also director of music at Winter Park Presbyterian Church. Alicia Shirley ’87 was named the Texas Music Teachers Association’s Teacher of the Year in 2008 for outstanding pre-collegiate teaching achievement. In addition to maintaining a private piano studio, she is also on the faculty at the University of Houston as instructor of applied piano as well as a teacher in the undergraduate and graduate pedagogy programs. James Collins ’89 finally figured out what he was meant to be when he grew up. He has been married to the love of his life, Denise, for 16 years. He has two wonderful children (Jacob, 14, and Maddy, 13). Both are involved in a band, and the band directors and the choir director are all TCU alums. Collins writes, “Just wanted people to know that I am still alive.” 30 | Da Capo o | News Mary Jane Phillips ’89 still lives in Watauga with her husband Troy (TCU bachelor of arts in journalism, ’90) and her beautiful 6-year-old daughter, Zoe, who is starting first grade this year. Phillips still teaches choir in Birdville ISD at North Ridge MS; she finds it hard to believe that she just finished her 20th year! She judges numerous UIL contests and other festivals. Phillips had the privilege of watching her own former middle school choir student take her choir to TMEA this year, and they even got to clinic them. “What a great feeling!” she writes. Phillips will be presenting a workshop on sight reading games at the 2009 TCDA convention as well. Jennifer Cahill Clark ’95 is now on the music faculty at UT San Antonio. Scott McClean ’97 is band director at Creekview Middle School in the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD. Carissa Reddick ’98 is joining the music theory faculty at the University of Oklahoma in a one-year, full-time instructor position. She will also be presenting a paper at the Society for Music Theory’s national conference in Montreal in November. She and her husband had their first child this summer: Robert Charles Thibodeau was born in Farmington, Connecticut on July 14, 2009, weighing 6 lbs., 12 oz., and measuring 19.5 inches long (PHOTO). Ava Mason Pine ’98 sang the role of The Angel in the Fort Worth Opera Festival production of Angels in America, May 16–June 7, 2008. Marcus Brunt ’98, ’00 graduated in May ’09 with an EMBA from University of Texas in Dallas. He is engaged to Charlsye Lewis (TCU ’04 communication studies, ’06 MLA). They will be getting married this fall. Both continue to grow their companies, Note Consulting and Metro Animals Depot and Daycare for Dogs, based in Fort Worth. Hannah June Smith ’00, ’02 serves as company manager of the Fort Worth Opera. Julián Gómez-Giraldo ’01, ’03 has been named director of orchestral activities at Easter Washington University. Sarah Klopfenstein-Wear ’01 sang as a core chorus member in Cincinnati Opera’s summer 2009 season for a second year. Productions included Carmen, The Marriage of Figaro, Verdi’s Don Carlo, and the Spanish opera Ainadamar with conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya and soprano Dawn Upshaw. In the fall, Klopfenstein-Wear enters the young artist program with Kentucky Opera in Louisville as their resident mezzo-soprano, where she will perform the roles of Flora in La Traviata, the Sandman in Hansel & Gretel, and Suzuki in Madame Butterfly. Next spring, she will resume her pursuit of a DMA at the University of Kentucky in Lexington. Melissa Sky-Eagle ’01 has a new CD entitled Christmas Joy. Andres Franco ’02 has been named associate conductor of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. Jorge Gregorio García ’02 writes music in Bogotá. His email address is jorg_gar@yahoo.com. Since graduating from TCU, James Mick ’02 taught elementary and junior high orchestras in Arlington, Texas before accepting a graduate assistantship at Ithaca College (New York). There, in 2005, he earned a master of music degree with an emphasis in music education. Subsequently, he returned to Texas and taught for two years as a head middle school orchestra director in Plano. Thereafter, Mick moved again to New York, where he spent the past two years teaching orchestra, chamber music, and jazz band at Fayetteville-Manlius High School outside of Syracuse. This fall, he accepted another teaching assistantship at Florida State University and started working towards his PhD in music education at that institution. Christi Thomas ’03 is certified in nutrition support and is working as a clinical dietitian at the Methodist Hospital in the Texas Medical Center. She also works as internship