Spring 2023 music.yale.edu
Feature | 18
Blocker leaves legacy of transformative leadership
Dear YSM community,
For the past 28 years, the βLetter from the Deanβ in Music at Yale has shared with the YSM community the work and the goodness of this remarkable place. The task of writing a final letter prior to my retirement as Dean on August 31 is daunting for many reasons, none more than wanting to express adequately enough to each of you my sense of profound gratitude.
Much has changed at Yale and in the world since my arrival at 435 College Street on a hot, humid August evening in 1995, yet much remains the same. What is different today from 1995 is evident to those who have traveled with me on this journey. The School has welcomed numerous world-class faculty and an extraordinary staff, expanded the music campus with new and refurbished buildings, and secured financial stability. What has not changed is the nature of the people who have studied, taught, and worked here. Their compassion, resilience, and determination have reflected a tenacious advocacy and conviction that music is likely the best guardian of human dignity.
Most of you have heard me speak of music as the currency of hope. It is my unyielding belief that our art form has the capacity to heal a broken world and to lift the spirits of, and ensure meaningful dialogue among, disparate people by building bridges of understanding. During your time at YSM, you learned that those who established our School understood the critical importance of the role music plays in our lives, in society, and certainly in any major universityβs curriculum. Together, we have experienced the joy and wonder that music brings to those who engage with it.
Music speaks to each of us individually. It is the transformative and transcendent bond that we share, and it is the only language that has spoken forever to people who have no other means to communicate with one another. This alone offers reason for optimism. I am humbled and grateful to know that long after I leave this office, Yale and the YSM community always will resound with music.
It is my heartfelt intention upon retirement as Dean to join you in supporting and advancing the work of the School as it purposefully anticipates the future here at Yale and beyond. Further, I look to the outstanding cultural leadership of all YSM alumni in response to Rabbi Tarphonβs admonition, βYou are not required to complete the work, but neither are you free to desist from it.β
It has been my privilege and high honor to serve you as Dean of the Yale School of Music.
Warmest regards,
Robert Blocker
Henry and Lucy Moses Dean of Music
[Top]
Dean Robert Blocker.
Photo by Sara Gardner, Yale School of Music.
1 2023 Letter from the Dean
Dean Robert Blocker.
Photo by Sara Gardner, Yale School of Music.
β€€ Front cover
Trumpet, H. N. White, Cleveland, c. 1930 (American, 20th century). Collection number: US.NH.y 3686.2005. A trumpet of nickel silver, with brass ferrules, and Art Deco style engraving on the bell. The instrument belonged to the renowned trumpeter, cornetist, composer, and bandmaster James Hembray Wilson.
β In the collection
Editorial staff:
David Brensilver
Katherine Darr
Sara Gardner
Katie Kelley
Elizabeth Landau
Design: FAY www.fay.design
Send us your news: musicnews@yale.edu
Follow us:
Facebook: yalemusic
Instagram: @yale.music
Twitter: @yalemusic
YouTube: YaleSchoolofMusicOfficial
Music at Yale is a publication of the Yale School of Music, P.O. Box 208246, New Haven, CT 06520-8246 music.yale.edu
Blocker leaves legacy of transformative leadership
Outside Leigh Hall, one can hear musicβthe sounds of pianists at the keyboard, violinists drawing bows against strings, chamber groups rehearsing intricately woven passages. Sometimes it is Dean Robert Blocker at the Steinway in his office, reading through a work in preparation for an upcoming performance or tapping into the magic of Mozart between meetingsβ¦
Life after Yale: Magdalena KuΕΊma
One year after graduating from YSM, soprano Magdalena KuΕΊma β22MM is an ascendant vocalist appearing on some of the most celebrated stages in the worldβ¦
The draw to and drawbacks of piano competitions
The Schoolβs distinguished piano faculty often serve as jurors for competitions around the world at which younger musicians seek to establish themselves and boost their careersβ¦
Film composer Marco Beltrami returns to campus
In February, composer and YSM alum Marco Beltrami β91MM returned to Yale to work with the Schoolβs composition students in classroom and one-on-one sessionsβ¦
1 Letter 6 Concert news 10 School news 12 Noteworthy 18 Feature 38 Faculty news 42 Class notes 52 Profiles 54 Honor roll 12 18 14 16 3 2023 Contents
4 Music at Yale
5 2023
Concert season offers historical performances
The 2022β2023 season offered concertgoers a wealth of memorable performances. The Yale Philharmonia, led by Principal Conductor Peter Oundjian, gave the world-orchestral premiere of Helen Haganβs Piano Concerto in C minor using a new orchestration by Soomin Kim β21MM β22MMA and featuring pianist and musicologist Dr. Samantha Ege as the eveningβs soloist. The performance took place on the same Woolsey Hall stage that Hagan presented her work, in 1912, with an ensemble of peers. Hagan was the first Black woman to graduate from the School of Music. The Yale Philharmonia also premiered a new edition, by Professor Emeritus of Music Paul Hawkshaw, of Brucknerβs Seventh Symphony on a program that also featured a performance of Brahmsβ Violin Concerto with faculty violinist Augustin Hadelich. The orchestra welcomed to the podium this season distinguished guest conductors Carolyn Kuan and Leonard Slatkin.
[Previous spread]
The Yale Philharmonia string section in rehearsal.
6 Music at Yale
Photo by Sara Gardner.
Yale Opera presented a new production of Brittenβs The Rape of Lucretia, directed by Candace Evans, at the Legacy Theatre in Stony Creek following Fall Opera Scenes and Liederabend programs and a gala concert with the Yale Philharmonia. Yale Operaβs year concluded with performances of Rossiniβs Le Comte Ory.
Alumni were well represented during the 2022β2023 season, no more so than during the Yale Clarinet Celebration organized by faculty clarinetist David Shifrin. More than 30 alums and current students joined Shifrin for a performance of music ranging in style from ragtime to contemporary.
Jazz, too, was explored during this past concert season. Fifty years after Willie Ruff β53BM β54MM, now Professor Emeritus of Music, invited more than 40 giants of the art form to Yale, local drummer Jesse Hameen II and his band, Elevation, celebrated Americaβs classical music with a performance that paid tribute to some of those same artistic giants. As part of the performance, Hameen received the Schoolβs prestigious Duke Ellington Medal. In April, the Ellington Jazz Series presented Epitaph: 100 Years of Mingus, a performance by the revered Mingus big band, with Grammy Award-winning saxophonist, YSM Lecturer in Jazz, and Director of Yale Jazz Ensembles Wayne Escoffery and Yale students, of Charles Mingusβ rarely performed big-band
epic.
[Facing page] Left to right: bass-baritone Finn Sagal β24MM, soprano Jillian Tate β24MM, and conductor Louis Lohraseb β15MM perform during Yale Operaβs Winter Gala Concert with the Yale Philharmonia in Woolsey Hall. Photo by Matt Fried.
[Top] Yale Operaβs production of The Rape of Lucretia. Photo by Matt Fried.
[Bottom] The Yale Clarinet Celebration, which featured more than 30 YSM students and alums. Photo by Harold Shapiro.
7 2023 Concert news
[Top right] Wayne Escoffery performs during the performance of Charles Mingusβ Epitaph. Photo by Matt Fried.
[Top] Students rehearse in various spaces on campus.
Photos by Sara Gardner.
[Bottom] Leonard Slatkin conducts the Yale Philharmonia in a rehearsal.
8 Music at Yale
Photo by Sara Gardner.
9 2023 Concert news
The path to tomorrow
Collection, Norfolk Festival renovation updates
A major facilities-improvement project began at the Yale Summer School of Music/Norfolk Chamber Music Festival in September and is slated for completion in time for the summer 2023 session. A replacement of the Music Shed Annex is underway and will yield new rehearsal spaces, and Eldridge Barn, which had been used for rehearsals, will be converted to student housing. The $10 million project is funded by the Ellen Battell Stoeckel Trust, the School of Music, and donors, and includes such upgrades to the Music Shed as a new air-cooling system, improved recording capabilities, a new green room, and the relocation of restrooms. Kirkegaard Associates, which consulted on acoustics design during renovations to YSMβs Sprague Memorial Hall, which was finished in 2003, and in the design of the Adams Center for Musical Arts, which opened its doors in 2017, is working on the Norfolk
project. βWe have a chance now to really make the Norfolk Festival a destination,β Festival Director Melvin Chen said.
Simultaneously, renovations to the Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments are ongoing. Objects from the Collection are being relocated to Yaleβs West Campus in advance of construction, which will reimagine the Collection as a teaching museum. Construction, which will include the installation of a new climate-control systemβand during which, Collection Director William Purvis said, βcare will be taken to preserve the unique and extraordinary acousticsβ of the keyboard galleryβis due to start this spring with a goal of work being completed by fall 2024, in time for the 125th anniversary, in 2025, of Steinertβs original gift of keyboards and other musical instruments to Yale in 1900. βThis project will significantly enhance the Collection and its role at the School and the University for years to come,β said Purvis, who will conclude his directorship of the Collection at the end of this academic year.
[Bottom] Rendering of the Eldridge Barn.
[Facing page, top]
An 18th century French harpsichord by Pascal Taskin at the Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments.
[Facing page, middle]
School of Music students gather at a reception in the Yale Commons following Convocation. Photo by Harold Shapiro.
[Facing page, bottom] Students share a meal and conversation in the Adams Center lounge in celebration of the Chinese Lunar New Year.
Photo by Sara Gardner.
10 Music at Yale
Graduates help grow Alumni Fund
At the start of the academic year, YSMβs Office of Development and Alumni Affairs secured the help of eight alumni volunteers in encouraging βtheir classmates and other Yale alums to give back to the School of Music,β Development and Alumni Affairs Officer Liz Landau said. The Alumni Fund Volunteer Program was modeled on initiatives that have long existed at Yale. Landau called the program a βservice to the Schoolβ and said, βWeβve definitely seen results from it,β explaining that YSMβs Alumni Fund enjoyed about a 50-percent increase in participation this past fiscal year over previous years.
Convocation 2022 welcomes βa new chapterβ
In early September, the incoming class was formally installed during a ceremony that implicitly celebrated the tradition itself, which YSM Dean Robert Blocker began upon arriving at Yale in 1995. Convocation 2022 included the presentation of awards, captivating performancesβincluding the annual collective singing of Schubertβs An die Musikβand a speech titled A New Chapter, in which Blocker, who will retire at the end of August after 28 years as Dean, said, βA new chapter begins tonight for each of us in this hall. β¦ I wish for each of you a time at Yale that is fulfilling, enlightening, and inspiring.β
Student Advisory Council sets agenda
The School of Musicβs Student Advisory Council embarked this academic year on an ambitious agenda that seeks to build on the work of last yearβs inaugural Council. This yearβs Council members seek to further define the groupβs organizational structure and election processes, appoint a Council chairperson, and establish more efficient lines of communication between councilors and their
constituents. Beyond the groupβs structure and operations, the Council continues to engage the YSM administration about course evaluations and more efficient processes for scheduling degree recitals and making and announcing performance assignments.
Council members remain dedicated to discussing ongoing health and safety policies at YSM, and, to the extent conditions allow, planning more social-engagement and community-building activities at the School of Music.
For more information, contact Liz Landau at elizabeth.landau@yale.edu.
11 2023 School news
Life after Yale Magdalena KuΕΊma
One year after graduating from YSM, soprano Magdalena KuΕΊma β22MM is an ascendant vocalist appearing on some of the most celebrated stages in the world. Most notably, KuΕΊma is participating in the Metropolitan Operaβs prestigious Lindemann Young Artist Development Program, an opportunity, KuΕΊma said, to hone skills, undergo βa lot of training,β and perform with one of the worldβs most revered companies. In addition to the ongoing experience at the Met, KuΕΊma has recently performed with the Santa Fe Opera and Opera Orlando, and, this coming summer and fall, will appear at the Glimmerglass Festival and in art-song recitals at Wigmore Hall in London and Merkin Hall in New Yorkβthose recitals the result of winning the Concert Artists Guild competition last year.
