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CMA Alum Megan E. Bell, Soprano, Awarded the Edith Newfield Scholarship

Megan E. Bell (M.M. 2008), soprano, was awarded the Edith Newfield Scholarship in the amount of $4,000 at The Musicians Club of Women’s 2011 Annual Music Scholarship Auditions held on Saturday, March 12 at Roosevelt University.  

As of 2010, the club is awarding annual scholarships totaling $67,500 in women’s voice, piano, strings and winds to the winners of an annual competition. In addition to these monetary awards, the club provides performance opportunities to both its scholarship winners and to active performing members of the club in two free public concert series presented in Preston Bradley Hall in the Chicago Cultural Center and at the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago.

View more information about Ms. Bell’s engagements at http://meganbellsoprano.com/

(Submitted by Megan Bell)

Masters’ Student Jing Lin Advances to the Finals in the Lotte Lenya Vocal Competition

Masters’ Student Jing Lin advanced to the finals in the 2011 Lotte Lenya Vocal Competition. The Kurt Weill Foundation for Music made the announcement on their website, saying, “Twelve exceptionally talented young singer-actors from the United States, United Kingdom and China have been selected to compete for top prizes of $15,000, $10,000 and $7,500 in the finals of the 2011 Lotte Lenya Competition, to be held on April 16, 2011, at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. Judges for this year’s finals will be Tony Award-winning singer-actress Judy Kaye, Broadway and Encores! music director Rob Berman, and Rodgers & Hammerstein Organization president and Chairman of the Board of the American Theater Wing, Theodore S. Chapin.”

For more information, click here.

(Submitted by Myra Darlene Merritt)

Dr. Jacqueline Leclair’s ensemble, Alarm Will Sound, Performes at Carnegie’s Zankel Hall in New York City

Alarm Will Sound (www.alarmwillsound.com) performed at Carnegie’s Zankel Hall in New York City March 10, 2011, an original show entitled, “1969.”

The New York Times and Wall Street Journal published full-length feature articles about Alarm Will Sound and the show before the show.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/06/arts/music/06alarm.html?ref=allankozinn

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703580004576180580962654412.html

The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times published highly positive reviews of the event:

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/12/arts/music/1969-by-alarm-will-sound-at-carnegie-hall-music-review.html?_r=2&emc=eta1

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/culturemonster/2011/03/dispatch-from-new-york-john-lennon-and-karlheinz-stockhausen-together-at-last-.html

(Submitted by Jacqueline Leclair)

Faculty Member Lisa M. Gruenhagen to Present Two Sessions at MENC

Faculty Member Lisa M. Gruenhagen, Ph.D., Coordinator of Student Teaching and Assistant Professor of Music Education will be presenting two sessions at MENC. The sessions will take place Monday, June 27, and Tuesday, June 28, as part of MENC’s Music Education Week in Washington, DC. The titles of the upcoming sessions will be “Listening to Learn: Engaging Children in Active Music Listening Experiences,” and “Explore, Discover, Think, Create: Constructing Meaning through Creating Music.”

For more information, click here.

(Submitted by Lisa M. Gruenhagen)

Wayan Balawan and Batuan Ethnic Fusion to Visit BGSU

Superstar Balinese guitarist Wayan Balawan and his band, Batuan Ethnic Fusion, will visit BGSU from March 17-22. Balawan will guest in several classes, visit the Arts Village, conduct a guitar workshop, and perform a free concert at the Clazel Theatre on March 21 at 8 pm. Balawan has released several albums and is famous for his guitar-tapping technique. His music is a high-powered combination of jazz, gamelan (the ensemble of gongs and metallophones in Bali) and metal

Balawan grew up in the arts village of Batuan in Bali, Indonesia, performing on gamelan, the ensemble well known for its scintillating sound and tempo. As a young man, he was drawn first to the guitar and then to the style known in the 1980s as speed metal and the music of bands such as Deep Purple and Van Halen. He was later attracted to jazz, particularly the jazz-rock styles of John McLaughlin, Chick Corea and Stanley Jordan. He was invited to study at the Australian Institute of Music in Sydney in the 1990s, and honed his jazz skills during that time to become one of the leading and most virtuosic players in Australia.

When he returned to Bali in 1997, he had mastered the tapping style of guitar playing and had mixed it with jazz harmony, rock rhythms, and Balinese gamelan sensibilities to create an entirely new sound. He founded the Batuan Ethnic Fusion band and has since toured throughout Indonesia and most of the world. He soon became famous for playing two guitars at once or two necks of a 12-string guitar at once through using all of his fingers over two fingerboards.

Batuan Ethnic Fusion has released three CDs with a fourth planned for later this year. The 2008 release, See You Soon, won an award as Best Instrumental Jazz Album in Indonesia. Balawan has also released a solo CD and was three members of Trisum, a recording project featuring superstar guitarists in Indonesia. In addition, Balawan produced a CD featuring the Bali Guitar Club, an organization he founded several years ago that is now 300 members strong.

He is touring the United States for the first time in spring, 2011, bringing with him two members of Batuan Ethnic Fusion to play gamelan instruments and picking up jazz drummers and bass players at every stop. In the United States, the band will play a combination of jazz standards and Balawan’s eclectic hybrid originals that fuse gamelan, metal, and jazz into a synthesis. Balawan and his gamelan musicians Suwida and Suarsana will be joined on stage at the Clazel Theatre by CMA jazz bass student Adam Meinerding and Afro-Caribbean ensemble director, Olman Piedra. This concert will be an unforgettable and high-powered experience!

(Submitted by Eftychia Papanikolaou)

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