Eastman School of Music Archives - Alumni News /adv/alumni-news-media/tag/eastman-school-of-music/ Ģý Thu, 07 Nov 2024 14:37:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Powered by passion /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/10/24/powered-by-passion/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/10/24/powered-by-passion/#respond Thu, 24 Oct 2024 14:58:05 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=88062 Bob and Mabelle Pizzutiello have found joy and purpose in supporting collaborative programs at the URochester.

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Powered by passion

Bob and Mabelle Pizzutiello have found joy and purpose in supporting collaborative programs at the URochester.

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS) plays the Chapman Stick in the lobby of Strong Memorial Hospital.

As a musician for the Eastman Performing Arts Medicine Center (EPAM), Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS) plays the Chapman Stick in the lobby of Strong Memorial Hospital.

“Most human beings are not monolithic,” says Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS), “They enjoy different perspectives.” He and his wife Mabelle Pizzutiello ’63N, P’89 support many programs at the URochester, with their interests spanning the arts, sciences, and healthcare, as well as those focused on equity, diversity, and inclusion, but the is one of the most unique.

Finding intersections between music and science comes naturally for Bob who pursued a degree in electrical engineering but also made time to study the physics of music. His education at the URochester allowed him to explore the interconnection between his broad interests. When he first came to Rochester in 1973, a teenage Bob had the impression that he would be done learning at the end of college. Instead, those years launched a lifelong career of discovery.

Bob recognizes the valuable life skills that he gained at Rochester—how to think and solve problems. As a Joseph C. Wilson Scholar, Bob had the opportunity to take any course across the University, and he made the most of it. In addition to his undergraduate workload, he took classes in the School of Medicine and Dentistry, which were foundational for him and his future work.

He credits his full scholarship for not only making it possible to pursue his education, but to find a career. At the age of 23, he completed a master’s degree, and he started his first real job at the URochester Medical Center.

Bob spent his career working in community hospitals as a medical physicist, while also bringing his learnings about physics and technology into the national discussion, as an advisor to the Food and Drug Administration. He founded and led Upstate Medical Physics, a regional practice, and was the senior vice president of Landauer Medical Physics, a national organization, collaborating with medical physicists to deliver services to individual health care facilities and larger integrated delivery networks. He is also a past president of the New York State Radiological Society.

As people come into earshot of the music, I observe an astounding transformation. They look up, hear the gentle melodies, and they smile.`` – Bob Pizzutiello

Bob’s professional contributions have been enhanced by his ongoing practice as a musician. He has been playing in his band, Indigo Breeze, for more than 10 years, and he started the Dreamseeds Jazz Band for underserved youth in Rochester in 2015. Bob sees himself as an “instrument for change in the lives of everyday people” and looks for ways to connect with others through the universal language of music.

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS) and Mabelle Pizzutiello ’63N, P’89

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS) and Mabelle Pizzutiello ’63N, P’89 support interdisciplinary programs as members of the George Eastman Circle.

After decades of working in the healthcare setting, Bob learned about the interdisciplinary EPAM and jumped at the chance to become a volunteer. Now he plays the unusual and expressive Chapman Stick in the lobby of Strong Memorial Hospital and witnesses how passersby appreciate the music amidst the chaos of their day.

“As people come into earshot of the music, I observe an astounding transformation,” Bob says, “They look up, hear the gentle melodies, and they smile. Many give a thumbs up or mouth the words ‘thank you.’ One time a patient in a wheelchair told me he was legally blind and asked me to describe my instrument. Another day, two staff members wearing “Interpreter” badges stayed for an extended chat, eventually saying, ‘We really needed this now.’ I recognized the feeling of coming off a difficult case, having worked in hospitals myself for 40 years.”

Mabelle Pizzutiello also spent decades working in a hospital setting after earning her degree in nursing at the URochester. She values the lifelong friends she met as a student and continues to stay involved through alumni events at the School of Nursing, such as their annual Clare Dennison Lecture, where she finds she is always learning something new.

For Mabelle, a lifelong career in nursing has meant that learning and teaching are always connected. For each new skill gained from her instructors, she was immediately responsible for passing it on to another student, reinforcing her education and the teamwork that is central to the profession.

While a student, Mabelle vividly remembers responding to the Mohawk Airlines plane crash in 1963. Called into action to work alongside the trauma team and save the passengers’ lives, she was moved and later became the trauma program manager at Strong Memorial Hospital.

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS)

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS)

Mabelle continues to transfer her knowledge and support on to the next generation of nurses. “Scholarship support made everything possible for me,” she says. “As soon as I graduated, I started giving back so that another student would have the same opportunities I did.”

An appreciator of the arts herself, Mabelle also serves on the , lending her hand as a volunteer in support of programs at the Memorial Art Gallery.

Bob and Mabelle are longtime members of the Ģý’s George Eastman Circle. They felt that joining the Eastman Circle was a good way to make a sustaining annual contribution that benefits all the programs across the University that matter to them.

Their membership has provided opportunities to connect with fellow alumni and attend events that continue to spark their curiosity. They see the power of the University to implement change in our community and enjoy meeting likeminded individuals who are looking to make a difference for important issues in Rochester and the greater world.

As Bob reflects on the time he spends playing music for the hospital community, and on his support for EPAM in particular, he says, “When I replay these experiences in my head, I feel a deep sense of joy and purpose. This simple act touches people under stress, if only for a moment, with the universal language of music. Supporting the program as a volunteer and as donor means a great deal to me.”

Bob’s professional contributions have been enhanced by his ongoing practice as a musician. He has been playing in his band, Indigo Breeze, for more than 10 years, and he started the Dreamseeds Jazz Band for underserved youth in Rochester in 2015. Bob sees himself as an “instrument for change in the lives of everyday people” and looks for ways to connect with others through the universal language of music.

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS) and Mabelle Pizzutiello ’63N, P’89

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS) and Mabelle Pizzutiello ’63N, P’89 support interdisciplinary programs as members of the George Eastman Circle.

After decades of working in the healthcare setting, Bob learned about the interdisciplinary EPAM and jumped at the chance to become a volunteer. Now he plays the unusual and expressive Chapman Stick in the lobby of Strong Memorial Hospital and witnesses how passersby appreciate the music amidst the chaos of their day.

