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How is Sarah Lawrence? Wesleyean? (2 on the top of my list right now)

Thanks for compiling this list.

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Do you also have to learn other subject at conservatory, such as English, Maths, History, etc.? Wouldn't that be a lot and very difficult to combine?

What do you all have to learn at conservatory (weekly private lessons, theory, chamber music, and?)


Kawai ES-110

"Music is enough for a lifetime, but a lifetime is never enough for music."
-Sergei Rachmaninoff.
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Quote
Originally posted by lol_nl:
Do you also have to learn other subject at conservatory, such as English, Maths, History, etc.? Wouldn't that be a lot and very difficult to combine?
University of Michigan requires (for a piano performance major):

1 semester of College Writing (4 credits)
1 semester of Argumentative Writing (3-4 credits)
2 semesters of French, German, or Italian (8 credits)
At least 15 credits of other non-music courses


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Most conservatories are making the requirements include what Sam said (more or less). Depends where you go really. Usually if you go to a school associated with a university you'll have to do courses that don't necessarily pertain to music.

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If the school meets state and national accredation for colleges and universities, then the academic course work is the same as for any other undergraduate degree. You will have to take credits in Math, English language, Sciences, Humanities, P.E, Liberal Arts, etc.
I went to a college and conservatory of music for my under grad degree, and had to take all of the above in addition to the core music program for music ed/piano performance, and that was back in 1982.


G.Fiore "aka-Curry". Tuner-Technician serving the central NJ, S.E. PA area. b214cm@aol.com Concert tuning, Regulation-voicing specialist.
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It really varies from school to school. The best way to get a feel for what courses are required (both in music and general education courses) is to go to the conservatory or university website and search for the coursework for your particular instrument and degree path. A Bachelor of Music is very different from a Bachelor of Arts, for example.

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Quote
Originally posted by Prophetic:
How is Sarah Lawrence? Wesleyean? (2 on the top of my list right now)

Thanks for compiling this list.
I applied and got into Cleveland, Indiana, Oberlin, Lawrence, Northern, and Wesleyan, and had about 1-2 teachers from each school to have a lesson with, and found by far my favorite at Illinois Wesleyan.

I am currently studying there now with Lawrence Campbell.

He is truly remarkable... as amazing of a teacher as a pianist! I see internationally renowned pianists come here and perform all the time, and I have not seen one concert as impressive or musical as his was last year. If you want to know more, e-mail me sranney@iwu.edu or kingsha@yahoo.com

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how about the Benjamin T. Rome School of music? One of their professors, Marilyn Neeley was a Cliburn and Geneva medalist.....I will be visiting there tomorrow

http://music.cua.edu/

Neeley:

Quote
Marilyn Neeley (B.M., M.A., University of Southern California), professor of piano and faculty adviser in chamber music and vocal accompanying. Prize winner in the Van Cliburn, Leventritt, Michaels, and Geneva International Competitions with solo appearances with over one hundred symphony orchestras, including the Chicago Symphony, the Boston Symphony, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Recipient of the Outstanding Alumna of the School of Music and Distinguished Alumna of the University awards from the University of Southern California. Recent Convention Artist for the Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Georgia, Oregon, and Alabama State Music Teachers Associations. Recent lectures for Cleveland, Savannah, West Virginia, California, and Philadelphia Music Teachers Associations, Georgia Music Educators, and The Juilliard School. Recorded the complete Beethoven violin and piano sonatas with Robert Gerle and received an Emmy award for their videotape of these for Public Television. Released a compact disc of solo piano music of Brahms, Mozart, Debussy, and Liszt. Teaches on the summer faculty of Brevard Music Center in North Carolina.
And their Assistant Piano Professor