βI feel I was super preparedβ for this career moment, KuΕΊma said, reflecting on the transition
from graduate-professional school to full-fledged career. βYale Opera truly works as a young artist program.β At Yale, KuΕΊma received βmuch attentionβ from faculty, guest artists, and peers. Today, KuΕΊma is enjoying similar mentorship from the artists and administrators at the iconic Metropolitan Opera. βTheyβve really been working hard to get the Young Artists on the stage,β KuΕΊma said of the companyβs leadership. In April, KuΕΊma sang Giannetta in a Metropolitan Opera production of Donizettiβs Lβelisir dβamore. Itβs a role KuΕΊma covered at the Met in January and an opera the soprano knows well, having sung Adina in Yale Operaβs May 2022 production. For KuΕΊma, revisiting the work on the Metβs hallowed stage and working with that iconic company less than a year after graduating from Yale has been nothing less than a dream realized.
Soprano Magdalena KuΕΊma sings the role of Pamina in an Opera Orlando production of Mozartβs Die ZauberflΓΆte Bearded Lens Photography.
13 2023 Noteworthy
I feel I was super prepared ... Yale Opera truly works as a young artist program. Magdalena KuΕΊma
The draw to and drawbacks of piano competitions
The Schoolβs distinguished piano faculty often serve as jurors for competitions around the world at which younger musicians seek to establish themselves and boost burgeoning careers. For the competitors, the events offer opportunities to showcase their artistry and meet peers and those who might have the influence to engage them for future performances.
Anthony Ratinov β20BS β22MM β23MMA, who won Second Prize at the 2022 Olga Kern International Piano Competition, the Jury Prize at the 2022 Hilton Head International Piano Competition, and First Prize at the 2021 Canada International Artists Piano Competition, has a βpositiveβ relationship with competitions. βI think of a competition as exposure and a performance opportunity,β Ratinov said. βI never think about it as an actual competition. A musical career is grounded on the network that youβre able to create. I enjoy having competitions as markers in terms of progress,β including any new repertoire thatβs learned for a particular contest. Still, Ratinov said, βI think all pianists have complicated relationships with competitions.β
Alexa Stier β21MM β27DMA, winner of the 2022 Virtuoso and Belcanto Concerto Competition, agreed with Ratinov about the value of exposure while pointing out that musicians must avoid giving competitions the power to βvalidate you as a musician.β Upon arrival at YSM, Stier wasnβt focused on competitions. Itβs been important to faculty pianists Boris Berman and Wei-Yi Yang β95MM β96AD β99MMA β04DMA that Stier expand her repertoire beyond the familiar.
Henry Kramer β13AD β19DMA, who earned Second Prize at the Queen Elisabeth Competition in 2016 and won the National Chopin Competition of the United States, Montreal International Music Competition, and China Shanghai International Piano Competition in 2020, 2011, and 2012, respectively, teaches at the University of Montreal, where he advises students to think carefully before applying to participate in competitions. Kramer does agree that performance contests offer opportunities βto make connections.β
βDonβt go through all that effort if itβs not going to be worth it,β Kramer said, explaining that βit takes a long time to build up that kind of technical security and focus.β
βMy competition success has definitely helped me,β Kramer said. βI do encourage certain students of mine to do them.β There are other students, Kramer said, whom he urges to pursue other avenues if their musical interests donβt align with the competition repertoire or design. βThere are people who are not suited to them,β Kramer said, explaining that rejection βcould be very detrimentalβ to those musicians, and there are βother things one can do to establish themselves.β
[Top] Portrait of Alexa Stier by Balog Zsolt.
[Facing page] Anthony Ratinov performs at the National Society of Arts and Lettersβ annual Viennese Ball at the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.
Photo by Paolo Galli.
14 Music at Yale
βThere are plenty of competition winners that nobody knows about,β Kramer pointed out, and plenty of well-known pianists who didnβt go the competition route.
Yang worries about the limitations that preparing for competitions can place on developing oneβs artistry through a thorough exploration of the ever-growing repertoire. That is, spending so much time on repertoire with which a student is already familiar, Yang pointed out, is βdifferent than what we aim to do at this stage of their lifeβto broaden and expandβ on studentsβ knowledge of the repertoire and experience with music of varying styles and of different periods. If a competition can be used as a motivator, Yang said, βIβm for it. Why not?β One can grow and develop, Yang pointed out, through the experience of βparticipating in and enduring these challenges.β Still, Yang said, βmy concern remains.β
βThere is a valueβ to competitions, Berman said, βand there is a danger.β Sure, exposure is invaluable, especially in
a scene thatβs now brimming with competitions, not to mention the competitive nature of the field itself. The drawbacks, though, can be βhuge.β One of those is that the time spent honing familiar repertoire leaves little space for studying and learning new pieces. More important, perhaps, is that βthe competitor should be able to handle a setback in the competition, which statistically is more likely than a win. But not every artist is thickskinned,β said Berman, who remembered one of his students who was eliminated after the first stage of a competition and took it very hard. βIt took me a semester to put him back on track,β Berman said, explaining that βsome competitors tend to take the personal opinion of judges as an objective valuation of their artistry. For them this may become a traumatic experience.β
Stier commented on the burden of facing rejection. βIt sucks. Itβs not a good feeling. But you have to cope with it. It makes you stronger.β
15 2023 Noteworthy
Film
composer
Marco Beltrami returns to campus
In February, composer and YSM alum Marco Beltrami β91MM returned to Yale to work with the Schoolβs composition students in classroom and oneon-one sessions. Beltramiβwho in October participated in a panel discussion called βStorytelling for Impact: Harnessing the Power of Arts, Media, and Culture,β which was organized as part of Yaleβs βFor Humanity Illuminatedβ campaignβstudied at YSM with Jacob Druckman, after which he relocated to Los Angeles to study with Jerry Goldsmith at the University of Southern Californiaβs Thornton School of Music. Since then, Beltrami has scored dozens of Hollywood blockbusters including Free Solo, The Hurt Locker, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, and the movies from the Scream franchise. He recently completed work on the score for Renfield and began work on the latest John Wick film. We spoke with Beltrami about breaking into the film-scoring industry, the differences between that scene and the world of concert music, his approach to the work, and teaching, which, after college and graduate school, he said, wouldnβt have been a natural progression because at that point he felt he βhad nothing to say, honestly.β
[Top] Composer Marco Beltrami with his score for La Citta Decadente.
Photo by Dawn Jones.
[Facing page] Beltrami talks with YSMβs composition students during a seminar on campus in February.
Photo by Sara Gardner.
16 Music at Yale
Are you asked frequently about an entry point into the film industry?
There are always a lot of questions from students about how one breaks into the business. In the commercial world, youβre trying to find someone who likes your ideas.
What are the primary differences between composing for film and writing for a live performance?
In film, youβre trying to talk to people who are not musically trained. Itβs a very different dynamic. Itβs a different skill set. Youβre working for the vision of other people, serving a visual medium. The recording is the performance. A lot of stuff is manipulated and treated in the studio. Youβre not thinking about repeat performances.
And writing for the concert hall...
Itβs about the idea itself.
What does your process look like?
It is very different from project to project. It is unique. The process is the same in that I approach every film the same way, which is to get an overview of it and try to reduce it to its most simple characteristics. Youβre trying to figure out what the point is that you want to convey, and how to do that.
You have a developing interest in teaching. How does that fit into your work and practice?
At this point, I have a little bit of real-world experience that might be beneficial to students. Itβs an ongoing interest. As I get older the balance will move more toward teaching. At this point, Iβm still immersed in (film scoring).
This conversation was edited for clarity. For Humanity presentation: forhumanity.yale.edu/
17 2023 Noteworthy
marco-beltrami-91-musm
BLOCKER
leaves legacy of transformative leadership
[Previous spread]
Portrait of Dean Robert Blocker by Sara Gardner.
[Bottom]
Dean Robert Blocker performs in Morse Recital Hall.
20 Music at Yale
Photo by Bob Handelman.
Outside Leigh Hall, one can hear musicβthe sounds of pianists at the keyboard, violinists drawing bows against strings, chamber groups rehearsing intricately woven passages. Sometimes it is Dean Robert Blocker at the Steinway in his office, reading through a work in preparation for an upcoming performance or tapping into the magic of Mozart between meetings. More than once, Blocker has remarked to a colleague in the hallway, βYou know, I must have the best job in the world,β situated as he has been in that office, at this School and University, for nearly three decades, learning each and every day about the art form from faculty and students alike, from guest artists, from the new repertoire that is imagined and created in the studios, classrooms, and concert venues that hold the echoes of performance and expression.
As he prepares to retire after twenty-eight years as Dean, Blocker, who will remain on the Schoolβs faculty, can follow the thread of his good professional fortune back to childhood, to the piano, and to the vocal works of Bach he sang in grade school and church, finding, in melody, harmony, and rhythm, a prescription for hope and wonder. Indeedβfirst, for Blocker, there was music. Ask him about this place and he will tell you it is about people and the art form to which each of us should have access as a birthright. He will tell you that what we do, as artists, can help heal our fractured world. It is that high-minded reverence for music-making and its power that has imbued Blockerβs leadership and a career at Yale that has been transformative for the School, the University, the City of New Haven, and the world.
21 2023 Feature
IT HAS BEEN A PRIVILEGE TO WORK CLOSELY WITH DEAN BLOCKER. HIS WISDOM AND VISION, COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE IN EDUCATION AND SCHOLARSHIP, BOLD CREATIVITY, AND PRINCIPLED LEADERSHIP HAVE REDEFINED THE SCHOOL, AND HIS IMMENSE CONTRIBUTIONS WILL BE FELT FOR GENERATIONS TO COME.
Peter Salovey President, Yale University
22 Music at Yale
Deanship redefined
When he arrived at Yale in 1995, Blocker brought with him a vision, a conception of what the School of Music ought to look and sound like, ought to represent, given its place on this storied campus. He had a long-term strategic plan and the knowledge and expertise to reimagine an institution whose work it is to prepare the most exceptional, ascendant young musicians for service to the profession and to society, as the Schoolβs mission stipulates. That would take more than wonder and hope. It would take support, and, most important, it would take people who shared with the Schoolβs founders the belief that music deserves a place in the curriculum of a university of Yaleβs reputation. Blocker came to Yale with an impressive history of building programs. He had served with distinction as the founding Dean of the School of the Arts and Architecture at UCLA, and as Dean at the University of North Texas College of Music and the School of Music at Baylor University.
Blocker was familiar with the Yale School of Musicβs legacy. There were and had always been remarkable performers and composers hereβ faculty, students, and academic pedagogues, alike. What was needed in the mid-1990s were the building blocks that could propel the School into the twenty-first centuryβscholarships and major facilities-improvements, a faculty whom, along with current students and alumni, constituted a community that gave music at Yale tangible meaning, a curriculum and programming befitting of the lone graduate-professional music school in the whole of the Ivy League. Blockerβs successful efforts to secure an extraordinary $100 million gift in 2005 enabled the School to offer full scholarships to all students in perpetuity, which in turn helped the School attract the most sought-after graduate students and young artists in the world.
Investment in existing programs including the Yale Summer School of Music/Norfolk Chamber
Music Festival and Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments were vital, as were those that would provide faculty and staff with state-ofthe-art spaces in which to work, whether reimagined and renovated or built anew, expanding the Schoolβs campus at the heart of the University. Sprague Memorial Hall, whose construction in 1917 had been made possible by one of the most important cultural philanthropists of her time, was remadeβits concert venue, Morse Recital Hall, an acoustic and aesthetic marvel. Leigh Hall, once the Universityβs health-care center, was repurposed, as was Hendrie Hall, Yaleβs former Law School building, in a project that yielded the Adams Center for Musical Arts, which connected Leigh Hall and Hendrie Hall, offered students and faculty a towering new orchestral rehearsal hall, classrooms, and additional practice spaces, and, for the first time, provided spaces for School of Music students to interact with their counterparts from Yale Collegeβs Department of Music. Every element of the Schoolβs remarkable growth has been made possible by Blockerβs extraordinary fundraising acumen, his ability to convey to potential supporters the importance and value of the Schoolβs work and to interest those potential supporters in sustaining the Schoolβs mission through timely and generous gifts. Investment in the Schoolβs work in the community was also made, thanks in large part to the relationships Blocker forged and the critical funding he secured through collaboration with the Yale College Class of 1957. Just as he has described himself as the most fortunate person in the world for having the opportunity to regularly hear world-class artists in rehearsal and performance, Blocker has frequently pointed out that performances by students from the New Haven Public Schools who participate in YSMβs Music in Schools Initiative are among the most meaningful he has attended during his time at Yale.