“As people come into earshot of the music, I observe an astounding transformation,” Bob says, “They look up, hear the gentle melodies, and they smile. Many give a thumbs up or mouth the words ‘thank you.’ One time a patient in a wheelchair told me he was legally blind and asked me to describe my instrument. Another day, two staff members wearing “Interpreter” badges stayed for an extended chat, eventually saying, ‘We really needed this now.’ I recognized the feeling of coming off a difficult case, having worked in hospitals myself for 40 years.”

Mabelle Pizzutiello also spent decades working in a hospital setting after earning her degree in nursing at the URochester. She values the lifelong friends she met as a student and continues to stay involved through alumni events at the School of Nursing, such as their annual Clare Dennison Lecture, where she finds she is always learning something new.

For Mabelle, a lifelong career in nursing has meant that learning and teaching are always connected. For each new skill gained from her instructors, she was immediately responsible for passing it on to another student, reinforcing her education and the teamwork that is central to the profession.

While a student, Mabelle vividly remembers responding to the Mohawk Airlines plane crash in 1963. Called into action to work alongside the trauma team and save the passengers’ lives, she was moved and later became the trauma program manager at Strong Memorial Hospital.

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS)

Bob Pizzutiello ’77, ’78 (MS)

Mabelle continues to transfer her knowledge and support on to the next generation of nurses. “Scholarship support made everything possible for me,” she says. “As soon as I graduated, I started giving back so that another student would have the same opportunities I did.”

An appreciator of the arts herself, Mabelle also serves on the , lending her hand as a volunteer in support of programs at the Memorial Art Gallery.

Bob and Mabelle are longtime members of the Ģý’s George Eastman Circle. They felt that joining the Eastman Circle was a good way to make a sustaining annual contribution that benefits all the programs across the University that matter to them.

Their membership has provided opportunities to connect with fellow alumni and attend events that continue to spark their curiosity. They see the power of the University to implement change in our community and enjoy meeting likeminded individuals who are looking to make a difference for important issues in Rochester and the greater world.

As Bob reflects on the time he spends playing music for the hospital community, and on his support for EPAM in particular, he says, “When I replay these experiences in my head, I feel a deep sense of joy and purpose. This simple act touches people under stress, if only for a moment, with the universal language of music. Supporting the program as a volunteer and as donor means a great deal to me.”

Join us

To learn more about joining the George Eastman Circle to make a lasting impact with your philanthropy, visit or call (585) 276-8740.

Ģý Eastman Performing Arts Medicine Center (EPAM)

The mission of Eastman Performing Arts Medicine Center (EPAM) is to deliver the collaborative potential of the performing arts and medicine to the healthcare environment; to support the medical needs of artists through clinical and pedagogical support; and to understand through research the underlying mechanisms by which music improves health and wellbeing.

EPAM seeks to enrich the healthcare environment by integrating music that calms, nurtures and inspires. Utilizing non-traditional settings such as public spaces in hospitals, waiting and family rooms, and hallways, our hospital community experiences personal and meaningful interactions with world-class musicians. Weekly public performances are held throughout the hospital public areas.

The Ģý School of Nursing is also involved in research alongside EPAM. Kathi Heffner, PhD, professor of nursing, medicine, and psychiatry, has collaborated with faculty at the Eastman School of Music to examine piano training for older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) as a brain exercise to see if it can promote emotional wellbeing, as well as ultimately slow cognitive decline in MCI.

To learn more about EPAM, visit

— Kristina Beaudett, Fall 2024

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Perfect Pitch and Much More /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/03/27/perfect-pitch-and-much-more/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/03/27/perfect-pitch-and-much-more/#respond Wed, 27 Mar 2024 19:08:25 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=81642 By the time Ashni Budge arrived at the Eastman School of Music, she’d already dedicated most of her life to music. She started playing the violin at just three years old. When she was five, she added the piano to her repertoire.

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Ashni M. Budge ’24, ’24E

Talent, drive, and donor generosity fuel the ambitions of this scholarship recipient

Ashni M. Budge ’24, ’24E

Budge is the recipient of multiple scholarships, including significant support from the Joyce Osborn Violin Scholarship, made possible through the generosity of Joyce Osborn and the Wegman Family Scholarship Challenge.

By the time Ashni Budge arrived at the , she’d already dedicated most of her life to music. She started playing the violin at just three years old. When she was five, she added the piano to her repertoire.

At about that same time, Budge’s family discovered that she had perfect pitch. Budge attributes that to her grandmother, a professional Chinese opera singer. “She taught my younger brother and me to sing,” says Budge, who grew up outside of Los Angeles. “I have vivid memories of the two of us performing and of me putting on operas for our family.”

In middle school, Budge joined the band and, even though it didn’t have a string section, she wasn’t deterred. That’s when she picked up the clarinet, which she continued playing throughout high school. She joined the choir, too.

When it came time to decide on a college, Budge knew Eastman was for her. She was drawn to its renowned reputation and that it is part of the URochester, a leading private research university with a flexible undergraduate curriculum. She was also excited to travel and live on the other side of the country.

Being a scholarship recipient has made it all possible for Budge. “Without the generosity of others, I couldn’t afford to be here,” she adds. “I can’t believe that people who don’t even know me have provided me with scholarships. Someday, I hope to help others in a similar way.”

Music has always given me an outlet, a way to express my feelings. As long as my life has music in it and involves some performing and watching people grow and develop, I’ll be happy. Thank you to all of the people who have supported me along the way—I’m forever grateful.`` – Ashni Budge
Budge and Nicholas Garcia-Hettinger ’24E, a Hamlin Family Scholarship Fund recipient, in the Wolk Atrium, Eastman School of Music

Budge and Nicholas Garcia-Hettinger ’24E, a Hamlin Family Scholarship Fund recipient, in the Wolk Atrium, Eastman School of Music

In the meantime, Budge is taking advantage of every opportunity. Not only is she an applied music major studying violin at Eastman, she is also a psychology major and brain and cognitive sciences minor at the University’s School of Arts & Sciences. Along the way, she’s performed in live-to-picture renditions of Danny Elfman’s Batman, cofounded a string quartet with friends, called the Avant Quartet, and earned the prestigious position of concertmaster for the Eastman Philharmonia. Budge has been recognized for her academic achievements, too. She’s on the dean’s list and was inducted into Psi Chi, the International Honor Society for psychology students, as a sophomore.

