1--terberger College of Fine Arts ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Arizona State University Wind Bands Wayne Bailey, Gary W. Hill, R. Andy Collinsworth, Jesse Leyva, Grant Linsell, Matthew Luttrell, Jorge Montilla, conductors Kimberly Marshall, organ University Choir Arizona State University Sinfonietta Jacob Harrison, Jana Minov and Joel Neves, conductors Steven Crichlow, violin School of Music Herberger College of Fine Arts Arizona State University Tuesday, October 6, 2005 7:30 p.m. Gammage Auditorium Program Pre-Concert, Intermission and Post-Concert Music by Wind Band Chamber Ensembles Brass Ensemble Richard Strauss Festmusik der Stadt Wien Wayne Bailey, conductor Giovanni Gabrieli Canzon duo decimi toni Kimberly Marshall, organ Percy Grainger I'm Seventeen Come Sunday University Choir Handel Consort Music for the Royal Fireworks, HWV 351 (1749) Ouverture, Bourree, La paix La Rejouissance, Menuet I and II Gary W. Hill, conductor Georg Friedrich Handel INTERMISSION Sinfonietta Eine kleine Nachtmusik (Serenade, K. 525) Movement I Jana Minov, conductor Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Henry Purcell Chacony in G minor Suite No. 1 for small orchestra Andante, Napolitana, Espanola and Balalaika Igor Stravinsky Suite No. 2 for small orchestra Marche, Valse, Polka and Galop Igor Stravinsky Joel Neves, conductor Jules Massenet Thais: Meditation Steven Crichlow, violin Jacob Harrison, conductor Die leichte Kavallerie (Light Cavalry): Overture Franz von Suppe Out of respect for the performers and those audience members around you, please turn all pagers, cell phones and watches to silent mode. Thank you. Biographies Wayne Bailey is Director of the School of Music and Professor of Music at Arizona State University. Prior to his appointment at ASU he held similar positions at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and at Texas Tech University. A trumpeter and band director, he has also served on faculties at East Tennessee State University; the University of Colorado, where he was also Assistant Dean; Hastings College; Alabama State University; and the Howell, Michigan Public Schools. Dr. Bailey holds a Bachelor of Music Education degree from Iowa State University, a Master of Music in trumpet performance from the University of Michigan and a Doctorate of Musical Arts in instrumental conducting from the University of Colorado. Dr. Bailey is the author of three widely used music education textbooks including Aural Skills for Conductors, Teaching Brass; a Resource Manual and Complete Marching Band Resource Manual as well as a number of band and brass arrangements and music education journal articles. A well-respected music administrator, Dr. Bailey has been chairman of the Committee on Ethics for the National Association of Schools of Music (NASM). He is currently a member of the National Commission on Accreditation and serves as an external evaluator of music programs for NASM. Kimberly Marshall, Associate Director for Graduate Studies, and Professor of Music, Patricia and Leonard Goldman Professor of Organ, holds a bachelor's in French from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a D.Phil. in Music from University College, Oxford. She has the Medaille d'Or in Organ Performance from the Lyon Conservatory and won a unanimous jury award of first prize in organ from the Toulouse Conservatory. She is currently a project leader for Goteborg Organ Research Center (GOArt) at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. She has previously taught at the Royal Academy of Music, London, and at Stanford University. She has been a Fulbright Senior Scholar teaching at the Sydney Conservatorium in Australia. Among her solo compact disc records are Kimberly Marshall plays the CavailleColl Organ of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse, Priory Records' Great Organs of Europe series, number 11, PRCD 261, 1989; Bach and the Italian Influence, recorded on the Fisk organ at Stanford University, Pickwick Group, PCD 965, 1991; Sienese Splendour: Italian Renaissance Organ Music on the Piffaro Organ, 1519, Pickwick Group, PCD 971, 1991; El Organ° historico espanol: Antonio de CabezOn, project sponsored by the Quinto Centenario Espana, Auvidis Valois, V 4645, 1992; Divine Euterpe: Organ Music from the 15th-20th Centuries by Women Composers, recorded on the Rosales organ at Trinity Episcopal Church, Portland, Oregon, Gamut Recordings, GAM CD 539, 1993. Three other CDs are forthcoming. Dr. Marshall has one book, Iconographical Evidence for