23 2023 Feature
Joseph Polisi President Emeritus, The Juilliard School
ROBERT SET A STANDARD EXCELLENCE β¦ AND BY YALE SCHOOL OF MUSIC
SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM, DEVELOPED ONE OF THE AFTER PROGRAMS IN AND FOR THAT YALEβAND
EDUCATIONAL WORLDβOWE AN ENORMOUS DEBT
24 Music at Yale
STANDARD FOR BY MAKING THE MUSIC A FULL PROGRAM, HE ALSO THE MOST SOUGHTIN THE WORLD. YALEβAND THE MUSIC WORLDβOWE HIM
OF GRATITUDE.
DEBT
25 2023 Feature
Community cultivated
Tradition, Blocker knew, would help draw a farflung community together. With Commencement exercises marking the transition from one academic year to the next, he established an annual Convocation in September during which the incoming class is formally installed in a ceremony marked by performances by faculty, alumni, and current students. Also added to the traditions the YSM community maintains today were the singing of Schubertβs An die Musik at Convocation and Commencement, a popular, year-ending Honors Banquet, where excellence awards are presented to students and faculty, and the establishment of prizes created to acknowledge the extraordinary achievements of the artists who have called this special place home and the staff who have been charged with its operations.
As much as Blocker understood the value of community here in New Haven, he has also long appreciated YSMβs international reach. Thousands of alumni live and work in cities around the world, cities whose populations value music and its place in our global society.
Blockerβs work in China alone has made the world a bit smaller. In addition to entering into several strategic agreements with cultural institutions across China, Blocker and Wang Cizaho, then President of the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, organized βMusicathlon: The Conservatory Music Festival,β in which students and faculty from music schools and conservatories around the world gathered for performances before the Games of the XXIX Olympiad, and which brought the Yale Philharmonia to Asia for performances in Beijing, Shanghai, and Seoul.
Locally, Blockerβs longtime presence on the Yale campus and in New Haven has positioned the School of Music as a cultural resource, a destination for concertgoers from Greater New Haven and beyond, and, as former Yale President Richard Levin has said, βthe soul of the University.β The Schoolβs place at Yale, in New Haven, and on the world stage, was at the heart of the communityβs 2019 celebration of the 125th anniversary of the Schoolβs establishment.
[Top] Robert and Serena Blocker with President Bill Clinton.
[Facing page, left] Photo taken before the Adams Center for Musical Arts dedication ceremony, February 2017. From left: Serena and Robert Blocker, Denise and Stephen Adams, Yale University President Peter Salovey and wife Marta. Photo by Harold Shapiro.
[Facing page, right] Dean Blocker at the signing ceremony with the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, 2010.
26 Music at Yale
IN HIS MORE THAN QUARTER OF A CENTURY AS DEAN, ROBERT BLOCKER NOT ONLY TRANSFORMED THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC, HE TRANSFORMED YALE. HE DID SO BY INFUSING BEAUTY THROUGHOUT OUR LIVES, THROUGHOUT THE UNIVERSITY. HE DID SO BY REACHING OUT TO THE NEW HAVEN COMMUNITY, AND OUT BEYOND ACROSS THE WORLD. HE DID SO BY USING MUSIC TO BRING US TOGETHER, TO SHOW US OUR SHARED VALUES, OUR SHARED JOYS, AND OUR SHARED RESPONSIBILITIES. HE DID SO BY REMINDING US WHAT EXCELLENCE SOUNDS LIKE.
Benjamin Polak
William C. Brainard Professor of Economics, Professor of Management
27 2023 Feature
Crises faced
If there has been one monumental project Blocker could not foresee embarking on it was keeping the work of the School going during the COVID19 pandemic. The Yale Philharmonia was set to begin a tour to Boston, New York, and Washington, D.C., when the world shut down. Following guidance from the University and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Blocker and his administration, almost overnight, had the School of Music operating virtually to the fullest extent that could be accomplished given the nature of music study and performance. For two years, during which work was accomplished mostly online, the YSM community came together in ways that reflected the cultural leadership Blocker spent his deanship championing. Students, alumni, and faculty created videos in their homes that the School shared widely, while some curated video playlists for patients and caregivers in area hospitals. Others, led by faculty, gave concerts in the parking lot behind the Adams Center. Slowly, as the coronavirus was understood, the YSM community began to return for safely conducted in-person performance activities. Eventually, the YSM community returned in full to campus, eager to welcome audiences and to take the stage in Morse Recital Hall and Woolsey Hall to do what they came here to do. The community that returned was one that had learned much about itself during months of isolation and lockdown. Just as the pandemic reminded the world that unexpected tragedy could arrive out of the blue, on a massive scale, events during that same period forced us all to face anew an ever-unfolding atrocity. The murder of George Floyd in May 2020, an act of violence that brought an outraged many into the streets to protest the systemic and structural racism that have always pervaded our society, expedited the hiring of YSMβs inaugural Director of Equity, Belonging, and Student Life and placed a Schoolwide focus on the relative lack of diversity in classical music. Coming out of the pandemic, Blocker sought anew to train a focus on an early YSM alum, pianist, and composerβHelen Hagan, whose Piano Concerto in C minor was given its world-orchestral premiere 110 years after Hagan composed the work and performed it, with an ensemble of her peers, on the same stage.
Faculty horn player William Purvis leads students in a rehearsal in the Adams Center parking lot during the spring 2020 semester.
28 Music at Yale
29 2023 Feature
β95ββ23
β95ββ23
β95
Robert Blocker is appointed the Henry and Lucy Moses Dean of Music and Professor of Piano at Yale. Blocker begins several traditions including the annual Convocation and Honors Banquet celebrations that mark the end of each academic year, and the singing of Schubertβs An die Musik at Convocation and Commencement.
β00
The Horowitz Piano Series is established, and faculty pianist Boris Berman is appointed Artistic Director.
β96
The Board of Visitors, later renamed the Board of Advisors, is established to provide advice and counsel for the advancement of the School of Music and to support the Schoolβs mission.
β03
Sprague Memorial Hall reopens after comprehensive renovations, revealing a refurbished Morse Recital Hall, a state-of-the-art recording studio, the Center for Studies in Music Technology, and practice rooms.
32
β05
Stephen Adams β59BA and Denise Adams make a transformative gift of $100 million, enabling the School to expand academic programs and give full-tuition scholarships to all students. Renovations are completed on the building at 435 College St., which reopens as Leigh Hall in honor of Abby and Mitch Leigh, who had made a generous gift to the School in 2001. The renovated Leigh Hall houses faculty studios, classrooms, and administrative offices, including the Deanβs Office. The Music in Schools Initiative is formalized with a gift from the Yale College Class of 1957, which had begun discussions in 1997 about creating a national arts policy and helping to bolster the relationship between Yale and the City of New Haven.
β08
Through βMusicathlon: The Conservatory Music Festival,β organized in partnership with the Central Conservatory of Music (Beijing) President Wang Cizhao, students and faculty from conservatories and music schools around the world gather for performances one the eve of the 2008 Summer Olympics. Through the festival, the Yale Philharmonia performs in Beijing, Shanghai, and Seoul. The Collection of Musical Instruments becomes part of the School of Music.
β07
The Yale in New York concert series begins presenting concerts at Carnegie Hall and other New York City venues.
β09
The School adopts its first strategic plan, Beyond Boundaries.
β10
The School begins livestreaming concerts free of charge. The Iseman Met Opera Broadcasts series begins thanks to a gift from Yale College graduate Frederick Iseman β74BA.
β15
A major construction, renovation, and expansion project begins on Hendrie Hall, which reopens as the Adams Center for Musical Arts.
β13
The Tokyo String Quartet retires from the international concert stage and from its longtime residency at Yale. The Brentano String Quartet is named the Schoolβs new faculty quartet-in-residence.
β17
The Adams Center for Musical Arts, a new complex that links the newly renovated Hendrie Hall with the previously renovated Leigh Hall, opens for use at the start of the spring semester. A grand-opening ceremony is held on February 16.
β19
The School celebrates its 125th anniversary. The Yale Philharmonia is set to go on an East Coast tour of Boston, New York, and Philadelphia with the Bach Choir, London. The tour is cancelled as COVID-19 enters the United States. The School moves operations online in order to adhere to health and safety protocols set forth by the University with guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
β22
Renovations begin on the building that houses the Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments, including the installation of climate controls for the Collectionβs objects and other major improvements. A major facilitiesimprovement project begins at the Yale Summer School of Music/Norfolk Chamber Music Festival, including the replacement of the Music Shed Annex and the conversion of Eldridge Barn to student housing.
β21
Timothy Steinert β82BA and his wife, Lixia Zhang, make a major gift to the Yale Collection of Musical Instruments, renaming it the Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments at Yale.
β23
Robert
35
Blocker retires as the Henry and Lucy Moses Dean of Music.
The final year
In September 2022, Yale University President Peter Salovey announced Blockerβs intention to retire, after twenty-eight years in the Deanβs Office at YSM, in August 2023. In the final years of his tenure, Blocker had opportunities to appoint more distinguished artists to YSMβs impressive faculty. Major renovation projects were ongoing at Norfolk Festival and at the Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments, and a search was launched to identify Blockerβs successor. As he prepared to step away from the Deanβs Office and to occupy a teaching studio in Leigh Hall, Blocker reflected on nearly thirty years of work and leadership at Yale and the people and music that have surrounded and nourished him. Planning, this past winter, was
underway for the send-off event in April. To ask him in a private moment each year how he felt his recital had gone would elicit the same response: βBetter than it could have, not as well as it should haveββin that, a healthy measure of modesty. While he has always performed here at Yale and beyond, Blocker has not, perhaps since his earliest days at the keyboard, had anything to prove to anyone. He plays because he needs to, needs the nourishment of the music itself, whether it is a work by Bach, Mozart, or a faculty composer, and wants very much for whomever might be in the audienceβwhether in Morse Recital Hall or some other venue halfway around the worldβto experience the wonder that he did as a child and still does.
Dean Robert Blocker, with faculty and students, during Commencement.
36 Music at Yale
Photo by Ian Christmann.
Yale Medal recipients since 1995
Ian Mininberg β34BM (2002)
Stephen Adams, Board of Advisors (2009)
Nancy Better, Board of Advisors (2019)
Don Roberts, Class of 1957 (2022)
Yale Honorary degrees since 1995
Caroline Shaw, 2022
Renee Fleming, 2020
Herbie Hancock, 2020
Willie Ruff, 2018
Marin Alsop, 2017
Stevie Wonder, 2017
Audra McDonald, 2016
Angelique Kidjo, 2015
Joseph W. Polisi, 2014
Ralph Stanley, 2014
John Adams, 2013
Midori Goto, 2012
Youssou Ndour, 2011
Aretha Franklin, 2010
Sofia Gubaidulina, 2009
Paul McCartney, 2008
Emanuel Ax, 2007
Krzysztof Penderecki, 2003
Dawn Upshaw, 2001
Robert Shaw, 1998
Paul Simon, 1996
Wynton Marsalis, 1995
37 2023 Feature
YSM faculty at work beyond the classroom
News
Paul Hawkshaw creates new edition of Brucknerβs Seventh Symphony
music.yale.edu/news/ paul-hawkshaw-createsnew-edition-brucknersseventh-symphony
In February, Ensemble Modern gave the premiere of waste knot, for soprano, large ensemble, and amplified Dictaphones, by faculty composer Katherine Balch β16MM, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic premiered Balchβs all around the sea blazed gold, for sinfonietta, on the orchestraβs Green Umbrella Series. In April, the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and cellist Zlatomir Fung premiered Balchβs whisper concerto, and in May the Darmstaadt Staatstheater Orchestra gave the European premiere of the concerto with cellist Maximilian Hornung. Balch was a recipient of New Music USAβs Amplifying Voices grant, through which a new work was co-commissioned by the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and the New York Philharmonic for the 2024β2025 season.