In 2022, Budge and her quartet participated in what’s become a life-changing experience for her: Eastman-to-Go. This one-semester chamber music course provides select ensembles opportunities to bring music into the Greater Rochester community, with a focus on presenting classical music to new, young audiences. Budge loved it, and so did the people with whom she interacted.

For instance, at the Dr. Charles T. Lunsford School No. 19, one of the schools they visited, Budge’s influence was so significant that she was invited back for the 2023–24 academic year to give violin lessons to fifth graders. “Working with them has been among the best experiences of my life,” says Budge. “We even played a few pieces with the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra over the winter holidays, which was a thrill for us all.”

Next up for Budge? In the short term, she’s practicing for a Sibelius violin concerto and a performance of Schubert’s Cello Quintet in C Major. Long term, she hopes to go to graduate school for music. She’s even considering law school someday.

Whatever Budge does, she knows music will always play a part.

Nicole, Danny, and Colleen Wegman of the Wegman Family Charitable Foundation

Nicole, Danny, and Colleen Wegman of the Wegman Family Charitable Foundation

The Wegman Family Scholarship Challenge

In recognition of the Eastman School of Music’s commitment to the next generation of leaders in music and the performing arts, the Wegmans Family Foundation established a $2 million scholarship challenge to encourage the creation of new endowed scholarships. Since 2021, nearly $6 million has been raised through the 46 scholarships established during the Wegman Family Scholarship Challenge, including the Joyce Osborn Violin Scholarship.

“Thank you to the Wegmans and the many donors who joined the Wegman Family Scholarship Challenge. Together, they are supporting the next generation of artists and leaders who will inspire audiences and transform lives through music.”—Jamal Rossi, Joan and Martin Messinger Dean, Eastman School of Music

Joyce Osburn ’54E black and white headshot

Joyce Osburn ’54E

“Without scholarship support, I probably never could have attended Eastman. Thus, the thought of giving someone else the opportunities I had rose in my mind. That’s why I set up this scholarship, to help wonderful young musicians like Ashni get an Eastman education. I’m so impressed by her and am overjoyed that I can help.”—Joyce Osburn ’54E

Join us

Learn how you can support students like Ashni Budge and .

— Kristine Kappel Thompson, 2024

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Overcoming adversity, hitting high notes /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/02/19/overcoming-adversity-hitting-high-notes/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/02/19/overcoming-adversity-hitting-high-notes/#respond Mon, 19 Feb 2024 21:56:44 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=79442 Violinist Alexandra Cutler-Fetkewicz ’99E, ’02E (MM) expands music career and serves the community

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Overcoming adversity, hitting high notes

Violinist Alexandra Cutler-Fetkewicz ’99E, ’02E (MM) expands music career and serves the community

Photo of Alexandra Cutler-Fetkewicz ’99E, ’02E (MM) Share a bit about yourself! What are you up to now?

Since graduating with my master’s degree, so much has happened in my professional life, that it is tough to choose what to highlight! I have made a career as a performer, recording artist, arranger, and contractor, and it seems the list of my musical endeavors is ever-expanding, something I attribute to the worldly music education I received at Eastman.

I have shared the stage with many big stars, from The Who, to Lauryn Hill, to Earth, Wind, and Fire, and many others. I have contributed to a Grammy-nominated album, and I am also the co-owner and founder of an entertainment contracting and production company called Philly Music Lab which I started with a close friend from ESM in 2015, Samantha Wittchen. Last summer, I had the honor of performing as a featured soloist with the Pittsburgh Symphony, alongside Pittsburgh rapper Frzy, as the orchestra performed my original arrangement of the hip hop song co-written by Frzy and I called “What Do I Know” for the city’s Juneteenth celebration.In addition to my performing and recording activities, I am extremely proud to serve the music community as vice president and co-chair of membership for the Philadelphia Chapter of the Recording Academy.

After finishing my degrees, I had always hoped to move back to the incredible music town that is my hometown of Philadelphia, so after a couple of years freelancing (Albany Symphony, Binghamton Philharmonic, and many regional gigs), I did just that, and am still based in Philly. However, as life is unpredictable, just before leaving Rochester, I was severely injured in a hit-and-run motor vehicle accident. This completely derailed my life and career, and I was told (erroneously) that I would never play professionally again. If not for my incredible family, and one special doctor who believed in me, I likely would have wound up in a very dire set of circumstances. After a long recovery, I began to play again little by little and won a position in the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, where I still perform.

What are your most cherished memories from the Ģý?

My most cherished memories from my time at Eastman include the years of incredible teaching, friendship, and mentorship I received from my beloved violin teacher, the inimitable Oleh Krysa. He taught me to believe in my talent, no matter where it would take me, and to honor and respect it. We still talk, and his teaching still guides my playing every day. One incredibly important moment for me during my time at ESM was my appointment as concertmaster when John Williams came to conduct a program of his music. I performed the solos from many of his films (on the Vuillaume violin owned by the school), including “Schindler’s List,” “Far and Away,” “The Reivers,” and more, to a standing-room-only audience in Eastman Theater. It remains a highlight of my career.

My membership in the professional fraternity Mu Phi Epsilon afforded me relationships with other musicians who still guide me in connecting and working with others in our industry today. The camaraderie we established allowed us to work together to help others, bringing music to the community while making life-long friendships along the way. Eastman is a place where many of my current collegial and personal relationships within the music world originated, and I am always proud and excited to work with fellow alumni. I also spent a great deal of time at Java’s, mostly practicing in the boiler room there instead of in the Annex at school. Yes, the boiler room. You’d be surprised how inspiring an industrial-looking space can be for practicing! Shout out to Mike Calabrese and his staff for keeping us caffeinated and working hard!

How did your experience at the URochester influence your life?

I was awarded significant scholarships for both degrees, which allowed me to use part of my grad school loans to purchase the amazing violin I now own. Eastman allowed me to succeed, not only by affording me that financial flexibility, but by giving me the tools to grow my music business acumen. There were hardly any other conservatories offering arts leadership, so when the ALP program began during my undergrad, I quickly started taking advantage of that resource. Without courses like “Music Business Law 101,” or “How to Survive and Thrive in the Arts,” frankly, without teachers like Ramon Ricker, Adrian Daly, or Fred Sturm, I’m not sure where my career would have wound up. They all gave me the critical tools needed to work as a musician, not just be one.