coordinator for the dietetic interns completing their clinical rotation at the Methodist Hospital. Jessica Smythe Koebbe ’04 just completed her third year of teaching piano at Texas Wesleyan University. She works with piano students in all areas: majors, minors, and secondary, and she teaches the class piano sections. She is also the president of Fort Worth Music Teachers Association. Koebbe still teaches piano in the Prep Division at TCU and continues to perform with other area musicians in duo piano and chamber music recitals. After graduating from TCU, Jonathan M. Thomas ’04 moved to New Orleans, where he worked as library assistant at Tulane University while singing with the university’s chorus as a choir member and soloist. Following this, he relocated to Portland, where he secured employment as an administrative assistant with VLMK Engineers in downtown Portland, and joined the Oregon Repertory Singers as a choir member and soloist in 2005–07. Beginning with the 2007–08 season, Thomas won one of about 14 paid staff singer positions with the 130-member Portland Symphonic Choir. This ensemble presents a full season of shows each year, in addition to at least one joint collaboration with the Oregon Symphony Orchestra. There, he has performed as both a chorus member and soloist, while helping to anchor the tenor section. Notable tour performances with the group included the 2008 ACDA convention in Vancouver, BC, and the 2007 Cascades Music Festival in Bend, Oregon. Thomas also spent the 2007–08 season as a member of the David York Ensemble, a chamber music choir of approximately 16 singers. After two seasons with Portland Symphonic Choir, he is taking a break so that he can dedicate his time to the pursuit of a master’s degree in library science at Emporia State University. Thomas’s dream job upon graduation is to find employment as a music librarian with a university or college. He continues writing music in his free time, mostly choral or vocal solo, as well as refining his abilities on classical and folk guitars. Following his graduation from TCU, John Angeles ’05 performed for two years with the Moscow Circus in South Africa and Taiwan as part of their percussion show. In October 2007, he became a performer with the touring company of STOMP, performing all over the US and Canada; he is still with this company at the present time. Ezra Hood ’05 graduated from George Mason Law School in Arlington, Virginia this month. Rumen Cvetkov ’06 won the solo viola position with the Tilburg Chamber Orchestra in Holland. He has also signed contract with Virtuoso Artist Management, and he has many solo and chamber music recitals in Europe and the USA. Last June, he married Desislava Marinova ’06. Evangelina Iola Frazier ’06 taught first grade and dyslexic students at the Fine Arts Academy in White Settlement ISD. Last summer she got married and began a new job as a music teacher at Townley Elementary School in Everman ISD. Jeanene Johnson ’06 has served as adjunct clarinet professor at Tarleton State University since fall 2007. She has also done recordings for numerous short and fulllength feature films. Manny Arciniega ’07 just finished his graduate work at the Royal Academy of Music (London, England). Pablo Benavides ’07 completed his master’s in jazz studies at the College-Conservatory of Music at University of Cincinnati. He had a full graduate scholarship and assistantship, and his responsibilities included directing a combo, working as an assistant director of jazz lab band, and teaching Latin jazz piano lessons. He has been steadily freelancing with several salsa groups in Cincinnati area, has been hired for jazz arranging and composing, and recently accepted a part-time elementary music teacher position starting in late August. Fernando Valcarcel ’07 has been named music director of The Peru National Youth Orchestra. Dave Hall ’08 just finished a year as assistant band director and director of percussion at Paschal High School in Fort Worth, Texas. In addition, Hall was on the TCU Drumline staff helping to achieve much success last fall. Next year Hall will be starting his DMA degree at the University of North Texas. His piece “Escape Velocity” was published by C. Alan Music and received its PASIC premiere in November by the TCU Percussion Ensemble. Jacqueline Leung ’08, who was a graduate student in piano performance with Tamás Ungár and studied conducting with Germán Gutiérrez, won important awards in Hong Kong last year. Her list of achievements includes the following: Secondary School Girls’ Choir, under 16 intermediate singing in English, first prize; Secondary School Girls’ Choir, senior category singing in English, first prize; Best Girls’ Choir of the Year; Hong Kong Television Broadcasts Ltd. Choral Prize; and String Orchestra Senior Category, second prize. Loren Novak ’08 works for the Cliburn Foundation. Matt Rush ’08 just finished his first year as assistant band director and director of percussion at Newman Smith High School in Garland, Texas. 