Following the success of two recordings of music by Brahms and Valentin Silvestrov (Palais des Degustateurs), faculty pianist Boris Berman performed in recitals in New York, Washington D.C., Paris, Brussels, Glasgow, and on various campuses in the United States. He also performed and gave numerous master classes at universities, conservatories, academies, and festivals in Austria, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Professor of Music History Lynette Bowring and Professor of Analysis and Musicianship Stephanie Venturino presented papers at the annual joint meeting of the American Musicological Society, Society for Ethnomusicology, and Society for Music Theory in New Orleans, LA. In βHidden Pedagogiesβ: Strategies for Learning in Early Modern Italy, Bowring surveyed educational strategies in 16th century Italy, seeking resonances between the education of musicians and some pedagogies for literacy, handwriting, and math during that era. Venturinoβs paper, Who Is Allowed to Be a Music Theorist? Sarah Mary Fitton and Conversations on Harmony (1855), focused on Fittonβs original theory of augmented sixth chords and her distinctive approach to chromatic scale harmonization, as well as questions about gender and class in music-historical narratives.
Faculty composer Martin Bresnickβs Mending Time was performed in September by the New Thread (saxophone) quartet at the Tenri Cultural Institute in New York City. Bresnickβs chamber orchestra arrangement of JanΓ‘Δekβs On an Overgrown Path was performed in November at Verbrugghen Hall at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music in Australia. In January, violinist Jenny Khafagi and pianist Lisa Moore performed Bresnickβs Bitter Suite at Tempo Rubato, in Melbourne, Australia, and at The Neilson during the Sydney Festival.
In January, Jeffrey Douma was appointed the Marshall Bartholomew Professor in the Practice of Choral Music at Yale and was recognized as Choral Conductor of the Year by the Connecticut chapter of the American Choral Directors Association. Douma conducted the premiere of Memory of Water by Garth Neustadter β12MM with the Yale Choral Artists and faculty percussionist Robert Van Siceβs Percussion Collective and prepared the Yale Glee Club for joint performances with Chanticleer and the Kaleidoscope Vocal Ensemble, which joined the Glee Club for the premiere of Prayer for Deliverance by Joel Thompson β20MMA β26DMA, conducted by Arianne Abela β10MM.
[Bottom] Valentin Silvestrov and Boris Berman in Mallorca in June 2022.
Photo by Patricia Lozano.
[Facing page] Faculty violinist Augustin Hadelich performs Brahmsβ Violin Concerto with the Yale Philharmonia in April.
39 2023 Faculty news
Photo by Matt Fried.
Saxophonist, Lecturer in Jazz, and Director of Yale Jazz Ensembles Wayne Escoffery released his new album, Like Minds, in April on the Smoke Sessions Records label. Escofferyβs previous album, The Humble Warrior, included an interpretation of Benjamin Brittenβs Missa Brevis alongside original compositions. Like Minds features collaborations with jazz giants Tom Harrell, Gregory Porter, and Mike Moreno along with Escofferyβs regular quartet.
The Sebastians, a New York-based early music ensemble directed by faculty members Jeffrey Grossman and Daniel Lee β06MM β08AD, concluded its 10th anniversary concert season on April 15 with a performance featuring Bachβs Mass in G major. The ensemble includes Yale alumni Lee, Nicholas DiEugenio β08AD β09MMA β14DMA, Ezra Seltzer β06BA β07MM, and others.
Faculty violinist Augustin Hadelich appeared as a soloist this spring with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Boston Symphony Orchestra and concluded a multiyear residency with the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra in Hamburg, Germany. Hadelich performed Brahmsβ Violin Concerto with Principal Conductor Peter Oundjian and the Yale Philharmonia in April.
Paul Hawkshawβs new critical edition of Anton Brucknerβs Seventh Symphony was published in Vienna as part of the new Bruckner Collected Works Edition. The Yale Philharmonia, led by Principal Conductor Peter Oundjian, premiered the new score in Woolsey Hall in April.
Faculty violinist Ani Kavafian judged the Bowers Competition, Chamber Music Societyβs young musicians program, and performed in Alice Tully Hall and at the Ocean Reef Chamber Music Festival in Florida in April. Kavafian was named Director of the 2023 Vivace Festival and will participate in the Four Seasons, Sarasota, Saratoga, Heifetz Institute, Bridgehampton, Music@Menlo and Lake George festivals.
Works by faculty composer Aaron Jay Kernis β83 that recently received premieres include Edensongs (with text by Peter Cole), written for the Yale Schola Cantorum, at Woolsey Hall, Grace for cellist Matt Haimovitz, On Hearing Nightbirds at Dusk for harpist Yolanda Kondonassis, and Sky Music, performed by YSM students in Morse Recital Hall in Sprague Memorial Hall. Additional performances included a portrait concert featuring a chamber version of Kernisβ Earth, for tenor Nicholas Phan, and Goblin Market at the Curtis Institute of Music in March, and a performance of the orchestral version of Earth by Santa Fe Pro Musica.
Yale Opera Director Gerald Martin Mooreβs recent engagements have included master classes for the San Francisco Operaβs Adler Fellowship program and the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto and serving as a judge for the Metropolitan Operaβs Eric and Dominique Laffont Competition. Future projects include recording a recital CD with Erin Morley that will also feature longtime YSM faculty member Ransom Wilson, hosting the Metropolitan Opera Radio Quiz, appearing in recitals with Morley and RenΓ©e Fleming, teaching and giving master classes at the Merola Opera Program in San Francisco, Music Academy of the West, Lyric Opera of Chicagoβs Ryan Opera Center, and Ravinia Steans Music Instituteβs Program for Singers. In February, for the fifth consecutive year, Moore served as Associate Director of Carnegie Hallβs SongStudio with Fleming.
[Left] Faculty clarinetist David Shifrin leads students and alums in a performance during the Yale Clarinet Celebration.
Photo by Matt Fried.
40 Music at Yale
[Bottom] James OβDonnell conducts the Westminster Abbey choir at the state funeral of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. AP photo.
Faculty organist James OβDonnell was made a Lieutenant of the Royal Victorian Order by King Charles III. The honor followed the funeral for Queen Elizabeth II, for which OβDonnell directed the music.
In September, faculty tenor James Taylor received Voices of Ascension Chorus and Orchestraβs George Perrin Prize for extraordinary contribution to the vocal arts in this country. The organizationβs artistic director, Dennis Keene, considers Taylor the great American Bach tenor of his generation and one of the most important vocal teachers in the United States.
Faculty clarinetist David Shifrin organized a Yale Clarinet Celebration in December. The concert, on YSMβs Faculty Artist Series, featured more than 30 School of Music students and alums.
Faculty composer Christopher Theofanidis β94MMA β97DMA is writing a clarinet concerto titled Indigo Heaven for Steve Williamson and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for that organizationβs 2023β2024 season. Williamson is the orchestraβs principal clarinetist.
News
music.yale.edu/news/ flutist-tara-helen-oconnorjoins-ysm-faculty
In June, New Focus Records will release a new CD by faculty guitarist Benjamin Verdery titled A Giant Beside You, which features four pieces for guitar and string quartet performed with the Ulysses Quartet, which includes cellist and YSM alum Coli Brookes β13MM β14AD. The CD includes the world premiere recording of the Quintet for High Strings by YSM alum Bryce Dessner β98BA β99MM, Verderyβs A Giant Beside You, and Verderyβs arrangement for guitar and string quartet of Leonard Bernsteinβs Sonata for Clarinet. The CD was recorded and produced by YSM Director of Technology Matthew LeFevre.
Faculty cellist Paul Watkins and his colleagues in the Emerson String Quartet embarked on a tour that will be the ensembleβs final slate of performances. The quartet was established in 1976 and will disband in October.
In September, faculty flutist Ransom Wilson received the National Flute Associationβs Lifetime Achievement Award. In November, Wilson was appointed the Camilla Huxford Endowed Chair in Orchestral Studies at the University of Alabama, whose faculty Wilson will join in August having taught at YSM since 1991. In a press release, the University of Alabama said Wilsonβs βappointment β¦ will make a tremendous addition to what is already a vibrant, energetic, and highly experienced faculty. His vast skillset and range of experience will provide a new level of leadership for the Huxford Symphony Orchestra, providing outstanding experiences and opportunities for our students.β
Following residencies at the Yale Summer School of Music/Norfolk Chamber Music Festival and festivals in Italy and the Netherlands, YSM faculty pianist Wei-Yi Yang β95MM β96AD β99MMA β04DMA will give performances and master classes at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., National Tsing Hua University in Hsinchu City, Taiwan, and Conservatori Superior de MΓΊsica de les Illes Baleares in Palma, Spain.
Faculty mezzo-soprano Adriana Zabala performed the role of Prince Lelio in the American premiere of Pauline Viardotβs Le Dernier Sorcier at the Wallis Annenberg Center in Beverly Hills in March. That followed the premiere recording Zabala made of the same work on Bridge Records with Camille Zamora, Jamie Barton, and Eric Owens. In May, Zabala reprised the title role in Nadia: A Chamber Music Play at the Hamel Music Center in Madison, Wis., presented by Lunarts, an organization that celebrates women in the arts.
The Yale School of Music is pleased to announce the appointment of flutist Tara Helen OβConnor, who will join the faculty in September as Visiting Associate Professor, Adjunct, of Flute. Ms. OβConnor has been a frequent guest lecturer at Yale and appreciates the legacy of excellent flute pedagogy and performance her predecessor, Professor Ransom Wilson, built over the course of three decades.
[Top] Faculty pianist Wei-Yi Yang.
[Bottom] Faculty mezzosoprano Adriana Zabala.
41 2023 Faculty news
Class notes
1950
Violin Fingering, Basic to Developed, a book by John (Jack) Bauer β54BM β55MM, was published in December by Mel Bay Publications, which has published five other books by Bauer.
1960
In September, Γditions LβHarmattan published Tom Johnson ou la amusique logique, which examines the work of composer Tom Johnson β61BA β67MM. The composerβs process is also examined in the YouTube playlist Tom Johnson: Illustrated Music.1
Pianist Althea Waites β65MM prepared music by Margaret Bonds for a recording project. The album includes three pieces by Bonds that have never been recorded, along with a major work by Curt Cacioppo, former professor of music at Haverford College, titled Fantasy-Choruses on This Little Light of Mine, which was written for and dedicated to Waites.
1970
In August 2023, soprano and educator Sheila Barnes β74MM β75MMA will teach βLingua e Liricaβ at Casa Monteripido in Perugia, Italy. Barnesβ courses bring together awardwinning coaches and singers to promote authentic interpretations of Italian opera and chamber music through a focus on the intersection of language and music.
In November, City Lyric Opera presented the New York premiere of Uncovered, a chamber opera in one act by Lori Laitman β75BA β76MM with a libretto by Leah Lax.
Prayer for Israel by composer Max Stern β70MM was presented at the 14th European Cantors Convention at the Rumbach Synagogue in Budapest. The work was performed by the Hungarian chamber choir Kecskemet Singing Circle led by conductor Peter Erdei, who was Director of the KodΓ‘ly Pedagogical Institute of the Liszt Academy of Music for more than 30 years.
Violinist James Wallenberg β76MM is celebrating his 44th season this year as a member of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.2
1980
Creative Health for Pianists: Concepts, Exercises & Compositions by Pedro de Alcantara β83MM was published in May by Oxford University Press.3
Horn player Marian Hesse β85MM retired from teaching in 2020. Hesse still performs around the world with the Chestnut Brass Company, an ensemble with which she has made more than 20 recordings, including Hornsmoke: The Music of Peter Schickele, which won a Grammy Award.
Gregory Peterson β85MM was named Professor of Music and College Organist Emeritus at Luther College, in Decorah, Iowa, upon his retirement in May. In recognition of his teaching career, which spanned more than 30 years and three institutions, former students and colleagues commissioned a new organ work in his honor from American composer Libby Larsen.
Composer Dr. John Sichel β85MMA β95DMA was named artist-in-residence at Capulin Volcano National Monument in New Mexico.