the Late-Medieval Organ in French, Flemish and English Manuscripts, published by Garland, 1989, an edited collection of essays on female traditions of music-making entitled "Rediscovering the Muses," published by Northeastern University Press, 1993, and a forthcoming edition of music: The Origins of Keyboard Music: Surviving Repertoire before 1550, in two volumes (Vol. I: Late-Medieval Music; Vol. II: Renaissance Music); Colfax: Wayne Leupold Publishing. Dr. Marshall joined the ASU faculty in the fall of 1998. Gary W. Hill is Professor of Music and Director of Bands at Arizona State University where he conducts the Wind Symphony and the Chamber Winds, teaches graduate conducting and is founder of the Digital Conducting Laboratory. Prior to Hill's appointment at ASU, he was Director of Bands at the University of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory of Music, where he also served as Music Director for the Kansas City Youth Wind Ensemble, and conducted two professional groups: the Kansas City Symphony Brass Ensemble and newEar, a chamber ensemble devoted to contemporary music. Previously, he held a similar post at East Texas State University and was Associate Director of Bands at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Hill began his teaching career in Michigan where he served as Director of Bands for the West Bloomfield and Traverse City public schools. Hill has conducted numerous high school, university and professional ensembles throughout North America and Europe including the National Band Association, the Music Educators National Conference, the College Band Directors National Association, the International Horn Symposium, the National Flute Association and at many state conventions. Performances led by him have consistently drawn praise from composers, performing musicians and critics alike for their insightful, inspired and cohesive realizations, as well as for their imaginative programming. As a guest conductor and clinician, appearances in more than a dozen countries and most of the fifty states have included performances with myriad high school honor bands, numerous college and university wind bands and orchestras, at the Midwest International Band and Orchestra Clinic, and at World Association of Symphonic Bands and Ensembles' conferences. In recent years, he has presented numerous workshops on conducting and rehearsal technique for instrumental teachers of all levels and has served as a clinician for thousands of bands and orchestras. Hill has developed a conducting pedagogy that promotes the systematic and parallel evolution of the musical and kinesthetic perceptions and skills utilized in conducting, thereby advancing the genuine articulation of musicianship through bodily actions. This has lead to innovations in nonverbal modes of teaching from the podium and in the approach to the process of conducting. Hill is currently involved with the investigation of digital technologies applicable to the conducting classroom. Hill is a member of numerous professional organizations including the Music Educators National Conference, The Society for American Music, the Conductor's Guild, The American Bandmasters Association, and the College Band Directors National Association, for which he hosted the 50 th Anniversary National Conference (1991) as well as the joint conferences of the North Central and Southwestern Divisions in conjunction with The Society for American Music (1998), served as president of the Southwestern Division (1989-91) and as national president (2003-05). Jana Minov graduated with a degree in conducting from the Conservatory of Music in Belgrade-Serbia. During her studies, Minov attended master classes and seminars with prominent conductors such as Emil Tabakov, Uro g Lajovic and Mladen Jagust. Minov's academic honors and work experience include first prize and a special award at the International Choir Competition in Shanghai, China in July 2004. She led a series of concerts with the NIS Symphonic Orchestra as a guest conductor. She is the youngest conductor to conduct an opera (Magic Flute) in the National Opera Theater in Belgrade. She also conducted stage music for many operas, which were part of the standard repertoire in this prestigious opera house. Minov had the privilege of organizing, supervising and conducting a series of performances with some of the most talented students within the Music Academy in Belgrade, who were assembled in the school's String Chamber Orchestra. She conducted a series of concerts with the Army Symphonic