31 | Da Capo | News conductor of the Basilica Schola Cantorum in South Texas, a fully professional SATB choir. The group is preparing for its first CD, featuring Marian Antiphons, as well as rehearsing for choral tours of Mexico and Rome in the near future. For further information you may contact Brenda Brown Perez at 956-454-0058. Tahle Kirk ’09 is the new assistant band director and director of percussion at Granbury High School. Sarah Millen Walsh ’09 married Erik Walsh in June. She is now attending Southern Methodist University’s graduate program as a viola major. Jackie Weitz ’09 was a leading soprano in Mozart’s opera Impresario, on Saturday, July 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the Babcock Theater. She was also in the chorus and had a couple of lines in Sister Angelica on the same night. STUDENT NEWS Conducting students Andres Felipe Jaime and Danaila Hristova were invited to conduct the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. 32 | Da Capo o | News Drum Corps International The Phantom Regiment (Rockford, IL) won the coveted high percussion award and the Drum Corps International title. TCU students who performed with the regiment include Mike Garcia, Kelsey Svirsky, Tanner Trigg, Buck Palmer, and Daniel Allen. Paul Rennick (TCU faculty) was the percussion caption head and instructor/arranger. Russell Wharton performed with the Cavaliers Drum Corps (Rosemont, IL). Zac Robason was on the percussion staff for Spokane Thunder Drum Corps (Spokane, WA). Percussion Studio News In 2008, the TCU Percussion Ensemble once again won the Percussive Arts Society International Percussion Ensemble Competition (PASIC). The ensemble won this competition in 2005, and 2008 was the first year they were eligible to compete again—this means back-to-back wins for the TCU Percussion Ensemble. This competition is a refereed blind audition process open to all percussion ensembles in the world. Each year, three university ensembles are chosen to perform at PASIC. The concert in Austin, Texas, included the world premiere of two new pieces commissioned by the ensemble and its director, Brian West: I Ching by Dwayne Rice, and Symphony for Percussion (movement I) by Eric Ewazen. Another new piece, written for the ensemble by TCU alum Dave Hall and entitled “Escape Velocity,” was also included on the program. A special treat for everyone was the addition of a guest conductor, Richard Gipson, on the concert. Gipson conducted the classic “Diabolic Variations” by Raymond Helble (commissioned by Gipson). In addition to the Percussion Ensemble’s appearance at PASIC 2008, the TCU Indoor Drumline competed at the PASIC Marching Percussion Festival. The drumline performed the world premiere of TCU alum Dave Hall’s original composition entitled “Death by Black Hole.” The drumline placed third in the competition, winning the best cymbal caption award. Besides regular concerts each semester on the TCU campus (one for the Percussion Ensemble I/Steel Band I and another one for the Percussion Ensemble II/Steel Band II), the Percussion Ensemble I and Indoor Drumline performed a fall tour with stops at Juan Seguin High School in Arlington, McCallum High School in Austin, Pflugerville High School in Pflugerville, and Leander High School in Leander. The spring Percussion Ensemble I concert featured three world premiere performances. Symphony for Percussion by Eric Ewazen and “A Ceiling Full of Stars” by Blake Tyson were commissioned and premiered by the ensemble; the other piece premiered was ZZZZing!, written by TCU faculty member Till Meyn. The following TCU percussionists presented recitals this past school year: Jessica Garrow, Tahle Kirk, Mike Dooley, Jason Jerger, Zac Robason, Alyson Holley, Phillip Richardon, Steven Washington, Cara Wildman, Matt Bibb, Angel Briseno, Evan Dabbs, Michael Rareshide, and Pat Wynne. In February, legendary percussionist Bob Becker spent three days at TCU presenting workshops, giving lessons, and rehearsing with the Percussion Ensemble. Topics presented included tabla drums (from India), orchestral