Tubist Antonio Underwood β87MM recorded two CDs, Tone Poem XIII: Sundayβs Window and Tone Poem XIV: Continuation. The albums were produced by Underwoodβs music label, Tone East Music Technology LLC.
The Magic Hummingbird, an opera by composer Joseph Waters β82MM, received its world premiere performance in June 2022 at The Cutting Room, in New York City. Excerpts from the opera were performed in July at Γpera en la Calle in Tijuana, Mexico. The Magic Hummingbird tells the story of three San Diego rockers who join refugees in Tijuana and cross into the United States through a magic tunnel.4
[Facing page] Christina Hughes β15MM joined βThe Presidentβs Ownβ United States Marine Band.
43 2023 Class notes
3 1 2 6 9 12 4 7 10 5 8 11 44 Music at Yale
Dr. Mark Elliot Bergman β97MM won the International Society of Bassistsβ 2022 Research Competition. Bergmanβs winning paper, E-portfolios as Learning Tools for Applied Double Bass Study: A Research-Based, Practice Oriented Approach, will appear in an upcoming issue of the ISBβs academic journal.5
Amy I-Lin Cheng β98MM β99AD was appointed Assistant Professor of Music (a tenure-track position) and Piano Chamber Music Coordinator in the Piano Department at the University of Michiganβs School of Music, Theater & Dance.
Bryce Dessner β98BA β99MM returned to campus for a multiyear residency at the Yale Schwarzman Center during which the guitarist and composer is commissioning and curating new works from Julia Bullock (with Carolyn Yarnell β89MM), Ash Fure, Nathalie Joachim, and Anna ThorvaldsdΓ³ttir that will be premiered at Yale. The residency will also explore Dessnerβs work with opera and theater director Kaneza Schaal.6
Maureen Hurd Hause β96MM β97MMA β02DMA was named Associate Director of the Department of Music at the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University. Hause served as Interim Associate Director at the institution during the 2021β2022 academic year.7
A recording of Cloud Ossuary, a new symphonic work by composer Douglas Knehans β93MMA β96DMA, garnered terrific reviews and nine international recording awards. One reviewer on the classical music blog Planet Hugill wrote, βCloud Ossuary is a striking and fascinating work, full of gorgeous textures and colors, yet, throughout it is clear that Knehans brings a strong structural underpinning to the beauty, making for a satisfying symphonic work.β 8
Clarinetist Seunghee Lee β92MM β94AD released a new album, Aspire, with bandoneonist and composer JP Jofre and the London Symphony Orchestra. The albumβs centerpiece is the first concerto ever written for the clarinet and bandoneon, which was commissioned by and written for Lee.9
Osiris Molina β98MM and RenΓ© Izquierdo β99MM β00AD collaborated on Cuba, Alabama, an album of works for clarinet by Cuban composers. The album features music by Paquito DβRivera, AndrΓ©s AlΓ©n, Javier Zalba, and two premiere recordings of works by Leo Brouwer, including a work commissioned by Molina and Izquierdo for clarinet and guitar.10
In July, the celebrated choir The Crossing premiered Beloved of the Sky by Tawnie Olson β99MM β00AD. The multimovement work explores and celebrates the creative process through texts by Canadian artist Emily Carr. Beloved of the Sky was commissioned by the Barlow Foundation for The Crossing, Seraphic Fire, and the BYU Singers. Olsonβs Salve Mater received its premiere in Toronto in November. The piece, which was commissioned and performed by the Tafelmusik Chamber Choir conducted by Ivars Taurins, sets a new Latin text inspired by the Salve Regina.
Double-bassist Changwoo Sohn β96MM, a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul, Korea, gave a volunteer performance at Joeten-Kiyu Public Library in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands.
2000
Trumpeter Benjamin Berghorn β04MM served as Visiting Professor of Music at Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas, for the 2022β2023 academic year.
The score for The Real Charlie Chaplin, the first foray into film scoring for composer Robert Honstein β04BA β10MM β14DMA, was nominated for a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition. The Real Charlie Chaplin can be seen on Showtime.11
Internationally acclaimed guitarist Yuri Liberzon β07MM released a recording of music for the instrument by Konstantin Vassiliev on the Naxos Records label. Vassilievβs music synthesizes jazz, Russian folk music, and contemporary Western traditions. The album features music written over a 22-year period, with three pieces composed specifically for Liberzon.12
Composer Andrew Norman β09AD was appointed Associate Professor of Composition at the USC Thornton School of Music and will begin serving in that capacity in fall 2023.
Pianist Marianna Prjevalskaya β07MM β10AD was appointed to the faculty at East Tennessee State University succeeding Esther Park β12AD β13MMA β17DMA, who was appointed to the faculty at Columbus State University. Park succeeds Henry Kramer β13AD β19DMA, who was appointed to the faculty at the University of Montreal.
Violinist Simeon βMoniβ Simeonov β06MM β07AD was appointed the Edelman Chair of Chamber Music at the Colburn School.
Sharon Wei β04MM, Associate Professor of Viola at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada, was named a 2022 Faculty Scholar.
music.yale.edu/news/ bryce-dessner98ba-99mm-returnsyale-schwarzmancenter-residency
1990
returns to Yale for Schwarzman Center residency
News Bryce Dessner
45 2023 Class notes
The award recognizes significant recent scholarly achievements among faculty at Western University who have an international presence in their discipline and are considered all-around scholars. Wei is the new violist of the New Orford String Quartet and toured with Musicians from Marlboro in October.
Bass-baritone Douglas Williams β06MM and composer Matthew Barnson β12DMA premiered a new work with the Orchestre philharmonique de Radio France at the Maison de la Radio in Paris, in October.13
Martin Wittenberg β04MM founded his own artist management firm, Wittenberg Artists. Based in New York City, Wittenberg Artists represents such established musicians as Gidon Kremer and Steven Isserlis, as well as such newcomers as violinist Stella Chen, cellist Seth Parker Woods, and conductor Naomi Woo β13MM.14
Pianist Lucas Wong β06MM β07MMA β12DMA was appointed Visiting Professor of Vocal Coaching at the A. J. Fletcher Opera Institute at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts.
2010
Guitarist and composer Gulli Bjornsson β17MM β18MMA was appointed Associate Professor of the Practice of Electronic Composition at the University of Kansas School of Music.
Tenor Ryan Capozzo β21MMA, a member of the Ryan Opera Center Ensemble, made his Lyric Opera of Chicago debut singing Remendado in a springtime production of Carmen.15
In July 2022, violinists Cameron Daly β18BA β20MM and Gregory Lewis β19MM β27DMA joined the Callisto Quartet, YSMβs fellowship quartet-inresidence. Grand Prize winners of the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition and Second Prize winners of the Banff International String Quartet Competition, the Callisto Quartet has also received prizes at the Bordeaux, Melbourne,
and Wigmore Hall competitions. The group is managed worldwide by Kanzen Arts.16
In October 2022, Kevin R. Dombrowski β14MM was appointed Principal Trombonist of the Fort Wayne Philharmonic.
Flutist Jake Fridkis β14MM β15AD was nominated for a Grammy Award in the βBest Rap Albumβ category for serving as a contributing writer and producer on DJ Khaledβs recording God Did.17
In August 2022, The Crossing released Born, an album that features two works by composer Michael Gilbertson β13MM β21DMA: Born and Returning. The album won a Grammy Award in the βBest Choral Performanceβ category.18
Violinist Sirena Huang β19AD won the Gold Medal at the 11th quadrennial International Violin Competition of Indianapolis. The prize, according to the Indianapolis Star, includes β$75,000 cash, a recital debut at Carnegie Hall, recording contract, and website development and maintenance for four years.β 19
Christina Hughes β15MM joined βThe Presidentβs Ownβ United States Marine Band in Washington, D.C., as a staff sergeant in the ensembleβs flute section.P.42
In July, guitarist JIJI β17MM signed with Kirshbaum Associates Management. In fall 2023, JIJI will begin serving as Associate Professor at Indiana University.20
Clarinetist Graeme Steele Johnson β17MM β18MMA joined the award-winning wind quintet WindSync in September 2022. One of only two American woodwind quintets with full-time, international touring schedules, WindSync has won the Concert Artists Guild Victor Elmaleh Competition and the Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition and is represented by MKI Artists. The groupβs upcoming projects include a recording at Abbey Road Studios.21
News
so-percussion-bringsysm-ethos-its-work 46 Music at Yale
16 (left), 20 (right)
SΕ Percussion brings YSM ethos to its work music.yale.edu/news/
15 19 23 25 17 26 18 22 24 14 13 21 47 2023 Class notes
31 34 37 29 32 30 33 35 38 36 39 27 48 Music at Yale
Alumni spotlight: composer Molly Joyce
Read a Q&A with Joyce on the YSM website: music.yale.edu/news/ alumni-spotlightcomposer-molly-joyce
Perspective, the latest album from composer Molly Joyce β17MM (released on New Amsterdam Records), features interviews with disabled people on the topic of what access, care, and interdependence have brought to their lives.22
Jenny Lee β18MM was appointed Adjunct Instructor of Piano at the University of Arizonaβs Fred Fox School of Music for the 2022β2023 academic year.
Violinist Ruda Lee β15MM β17MMA performed with the Yale Alumni Chamber Music Society in Hong Kong as part of a charity concert organized by the Mighty Oaks Foundation in November.
Josip Kvetek β18MM was appointed Assistant Principal Violist of the Sinfonieorchester Basel.
Clarinetist Jesse McCandless β17MM won an audition for the Principal Clarinet chair in the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.
Joshua Newburger β17MM was appointed Principal Violist of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra.
In November, pianist Michael Noble β12MM β14MMA β20DMA released his debut album, American Dissident, which features music by Frederic Rzewski and Margaret Bonds.23
In September 2022, the Attacca Quartet, of which violinist Domenic Salerni β11MM is a member, released Evergreen, an album featuring music by Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Caroline Shaw β07MM that won a Grammy Award in February. A follow-up to the Grammy Award-winning album Orange, Evergreen was released by Nonesuch Records and has been reviewed in Pitchfork and Slant magazines. An album-release show took place at Public Records in Brooklyn, N.Y.24
Several YSM alumni participated in the Sphinx Orchestral Partners Auditions. Violist Marlea Simpson β19MM won Second Prize in the strings and harp category, and clarinetist Juan Esteban Martinez β21MM won First Prize in the woodwinds category. Double-bassist Matthew Peralta β21MM β22MMA earned an Honorable Mention.25
In December, tenor Stephen Soph β13MM made his Seattle Symphony and Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra debuts in performances of Handelβs Messiah.
Violinist Matheus Garcia Souza β14MM performed the New York premiere of Christopher Starkβs Fire Ecologies with the Unheard-of//Ensemble at the Gowanus Canal (literally on the water). The 50-minute multimedia piece incorporates images of the 2020 California wildfires. The commission was made possible by Chamber Music Americaβs Classical Commissioning Program.26
NoΓ«l Wan β16MM was appointed Assistant Professor of Harp and Entrepreneurship at Florida State University, where Wan will lead the harp program and join the College of Musicβs entrepreneurship cohort. Wan won the Gold Medal at the 12th USA International Harp Competition in July 2022.27
Pianist Naomi Woo β12BA β13MM won the Virginia Parker Prize. Administered by the Canada Council for the Arts, the award recognizes βa musician, instrumentalist, or classical music conductor β¦ who demonstrates outstanding talent, musicianship and artistic excellence and who makes a valuable contribution to artistic life in Canada and internationally,β the Council explained in its announcement.
2020
Mezzo-soprano Rhianna Cockrell β21MMA and choral conductors Joe Lerangis β25DMA and Gloria Yin β22MM established the New Muses Project, βa DEI-centered classical music organization, promoting justice and curiosity through performance, education, and scholarship,β according to the organization. The project was launched in August with a concert at the Kaufman Music Center in New York.