Orchestra and Choir in Belgrade and worked as a conducting assistant. In addition, she directed many public concerts with the amateur choir "Belgrade Madrigalists." Minov also worked with church choirs for a two-year period during her studies and conducted several highly acclaimed concerts in Serbia and abroad. Before coming to Arizona, Minov worked as a music professor at the music high school "Mokranjac." She is currently a doctoral student in orchestral conducting at ASU, studying with Dr. Timothy Russell. She is a conductor of the ASU Sinfonietta and an assistant conductor for the ASU Orchestra Program. Joel Neves began his formal musical studies at Brigham Young University studying trumpet performance, where he was principal trumpet of the Philharmonic Orchestra, Brass Choir, Marching Band, Jazz Ensemble and brass quintets. After receiving his bachelor's degree in music, Neves pursued his true love and completed his master's degree in Orchestral Conducting at BYU, studying with conductors David Blackinton and Kory Katseanes. During his studies, Neves was principal conductor of the University and BYU String Orchestras, assistant conductor of the Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor of multiple recitals for new music. As conductor for the acclaimed BYU School of Music production of My Fair Lady, Neves was honored to be the only conductor in the West to receive the "Meritorious Achievement Award" from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Neves' recent conducting engagements include the Sanpete Community Orchestra, Pleasant Grove Symphony & Orchestra, Orchestra of Southern Utah, various community religious choirs and the world premiere of "Essay for Freedom" for 24 trumpets. He enjoyed working side-by-side with noted conducting teachers Harold Farberman, Daniel Lewis, Donald Thulean and Larry Rachleff at the Bakersfield Conducting Workshop in California and Bard Conductor's Workshop in New York. Neves' commitment to education is evident in his work as guest clinician and adjudicator at the Southern Utah Orchestra Festival, instructor of intermediate orchestral conducting at BYU, band conductor of 5 th and 6th graders at two elementary schools and private instructor of trumpet and trombone. Neves is currently pursuing a DMA in Orchestral Conducting at ASU, studying with Timothy Russell; he is also studying opera conducting with William Reber. Jacob Harrison began his musical training at the age of four with the Suzuki Violin Method in Russellville, Ark. He also studied piano privately and later started playing the trombone in the Russellville Public School band program. In 2001, he received his Bachelor of Music degree in Trombone Performance from the University of Texas at Austin. Harrison currently studies orchestral conducting with Dr. Timothy Russell and opera conducting with Dr. William Reber while pursuing a master's degree in Music Education at ASU. Jacob is a conductor of Sinfonietta and guest conductor for the ASU orchestra program. Before moving to Arizona, he lived in Chicago where he worked with groups such as the Peoria Youth Orchestra, the Lake Shore Symphony Orchestra, the University of Chicago Chamber Orchestra and the Mason Youth Orchestra in Michigan. In the summer of 2004, Jacob was one of four selected to participate in the Romanian National University of Music's conducting master class led by Maestro Dumitru Goia in Bucharest, Romania. Most recently, he was guest conductor for the Paradise Valley Community College Chamber Orchestra and conducted the Paradise Valley High School 's production of Footloose. Steven Crichlow earned his Bachelor of Music at Vanderbilt University and is currently studying with Dr. Katie McLin at ASU, where he is pursuing a Master of Music degree in Violin Performance. Previous violin instructors include Guangshu Song, Gerald Greer and Chris Teal. He also studied under the tutelage of Bretislav Novotny, first violinist of the Prague String Quartet in the Czech Republic in the summer of 2001. Crichlow appeared as a guest recitalist in St. Vincent, West Indies in December 2003 and was the winner of the Miami Palmetto Senior High Concerto Competition in 1999. He has performed in numerous solo and chamber music master classes and has attended several summer music festivals including Killington, Eastern and Heber Springs Music Festivals, as well as the Brevard Music Center and the Henry Mancini Institute. Currently a member of Crossing 32" d Street, he also performs with Musica Nova Symphony Orchestra and the ASU New