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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230609T104500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20230609T120000
DTSTAMP:20260603T221238
CREATED:20230408T224117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230408T224328Z
UID:7813-1686307500-1686312000@oregonmta.org
SUMMARY:Grant Event - Teachings of Nelita True: An Homage
DESCRIPTION:Presenting District: Central Oregon\nPresenter: Thomas Otten[expand title=”Read Presenter Bio” swaptitle=” “]Thomas Otten holds the title of Emeritus Professor\, having retired in 2018 as Piano Area Chair from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He now resides in Portland\, OR\, where he is establishing himself as a master teacher and concert artist. A California native born of German-American parents\, Dr. Otten has been hailed by the New York Times as “an extremely original player who puts a formidable technique at the service of his ideas.” He made his debut at age seventeen with the National Symphony Orchestra at the Kennedy Center\, and has since developed a global profile through performances in New York\, Washington\, Los Angeles\, St. Petersburg\, Sydney\, Munich\, Frankfurt\, and Milan\, including such venues as Carnegie Hall\, Alice Tully Hall\, Severance Hall\, the German Embassy\, and the National Press Club. He has given guest artist recitals and masterclasses at top music schools and conservatories\, such as the Rimsky-Korsakov St. Petersburg State Conservatory in Russia\, the Munich Hochschule für Musik in Germany\, as well as the Eastman School of Music\, The Juilliard School\, and Oberlin Conservatory in the U.S. \nA recipient of numerous national and international awards\, Dr. Otten has studied with artist teachers John Perry and Nelita True and worked intensively with biomechanics expert Barbara Lister-Sink. He has been on the faculties of the International Young Artists Project (Italy)\, Saarburger Serenaden International Music Festival (Germany)\, the American Institute of Musical Studies (Austria)\, and the Kent/Blossom Festival (Ohio)\, as well as concerto soloist at the Chautauqua and Brevard Summer Festivals. He has been a member of competition juries in the U.S. and abroad\, and was founder of the Kent Piano Seminar in Ohio\, as well director of the UNC Liszt Festival\, UNC Etude Festival\, and the Ginastera Centennial Celebration in North Carolina. His discography includes transcriptions of Franz Liszt and a premiere recording of etudes by African American composer Leslie Adams. He is committed to diverse music of our time\, having also premiered works by electronic music expert Frances White and jazz pianist/composer Joe Utterback. \nDr. Otten’s former students include prize-winning concert artist Andrew Tyson\, along with other professional musicians who are active throughout the country. His collaborations include the Miami and Vega String Quartets\, violinist Richard Luby\, as well as baritone Marc Callahan and soprano Louise Toppin. For more information on Dr. Otten\, please visit his website at www.otten.studio.[/expand] \nProgram Description: Nelita True\, who passed in January 2021 due to COVID\,[expand title=”Read More” swaptitle=” “]was one of the great artist teachers and clinicians of our time. Dr. Otten counts his study with her as one of his great blessings and joys; much of his pedagogical approach is due to his work with her. This session will illuminate her highly practical\, organized\, and effective approach to musicianship (tone\, voicing\, line\, rhythmic direction)\, technique\, practice\, and memorization\, along with anecdotes that underscore her warm\, nurturing approach to her students.[/expand]
URL:https://oregonmta.org/event/grant-event-teachings-of-nelita-true-an-homage-2/
LOCATION:Virtual/Online
CATEGORIES:District Grant Event,Virtual,Workshop/Seminar/Class
ORGANIZER;CN="Janet Smith":MAILTO:jstrekkie@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220506T034500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20220506T051500
DTSTAMP:20260603T221238
CREATED:20220306T180257Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220319T191853Z
UID:6768-1651808700-1651814100@oregonmta.org
SUMMARY:Grant Event - Duke Ellington\, the Pianist
DESCRIPTION:Location: Zoom\, for more information and access please contact Janet Smith.\nPresenting District: Central Oregon\nPresenter: Dr. Matt Cooper[expand title=”Read Presenter Bio” swaptitle=” “]Matt Cooper is a Professor Emeritus of Music at Eastern Oregon University\, where he was awarded the 2019 Distinguished Teaching Faculty award\, retiring after a 31-year college teaching career. He served as OMTA President from 2000 to 2002\, during which time he traveled to Khabarovsk\, Russia as part of the “Music Without Borders” exchange program\, leading to two additional invitations to perform in Khabarovsk in 2002 and 2004.\nDr. Cooper earned his Doctor of Musical Arts degree at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. He has done extensive study in the Taubman approach at the Golandsky Institute and Princeton University and has studied Tango music in Buenos Aires. A former prizewinner in the Thelonious Monk and Great American Jazz Piano competitions\, he is the author of Duke Ellington: A Study in Styles.\nDr. Cooper has adjudicated many piano festivals and competitions and has performed numerous solo recitals\, chamber recitals\, and concerto appearances throughout the Northwest. He has recorded four jazz and classical CDs and is in frequent demand throughout the Northwest as a performer\, adjudicator\, clinician\, and presenter.[/expand]\nProgram Description: Duke Ellington has been widely acknowledged as America’s greatest “jazz” composer\, but[expand title=”Read More” swaptitle=” “]from a 21st Century perspective many are now viewing his work as the equal of other composers working from European models. Ellington himself liked to use the phrase “beyond category” as the highest praise\, and as recent scholarship by David Schiff and Harvey Cohen points out\, Ellington’s music has been “ghettoized” partly due to popular mythology about his methods of composing.\nAlthough he did not attend conservatory and he purposely avoided European models in his quest to create a music that would reflect the unique perspective of African Americans\, Ellington did in fact study harmony and composition with Henry Grant\, Will Marion Cook\, and Will Vodery. His longtime collaborator from 1941 to 1967\, Billy Strayhorn\, was also an accomplished classical musician who thoroughly understood Ravel\, Stravinsky\, and Debussy. Contrary to popular belief\, Ellington was a tireless composer who left behind nine cubic meters of scores\, many in his own exquisite hand. Although a single critical edition of Ellington’s work is long overdue\, these manuscripts reside in the Smithsonian and include several fully notated solo piano pieces which would make a fine addition to Syllabus\, contemporary festivals\, or recitals. Though currently unpublished\, they are available to the public and are eminently more playable than comparable\, hybrid pieces by Astor Piazzolla.\nIn this workshop\, Dr. Cooper will share Ellington piano works such as “The Single Petal of a Rose\,” “Meditation\,” and “The Clothed Woman” as well as original transcriptions from his book\, Duke Ellington as Pianist: A Study in Styles (College Music Society\, 2013) and attempt to place Ellington in his rightful place in the wider canon of American music and music in general.[/expand]
URL:https://oregonmta.org/event/district-grant-event-duke-ellington-the-pianist/
LOCATION:Virtual/Online
CATEGORIES:District Grant Event,Virtual,Workshop/Seminar/Class
ORGANIZER;CN="Janet Smith":MAILTO:jstrekkie@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210409T104500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210409T121500
DTSTAMP:20260603T221238
CREATED:20210123T181426Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210214T224236Z
UID:5230-1617965100-1617970500@oregonmta.org
SUMMARY:Grant Event - Playing Perfectly: What It Takes to Practice and Perform Completely Without Mistakes (or Fear of Mistakes) - Yes\, It's Possible!
DESCRIPTION:Local Contact: For more information please contact Janet Smith.\nLocation: Zoom\, for access please contact Susan Todd.\nPresenting District: Central Oregon\nPresenter: Jennifer Wright [expand title=”Read Presenter Bio” swaptitle=” “]Jennifer Wright\, M.M.\, B.M.\, is a keyed-instruments performer\, composer\, educator\, graphic artist\, event producer and culture-maker. She is passionate about creating beautiful\, thought-provoking cultural realities and memorable\, multi-sensory performance experiences. Her work melds diverse artistic disciplines and expressions to create adventurous contexts that reshape the landscape of performative experience in order to engage\, inspire\, move\, and change both the giver and the receiver for the better. Jennifer performs regularly as a solo and collaborative artist and has presented numerous concerts\, master classes\, and workshops in the U.S.A.\, the U.K.\, Europe\, and Cuba. \nJennifer graduated summa cum laude from the Hartt School of Music in Hartford\, CT with a Bachelor of Music in piano performance and studied for two years at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst and Universität Stuttgart in Germany. She was awarded several Distinctions for her Masters Degree achievements in performance and musicological research at the Trinity College of Music in London\, England in the Historically Informed Piano Performance degree program. \nJennifer mischievously mixes experimental\, visceral\, and utterly listenable elements in an ever-evolving mix of her wide-ranging obsessions and curious whims\, including repurposing pianos and other instruments\, video art\, found sound\, alternative keyed instruments\, sound sculptures\, theatricality\, trash