cymbal techniques, and ragtime xylophone history and performance. Becker’s stay culminated with a concert of his music performed by him and the TCU Percussion Ensemble I. Last year senior music education major Jake Remington ’09 successfully completed an audition for entrance into the graduate program at England’s Royal Academy of Music (RAM). Jake spent the fall at RAM participating in our study abroad program and enjoyed it so much that he re-auditioned and was accepted for graduate study beginning in the fall of 2009. In May, Jessica Garrow and Tahle Kirk earned master of music degrees in performance. Jake Remington and Zac Robason earned undergraduate degrees in music education. Congratulations, graduates! Trumpet/Trombone News Congratulations to graduate trumpet performance major Micah Bell, and senior music education major (soon to be a graduate trombone performance major at TCU) Scott Sidway for having their trumpet and trombone etudes selected by the Texas Jazz Education Association to be included in the 2009 Texas All-State Jazz Ensemble Audition Etude packet. The very best high school trumpet/ trombone players in Texas were practicing these etudes all summer for the final All-Region and All-State auditions in the fall 2009. Congratulations to Sarah Bauza (trumpet) and Scott Sidway (trombone) for being selected through a national audition process to perform in the Disneyland InterCollegiate Band in Anaheim, California this summer. Sarah played third trumpet, and Scott played first trombone. They performed professionally all summer at the Disneyland theme park in California, and also attended master classes every week with some of the top professional studio musicians in the Los Angeles area. Viola Studio News We are now on Facebook: Please visit and join our group at the “Texas Christian University Viola (and occasionally violin) Studio” page. Andrey Yarovoy won the TCU Concerto Competition and performed with the TCU Symphony. He will be performing a solo with Fort Worth Symphony orchestra on November 14 and 15. Our alum Rumen Cvetkov ’06 married Desislava Marinova ’06. Sarah Millen Walsh was accepted to SMU’s graduate program with a full assistantship award. Peter Kutin spent the whole summer of 2009 in China. Rebecca Trefny’s article “Antonin Dvo ák: His First American Year and the New World Symphony” was selected to be published in the TCU Journal of Undergraduate Research and Creativity. Last year’s guest master classes included those by Barbara Sudweeks from Dallas Symphony, Megan Fergusson from Bowling Green University, John Largess from Miro Quartet, and Goichi Yoshikawa from Japan. Goichi Yoshikawa, an instructor of Suzuki method for violin and a board member for Nagaoka International Exchange Association, and Kazue Mitomo, a viola orchestra player in Japan and Yoshikawa’s daughter, participated in a joint studio class for TCU violin and viola students on November 14. They also met with Richard Gipson, director of the TCU School of Music, and German Gutierrez, TCU’s director of orchestras, to discuss plans for future collaborations. This year, our viola students came from Russia, Bulgaria, Taiwan, Columbia, and the United States. Also this year, Brandon Polson, Andrey Yarovoy, and Peter Kutin will play their recitals in the fall of 2009, and Wendy Daugherty will perform in the spring of 2009. Please check the TCU School of Music website at www.music.tcu.edu for dates, times, and program information. TCU Pianist Wins National Competition Artist diploma piano student Anna Bulkina was named the national winner of the 2009 MTNA Young Artist Performance Competition in Atlanta. Bulkina is a student of TCU Professor of Piano Tamás Ungár. The competition in Atlanta was the culmination of a process that involved state, regional, and national competitions open to students ages 19–26 throughout the country. The Music Teachers National Association Young Artist Performance Competition in Piano is sponsored by Steinway & Sons. Bulkina’s grand prize for winning the competition is a new Steinway “M” grand piano valued at $54,000. In addition to Bulkina’s win, Ungár’s high school student, Michael Taylor, from Arlington was named the national winner of the 2009 Senior Performance Competition in Piano for students ages 15–18. This marked the first time in the competition’s more than 40 years that students from the same teacher’s studio won both the National Senior and Young Artist piano categories! Taylor also received first prize in the MTNA Senior National Composition Competition. Congratulations