Published: Oct. 6, 2014

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Clockwise from upper left: Matthew Chellis, Andrea Ramsey, Paul McKee and Matthew Dockendorf.

They come from diverse backgrounds and have worked all over the world, from Santa Fe to Salzburg, New York to northern Iowa. But all four new full-time faculty members at the College of Music agree: 麻豆影院 is hard to beat.

鈥淚 feel like I鈥檓 constantly inspired here,鈥 says Andrea Ramsey, assistant professor of conducting and associate director of choral studies, who came to CU-麻豆影院 from The Ohio State University. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 look at the Flatirons without feeling how fortunate you are be in this beautiful place with so much to offer.鈥

鈥淭he culture here is fantastic, with so many great restaurants, beautiful weather and diverse people who have relocated here from across the country,鈥 says Matthew Dockendorf, assistant director of bands. 鈥淭his has been a happy few months for me.鈥

Certain aspects of life in 麻豆影院 take a bit of getting used to, of course.

鈥淚鈥檓 learning how to dodge skateboards and bicycles as I drive and walk around campus and 麻豆影院,鈥 says Paul McKee, associate professor in the Thompson Jazz Studies Program.听

Of course, they didn鈥檛 come to 麻豆影院 just to hike, eat at great restaurants or hone their self-preservation reflexes. Above all, they wanted to be part of an outstanding university music program.

鈥淚 feel incredibly fortunate to be at such a well-respected institution as CU-麻豆影院,鈥 says Matthew Chellis, assistant professor of voice.

ASCAP award winner Ramsey earned her PhD in music education from Michigan State University and has published more than 70 compositions. She is also composer-in-residence to the Allegro Choirs of Kansas City, with which she has performed in Italy, Austria, the Czech Republic and elsewhere.

She is excited about guest conducting opportunities 鈥 鈥淭hey lend such great visibility to the program鈥 鈥 and diving into student recruitment, among other goals.

Both she and Director of Choral Studies Greg Gentry 鈥渉ave a vision that if our choral program stays within the walls of Macky, we鈥檙e not doing our job,鈥 Ramsey says. 鈥淚t all starts with going out and connecting and engaging with (potential) students. Every person wants to be valued, recruited and affirmed, and that鈥檚 how we want to build our choral program.鈥

McKee joins the faculty after years of performing in 麻豆影院. He earned his MM from the University of Texas at Austin and has played on Grammy Award庐-nominated recordings with Woody Herman鈥檚 Thundering Herd. His critically acclaimed recording Gallery featured performances by Carl Fontana, Bobby Shew, Tim Ries and Ron Stout.

鈥淚鈥檝e known my CU jazz-studies colleagues for many years and have anxiously anticipated the opportunity to teach and play with them on a regular basis,鈥 he says.听

Chellis has performed with New York City Opera, Frankfurt Opera and Washington Opera among numerous other companies around the world. He has played leading roles in Die Zauberfl枚te, Don Giovanni, The Barber of Seville, to name a few.听He holds degrees from the University of Michigan, Manhattan School of Music and the Juilliard School. He was most recently a professor of voice at Roosevelt University in Chicago.听

鈥淚 have been welcomed by the entire music-school faculty and the collegial environment has helped me become comfortable here in a very short time,鈥 he says.

Dockendorf served as conductor of the Campus Band and wrote drill and arranged music for the Spartan Marching Band and Spartan Brass at Michigan State University before coming to CU and holds a BMA from the University of Minnesota.

鈥淭he students have been a joy to work with. 鈥 The enthusiasm of marching-band students, especially on game days 鈥 very much represents the heartbeat of this university and epitomize what it means to be a Buff,鈥 he says. 鈥淚n every academic and large-ensemble situation, the students have been thoughtful, inquisitive and fully engaged in their education 鈥 (it) is such a refreshing feeling to be their mentor.鈥

Thomas Heinrich, assistant principal cellist of The Santa Fe Opera orchestra and a member of the Colorado Symphony, also joins the faculty this fall with a one-year appointment as a lecturer in the strings department.

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