Composer Sophia Jani β22MM established a concert series in Germany called Feet Become Ears.28
A group of artists including Allison Chu, who earned master of arts and master of philosophy degrees in 2022 from Yaleβs Department of Music, where she is a Ph.D. candidate, Edwin Joseph β20MM, Frances Pollock β19MM β25DMA,
28 News
49 2023 Class notes
and Emily Roller β07BA established the Midnight Oil Collective, which βcombines the tools of venture capital with those of cooperative economics to create a wholly new business model that truly centers creators. It is a model developed by the minds of artists with the specific needs of artists in mind,β according to the organization.
Pianist Simon Karakulidi β21MM β22MMA won Second Prize at the inaugural Samson FranΓ§ois International Piano Competition in Cagnessur-Mer, France.
Composer Soomin Kim β21MM β22MMA orchestrated Helen Haganβs Piano Concerto in C minor, whose world-orchestral premiere was performed in October by pianist and musicologist Dr. Samantha Ege and the Yale Philharmonia, led by Principal Conductor Peter Oundjian. Hagan was the first Black woman to graduate, in 1912, from the Yale School of Music.29
Soprano Magdalena KuΕΊma β21MM made her Metropolitan Opera debut singing Giannetta in a production of Donizettiβs LβElisir dβamore in April.30
Pianist Chungho Lee β21MMA won Second Prize at the San Francisco ArtciΓ‘l International Piano Competition, which was held online in July and August 2022.
Pianist Linda Lee β23MM was a co-Second Prize winner at the Giorgos Thymis International Piano Competition in ThessalonΓki, Greece. In addition to earning a cash prize, Lee will return to Greece for performances next season. Lee won First Prize at the 28th LeoΕ‘ JanΓ‘Δek International Piano Competition in Brno. In addition to the cash prize, Lee will return to the Czech Republic for performances.31
Charissa Leung β21MM joined the second violin section of the Nashville Symphony at the start of the 2022β2023 season.32
Stephen Perkyns β22MM joined the New York City Ballet Orchestra as Principal Cellist in September.33
Composer Udi Perlman β26DMA was named the 2024 Pogorzelski-Yankee awarded composer by the American Guild of Organists.34
Pianist Anthony Ratinov β20BS β22MM β23MMA won Third Prize at the San Francisco ArtciΓ‘l International Piano Competition, which was held online in July and August. Ratinov won Second Prize at the Olga Kern International Piano Competition.
Christopher Rogers-Beadle β21MM β23MMA was appointed Solo Violist of the Deutsch Kammerphilharmonie Bremen.
Violist Joseph Skerik β24MM won Third Prize at the Oskar Nedbal International Viola Competition in Prague.
Pianist Alexa Stier β21MM β27DMA was named a winner of the Virtuoso & Belcanto Concerto Competition.35
Organist Alexander Straus-Fausto β24MM performed at Our Lady of Sorrows in Toronto in March, Saint Johnβs Episcopal Church in West Hartford in May, and will perform at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., in July, and Saint James United Church in Montreal in August.36
Jae In Yoo β22MM won Eighth Prize at the 12th USA International Harp Competition.
In July, pianist Seho Young β21MM β22MMA won the Bronze Medal at the New Orleans International Piano Competition.37
Composer Ben Wallace β22DMA was hired to arrange ZEDDβs album Clarity for piano and orchestra. ZEDD celebrated the 10-year anniversary of the release of Clarity in October at a concert at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Calif. The program featured a performance of Wallaceβs new arrangement.
Pianist Derek Wang β24AD was awarded Second Prize at the Liszt Utrecht competition and performed five concerts around the Netherlands.
Composer Samantha Wolf β21MM β22MMA was appointed Artist-in-Residence at the Longy School of Music in Boston. Under the mentorship of composer Amy Beth Kirsten, the two-year appointment will allow Samantha to compose and present her first opera, a surrealist dark comedy set in a game show.38
Guitarist Daniel Zanuttini-Frank β22BA β23MM won First Prize at the Concorso Musicale Nazionale βVilla Oliva.β
Pianist Muzi Zhao β23MM was awarded the Gold Medal at the 2022 Seattle International Piano Competition.
Percussionist Kevin Zetina β20MM β21MMA was appointed Lecturer of Percussion at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.39
50 Music at Yale
2023 GRAMMYS
PLEASE JOIN US IN CONGRATULATING MEMBERS OF THE YALE SCHOOL OF MUSIC COMMUNITY WHO WON A 2023 GRAMMY ON FEB. 5.
Composer Michael Gilbertson β13MM β21DMA won for his pieces Born and Returning, which were recorded by The Crossing. The album, titled Born, won in the βBest Choral Performance, Classicalβ category and also features music by Edie Hill.
YSM faculty tubist Carol Jantsch and cellist Alexander Veltman β90MM won as members of the Philadelphia Orchestra for a recording titled Letter from the Future featuring Contact by composer Kevin Puts β99MM. The recording also features the trio Time for Three and was conducted by Xian Zhang. The album won in the βBest Classical Instrumental Soloβ category, for Jennifer Higdonβs Concerto 4-3, and in the βBest Contemporary Classical Compositionβ category.
Double-bassist Daniel Krekeler β99MM won as a member of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra for a performance of Terrance Blanchardβs Fire Shut Up in My Bones, conducted by Yannick NΓ©zet-SΓ©guin.
Bassoonist Dennis Michel β77MM won as a member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for a recording of Mason Batesβ Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra. The recording, which was conducted by Edwin Outwater, won in the βBest Engineered Album, Classicalβ category.
Violinist Dominic Salerni β11MM won as a member of the Attacca Quartet for a recording titled Evergreen, featuring music by composer Caroline Shaw β07MM. That album won in the βBest Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performanceβ category.
[Top] The Attacca Quartet at the 2023 GRAMMYs.
View the full list of YSM nominations here: music.yale.edu/news/ysm-faculty-alums-win-grammy-awards 51 2023 Class notes
Donald M. Roberts receives Yale Medal
In November, Donald M. Roberts β57BS received the Yale Medal, which is bestowed by the Yale Alumni Association for βoutstanding individual service to the University.β Roberts led an effort through which the Class of β57 endowed and helped formalize the School of Musicβs Music in Schools Initiative.
In its announcement about this yearβs Yale Medal recipients, the YAA explained, βAs founder of the Music in the Schools Initiative at the Yale
School of Music, Roberts began a now-thriving program that has enhanced music education for more than one thousand New Haven Public Schools students and counting. His generous personal donation to the Class of 1957 Music Endowment led many of his fellow classmates to join him in support of music in public schools.β
The endowmentβs inception can be traced back to the Class of β57βs 40th reunion, in 1997. Roberts was class secretary, and he and his classmates wanted to provide support for a βworthy cause.β The Class of β57, Roberts said, was also driven to βstrengthen the association between Yale and the City of New Haven.β
Over the course of a decade, a program was conceived that included a partnership with the New Haven Public Schools, a biennial Symposium on Music in Schools designed to recognize music educators across the United States for their excellence, and a faculty position at the School of Music whose curricular focus was community engagement. On the occasion of its 50th reunion, the Class of β57 made a gift to the School with which to fund the initiative. Today, more than a thousand young musicians from the New Haven Public Schools have been mentored by graduate students from the School of Music whose work supports the certified public music educators in the local public-school district.
βI vividly recall the class meeting in November 1997 at which Don and his classmates outlined a vision for a national arts policy that would ensure the birthright of music for all children in America,β School of Music Dean Robert Blocker wrote in a letter nominating Roberts for a Yale Medal. βNone of us could have begun to imagine the impact that the Initiative has had as a national model and lodestar for diversity, equity, and inclusion in city schools.β
Roberts, speaking understatedly on behalf of the Class of β57, said, βMicroscopically, I think weβve helped.β Reflecting on performances by students whoβve participated in the Initiative, Roberts said he and his classmates βmarvel at each other.β The program today, he said, is βa lot bigger than when we started. There have been other efforts in other cities around the country to replicate the New Haven teaching scheme.β
52 Music at Yale
[Bottom] Donald Roberts.
In memoriam Emily Anne Payne
Emily Anne Payne β99MM died peacefully on August 22, 2022, in Los Angeles, CA. Daughter of Serena and Robert Blocker and an alumna of the Yale School of Music, Emilyβs talent and intellect were extraordinary, and she nurtured them with care and curiosity.
Born in Atlanta, GA, Emily earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from UCLA in 1997 and her Master of Music degree from the Yale School of Music in cello performance in 1999. She also earned the California Professional Multiple Subject Credential, K-12 and the California Certification for Gifted and Talented.
At Yale, she performed, recorded, and toured with the Yale Cellos and sang with the Yale Camerata. Emily spent summers at Banff studying with her beloved cello professor, Aldo Parisot. A consummate artist, Emilyβs passion for making music as a cellist and singer was admired and respected by peers and faculty alike.
A dedicated teacher, Emily possessed the exceptional ability to inspire a class while offering additional guidance to students who needed it most, and she was a trusted advocate for children and parents whose voices are marginalized.
Peter E. Derheimer β88MM
Rosamond Hamlin
Neil K. Keen β80MM
Michaela M. Paetsch β84
Emily A. Payne β99MM
Kenneth N. Price β90MM
Gerard Rosa β60BM β62MM
M.L. Spratlan, Jr. β62BA β65MM
John D. Weinland β65BA β69MM
Emilyβs lifelong commitment to service is reflected in her selection as the national 2017 recipient of Kappa Delta sororityβs Order of the Pearl. She was a member of the YSM alumniVentures committee and a member of the Schoolβs Student Advisory Council. Emily served her community in Los Angeles through engagement with the UCLA Medical Center Neuroscience Unit, the Childrenβs Community School, and by singing in the All Saints Episcopal Church Beverly Hills Choir for more than 20 years.
Emilyβs life was celebrated in services at All Saints Episcopal Church in Beverly Hills and the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer in Atlanta.
[Top] Emily Anne Payne. Photo courtesy of her family.
Gifts in Emilyβs memory can be made to the Yale School of Music.
The School of Music recognizes the passing of these faculty, alumni, colleagues, and friends
53 2023 Profiles
[Bottom] Peter Derheimer.
Honor roll
The School of Music is grateful for the generous support of its alumni and friends. The following individuals made a contribution between May 31, 2022 and March 31, 2023. To make your gift, please visit yale.edu/givemusic.