to Dr. Ungár, Anna, and Michael! TCU Pianist is on a Winning Streak As a result of his winning the 2009 Fort Worth Symphony Young Artist Competition, Sahun (Sam) Hong, senior piano performance major at TCU, performed Beethoven’s Piano Concerto 3 with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra on September 12 in Waxahachie, with Miguel HarthBedoya conducting. He also won first prize in his division at the Texas Music Teachers Association Solo Contest in Houston. Out of the 56 young pianists from across the state of Texas who played in the semi-finals, 10 were selected for the finals, from which the three prize-winners were chosen. Two days prior to this, Hong performed his program at a presentation for the Campaign for TCU at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. The program at the museum included Variations on the TCU Alma Mater for piano four hands, written by and performed with his teacher John Owings. In April, Hong won first prize in the 2009 Gifted Young Pianists Concerto Competition sponsored by the Leschetizky Association in New York. In addition to a cash award, Hong performed the Beethoven Piano Concerto 3 with Camerata New York in Merkin Concert Hall on April 21, and, for an encore, the Toccata by Leschetizky. In review of the performance in the summer 2009 issue of New York Concert Review, Howard Aibel wrote, “Sahun Hong is certainly a pianist to watch.” In January, Hong won first prize in the Piano Division and overall grand prize in the Juanita Miller Competition in Dallas, sponsored by the Texas Association of Symphony Orchestras (TASO). In addition to his cash prize, Hong will perform this season with the Irving and Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestras. He was also a featured performer at the TASO annual convention in April. Hong has also been invited to perform on NPR’s program From the Top this fall. 33 | Da Capo | News Jordan Warner ’08 was awarded a full graduate scholarship and assistantship at the College-Conservatory of Music at University of Cincinnati. His master’s in music education assistantship includes such duties as co-teaching the undergraduate woodwind methods classes and helping with the freshmen music education colloquium. He hopes to complete his coursework and graduate in the spring next year. Harp Student Wins American Harp Society Competition Congratulations to TCU harp student Rachel Lamb, winner of the 2009 American Harp Society (AHS) in Dallas Student Scholarship Competition. Rachel was named the winner in the advanced division, performing the Hindemith Sonata for Harp. The competition was held Saturday, April 18 in Irving, Texas. Rachel received a scholarship award and was a featured soloist on the AHS in Dallas Student Recital on May 3. The 32nd annual TCU Jazz Festival (held March 27–28) hosted 28 middle school and high school jazz ensembles that performed and were adjudicated by nationally and internationally known jazz performers and educators. This year, our guest artist was the world-famous Howard Johnson, a New York-based jazz tuba player, baritone saxophonist, and penny whistle artist. Johnson performed with the faculty jazz combo on Friday evening. The program included music that he wrote for baritone saxophone ensemble and tuba/euphonium ensemble. On Saturday night, Johnson performed with Curt Wilson’s big band. Also on the program were bands led by Joey Carter and Micah Bell. In addition, Johnson presented a tuba master class, and he interacted with Richard Murrow’s tuba studio while on campus. On February 9, the TCU Jazz Ensemble performed at Bass Hall along with the Wind Symphony, Symphony Orchestra, and Choir. Horned Frog Marching Band Ranked Second in the Nation The TCU Horned Frog Marching Band was selected as one of the top five college marching bands in the country by the College Band Directors National Association (CBDNA). It was eventually ranked number two out of the five selected groups. The CBDNA has a biennial call for videotapes, and the recordings are judged by a panel of college band directors. The top five groups are identified, and these tapes are presented at the national convention of the CBDNA. The TCU Jazz Studies program released its 17th CD in September, entitled Just Friends and containing nearly 30 great big-band and combo tracks, including the music of Patrick Williams and Mark Taylor. It features faculty members Joey Carter, Joe Eckert, and Gary Whitman, as well as special appearances by Los Angeles jazz trombone artist Andy Martin, and Director of the USAF Air Men of Note Senior Master Sergeant Joe Jackson. The TCU Jazz Ensemble is also included on the new School of Music Christmas CD performing the great Les Brown’s version of the Nutcracker Suite. During the fall of 2008, the Horned Frog Marching Band delivered exhibition performances at the Region V UIL Marching Band Contest on October 20 and at the Region 23 UIL Marching Band Contest on October 24. The band was invited to perform at the UIL State Marching Band Contest on November 3. The band also performed for over 200,000 people at the opening ceremonies of a major NASCAR race at the Texas Motor Speedway on November 8. The band’s performance of the national anthem was broadcast on national television. Opera Studio News Fall 2008 saw Fort Worth Opera’s Clyde Berry lead the TCU Opera Studio in an evening of opera scenes presented on November 21. Berry is education director and director of the Young Artist Program at Fort Worth Opera. TCU appreciates its continuing relationship with the Fort Worth Opera. The Marching Band will be presenting “ROCK STAR!” for their fall 2009 season. The production showcases rock music form Jimi Hendrix, Queen, and DemShop Boyz. The show opens with “VooDoo Child” and ends with “Party Like A Rockstar.” An exciting schedule has been planned for the fall, with invitations to perform at many special events. 34 | Da Capo o | News TCU Jazz Ensemble The TCU Jazz Ensemble was the featured musical group (also accompanying all singers, dancers, and actors) at TCU’s 2008 Fine Arts “Big Band” Gala held on October 23, which raised around a quarter of a million dollars for the School of Fine Arts. The fall 2008 jazz concert featured local jazz trumpet artist Brian Standridge, plus three student big bands directed by Micah Bell, jazz studies graduate assistant; Joey Carter, professor of percussion, theory, and jazz piano; and Curt Wilson, director of jazz studies. TCU Opera Studio presented Francesco Cavalli’s 1644 comic opera L’Ormindo in Ed Landreth Auditorium March 5–7, 2009. The 10 principal roles were filled by TCU undergraduate and graduate students along with guest artist Bert Johnson of Granbury. The orchestra was conducted by J. David Brock, and stage direction was by Richard Estes. TCU students and alumni in the Forth Worth Opera Company for the 2009 Festival Season were Vanessa Becerra, Meredith Browning, Corrie Donovan, Joanna Fernandes, Annie Laing, Allison Ward, Paige Myrick, Devin Drerup, Michael Rausch, Blas Canedo, Will Mattox, and Caitlin Sapaugh. TCU Opera Studio alumna Ava Pine will star in the Fort Worth Opera’s production of Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore May–June, 2010. Pine appeared last season in Dallas Opera’s production of Die Fledermaus and Fort Worth Opera’s Angels in America. Other TCU opera alumni working in opera companies around the country are Christina Hager, recently seen as Despina in Shreveport Opera’s Cosi Fan Tutte; and David Guzman, heard as Hoffmann in Tales of Hoffman for Opera Boheme in New York and, in May 2009, as Don Jose in Carmen for the Natchez Festival. If you have news of opera activities of other TCU alumni, please send the information to Richard Estes, director of TCU Opera Studio, at r.estes@tcu.edu. Wind Symphony, Symphonic Band, and University Concert Band By Bobby Francis Imagine a week like this: Four days, four concerts, six guest conductors, four guest composers, a guest soloist, and a concert for an audience of the best band directors in the world—it makes me tired just remembering it! The TCU Concert Band program had a very active year culminating in a performance at the American Bandmasters Association (ABA) convention in College Station. This is a very prestigious organization that has only accepted some 700 band directors in the country into its membership during the last 80 years or so. The annual event featured concerts by three college wind ensembles (Texas A&M, Host; University of Texas; and Texas Christian University), one high school band (Austin Bowie High School), and one military band (United States Navy Band). This is the first time in the history of the TCU band to be invited to perform at this important event. The week consisted of a short concert tour, including performances at the White’s Chapel United Methodist Church in Southlake, Trinity High School in Euless, Brenham High School in Brenham, and the ABA Convention in College Station. A tradition for ABA concerts is to have series of guest conductors for the performances. We were privileged to have some of the finest conductors