Quote
Ivo Kaltchev (D.M.A. Rutgers University; M.M. Yale University; B.M., Sofia State Academy of Music; additional study at F. Liszt Hochschule für Musik, Weimar, Germany), assistant professor of piano. Adviser for the M.M. in Piano Performance degree program. Faculty member of the World Piano Pedagogy Conference. Visiting piano professor, China Conservatory of Music, Beijing, China. Bösendorfer artist. Prizewinner of international piano competitions in Italy, United States, and Bulgaria. Critically acclaimed recital and solo concerto appearances in leading musical centers throughout the world, including Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, Kennedy Center, Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory Hall, Beijing China Conservatory of Music, St. Petersburg State Philharmonic Hall, Warsaw National Philharmonic Hall, Tel Aviv Museum Recanati Auditorium, Mendelssohn Hochschule für Musik (Germany), Teatro di Verdi (Italy), Bulgaria Great Hall, Cooper Union Great Hall, and Richardson Auditorium of Princeton University. Performances at the Sofia Music Weeks International Festival, Toledo International Music Festival (Spain), First Mozart International Music Festival (Frankfurt, Germany), French Music Festival at Lincoln Center, and Rutgers SummerFest, and others. Has been a featured artist at New York’s WNYC and WQXR radio stations, Radio Free Europe, Radio Moscow, Bulgarian National TV and Radio, among many others. Has collaborated as a chamber musician with pianist Ilana Vered, tenor Frederick Urrey, Essex Quartet, and members of the New York Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony, the National Symphony Orchestra, and Royal Concertgebouw. Recording artist for the Bulgarian label GEGA NEW. Discography includes an all-Charles Griffes compact disc (hailed by the French magazine Diapason as “the most accomplished interpretation known until now”) and a compact disc with the world premiere of piano works by Florent Schmitt, in addition to other recordings for Yamaha Disklavier, MSF Records, and World Music Marimba labels. Recipient of pedagogy awards for teaching excellence from the Piano Teachers Society of America and the Princeton Steinway Society. Active as an adjudicator and has presented lectures, workshops, and master classes in Europe, China, Virgin Islands, and the United States. Has served on the faculties of Westminster Choir College, Sofia State Academy of Music, and Sofia State University (Bulgaria).

anyone know anything about the school?


Shigeru Kawai SK7
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I taught at Wichita State and know several of the
instrumental faculty there. It is a fine department, but I would not call it prestigious. Julie Bees teaches piano there, a merititious pianist.


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Notre Dame at http://www.nd.edu/~music/


"The creative mind plays with the object it loves." -- Carl Jung

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Westminster Choir College. http://www.rider.edu/westminster

It's got an accredited piano department. I don't know how it stacks up next to the other schools mentioned, but I think it has a decent reputation.

Pianojerome, great points! Some of your points are reasons that I am studying where I am.


"It's easy to play any instrument: you just have to touch the right key at the right time and the instrument will play by itself."
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I am so surprised that the very best school is not part of any of your lists. The one that should have been the first Berklee College of Music. The very Best in the whole world


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Just a quick note to correct the poster who said that 21 was the absolute cutoff age for Curtis applicants - that's not quite correct, as we do accept vocal students up to age 26, opera students and composers up to age 28, and several other instruments like organ, harp, viola, etc. at a slightly higher age bracket (age 23). Also, master degrees are offered in the opera department. Please refer to our catalogue for complete admission details, available as a PDF download from our site at <a href="http://www.curtis.edu">www.curtis.edu</a>.
If anyone has any Curtis-related questions, please feel free to either post them here in the forum or email me directly. I'm the Director of Student Recitals and Instrumental Accompaniment here at Curtis. Looking forward to making many of your acquaintances here on the forum!
All the best,
Hugh Sung

<a href="http://hughsung.com"> [Linked Image]</a>

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How old were you when Madame S. started torturing you there? Nine? laugh

koji


"I'm a concert pianist--that's a pretentious way of saying I'm unemployed at the moment."--Oscar Levant

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Originally posted by computerpro3:
how about the Benjamin T. Rome School of music? One of their professors, Marilyn Neeley was a Cliburn and Geneva medalist.....I will be visiting there tomorrow

http://music.cua.edu/

Neeley:

