The support they receive from local music lovers helps them record albums, find their voice鈥攅ven achieve their dream of bringing a new kind of musical study to their home country. But above all, scholarships and other support from College of Music donors help our students do what many of them came many miles to do: study music in 麻豆影院.
On Monday, Oct. 5, that important role and the accomplishments of more than 350 College of Music students were recognized at the annual Scholarship Celebration and Dinner. Seated alongside donors, students enjoyed dinner and conversation in the Glenn Miller Ballroom at the University Memorial Center, getting to know the men and women who helped make their education possible.听
In front of a capacity crowd of 475 guests, Dean Robert Shay, undergraduate student Charles Douthit, graduate student Michael Hoffman, Adopt-a-Student co-founders Bob Charles and Barbara Brenton, and Associate Professor of Flute Christina Jennings gave brief speeches about the impact of scholarships; the Altius Quartet and the Opera Theater Singers also performed.
Donor Marion Thurnauer鈥檚 parents, Hans and Dolores Thurnauer, established the NORIS Graduate Student Awards in Music. She attended the dinner to represent her parents鈥 fund and the scholarship in her father鈥檚 name, which is supported by the SeiSolo Foundation. Thurnauer says the evening is just the beginning of a longer relationship with the students. 鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to see how they progress. We attend their recitals and other performances throughout their time here,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to us to support them, but it鈥檚 also important for 麻豆影院 to have these arts resources.听
鈥淐U adds a vibrant element to the arts, and our local organizations have access to wonderful students and faculty to perform with their groups.鈥 Thurnauer and her husband, Alexander Trifunac,听also support the Tak谩cs Society and the Adopt-a-Student program.
The feeling of mutual gratitude threaded throughout the evening is not one these students, donors or faculty take for granted. Scholarships help bring the best student musicians to 麻豆影院-area audiences, and they give those students the ability to focus full time on becoming better performers.
鈥淚t鈥檚 helping cover my bills so I don鈥檛 have to get an extra job,鈥 says DMA piano student Maria Kurchevskaya, who received the Adopt-a-Student scholarship from Thurnauer and Trifunac. 鈥淚鈥檓 so grateful for that. I can get by with just my TA duties.鈥 Kurchevskaya, who鈥檚 from Russia originally, says since arriving in America she鈥檚 been lucky to know several generous people like Thurnauer. While studying in Houston, she says she became almost a daughter to her host family, who introduced her to the family she鈥檚 currently staying with in Longmont.
Similarly, junior Jessica Beal credits her award, the Katherine Ann Suber Whiton Memorial Scholarship in Double Bass, with helping her keep up with a double major. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I came here, because I could study double bass and mechanical engineering,鈥 says Beal. 鈥淭he studio and Dr. [Paul] Erhard are very supportive of that, and because of the help paying for fees, especially as an out-of-state student, I鈥檓 able to balance two demanding majors.鈥
For Beal, her music studies are complementary to her engineering studies. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 learn presentation skills any other way,鈥 she says. 鈥淪elf-discipline, time-management skills, professionalism, how to interact with people. That鈥檚 what you learn beyond the music.鈥 Beal hopes to do work with prosthetics for musicians who play bowed instruments.
The cross-disciplinary nature of music is also a reality for sophomore vocal performance major Rebecca Ramsey. She could see herself someday combining vocal pedagogy and speech pathology. 鈥淸Music Advisory Board Co-Chair] Becky Roser recommended I get in touch with the speech department to pursue that,鈥 says Ramsey. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really interesting to me to have that kind of medical background and then to practice what I鈥檓 learning when I sing, or work with other singers.鈥 Ramsey received the Adopt-a-Student scholarship from Barbara Brenton.
鈥淲hen I was here for my audition, I fell in love with the beautiful campus and the faculty. They care about the students who come here, and are really invested in us. I couldn鈥檛 be here if it weren鈥檛 for my scholarship,鈥 says Ramsey.
NORIS Graduate Student Award winner Kellen Toohey will focus this year on releasing his first CD. The clarinet performance and pedagogy DMA student started off as a local fan of the College of Music, attending recitals as a child while studying the clarinet in 麻豆影院.
鈥淚鈥檓 so thankful for my scholarship because it鈥檚 allowing me to finish my degree while working on recording,鈥 says Toohey. 鈥淚 just commissioned some pieces from a couple of alumni, and hope to release a CD around the time I graduate in the spring.鈥
In the case of Cecelia Kao, her award, the Hans Thurnauer Scholarship, is helping her continue an important mission. From Taiwan originally, Kao was the first person in her country to graduate with a master鈥檚 degree in collaborative piano. From there, she came to the United States to be a part of more trailblazing collaborative piano programs鈥攍ike the one in 麻豆影院.
鈥淚 did my second master鈥檚 with Anne Epperson at the University of Texas at Austin. She started the collaborative piano program at CU-麻豆影院,鈥 Kao explains. 鈥淭hen, after I completed that degree, I came here for my DMA to study with Margaret McDonald, who was a student of Anne鈥檚 as well.
鈥淚鈥檝e been so lucky to work with these pioneers. My dream is to have my own collaborative piano program, since so many schools still don鈥檛 have one. If there鈥檚 a chance to go back to Taiwan and teach students there, I would be thrilled to do that.鈥
These, and countless other opportunities created by the generosity of College of Music donors, were the cause for celebration at the scholarship dinner. In addressing attendees, Dean Shay said donors make it possible for the college to 鈥渓everage the excellent and transformative education our faculty provide.鈥 Private supporters donated more than $900,000 this year.