What sparked your initial interest in volunteering with the University? What role(s) have you held?

Serving my community is important to me, so I volunteer with the Philadelphia Network Leadership Council (NLC) to help create more connections for Philadelphia area alumni and to help the University identify where we may have continuing opportunities for them.

What advice do you have for fellow alumni and friends who may be interested in taking a more active role in our alumni and friends’ community?

I would advise fellow alumni to get involved. We have a support system in place as a community of alumni of this great school, and when we show up for each other, we can work together and achieve great things. Also, I believe that networking is a very important part of being a successful performing artist, and a very important part of achieving representation. We need you in these rooms, and we need your voices to be heard.

What’s the most rewarding part of staying connected with your alma mater?

The most rewarding part of staying connected to ESM is the continued support and development of initiatives to push our art form into the future while preserving its integrity. I feel so fortunate to have received the well-rounded music education I did and love seeing my fellow alums thrive and have great success. I’m writing this while attending the Grammy Awards in Los Angeles this week, and am proud that I will see more than one alumnus of Eastman being honored for their work and talent.

If you’d like to learn more about what Alexandra and her team are doing, visit and for more info.

—Amelia Sykes, Spring 2024

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Inspiring young musicians and sharing Eastman knowledge in Singapore /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/02/19/inspiring-young-musicians-and-sharing-eastman-knowledge-in-singapore/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/02/19/inspiring-young-musicians-and-sharing-eastman-knowledge-in-singapore/#respond Mon, 19 Feb 2024 20:21:59 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=79252 Meet violinist and Global Leadership Council member Vivien Goh ’69E

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Inspiring young musicians and sharing Eastman knowledge in Singapore

Meet violinist and Global Leadership Council member Vivien Goh ’69E

Photo of Vivien Goh ’69E

Photo credits: Gilbert Chan

Share a bit about yourself! What are you up to now?

I graduated with a bachelor of music in violin performance from the Eastman School. After graduation, I returned to Singapore and performed actively on stage, radio, and television in Singapore and the region. I taught violin classes in public schools and had a private violin studio until 2017. I was the founding music director and resident conductor of the Singapore Youth Orchestra from 1980-1990.

Currently, I am retired but still teach a chamber music class at the School of the Arts. I am an organist and choir director at the Wesley Methodist Church and sit on the Boards of the Youth Orchestra and the Music Conservatory. I am involved in projects to mentor young musicians. I am an avid walker in the various parks in Singapore and also on my travels in the UK, Europe, Japan, and New Zealand.

What are your most cherished memories from your time at the URochester?

At Eastman, I was involved in so many musical activities that were not available in Singapore in the 1960s, like playing in a full Symphony Orchestra and being part of chamber music groups. The opportunity to listen to famous musicians “live” at school and on campus provided many moments of inspiration.

What University resources or initiatives were most impactful to your next steps after graduating?

The Sibley Library was and remains one of the great collections of music scores and audio recordings. The Eastman Theatre and Kilbourn Hall were thrilling to perform in. I was loaned a precious Italian violin – a G.B. Guadagnini – to use in my senior year.

How did your experience at the URochester influence your life?

My experiences in the Eastman Orchestras, playing under various conductors and guest conductors and composers like Stravinsky and Khachaturian shaped my activities as conductor of the Singapore Youth Orchestra, as did my intensive activities as a member of the Eastman Honors Quartet. The Suzuki Method was first introduced at Eastman when I was there. I used the concepts of this method in my teaching. Listening to great musicians of the day “live” was a great inspiration.

What sparked your initial interest in volunteering with the University? What role(s) have you held?

My time spent in Rochester had a great influence on my life and I wanted to share this experience with aspiring young musicians in Singapore who were looking for a university education. Currently, I am on the Global Leadership Council.

What advice do you have for fellow alumni and friends who may be interested in taking a more active role in our alumni and friends’ community?

Being involved in this community brings you together with many alumni from different faculties and professions which broadens your horizons. It is also rewarding to help steer young students toward fulfilling their aspirations.

What’s the most rewarding part of staying connected with your alma mater?

I enjoy many of the live-streamed concerts from Eastman and webinars on a wide range of topics. It is fulfilling to know that I can help future students experience what I did at the University.

—Amelia Sykes, Spring 2024

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Connecting the California community /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/02/19/connecting-the-california-community/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2024/02/19/connecting-the-california-community/#respond Mon, 19 Feb 2024 17:21:46 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=78862 Meet musician and film producer Jeff Pifher ’07E

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Connecting the California community

Meet musician and film producer Jeff Pifher ’07E

Photo Jeff Pifher ’07E

Share a bit about yourself! What are you up to now?

After lots of schooling including Eastman, University of Miami, and University of Southern California, I began my career in Los Angeles where I still reside. Recently I have released four recordings with my band called Socrates’ Trial. We perform my original music. I like to compose what I call “cinematic jazz”. It’s a combination of film score elements such as soaring melodies played alongside an orchestra with long improvised solos by all members of the band. I perform at venues such as Catalina Jazz Club here in Los Angeles and my band has been a featured guest at the Jazz Education Network Conference this past year.

As a music and film producer, I have produced a short film documentary entitled In the Same Direction: Jeff Pifher & Socrates’ Trial which chronicles my band and our latest projects garnering 24 “Best Documentary” and “Best Music” awards from film festivals worldwide. Most recently I have finished production on Somewhere, a short film musical centering around immigration reform featuring cast members from Wicked, Glee, American Idol, The Voice, and America’s Got Talent. I am the composer, lyricist, and executive producer for the film which has won “Best Musical” at NoHo Cinefest here in Los Angeles. In 2020, I produced Writing for Strings Masterclass featuring arrangements of my original music by Harlan Hodges (Star Wars: Galaxys Edge, League of Legends).

I am a member of the Recording Academy, Society of Composers and Lyricists, and several other entertainment organizations. I have also had the privilege to be a teaching artist with the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz outreach program Jazz in the Classroom.

What are your most cherished memories from your time at the URochester?