Quote
Marilyn Neeley (B.M., M.A., University of Southern California), professor of piano and faculty adviser in chamber music and vocal accompanying. Prize winner in the Van Cliburn, Leventritt, Michaels, and Geneva International Competitions with solo appearances with over one hundred symphony orchestras, including the Chicago Symphony, the Boston Symphony, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Recipient of the Outstanding Alumna of the School of Music and Distinguished Alumna of the University awards from the University of Southern California. Recent Convention Artist for the Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Georgia, Oregon, and Alabama State Music Teachers Associations. Recent lectures for Cleveland, Savannah, West Virginia, California, and Philadelphia Music Teachers Associations, Georgia Music Educators, and The Juilliard School. Recorded the complete Beethoven violin and piano sonatas with Robert Gerle and received an Emmy award for their videotape of these for Public Television. Released a compact disc of solo piano music of Brahms, Mozart, Debussy, and Liszt. Teaches on the summer faculty of Brevard Music Center in North Carolina.
And their Assistant Piano Professor

Quote
Ivo Kaltchev (D.M.A. Rutgers University; M.M. Yale University; B.M., Sofia State Academy of Music; additional study at F. Liszt Hochschule für Musik, Weimar, Germany), assistant professor of piano. Adviser for the M.M. in Piano Performance degree program. Faculty member of the World Piano Pedagogy Conference. Visiting piano professor, China Conservatory of Music, Beijing, China. Bösendorfer artist. Prizewinner of international piano competitions in Italy, United States, and Bulgaria. Critically acclaimed recital and solo concerto appearances in leading musical centers throughout the world, including Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, Kennedy Center, Moscow Tchaikovsky Conservatory Hall, Beijing China Conservatory of Music, St. Petersburg State Philharmonic Hall, Warsaw National Philharmonic Hall, Tel Aviv Museum Recanati Auditorium, Mendelssohn Hochschule für Musik (Germany), Teatro di Verdi (Italy), Bulgaria Great Hall, Cooper Union Great Hall, and Richardson Auditorium of Princeton University. Performances at the Sofia Music Weeks International Festival, Toledo International Music Festival (Spain), First Mozart International Music Festival (Frankfurt, Germany), French Music Festival at Lincoln Center, and Rutgers SummerFest, and others. Has been a featured artist at New York’s WNYC and WQXR radio stations, Radio Free Europe, Radio Moscow, Bulgarian National TV and Radio, among many others. Has collaborated as a chamber musician with pianist Ilana Vered, tenor Frederick Urrey, Essex Quartet, and members of the New York Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony, the National Symphony Orchestra, and Royal Concertgebouw. Recording artist for the Bulgarian label GEGA NEW. Discography includes an all-Charles Griffes compact disc (hailed by the French magazine Diapason as “the most accomplished interpretation known until now”) and a compact disc with the world premiere of piano works by Florent Schmitt, in addition to other recordings for Yamaha Disklavier, MSF Records, and World Music Marimba labels. Recipient of pedagogy awards for teaching excellence from the Piano Teachers Society of America and the Princeton Steinway Society. Active as an adjudicator and has presented lectures, workshops, and master classes in Europe, China, Virgin Islands, and the United States. Has served on the faculties of Westminster Choir College, Sofia State Academy of Music, and Sofia State University (Bulgaria).

anyone know anything about the school?
Kalchev is good friends with my professor. I don't know much about him, but hear that he's a little odd...he's also apparently very close to his doctoral professor at yale, Boris Berman. So that connection is very powerful.

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How does Chicago College of the Performing arts rank?????????? the CCPA

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Originally posted by JOEJAZZ:
I am so surprised that the very best school is not part of any of your lists. The one that should have been the first Berklee College of Music. The very Best in the whole world
Right on Joejazz. I'm a graduate from 1976 with a degree in composition. