Category Archives: student news

BGSU Trumpets chosen as finalists in ITG competitions

Marcus Flores,  Graduate Fellow in Trumpet,  has been chosen as a Finalist for the 2015 International Trumpet Guild Solo Competition.  He will perform on Friday, May 29, at the ITG Conference in Columbus, Ohio.

Tom Darlington,  Senior Trumpet Performance major,  has been chosen as a Finalist for the 2015 International Trumpet Guild Orchestral Excerpts Competition.  He will perform on Thursday, May 28, at the ITG Conference in Columbus, Ohio.

Top art song duos crowned at BGSU’s Conrad competition

Art Song Winners

The Sentinel Tribune writes –

Just as it takes two to tango, it takes two to perform an art song.

The Dr. Marjorie Conrad Art Song Competition at Bowling Green State University honors not just the singer out front, but the pianist who provides the instrumental support.

On Saturday College of Music crowned the 16th set of winning musical teams.

The winners in the undergraduate division were soprano Autum Cochran-Jordan and pianist Qincheng Zeng. In the graduate division the winners were soprano Desiree Johnson and pianist Alphonsus Kiu.

Both sopranos study with Myra Merritt, and both said the chance to study with Merritt was what brought them to BGSU.

Zeng studies with Laura Melton and Kiu, who plans to specialize in collaborating with vocalists in his doctoral program, studies with Robert Satterlee.

Both duos had an international flavor Johnson and Cochran-Jordan are both from Ohio and Zeng is from Chion and Kiu from Malaysia.

They were elected in the finals Saturday night. The first round was held earlier in the day with 17 undergraduates duos and nine graduate duos participating.

That field was winnowed to six undergraduate duos and five graduate duos.

Also honored in the undergraduate division were: second place, soprano Rebekah Wehrly and pianist Peng Zhang, and third place, baritone Daniel Baumgartner and pianist Amy Faber.

Other honorees in the graduate division were: soprano Jennifer Cresswell and pianist Chia-Jung Lin, and third place, soprano Elizabeth Hood and pianist Kiu.

The winning duos share the cash prizes: $1,500 for first, $1,000 for second, and $750 for third.

The singers must perform songs from a variety of periods including one by a living composer and at least one each in  English, French, German and Italian.

This was the first competition since the death of its founder last October at the age of 92.

Conrad was remembered with a reserved seat and floral arrangement in the center front row of the Bryan Recital Hall.

Christopher School, the voice faculty member who coordinates the competition, said Conrad would always attend the event.

Until last few years she would come to both the first and final rounds.

The winners of the competition will perform March 3 at 7:30 p.m. in the Manor House in the Wildwood Preserve Metropark in Toledo.

Class of 2014 Success Stories: When Reality Strikes

Kimberly Lewis

Music major overcomes setbacks to achieve high goals

By Liz Gladieux

 

Her lifelong dreams revolved around music. She sat first chair flute in the top band at Ohio’s Stow-Monroe Falls High School and she was accepted into BGSU’s nationally recognized College of Music to study music education. Kimberly Lewis thought she was right on track to achieve her goals.

“All I ever wanted to do with my life was to be a musician and help others through music,” said Lewis. “From the time I can remember, music was a main focus in my life. I couldn’t imagine myself having a profession that did not involve music.”

During her freshman year at BGSU, reality hit Lewis hard. “I wasn’t seated in the top band, Wind Symphony. I wasn’t seated in Concert Band, the second tier band,” said Lewis.  “I was seated in University band, a non-audition based band. I was the lowest ranked flute major at BGSU!”

This placement was a huge blow to Lewis and it made her question where she was headed and what she should do. “This placement was a real reality check for me,” she said.

Lewis looked inward and realized she was suffering from performance anxiety and self-doubt. “I realized I would have to work hard to get better in order to do what I wanted.”

She decided to find out more about performance anxiety and how to conquer it. As part of her Honors program, she worked with Dr. Conor Nelson, assistant professor of flute, and Dr. Kenneth Thompson, chair of music education, to research the subject. She also attended a summer festival and workshop focused on performance anxiety and carried out extensive research.

“This project made me realize I wasn’t alone and that I was in control.  It was up to me to change my reactions to the anxiety,” she said.