Many of my fondest memories include making music with such incredible musicians and the late-night discussions about how to learn and be creative. Often my peers and I would engage in these lengthy debates that revealed how each one of us was similar but also strikingly different. Many of our goals were the same but how we went about achieving them was a unique learning experience for each of us. Sharing stories while eating at the cafeteria, making trips to the River Campus to use the exercise facilities, taking long walks in the freezing temperatures to get a favorite food fix, watching friends perform music and being inspired to reach for more, helping out lost visitors during audition weekends, and laughing until you cry about the nerdiest music jokes are all cherished memories from my time at Eastman.

How did campus life and any co-curricular involvement (clubs, organizations, teams, etc.) impact your personal and professional growth?

Part of my daily routine was to travel from the Eastman campus to the River Campus to use the University exercise facilities. While there, I was able to engage with students studying different fields and participate in other activities such as festivals and gatherings. This experience allowed me to get out of my own head, gain more perspective, and begin to hone my networking skills. As a performer, producer, educator, and member of the entertainment community in Los Angeles, these are extremely useful if not essential skills.

Did the University offer any resources or initiatives that helped you transition smoothly into the workforce?

While I did not reach out to or receive direct help from the University administration when I began establishing a performing career in Los Angeles, it was through my fellow Eastman alumni that I was able to secure my first opportunities. Currently, I am benefiting from the University by volunteering and staying involved.

How did your experience at the URochester influence your life?

Teachers at Eastman are some of the best around. I learned so much from a music and career perspective from them however, what has had the most influence on my life is what I learned from my peers. Through discussions and daily interactions with my Eastman peers, I learned not only “how to learn” but how I learn best. I was able to witness firsthand the daily dedication and discipline needed to succeed in the entertainment industry. These are traits that are now a part of my daily life and that I employ throughout my endeavors.

What sparked your initial interest in volunteering with the University? What role(s) have you held?

Connecting with local leaders in the community initially fueled my interest in volunteering with the University. I have been able to meet so many incredible people who are making notable contributions. I have been able to get involved in rewarding experiences that are a direct result of volunteering with the University and being a member of the Ģý Network Leader Council.

What advice do you have for fellow alumni and friends who may be interested in taking a more active role in our alumni and friends’ community?

This alumni and friends community is so welcoming so don’t be afraid to get involved, take initiative, and share your ideas. Let your passion for giving and connecting shine through!

What’s the most rewarding part of staying connected with your alma mater?

There are several aspects of staying connected that I find rewarding. Being able to give back through different University-sponsored events by helping others make connections, building and expanding this strong community, and supporting other alumni to reach their goals has been a truly rewarding experience that also fills me with a sense of pride to be an alumnus of the URochester.

—Amelia Sykes, Spring 2024

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Giving back through musical mentorship /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/08/16/giving-back-through-musical-mentorship/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/08/16/giving-back-through-musical-mentorship/#respond Wed, 16 Aug 2023 18:53:48 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=70772 Meet professional singer and Meliora Collective mentor Sabrina Learman ’89E

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Giving back through musical mentorship

Meet professional singer and Meliora Collective mentor Sabrina Learman ’89E

Sabrina Learman ’89E

Tell us about your time as a student (favorite classes, clubs, memories, etc.)

My time as a student was spent mostly on the Eastman School of Music campus. I was a voice major and was so delighted to be in a conservatory atmosphere where my job was to practice and study music. I loved everything – how small the school was, that there was a naturally collaborative spirit among the students, the opportunities to perform new student composer works, sing with the jazz ensemble, perform in operas and recitals, and all the rest!

I also spent quite a bit of time on the River Campus and I really enjoyed that dual-campus life. I remember going through all the cool underground tunnels in the winter, seeing the Yellow Jackets in concert, dancing at a Viennese Waltz Night, attending Asia Night, having a blast on Dandelion Day, taking a class where we performed a play in German (scariest moment of my life), going to movies, and just enjoying being there – especially because we didn’t have a traditional campus at Eastman.

How did your experience at the URochester influence your life?

I chose Eastman because of the gut feeling I had when I visited and auditioned. Unlike other schools, everyone was sincerely welcoming, the audition experience was wonderfully organized and thoughtful, and the sense of playfulness, independence and professionalism among the students was palpable. My gut was right. Everything I witnessed and felt at my audition was present throughout my four years at Eastman; all facets of that education formed my positive spirit going into my professional life. I learned by example to be extraordinarily prepared, reliable, responsive, collaborative, responsible for my actions, communicative, and a trustworthy colleague. These are essential ingredients for a life in music and teaching, of course, and they are vital for any career. Having been mentored in such a way has opened so many doors for me in my life as a musician and educator.

What inspired you to get involved and volunteer? Feel free to touch on your mentorship experience.

Since I felt so cared for during my time at Eastman, I have always wanted to give back to Eastman and the University in the same vein. I could never fully express the degree to which I cherish the opportunity to help my current college students embrace their work and opportunities with that level of care. What I have to give at this point in my life is some wisdom (I hope!), tactics for making big life decisions, experience carving out a career path, hindsight about mistakes I’ve made, and a sincerely supportive ear. Being a mentor to an Eastman singer this last semester was incredibly rewarding and heartwarming honor. I am quite sure we will stay connected for years to come.

What’s the most rewarding part of staying connected with your alma mater?

That’s an easy one! It’s such a simple way to demonstrate my appreciation for the education I received and it keeps me extra tied to my cherished college buddies and other Eastman/Ģý alums who are in my area. Through the Meliora Collective, I learned that another Eastman graduate and I had been teaching at the same institution for years without realizing it, and it was wonderful to reconnect with him.

What advice do you have for others looking to get involved?

There are so many ways to define “involvement” – doing something small can truly help a student or the University. Do you have an hour to spare each month? Then mentoring takes just that much time. Got a hankering to hang out with alums? Maybe you’d like to organize a coffee time in a convenient area. That’s what I’m going to do next because I think it’s meaningful to bring people together and have time to talk about life.

Is there anything else you’d like to share?

I have been thinking a lot about what I would do differently if I could go back in time to my four years at Eastman. My advice to myself would be an urgent call to truly take in my college experience while it is happening and to exude appreciation in the moment. I often remind my current college students that there will likely never be another time in their lives when their job is simply to learn and study what they love. What a gift that is!

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Ask the Archivist /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/06/14/ask-the-archivist-4/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/06/14/ask-the-archivist-4/#respond Wed, 14 Jun 2023 19:06:23 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=66552 Are reports of the marching band’s last hurrah greatly exaggerated?

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Ask the Archivist

Are reports of the marching band’s last hurrah greatly exaggerated?