Music Ensemble and recently recorded all six of Richard Arnell's Symphonies with Musica Nova Symphony Orchestra under the Naxos label. ASU Wind Band Personnel for this Evening's Performance Flute Michelle Buckley Sarah Howell Christina Jaramillo Aileen Kilgore Elany Mejia Lynch Sixto Montesinos, Jr. David Nischwitz Kehokule'alani O'Daniell Beth Ratay Monica Sauer Kathryn Schaap Katie Valadez Oboe Timothy Barnes Elisabeth Bedard Dominique Bellon Megan Burton Rachel Cullers Eileen Ermel Amy Fleishans Nikolaus Flickinger Elizabet Gerber Jonathan Gill Heather Guadagnino Kendra Hawley Rebecca Jolly Katie Mordarski Hung Quoc Nguyen Megan Radcliff Stephanie Simper Timothy Singer Emily Skidmore Ashley Williams Bassoon Michael Burns Pablo Garcia Ashley Haney Michael Kato Joseph Klvesener Julie Link Jeffrey Lyman Becky Mestek Catherine Miller Ian Newton Chelsea Upham John H. Veloz Mathew Wadsworth Kristilyn Woods Benjamin Yingst Clarinet Korbi Adams Charles Aucheta Emily Avesian Joshua Bennett Sarah Brown Alana Bundock Yen-zing Chuang Josh Gardner Michelle Hansen Julia Anne Georges Stefanie Harger Emily Howell Evan Lynch Brian Mabry Alyson Nowalk Pearl Gonzales-Owen Natalie Pascale Haley Ross Chris Taylor Susan Whitley Saxophone Blake Allen, baritone Paul Berglin, tenor Alycia Carlson, alto Miguel A. Carrasco, alto Marco Carrillo, tenor Chris Charbonneau, alto Kevin Feeker, baritone Michelle Fisco, alto Melissa Kelley, tenor Lewis Nelson, tenor French Horn Eddie Altherr Sally Bailey Sean Bayman Robbie Buss Eric Damashek Jenni Ensign Ryan Gastonguay Danielle Hansen Katherine J. Paetz Jordan Robert David Simon Elijah Smith Rick Strong DeAnna Uranga Trumpet Kyle Anderson William Anonie Eric Baker Brandon Corenman Chris Coughlin Kent Foss Amy Frost Joe Kim Ryan Lehr David Melancon Ryan Nielsen Tom Peterson Ivan Pour Daniel Thrower Tim Wootton Trombone Allison Barsnica Steve Brazier Derik Dalby Matthew Herzberg Todd Jacobs Amber Lakotish Lisa Lizanec Tim Ness Samuel Winston Price Hilario Triana Seth Vatt Euphonium Allison Barsnica Tara Davis Brandon Kiesgen Matthew Petterson Amy Swietlik Eric Wei ngartner Tuba Kevin Bock Edwin Brown Christian Carichner Steve Collins Mike Huttlin Kevin Ronan Percussion Josh Carro Matt Coleman Pat Fanning Kyle Forsthoff Anthony Garcia Joe Goglia Mike Kemp Tasia Malone Aaron Morales Marilyn Rodriguez Mat Solace Jon Sutton University Choir Gregory Gentry, conductor Soprano Jennifer Allen Holly Ashby Lauren Bass Laura Boone Angela Brower Lisa Bulloch Lauren Edwards Erica Glenn Heidi Humpherys Melissa Kuproski Sun Joo Lee Beth Lokken Jessica Loomis Katy Olsen Michele Paynter Paise Kimberly Poll Lynette Kidman Rogers Andrea Squires Wendy Stapley Rebecca Woolf Julianne Wright Alto Julie Anne Bunnell Megan Christensen Elisabeth Coleman Justine Farenga Brittney Greer Nancy ancy H eat h Michelle Hoxie Katie Mogerman Sherin Moustafa Sarah Ourwater Erin Parrott Beth Ratay Karina Scott Barbara Storch Tenor Gregory Amerind Cameron Becker Chris Chavez Timothy Glemser Joey Kluesener Michael Lottes Brandon McBain Christopher Mendez Daniel Ryan Jr. Jason Shoemaker Bass Michael Chang Brady Cullum Elvin Dioquino Ryan Downey Bryce Doyle Timothy Gades Gabriel Hall-Rodrigues Ryan Howell John Li Cody Matz Brian McQueen Seth Pate Markus Renno Daniel Ryan Robert Wright Assistant Conductor Kenneth Owen Rehearsal Accompanist Chia-I Chen Choir Manager Justine Farenga ASU Sinfonietta Violin I Melissa Lou** Jihyun Lee Melina Letham Brian Hoblit Megan Faraoni Charlene Bashore Rosemary Vallecillos Matthew Wright Violin II Bee-Lian Quah* Elizabeth Hutchins Jessica Brooksby Jaclyn Hawtin Miaka K. Golden Katherine Florence Sara Guzman David Ou Viola Lance Heisler* Maia Clark Michi Aceret Ryan Berkseth Cello Katy Olsen* Susan Jacob Aubree Legler Courtney Grimm Eunyae Ji Stefanie Schatz Bass Marisin Alzamora* Stephen Tessier Dawn Weaver Andrew Bates Flute Jessica Polin A Sixto Montesinos^ Kathryn Schaap Piccolo Michelle Buckley Oboe Megan Radcliff* Timothy Barnes Harp Noriko Ujiie Timpani Brian Connolly Percussion Brian Connolly* Matt Holm Tasia Malone ** Concertmaster Clarinet Ryan Sandell* Evan Lynch Bassoon Michael Kato A Kallie Knutson^ Horn Elijah Smith^ Eddie Altherr^ Jayme Goldstein Sean Bayman Jordan Robert Justine Ascanio Trumpet Kyle Anderson* William Anonie Trombone Derik Dalby* Amber Lakotish Bass Trombone Allison Barsnica Tuba Allison Barsnica * Principal A Co-principals Orchestra Assistants Jana Minov Daniel O'Bryant Orchestra Librarian Jacob Harrison Orchestra Managers Jana Minov Derik J. Stein