Alumni Fund
Kent R. Adams
Ole Akahoshi β95CERT β97MM
Judith R. Alstadter β66MM β72MMA β75DMA
Gregory N. Anderson β08MMA β13DMA
Katharine Strenge Anderson β84MM
David B. Angell β84MM
Richard A. Appelgren β94AD
Dmitri Atapine β05MMA β06AD β10DMA
Halina D. Avery β96MM
Eliot T. Bailen β80MM β82MMA β89DMA
Amanda Dawn Baker β00MM
Howard N. Bakken β67MM
David B. Baldwin β73MM β74MMA β79DMA
Anthony Joseph Bancroft β95MM
Cecylia B. Barczyk β79MM
Geoffrey W. Barnes β74MM
James R. Barry β83MM
Julie Anne Bates β94MM
Alexander Sylvain Bauhart β99MMA
David A. Behnke β77MM
Mark E. Bergman β97MM
Amy Feldman Bernon β91MM
George S. Blackburn, Jr. β64BA β67MM
Sara Lambert Bloom β68MM
Ronald A. Borror β67MM β73MMA β78DMA
Michael C. Borschel β74MMA β79DMA
Ryan J. Brandau β06MM β07MMA β11DMA
Anna Kay Rachel Brathwaite β03MM
Betsy Adler Brauer β84MM
Susan S. Breitung β86MM
Inbal Segev Brener β93CERT β98MM
Mark Allen Brombaugh β77MMA β83DMA
Anthony Carlisle Brooks β03MM
Karen L. Burlingame β85MM
K. Butler-Hopkins β78MMA β82DMA
JesΓΊs Castro-Balbi β99MM
Susan Chan β90MM
Violeta N. Chan-Scott β84MM
Tien-Min Chou
Gene J. Collerd β73BA β74MM
Rosemary Colson β65MM
Charlotte M. Corbridge
Noah J. Cotler β14MM
Ronald A. Crutcher β72MMA β79DMA
Edward H. Cumming, III β84MM β85MMA β92DMA
Ralph P. DβMello β62MM
Richard L. De Baise β67MM β70MMA
Preethi I. de Silva β71MMA β76DMA
Deborah Dewey β79MM
Dominick DiOrio, III β08MM β09MMA β12DMA
Michael John Diorio, III β02MM
Patrick J. Durbin β15MM
Robert A. Elhai β86MM β88MMA β95DMA
Anonymous β87MM
Joan Osborn Epstein β76MM
Helen B. Erickson β69MM
Reena Maria Esmail β11MM β14MMA β18DMA
Eduardo Espinel β03MM β04AD
Ethel H. Farny β66MM
Alan K. Fetzer β81MM
Michael G. Finegold β68MM β69MMA
Geoffrey Fuller β67BA β69MM
Richard J. Gard β02MM β04MMA β07DMA
Richard J. Gard β02MM β04MMA β07DMA
Daniel Tran Gien β94 β96MM
Jay L. Gitlin β71BA β74MM β82MA β02PhD
Alexander Glantz β93
Richard H. Goering β86MM
Hall N. Goff β75MM
Jie Gong β07MM
Daniel M. Graham β63MM
Carol Colburn Grigor β69MMA
Barbara J. Hamilton-Primus β86MMA β93DMA
June Young Han β96MM β97AD
Edward Duffield Harsh β88MM β92MMA β95DMA
Robert L. Hart β74MM
Troy Matthew Hascall β04MM
Eva Marie Heater β91MM
Dennis Helmrich β64 β66MM
Andrew Elliot Henderson β01MM
Leonardo Hiertz β00CERT β05MM
Ella A. Holding β57BM β58MM
Melissa Hopwood β98MM
William G. Hoyt, Jr. β76MM
Hsing-Ay Hsu Kellogg β01MM
Mary Wannamaker Huff β01MM
Helen K. Hui β69MM
Paul Abraham Jacobs β02MM β03AD
Nancy Dae Jin β02MM
Wenbin Jin β13MM β09CERT β15AD
Boyd M. Jones, II β77MM β78MMA β84DMA
Jennie Eun-Im Jung β01MM β02AD
Julie Elizabeth Jung β02AD
Marie Jureit-Beamish β81MM β83MMA β85DMA
[Facing page] SΕ Percussion returned to the Oneppo Chamber Music Series during the 2022β2023 season.
Photo by Matt Fried.
55 2023 Honor roll
Igor Kalnin β10AD
Daniel Dixon Kellogg β01MM β03MMA β07DMA
Aaron Jay Kernis β83
Richard E. Killmer β67MM β71MMA β75DMA
Nayeon Kim β12MM β13AD
Dong-Geun Kim β09AD
John T. King β85MM
Karen A. Kmetzo β79MPh
Daniel Phillip Knopf β99MM
Richard A. Konzen β76MM β77MMA β84DMA
Ronald H. Krasney β75BA
David M. Kurtz β80MM
Sarita Kit Yee Kwok β05MMA β06AD β09DMA
Christian Mark Lane β08MM
Theresa E. Langdon β79MM
David Lasker β72BA β74MM
Ronald Ling-Fai Lau β95MM
Jenny J. Lee β18MM
Genevieve Feiwen Lee β89MM β90MMA β94DMA
Christopher Matthew Lee β02MM
Kangho Lee β96MM
William B. Lepler β80MM
Stephane Levesque β95MM
Linda T. Lienhard β62MM
Jahja Wang-Chieh Ling β80MMA β85DMA
Jaroslaw Lis β92MM β94AD
Donald Glenn Loach β53BM β54MM
Jo Ann B. Locke β54BM
Vincent F. Luti β67MM β70MMA β78DMA
Maija M. Lutz β63MM
Xinhua Ma β87MM
Anita La Fiandra MacDonald β70MM
Matthew Lee Mainster β10MM
Dennis P. Malone β84MM
Robert C. Mann β64MM
Robert M. Manthey β01MM
Sheila A. Marks β60MM
Katherine Mireille Mason β04MM
Lyman McBride β20MM
Marjorie J. McClelland
Charles M. McKnight β73MM
Edmund J. Milly β15MM
Chouhei Min β72MMA
Pamela Getnick Mindell β99MM β00MMA β05DMA
Michael David Mizrahi β03MM β04MMA β08DMA
Joanna C. Mongiardo β98MM
Grant R. Moss β82MM β83MMA β91DMA
David Henry Nadal β95MM
Hando Nahkur β06CERT β08MM
Kathryn L. Nichols β77MM
Peter J. Nikiforuk β87MM β88MMA β94DMA
Abigail Andrews Nims β07AD
Alan M. Ohkubo β14MM β15AD
William A. Owen, III β79MM
Sun-A Park β16AD β17MMA
Hye-Yeon Park β05MM β06AD
J. Reid Patterson, Jr. β76MM
Aaron M. Peisner β16MM
Julian V. Pellicano β07MM β09MM
Sarah Marie Perkins β07MM
Kimberley Shelley Perlak β01MM
Stephen B. Perry β81MM
Gregory M. Peterson β85MM
Kirsten Peterson β90MM
Kevin J. Piccini β85MM
Joseph W. Polisi β73MM β75MMA β80DMA β14MDh
Benjamin Carey Poole β90MM
James H. Pyle β78MM
Robert J. Redvanly β80MM
Lois Wetzel Regestein β61MM
Mark J. Richards β81MM
Hildred E. Roach β62MM
Kay George Roberts β75MM β76MMA β86DMA
Dale Thomas Rogers β76MM
Svend J. Ronning β91MM β93MMA β97DMA
Linda L. Rosdeitcher β59BM
Werner G. Rose β61MM
Melissa Kay Rose β85MM
Donald S. Rosenberg β76MM β77MMA
Bernard Rubenstein β61MM
Jason Arthur Rubinstein β88CERT β91MM
Janna Leigh Ryon β00MM
Robert Scott Satterlee β89MMA β94DMA
Elizabeth B. Schurgin β07BA β08MM
Permelia S. Sears β74MM
Frank Shaffer, Jr. β73MM β75MMA β80DMA
Joseph Shields β00MM
Jill Shires β70MMA
Alvin Shulman β65MM
Bryan R. Simms β66BA β69MM β70MPhil β71PhD
Kenneth D. Singleton β74MM β75MMA β81DMA
James Austin Smith β08MM
Jennifer Louise Smith β88MM
Rheta R. Smith β65MM
Timothy Charles Snyder β99MM
Tram Sparks β98MMA β03DMA
Timothy Dale Spelbring β05MM
Philip D. Spencer β77MM
Daniel J. Stepner β72MMA β78DMA
Julie Margaret Stoner β72MM
Margaret A. Strahl β56BM β57MM
Pamela Sverjensky β79MM
Brennan Dale Szafron β00MM
Derek Saiho Tam β11BA
Kiyoshi Tamagawa β83MM
Timothy D. Taylor β85MM
Debra Ann Thalberg β91MM
Anthony C. Tommasini β70BA
Michael C. Tusa β75BA β76MM
Ian Tuski β15MM
Joyce M. Ucci β63MM
Rachel Faye Van Voorhees β80MM
Antoinette C. Van Zabner β74MM β75MMA
John P. Varineau β78MM
Ferenc Xavier Vegh, Jr. β92MM
Raymond Vun Kannon β53BA β54BM β55MM
Cheryl Rita Wadsworth β95MM
Althea M. Waites β65MM
56 Music at Yale
Alumni spotlight Dashon Burton
Dashon Burton β11MM is a Grammy Awardwinning bass-baritone whoβs appeared with such acclaimed ensembles as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, and Seattle Symphony, at the Salzburg Festival, and with the choral group Roomful of Teeth. Burton studied at Yale with James Taylor, Simon Carrington, and Masaaki Suzuki, all of whom, Burton said, βbrought such a welcoming spirit to music-making.β In addition to performing, Burton serves as Assistant Professor of Voice at Vanderbilt Universityβs Blair School of Music. When he is not onstage or in the teaching studio, Burton spends time studying aviation and learning about physics, reading, and enjoying comedy.
Derrick Li Wang β08MM
Elizabeth Ward β70MMA
Abby N. Wells β67MM
Donald F. Wheelock β66MM
Joseph L. Wilcox β66MM
Christopher P. Wilkins β81MM
Rodney A. Wynkoop β73BA β80MMA β85DMA
Wei-Yi Yang β95MM β96AD β99MMA β04DMA
Kyung Hak Yu β87MM
Concert Series and Patron Programs
Nina R. Adams β69MS β77MSN
Susan S. Addiss β69MUS β69MPh
Mary Alsop
Laura and Victor Altshul β60MD
Gabriel Assumpcao β22MPhil β22MS
Linda and Roger Astmann
Henry E. Auer
Arnaud Augert
Christopher Avallone
Irma Bachman
William S. Barbee
Joan Barere
William P. Batsford β89MAh
Claudia Bauer
Richard W. Beals β60BA β62MA β64PhD
Laura Berry
Joan and Henry Binder β78MAh
Serena and Robert Blocker β95MAh
GeorgβAnn Bona
Read a Q&A with Burton on the YSM website: music.yale.edu/news/ alumni-spotlight-bassbaritone-dashon-burton
Kathleen G. Bradley
Dorothea Brennan
Susan and Leslie Brisman β79MAh
Anonymous
Robert A. Burt
Grace C. Burton
Maxamil Carlino
Felipe Carrasco-Tenezaca
Roseann Chatterton
Jeanne Chinard
Frank M. Colarusso
Roseline G. Crowley β76PhD
Douglas J. Crowley β63BA
Cynthia F. Cummiskey β85BA
Michael Davidson
Jerome Delamater
Elizabeth M. Dock
Mildred A. Doody β85JD
Robert Duguay
Richard H. Dumas
Maile Dyer
Erik Elligers
Ray C. Fair β79MAh
Neda Farid
Delaney B. Farris
Terry S. Flagg
Madlyn and Richard Flavell
Steven David Fraade β89MAh
Ralph W. Franklin
Michael A. Gantt
Gary W. Gara
57 2023 Honor roll
Howard Garland β73MAh
Peter S. Garsztecki
Smaranda Gata-Lungu
Arvand Golbazi
Richard E. Goldberg
Carolyn P. Gould
Angela Gourchane
Lauretta Grau
Elizabeth Greenspan β76BA
Mary J. Greer β78BA β86MA
Eduardo A. Groisman β11MAh
Elizabeth Haas
Timothy Hampford
Alexandru Harabagiu
Reiko Hashimoto
James Hatch
Robert Heimer β80MS β88PhD
Reinier Hesselink
Gwenith Heuss-Severance
Mary-Michelle Hirschoff β70llB
Jay L. Hirshfield β68MAh
Thomas R. Holahan
Penn Holsenbeck β68BA
Peter Hunt
Francesco Iachello β78MAh
Robert A. Jaeger
Nelson Johnson
Samuel Jungeblut
Shun-ichiro Karato β01MAh
Alan Katz
Ivan M. Katz
Barbara Keefe
Ted R. Killiam
Robert Kleibohmer
Joan and Alan Kliger
Daniel R. Kopti
Florence H. Kovacevic
Alicia F. Laguarda
Ann R. Langdon
Constance and Joseph LaPalombara
Kathrin D. Lassila β81BA
Lleana Licona
George Lister β73MD
Zhao Liu
Tony Lombardozzi
Elizabeth N. Lowery β78MAR
Deborah Madzik
Maurice J. Mahoney β82MAh
Margaret B. Mann
Ann H. Marlowe
Diana Martinez-Saucedo
Denize V. Martins
Matthew McCaffrey
Jane F. Meditz β17MAR
Teresa J. Mensz
John Merriman
Elizabeth D. C. Meyer
Irene Miller
Alexa Moya
Leonard Munstermann
Danny J. Nackan β22MPhil β22MS
Karla Neugebauer β13MAh
Ilias Nikolakopoulos
Barbara and William Nordhaus β63BA β73MAh
Roy Ogren
A. David Paltiel β85MBA β89MA β89MPhil β92PhD
Bettina Patterson
Nancy A. Pelaez
John F. Pell
Lisa Peterson
Andrew Petracco
E. Anthony Petrelli β61BA
Richard L. Petrelli β65BA β68MPh
Baruh Polis
Soenje Reiche
Cristin β88MEM and David Rich β83BA
W. Dean Rupp, Jr. β65PhD
Paul Schultz
Erik M. Selmquist
Paul H. Serenbetz
Diane Sholomskas
Lorraine D. Siggins
Clifford L. Slayman β83MAh
Alan C. Solomon
Richard Sonder
Wilma Stahura
Violette Takahashi
Michael J. Tessman β73MDiV
David D. Thompson
Patricia Thurston
Lisa and David Totman β61BA β65llB
Suzanne Tucker
Antoinette Tyndall β79MSN
Victor Thang Vu β02BA β05MDiV
Yifan Wang
Yilei Wang
Mary-Jo Warren
Abby N. Wells β67MM
Jennifer Werner
Elizabeth R. Whitney
Roy H. Wiseman β76MM
Elizabeth Anne and Werner Wolf β65MAh
Kyle J. Wood
JerΓ³nimo E. Yepes
Michael A. Zuber β14MM
Endowed Scholarship, Support, and Resource Funds
Denise and Stephen Adams β59BA
Preston G. Athey β71BA
Halina D. Avery β96MM
Nancy Marx Better β84BA
Serena and Robert Blocker β95MAh
Mary Beth and Walter Buck
Allison Butler
Donna M. Cable
David C. Cansler β74BA
58 Music at Yale
Nancy and H. Capers Cross
Joanne Lipman Distler β83BA
Jayson Rodovsky Engquist β96MM
Daniel Tran Gien β94BS β96MM
John M. Graziano β66MM β70MPhil β75PhD
Edward J. Greenberg β59BA
Mary J. Greer β78BA β86MA
Helen Chung-Halpern and Abel Halpern β88BA
Ruth A. Hashimoto
Ruth and Stephen Hendel β73BA
John A. Herrmann, Jr. β57BA
Elinor Hoover β89BA
Hammer Huang
Patrick Hie Young Jee β99CERT β03MM
Molly S. Joyce β17MM
Anne-Marie SoulliΓ©re and Lindsey Chao-Yun Kiang β64BA β68llB
Jane β72MPhil β75PhD and Richard Levin β72MPhil β74PhD
Stephanie Yu Lim β00BA
Paige E. Macklin β69MM
Richard J. Martz
David McConnell
Lester S. Morse, Jr. β51BA
Kimberley S. Perlak β01MM
Eugene A. Pinover
Arnold L. Polinger β68BS
Linda S. Reinfeld β67MM
Alison F. Richard β86MAh
Donald M. Roberts β57BS
David N. Rosen β69llB
Melanie and Jean Salata
Irving Sitnick
Jane Spangler
Richard S. Steen β72MMA β78DMA
Stephen M. Wittenberg β57BA
Morris Steinert Collection of Musical Instruments
M. Teresa Beaman β81BA β82MM
Serena and Robert Blocker β95MAh
Emile L. Boulpaep β79MAh
Kevin Brodie
Anne and Guido Calabresi β53BS β58llB β62MAh
Grace Clark
Victoria K. DePalmaβ
Jeffrey S. Kahn β70BA
Richard D. Kaplan β66MS β68MPhil β70PhD
Craig Kridel
Elias Nicholas Kulukundis β54BA
Thomas G. MacCracken β73BA
Craig A. Monson β66BA
E. Anthony Petrelli β61BA
William Purvis
Rodney J. Regier
Alan D. Seget β71BA
Alan Steinert, Jr.
Stephanie L. Wiles and Jeff C. Rubin
Music in Schools Initiative
James M. Banner, Jr. β57BA
Hope Childs
Thomas S. Chittenden β57BA
William F. Eaton β57BA
Jefferson Freeman β57BA
Maria Hammons
Elvira and Richard Miller
Robert S. Walker β57BA
Yale Summer School of Music/ Norfolk Chamber Music Festival
Emily Aber and Robert Wechsler
Mary M. Ackerly β77JD and Michael Sconyers
Bernard R. Adams β69llB
Joyce Ahrens
Kathy Albano and Paul Stranieri
Morel and Jeffrey C. Alexander β01MAh
Peter Andrighetti
Vincent D. Andrus β63BA
Anonymous
Janet B. Ansbro
Linda and Roger Astmann
Alan B. Astrow β76BA β80MD
Linda M. Austin
Joanna Aversa and Christopher M. Ursini
Elizabeth Bailey
Emily P. Bakemeier
Carolyn A. Barber β92MM
Beverly Bartow and James Stengel
John J. Batten
Francis Baudry
Astrid and John E. Baumgardner, Jr. M. Teresa Beaman β81BA β82MM
John R. Beecher β84MPh
Frank B. Bell
Joanne and Warren S. Bender
Anne Marie and Jonathan Berger
Estelle and Charles Berthiaume
Donald A. Bickford β66BS
Lori Black
Serena and Robert Blocker β95MAh
Sara and Les Bluestone
Jeannie and Edward Boehner
Elizabeth Bradford Borden β04MEM
Candace Bowes and David Kurtz β80MM
D. Weston Boyd
John W. Buckman β83MAh
Margaret E. Burnett
Ann and Robert Buxbaum
Steven B. Callahan β74BA and Randall R. Dwenger
Carol A. Camper and John Hartje
Fiorella Canin
James J. Capra, Jr. β75BA
Susan E. Carpenter
Vincent Casey
Susan L. Caughman β83MBA and Gerry Goodrich
β Deceased 59 2023 Honor roll
60 Music at Yale
Oscar G. Chase β63JD
Melvin Chen β91BS
Marlene and John W. Childs β65BA
Hope Childs
Marvin L. Chin
Marjorie and Roger Clarke
Mary Lou Cobb
Peter Coffeen and Stephen Getz
Ellen Cohen and Steven David Fraade β89MAh
Lewis G. Cole β54llB
Suzanne and Edward Colt
George Cronin
Martha J. Crutchfield and Robert Hobbs
Hope Dana and John Perkins β84MARCh
Robert A. Dance β80MAR and Robert B. Loper
Donna and Richard Davis
Allan J. Dean
Anne Dennery
Andrew G. DeRocco
Katharine and Rohit Desai
Karen DiYanni β96MM β97AD
Elizabeth and Thomas Dubbs
Louise Ducas
Dalton G. Dwyer
Daryl W. Eaton
Jane Edwards and Humphrey Tonkin
Susan and Jon Eisenhandler
Paul Ellner
Fleur E. Fairman β78BA and Timothy Wallach
Roselee and Nicholas Fanelli
Mary E. Fanette and Veronica Burns
Mary Kay and William E. Flowers
Alison B. Fox
Larita and Lawrence Freedman
Hugh J. Freund
Judith N. Friedlander
Deborah and Michael Friedmann
Sara Frischer
William Fuller
Adrienne Gallagher and James Nelson
John C. Garrels, III β61BA
Linda Garrettson
Catherine Gevers
Justin Giampaolo
Elisabeth C. Gill
Sharon and David Gilmore
Ellen D. Glass
Dotty Smith and Lionel Goldfrank, III β65BA
Danielle Greenberg
William and Mary Greve Foundation
Barbara Gridley
Madelon and Jerald Grobman
Judith and Morton E. Grosz
Sally and Larry Hannafin
William C. Harrop
Dorothy Hatch
Jane Henry
Barbara and Gerald Hess
Mary and Peter Hess
Judith and David Howard β70BA
Daphne Hurford and Sandy Padwe
Marcie Imberman
Colta and Gary Ives
Leila and Daniel Javitch
Helen Jessup
Lane Kendig
Doreen and Michael Kelly
Joseph G. Kelly
Galene and Richard H. Kessin β66BA
Anne-Marie SoulliΓ©re and Lindsey Chao-Yun
Kiang β64BA β68llB
Charles Kimball
Elizabeth Kitridge and Christopher Little β71BA
Sara M. Knight
Diane and David Kopp
Myron L. Kwast
Robert Blocker
Henry and Lucy Moses Dean of Music
Serving our School of Music and Yale University as the Henry and Lucy Moses Dean of Music has been an unimaginable privilege and joy ...
What makes this School truly special to me are the people who have taught, studied, performed, and worked here.
[Facing page] Horn player William Sands β24MM rehearses with peers.
Photo by Sara Gardner.
61 2023 Honor roll
Sandra Landau and Richard Rippe
Kathrin D. Lassila β81BA
Robert E. Lee
Susan and Douglas Lint
Nicholas W. Lobenthal β83BA
John E. Long
Pepe Lopez
David N. Low, Jr. β87MPPM
Albert J. Macchioni β71BA β75JD
Susan MacEachron and Michael Halloran
Caitlin Macy β92BA and Jeremy Barnum
Paul Madore and Thomas Hlas
Ernest Malecki
Joan and Chris Maloney
Lenore H. Mand
Tom Martin
Judith and Ronald Maxwell
William B. McKeown
Standish Meacham β54BA
Noel Melliza
Ruth and Stephen Melville
Patricia Nooy and Roger W. Miller
Mary E. Miller β78MA β80MPhil β81PhD
Andrea and Robert M. Milstein β70BA β78PhD β81MD
Roger Mitchell and Frank Peterson
Deborah and Timothy Moore
Bethany and Frank Morelli
Jeffrey Morrison
Andra Moss and Peter Chaffetz
Jeanne and James Moye
Jacqueline Ann Muschiano and Jonathan J. Silbermann
Valerie Nelson
Michael D. Nicastro
Norfolk Artists and Friends
Grace Noyes
Maureen and Michael OβConnor β56BS
Eric G. Olsen β84MS
Frances Pascale
Jennifer Perga
Catherine Perga
Susan Pinsky and Marc Rosen
Paul R. Provost
Sally and Andrew C. Quale, Jr.
Donna and Dennis Randall
Margo Rappoport and Michael J. Emont β74JD
Nancy and James Remis
Susan and Peter Restler
Andrew Ricci
Cristin β88MEM and David Rich β83BA
Melissa Robinson
Philida Rosnick
Marion H. Sachdeva
Claire and Jeremy Sachs
Linda and Raleigh D. Sahl
Anita E. Saman
Elizabeth A. Scheel
Elizabeth Schorr and Eric Grossman
Marla Schreibman
Benjamin Leo Schrom β04BA
Harvey Schussler
Joyce S. Schwartz
Michael K. Selleck
Harriet Schelare and Thomas R. Shachtman
Dee and Stanley Shapiro
Judith and Joel Sherman
Kathleen Sherrill
David A. Shifrin
Julia Shin and Tano Santos
Nelson Sly
Ileene Smith and Howard Sobel
Elizabeth and David Sollors
Marcia and Robert Sparrow
Monica Spencer β91BA
Barbara Spiegel and Tom Hodgkin
Michael Spies
Bruce Stein β80BA
Roxann Steinberg
Abbe and Peter Steinglass
J. W. Streett
Frederica M. Sulzbacher
G. A. Swibold and Richard E. Swibold
Martin J. Tandler
Steven Tepper
Nicholas S. Thacher β67BA
Sarah M. Thacher β98MDiV
Roger Tilles
Jack E. Triplett
Amy and David Troyansky
Sandra and David Van Buren
Patricia and Herbert A. Vance, Jr. β65BA
Sally and William Vaun
Nancy H. Wadelton
Nancy R. Wadhams
Annick and Eliot Wadsworth
Susan Wagner
Alexandra Walcott
Tania and Mark A. Walker β66llB
Eric Wanner
Mary-Jo Warren
Kim Welch and David Levin
Abby N. Wells β67MM
Kate Wenner and Gilbert Eisner
Phyllis and William N. White
Susannah and Willard Wood
Helene Young
Hua gu, unknown maker of southern Shanxi Province, early 20th century (Chinese, 20th century). Collection number: US.NH.y 2050.1972. This Chinese βflower drumβ is painted with a dragon and Chinese characters. The folk art form βFlower Drum Lanternβ (Hua Gu Deng) combines dance, drama, song and percussion music, originally a rural folk seasonal tradition, has made its way to the stages of Chinese opera and the American Broadway musical.
β In the collection
62 Music at Yale
Yale School of Music P.O. Box 208246 New Haven, CT 06520-8246 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID New Haven, CT Permit No. 526