A black and white photo of the Yellowjacket marching band members from the 1980s

STANDING OVATION: Tracing its origins to the early 20th century, by the mid-1980s, the University’s marching band moved from on-field performances at football games to a pep band that performed from the stands of Fauver Stadium, a tradition that continues today.

I was both surprised and very pleased to see the photo of Yellowjacket marching band members in the Fall 2022 issue of Rochester Review and both interested and sad to learn of the probable year of the band’s demise. I had been wondering for decades about when the band stopped functioning. Can you tell me why the band was discontinued?

—Harrington (Kit) Crissey Jr. ’66

Letters from alumni of the 1970s to Review also dispute the end date of the marching band proposed in the Fall 2022 issue, echoing a 1974 Campus Times letter from Michael Horowitz ’77: “Perhaps few people realize it, but the UR Marching Band is alive and well.” And so it would be—for about another decade.

The end of the band can probably be attributed to several factors, including competition from other activities and funding. Considered a student group providing a service to the University, the band could not receive Students’ Association funding and relied on an academic department—or in this case, two departments: music and athletics. In the September 20, 1982, Campus-Times, Sharmila Mathur ’85 reported that athletics became the band’s sole sponsor in spring 1981 but lacked a budget line to support it. With practice time in Fauver Stadium scarce, there was less stepping on the field and more pepping in the stands, and the baton was passed to the Varsity Pep Band, which continued to “create spirit in the fans by displaying spirit” as noted in the 1985 Interpres.

The origins of the University’s marching band—or perhaps the marching University Band—are no clearer than its coda.

In the Winter 1984 issue of Review, Frederick Fennell ’37E ’39E (MM), ’88 (Honorary) recounted his role in starting the band. “It was on a September afternoon just fifty years ago last fall when I, a pea-green Eastman School freshman . . . hiked over to the new River Campus to found the Ģý Marching Band.”

While hesitating to suggest Fennell was beating his own drum, there is considerable evidence that an organization known as the University Band, which performed and marched at football games, predated his Rochester arrival by some 25 years.

“Our University band should be the rallying point for our improved cheering and for the rendering of our really good college songs,” announced the November 18, 1908, Campus newspaper. In the years that follow, information about the band appears sporadically; each successive article announces a new band almost as though there had been no previous group.

Thus the October 1926 issue of Rochester Review trumpeted the news to alumni: “A praiseworthy addition to student life is a new University band, which made its initial appearance of the season at the Clarkson game, strikingly garbed in yellow jersies (sic), blue sailor trousers, and blue toques with yellow tassels . . . The band was organized by [Eastman School of Music professor] Sherman A. Clute . . . with the co-operation of Matthew D. Lawless, ’09 . . . and Eugene Loewenthal, ’28, student manager.”

The next Review issue pointed out that “quite aside from the rendition of music . . . [the band] is providing a definite tie-up between the college and the Eastman School of Music. Only about one-third of the band members are students of the college; the remaining two-thirds are from the School of Music.”

Home games were played at University Field, in the area where East High School is currently located—bounded by Culver Road, East Main Street, Ohio Street, and Atlantic Avenue. When the River Campus opened in the fall of 1930, the band, directed by Theodore Fitch, Class of 1922, joined the football team in the new Varsity Stadium. (The stadium was named for Edwin Fauver in 1951 and is now part of the Brian F. Prince Athletic Complex.)

Fennell took over the marching band in early 1934, and by all accounts (not just his own), the ensemble was a rousing success even after he passed on the baton about a decade later. In the off-season, he converted the group into a true University Band. Fennell directed its first concert in Strong Auditorium, won Eastman director Howard Hanson’s approval, and embarked on one of the University’s most illustrious careers.

Fennell’s reminiscence may resonate with that of other marching band alumni: “Whatever has happened to me in the fifty years since then, no matter where, when, or with whom, all dates from that beautiful early-autumn afternoon with my own first group. And I don’t intend, ever, to forget it.”

Ask the Archivist features a question for Melissa Mead, the John M. and Barbara Keil University Archivist and Rochester Collections Librarian.

Learn more

For more about the University’s history,. To ask a question for Ask the Archivist, send an email torochrev@rochester.eduwith “Ask the Archivist” in the subject line.

This article originally appeared in the spring 2023 issue of theRochester Reviewmagazine.

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When Martha Graham danced… /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/06/07/when-martha-graham-danced/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/06/07/when-martha-graham-danced/#respond Wed, 07 Jun 2023 15:43:09 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=66182 A year-long teaching post at the Eastman School of Music provided Martha Graham with “a new adventure of seeking” that would prove pivotal to her place as a pioneering dancer and choreographer, according to a new biography.

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When Martha Graham danced…

A year-long teaching post at the Eastman School of Music provided Martha Graham with “a new adventure of seeking” that would prove pivotal to her place as a pioneering dancer and choreographer, according to a new biography.

Neil Baldwin ’69

Neil Baldwin ’69. PHOTO BY BLUE MOON PHOTOGRAPHY NJ

As a scholar and author, Neil Baldwin ’69 willingly expresses an affinity for the currents of American culture that lead to reinvention—older currents being reconfigured and recast in new ways.

If through lines can be found in his life’s work as poet, critic, and biographer, that might be one. The former founding executive director of the National Book Foundation and now a professor emeritus at Montclair State University, Baldwin has written highly regarded books about poet and physician William Carlos Williams, visual artist Man Ray, inventor Thomas Edison, and auto magnate Henry Ford, among others.

A new biography of modern American dance icon Martha Graham—the first in more than 30 years—seemed a logical addition to that pantheon.

“I felt like [Graham] had been left out of the narrative that I’ve been creating for my whole life about American art,” Baldwin says. “I thought, ‘Wait a second . . . what about dance? I did art. I did literature. I did technology.’”

“At a rather late point in my career, I suddenly am hit over the head with this physical nature of modernism, movement- wise, and how she used her body to create a new aesthetic,” he says. “Again, the key note is new, to make it new, as Ezra Pound says, to carve space and to create shapes with the body that no one’s ever done before—Graham was the pioneer of physicality.”

After more than a decade of research and dozens of interviews with Graham dancers— former and current—Baldwin published Martha Graham, When Dance Became Modern: A Life in 2022.