in the country perform with thet TCU Wind Symphony, including John Whitwell (director emeritus, Michigan State), Ray Lichtenwalter (director emeritus, UTA), Jay Gephart (director of bands, Purdue University), Mark Fonder (professor of music education, Ithaca College), Gary Green (director of bands, University of Miami), and Eric Rombach-Kendall (director of bands, University of New Mexico). We also featured our new professor of saxophone, Joe Eckert, on the concert. The members of the Wind Symphony had a few days of getting to work with some very prominent composers while on this tour, including Frank Ticheli, John Mackey, Christopher Tucker, and our very own Curt Wilson. We were proud to feature a new setting of one of Wilson’s compositions entitled “A New Homeland” (from Ukrainian Dances for Symphonic Band). It was a big hit with the crowd! In addition to that incredible week, the three concert bands performed a total of nine concerts throughout the year. With an unexpected resignation of the assistant band director (third position) in August, we put our talented new graduate conducting associates Jeremy Strickland and Heath Baker to work conducting the University Concert Band during the spring semester—and they did a great job! After a national search for a replacement for the assistant position, we hired Jeremy Strickland to serve in that capacity starting in the fall. We look forward to many successful concerts this next year. We will be performing a new composition (that we helped to fund) by TCU graduate alum Arturo Rodriquez, and we will feature, as guest soloist, Jesus Castro-Balbi on cello. The ensemble will travel to New York in early spring 2011 to perform a concert in Carnegie Hall. Finally, we welcomed TCU’s first student ever to be admitted in the new doctorate of musical arts (DMA) program in wind conducting, Mike Davis. He is a veteran Texas band director with over 20 years of experience. Basketball Band The Basketball Band at TCU is made up of 50 students who love to cheer on the Horned Frogs, and it has long held the tradition of being one of the most spirited bands in the nation. The band appears at all home games during the fall and spring semesters for the men’s and women’s home games, where they join with other fans and spirit groups in support of the teams. In March, the band splits into smaller bands and travels to the Mountain West Basketball Tournament held in Las Vegas, as well as the NCAA tournament. Membership is based on audition. SCHOOL OF MUSIC JOINS AA BUSINESS PROGRAM TCU School of Music (SOM) is now a member of American Airlines Business ExtrAA program. Simply put, if you enter the SOM Code (778230) into the Business ExtrAA field when you book air travel on American, the SOM will benefit. This works whether you are booking professional or personal travel—anything on American Airlines. This will in no way affect your personal AAdvantage miles—they will continue to be awarded as always; by also entering 778230 in the Business ExtrAA field, the SOM will receive points at the same time you receive miles. We hope to gather enough points to help pay for student travel. 35 | Da Capo | News 2008 Wildeman Piano Competition Winners The 2008 Wildeman Piano Competition was held at Centenary College of Louisiana in December. Zhao Lei Xie, a student of John Owings, received the bronze medal and the $1,500 award; Anna Bulkina, a student of Tamás Ungár, received an honorable mention and the $1,000 award. Non-Profit Org. US Postage PAID Ft. Worth, TX 76129 Permit No. 2143 TC U SCH O O L OF M USI C Texas Chri s t i a n U n i v e r s i t y TC U Bo x 29 75 00 For t Worth , T X 7 6 1 2 9 Mitchelmore Masters Series Cavani String Quartet Residency March 22 – 24, 2010 Fort Worth Comes Alive with the best of Latin music! Nov. 13-20 With performances at TCU and Bass Performance Hall Featuring conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya, and his Carminos del Inka project UÊ UÊ UÊ UÊ UÊ UÊ UÊ UÊ UÊ The celebration will include: A traditional tiple, guitar, and bandola trio from Colombia Maria Luisa Harth-Bedoya, the renowned Peruvian guitarist Composer and conductor Arturo Rodriguez from Mexico Tamborimba, a percussion group from Colombia The tenor David Guzman from Colombia Electronic Music chamber groups from TCU, Dr. Gerald Gable, director The TCU Wind Symphony. Mr. Bobby Francis, director TCU Percussion Ensembles. Dr. Brian West, director TCU Symphony Orchestra, Dr. Germán Gutiérrez, director For a complete schedule of events, please visit www.latinarts.tcu.edu