The change did not happen overnight. “It wasn’t until I made the finals of the BGSU Concerto Competition during my junior year that I began believing in myself. I didn’t think I was good enough, but I kept trying. No one was more surprised than me when I made the finals! It was in my junior year that I really began enjoying the experience of performaing,” said Lewis.

Overcoming performance anxiety was just the first step for Lewis. During one of her flute lessons with Nelson, he asked if she had considered being a performance major. Initially surprised at the suggestion, it propelled Lewis into an even more focused drive for success in music. “I realized that the music world is big and full of many different ways to share music.”

Three years later, Lewis has achieved her goals. She will end her BGSU career as second chair flute in the Wind Symphony and will be graduating Dec. 19 with a double major in music education and music performance.

Lewis gives credit for much of her success to Nelson. “He saw things in me I didn’t see or believe I had. I didn’t have enough confidence and he helped to instill that in me. I don’t know if I could have done it without Dr. Nelson.”

Nelson has nothing but praise for Lewis. “Majoring in both music education and performance is not for the weak of heart. It is a track that only someone with her exquisite time-management skills, talent and broad interests could possibly manage. We are so proud of her. Kim matured exponentially as a musician and flutist during her time at BGSU.

“Musically, her developments were of epic proportion; in many respects, I have never seen anyone improve so quickly. She now plays with a sound that belies her years and with an excitement for music that is apparent to all. In tandem with her somewhat shocking musical developments, she also grew as a person, overcoming any obstacle in her way,” noted Dr. Nelson.  “Kim is a true star. I feel that she could do anything she puts her mind to and I know that she will make the CMA proud.”

Other faculty with whom she worked also noticed Lewis’ abilities. “Kim came to BGSU with a great deal of talent, but with limited experience. She is a perfect example of what a student can achieve if they apply themselves to focused worked and diligent study,” said Thompson. “She performed in our third tier ensembles as a freshman, and in four short years advanced to the very top of our undergraduate class, performing in top level ensembles and being recognized as a finalist in our concerto competition. She is an excellent young musician and teacher.”

Lewis will pursue her master’s degree in music and then see what happens next.

“I would like to teach flute on a collegiate level, but if it doesn’t happen, that’s okay,” mused Lewis. “It doesn’t matter what level I teach. What matters is that I will be teaching and helping others to have a great musical experience and sharing my music with as many people as possible.  There are so many paths and options ahead of me.”

DMA pianist Michiko Saiki wins awards with her film, “a…i…u…e…o….”

Second-year DMA pianist Michiko Saiki is the winner of several awards with her film, “a…i…u…e…o….” In September the work was competitively selected for viewing at “The Twelfth And The Last Experimental International Film Festival” in Australia. Most recently it was one of 19 out of 263 entries chosen for the “Without Words Festival” in France. Ms. Saiki’s work was created to remind people of the tragic aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake in her native country Japan. Ms. Saiki has studied with Drs. Tom Rosenkranz and Laura Melton.

Doctoral Student, Jeff Manchur, to present paper in London

Jeff Manchur

Fourth-year DMA pianist Jeff Manchur has been invited to present a paper at the Institute of Musical Research in London, England on November 19th. The event, titled “Re-thinking Music Analysis and Performance”, is jointly hosted by the music research centers at the University of Oxford and University of London. His paper, titled “Ervin Nyiregyhazi and Romantic Piano Performance Traditions: Challenging Objectivity in Contemporary Performance”, is one of only eight chosen to be delivered at the event, with other presenters from the United Kingdom, Sweden, Finland and Israel. Jeff studies with Associate Professor of Piano, Thomas Rosenkranz.

BGSU Flute Studio Sweeps the Ohio MTNA Competition

This past weekend, October 24-26, the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) held their Ohio competition in Columbus.  BGSU students of Dr. Conor Nelson won prizes in both age categories for woodwinds, as well as second and third place in the “Senior Performance” category:

Young Artist Performance Competition (Woodwinds)

Octavian Moldovean (MM16), winner

Senior Performance Competition (Woodwinds)

Elizabeth Ritter (BM 2018), winner
Francesca Leo (BM 2018), alternate
Samantha Tartamella (BM 2018), honorable mention