Listed in many year-end round-ups as one of the best books of the year, the biography recounts Graham’s creative life, from growing up in Pittsburgh to her status as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.

Among the many institutions where Graham left a lasting mark was the Eastman School of Music. From the fall of 1925 to the spring 1926, Graham participated in an innovative, but short-lived, program of “dance and dramatic action” at Eastman.

“She was hired with the express reassurance that she was going to do something different than just conventional ballet at Eastman. And she welcomed that,” Baldwin says. “In terms of the theme of the book, “When Dance Became Modern,” that’s really important because the roots of her modern mode can definitely be traced to that year.”

Dance Recital program for Martha Graham from 1926

ENCORE: Graham and her Eastman students reprised the New York City debut for a late spring recital in Rochester. MARTHA GRAHAM COLLECTION/MUSIC DIVISION/LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

What brought Graham to Eastman?

At that point, she was starting to develop her own choreographic style of movement. And when she was hired by Rouben Mamoulian who was the head of a newly established school of dance and dramatic action under George Eastman, she was told that she could use the class to experiment in developing her individual technique, which is what she was really itching to do at that point.

She had paid her dues in vaudeville and as a showgirl. She had traveled back and forth across the country and performed in all these little towns from east to west and north to south with Ted Shawn and Ruth St. Denis and their dance company.

Did she have a plan in mind as she joined the faculty?

When she left the Greenwich Village Follies and moved beyond vaudeville, she said she wanted to create her own dances in her own body and that was crucial to the Eastman residency. Intrinsic to the origin of modern dance, is there was no formal, pre-existing repertory. There’s no, “Oh, let’s do Swan Lake.” Everybody has the pattern and the narrative and the staging of Swan Lake to follow, whereas Graham was concocting dances from simple, pedestrian movements like walking, running, skipping, and leaping and drawing upon her students’ inner energy to make new movement patterns come to life.

Is it fair to say the roots of the Martha Graham Dance Company can be traced to her time at Eastman?

Three Eastman students—Evelyn Sabin, Betty Macdonald, and Thelma Biracree—were the nucleus of what became her company. Looking back upon that nascent period, which was less than a year, she was teaching in New York City at John Murray Anderson’s school and then she would take the train up to Eastman and teach her classes and she went back and forth like that from New York to Rochester. She featured Eastman students in her New York City premiere in April 1926.

Did you work with Eastman as you were recounting Graham’s time in Rochester?

The Eastman School’s historian, Vince Lenti, and his books, for example, For the Enrichment of the Community: George Eastman and the Founding of the Eastman School of Music (Meliora Press, 2004), were very helpful. The head of special collections at the Sibley Music Library, David Peter Coppen, was also extremely helpful. Paul Horgan’s memoir of Mamoulian was a gem, as were some old Rochester Democrat and Chronicle clippings files I discovered in the Reading Room of the Library of Congress. I would say that the story of Graham’s time at Rochester is more known among the Eastman community than the larger University community.

How do you think your time as a student at Rochester set you on your path as a writer and scholar?

It was my freshman or sophomore year, when the Outside Speakers Committee brought the charismatic cultural critic Susan Sontag to campus. I don’t think she was even 30 years old. She had just published what would become her most enduring classic, Against Interpretation. I remember all of us students sitting on the floor in a circle around her. That was my first really vivid inspiration about how you could write about the alchemy of societal mores and art and performance and visual art. I still return to Against Interpretation every few years.

During my freshman year, I took a course called American Intellectual History with the brilliant, resonant-voiced, impassioned professor Loren Baritz in the history department. The startling keyword for me was “intellectual”—the core of his thesis in his book City on a Hill. That was a major cataclysmic epiphany for 18-year-old me.

— Written by Scott Hauser

This article originally appeared in the spring 2023 issue of Rochester Review magazine.

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The magic of Mozart—As Mozart would have created it /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/06/07/the-magic-of-mozart-as-mozart-would-have-created-it/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2023/06/07/the-magic-of-mozart-as-mozart-would-have-created-it/#respond Wed, 07 Jun 2023 13:27:53 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=65942 Kristian Bezuidenhout ’01E, ’04E (MM) watched Amadeus, the 1984 semibiographical movie about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, when he was 10.

The “super lonely” child, as Bezuidenhout describes himself at that age, was “completely bamboozled by how beautiful the music was” and became obsessed both with the film and Mozart’s compositions, which he felt gave him a way to escape his solitude.

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The magic of Mozart—As Mozart would have created it

An Eastman keyboardist aims to capture the passion and romance of classical music as it sounded in the late 18th century.

Man playing a piano

METHOD TO MOZART: “Every time I heard someone play [Mozart’s] music, I was baffled by how terrified they sounded of doing the wrong thing,” Bezuidenhout says. “I was determined to find a way to bring out more passion, relaxation, and romance. And I could do that on these old pianos in a way that I just never could on a Steinway.”

Kristian Bezuidenhout ’01E, ’04E (MM) watched Amadeus, the 1984 semibiographical movie about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, when he was 10.

The “super lonely” child, as Bezuidenhout describes himself at that age, was “completely bamboozled by how beautiful the music was” and became obsessed both with the film and Mozart’s compositions, which he felt gave him a way to escape his solitude.

“Those feelings you have as a kid with music like that just never go away,” he says from his home in London.

Today, Bezuidenhout is a leading period-instrument keyboard player, best known for his fortepiano interpretations of the complete keyboard music of Mozart (Harmonia Mundi record label). Earlier this year, he released his 25th album—the last volume of the complete Beethoven Concertos (Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 3) recorded with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra.

A regular guest with the world’s leading ensembles—and with conductors including Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Philippe Herreweghe, Giovanni Antonini, and Daniel Harding—Bezuidenhout was named Most Exciting Young Musician for the 2005–06 season by the Dutch Federation of Music and Drama and earned a nomination in 2013 as Gramophone magazine’s Artist of the Year.

During the 2017–18 season he became an artistic director of the Freiburger Barockorchester and principal guest conductor with the English Concert.

Future projects include Bach Christmas Cantatas and Handel Dixit Dominus—both with the Freiburger Barockorchester— and the English Concert, featuring Purcell Odes and Handel Chandos.

In one music review, the New York Times wrote that Bezuidenhout’s performance of keyboard works by Mozart demonstrated the “dazzling variety of colors he can draw from his instrument.”