instruments\, the natural world\, movement/dance\, science\, silliness\, electronics\, fashion\, and live art-making. Much of her work focuses around her one-of-a-kind “Skeleton Piano\,” an upright piano that she stripped of its exterior\, altered mightily\, and plays from the inside out with wild extended techniques and electronic modification. \nHer compositions have been performed at the 29th and 31st Annual Festival de La Habana de Música Contemporánea in Cuba\, the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival\, The Astoria Music Festival\, Portland International Piano Festival\, Portland’s March Music Moderne festivals\, Crazy Jane Composers and Cascadia Composers concerts\, on KBOO\, XRAY and KTCB radio\, on KGW TV and Cuban National TV\, by Portland’s Resonance Ensemble\, the Free Marz String Trio\, the Delgani Quartet\, and in recitals in the U.S.\, England\, and Finland. \nMore info available at jenniferwrightpianostudio.com and skeletonpiano.com.[/expand]\nProgram Description: Have you heard a “kind” instructor say that making mistakes is normal\,[expand title=”Read More” swaptitle=” “]human\, even a valuable part of the learning process? Or that striving for musical perfection is akin to being a lifeless robot and even creatively dangerous? Perhaps you heard a “tough love” teacher remark that you’re only as good as your last performance and that if you’re not perfect\, you’re not even in the game? \nWhich perspective is the right one? Surprise: they all are – to a point! The secret is in the mix. This workshop shows how to reconcile these viewpoints into a joyous lifelong practice approach and gives you the tools and practice techniques to eliminate mistakes (and the terrible fear of mistakes) entirely from your playing. Let’s waste no time in giving this gift to ourselves and to our students! \nIn this workshop we’ll cover:\n• Why do we make mistakes?\n• What are you actually doing wrong? (Hint: it’s usually not what you think.)\n• Practice techniques: the good\, the bad\, and the useless\n• How to fix ingrained mistakes and habits\n• The power of habits and human nature: you can fight them\, or you can make them work for you…it’s your choice\n• Tapping into your innate learning instincts for powerful progress\n• Once you get it\, it’s all fun and games! \nBring your “That’s impossible” stories\, your “I’ve tried and I can’t” tales\, your burning questions\, and your overwhelming challenges with you – so we can knock them down one by one![/expand]
URL:https://oregonmta.org/event/district-grant-event-playing-perfectly-what-it-takes-to-practice-and-perform-completely-without-mistakes-or-fear-of-mistakes-yes-its-possible/
LOCATION:Virtual/Online
CATEGORIES:District Grant Event,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Janet Smith":MAILTO:jstrekkie@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201009T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20201009T120000
DTSTAMP:20260603T221238
CREATED:20200918T005653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200918T010820Z
UID:4676-1602239400-1602244800@oregonmta.org
SUMMARY:Grant Event - Online Teaching: Equipment\, Apps and Approaches to Remote Piano Lessons
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Stephen Lewis\, NCTM \nPresenting District: Central Oregon \nProgram Description: This presentation gives many practical pointers to make your remote teaching easier and more effective. \nAbout the Presenter: Dr. Stephen Lewis\, PhD\, DMA\, is a Portland-based composer\, pianist\, conductor\, and teacher whose compositions inhabit the terrain between sound as physical sensation and sound as signifier of culture. Stephen’s opera\, Noon at Dusk\, was hailed as “delectable\,” with a “constantly shifting sonic world [that] proved fascinating and effective.” Recent and upcoming performance engagements include concerts with the Oregon Symphony\, the Agnieszka Laska Dancers\, the Astoria Music Festival\, and Fear No Music’s Young Composers Project as well as a live broadcast on All-Classical Radio. Stephen has also performed throughout the United States and in Italy. Stephen holds a PhD in composition and a DMA in piano from UC-San Diego\, and a BMus from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. Stephen teaches piano\, composition\, music theory\, and conducting privately at his home and from St. Stephen’s Episcopal Parish\, where he serves as music director and organist. Stephen enjoys baking bread\, reading\, wine tasting\, and hiking with his wife. See more at his websites: www.stephenlewiscomposer.com (artistic) and www.chopinois.com (teaching). \nPlease contact Janet Smith for Zoom meeting link.
URL:https://oregonmta.org/event/grant-event-online-teaching-equipment-apps-and-approaches-to-remote-piano-lessons/
LOCATION:Virtual/Online
CATEGORIES:District Grant Event
ORGANIZER;CN="Janet Smith":MAILTO:jstrekkie@gmail.com
END:VEVENT
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