Bezuidenhout’s repertoire extends beyond Mozart to works by Baroque and Romantic composers, including Purcell, Handel, and Bach, to the music of Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Brahms. But Mozart has remained a main focus for the Australian/South African pianist—in part to interpret the prolific composer’s works in new ways.

“Every time I heard someone play his music, I was baffled by how terrified they sounded of doing the wrong thing,” he says. “I was determined to find a way to bring out more passion, relaxation, and romance. And I could do that on these old pianos in a way that I just never could on a Steinway.

“While there is a great deal to be learned from historical sources, an equally important aspect of my approach is based on ‘gut’ feelings; on the realization of sounds in my imagination,” he adds. “It is a highly postmodern exercise in a sense—deeply subjective and based on background and personal experience.”

Bezuidenhout says the Eastman School of Music was instrumental in allowing him to develop that trial-and-error approach as an advanced keyboard student.

He remembers “a constellation of important people” at Eastman who valued that process much more than a heavily structured curriculum.

“It was this free, open environment where there was so much experimentation,” he says. “They allowed me to be myself at a time when—at least hypothetically—other faculty might have tried to suppress these slightly fantastical tendencies.”

Those tendencies included bouncing between the fortepiano, harpsichord, flute, and chamber music.

For example, Rebecca Penneys, a professor emerita of piano and Bezuidenhout’s principal piano instructor, was “unbelievably open-minded.” Meantime, Paul O’Dette, a professor of lute, inspired him to use historical information to enliven and enrich music making. (Bezuidenhout became O’Dette’s assistant for several years). He also counts his work with Malcolm Bilson (fortepiano) and Arthur Hass (harpsichord) as deeply stimulating: “Both teachers instilled in me a newly found appreciation of the myriad possibilities offered by these instruments; they are both scrupulous stylists, too—remarkable.”

“We were renegades in a way,” he says of himself and his peers, “with the consent of our teachers.”

That preference for unconventionality paid off. The year Bezuidenhout received his bachelor’s degree, he recorded his first disc of Mozart, titled Sturm und Drang, and captured first prize at the prestigious Bruges Fortepiano Competition.

Ģý 60 percent of Bezuidenhout’s typical music season is solo work, which he finds the most demanding. When recently preparing to perform the Schumann Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 54 for the first time, he spent between five and six hours a day for several weeks before he felt ready.

He also performs chamber music—the accompaniment of vocal repertoire is a particular source of joy—and collaborates with musicians such as tenor Mark Padmore, Carolyn Sampson, Anne Sofie von Otter, and Isabelle Faust.

“It’s a fantastic mix,” he says. “I could never get bored because there’s such constant variety in this field. I always wanted a career that would challenge me in many different directions.”

For another challenge, Bezuidenhout is thinking about buying a harpsichord so that he can delve into the instrument more deeply. He’s looking forward to several years of intense training and possible future recordings including the Bach Harpsichord Concertos (with single strings).

But it needs to be the right kind of training—the kind he received generously at Eastman at a time when he was trying to build a child’s dream into what would become a professional career.

“It was an entire atmosphere of collective acceptance and flexibility,” he says. “I had that in a complete sense from everyone I came across there.”

This article originally appeared in the spring 2023 issue of Rochester Review magazine.

— Written by Robin L. Flanigan

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Gift establishes a violin professorship at Eastman /adv/alumni-news-media/2022/12/22/gift-establishes-a-violin-professorship-at-the-eastman-school-of-music/ /adv/alumni-news-media/2022/12/22/gift-establishes-a-violin-professorship-at-the-eastman-school-of-music/#respond Thu, 22 Dec 2022 18:44:08 +0000 /adv/alumni-news-media/?p=58722 A $1.5 million gift from Susan Ain ’78E and her husband, Aron Ain, establishes a newly endowed violin professorship at the URochester’s Eastman School of Music. The Susan and Aron Ain Professorship for Violin will support, recognize, and honor as well as attract and retain exemplary faculty at the acclaimed music school.

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Gift establishes a violin professorship at the Eastman School of Music

The generosity of Susan Ain ’78E and Aron Ain will support and honor exemplary faculty

Aron Ain and Susan Ain ’78E

Aron Ain and Susan Ain ’78E

A $1.5 million gift from Susan Ain ’78E and her husband, Aron Ain, establishes a newly endowed violin professorship at the URochester’s . The Susan and Aron Ain Professorship for Violin will support, recognize, and honor as well as attract and retain exemplary faculty at the acclaimed music school.

“Endowed professorships provide us with essential resources to support world-class faculty and recognize them for their exceptional accomplishments as artists, scholars, and teachers,” says Jamal Rossi, the Joan and Martin Messinger Dean of the Eastman School of Music. “We are tremendously grateful to the Ains for their commitment to music, education, and excellence.”

“As an Eastman alumna, I know how important professors are,” says Susan. “Students want to learn from and be inspired by the best and often attend a music school because of the quality of their instructors. We created this professorship as a way to support the future of classical music, ensure outstanding instruction, and develop the potential of young artists. Making this gift during Eastman’s Centennial is also our way of celebrating the school’s place in history.”

At Eastman, Susan studied with the late Millard Taylor ’35E and performed in the Eastman Philharmonia under the direction of David Effron, the head of the school’s orchestra program from 1977 to 1998. After receiving her bachelor’s degree in violin performance at Eastman in 1978, Susan earned a master of musical arts degree from Roosevelt University’s Chicago Musical College and later a master of arts degree in Jewish Studies from Hebrew College. She has enjoyed a career in music education and is committed to volunteerism and supporting various organizations centered around music, Jewish life, higher education, and medicine.

In the fall of 2022, Susan and Aron—an author, software technology expert, and executive chair of UKG—were presented with . This honor recognizes the couple’s commitment to artistry, scholarship, leadership, community engagement, and philanthropy. In addition to their support of Eastman, the Ains have been members of the George Eastman Circle, the University’s annual leadership giving society, since 2012.

“Music and education have been so important to our family,” says Aron. “This gift celebrates our appreciation for both and, we hope, makes a difference in the training and education of the next generation of talented performers and music leaders.”

Shape the future of music
Please contact Eastman’s Advancement team to learn how you can support this fund as well as contribute to other initiatives at the school that promote music, education, artistry, innovation, and community.

— Kristine Kappel Thompson, January 2023

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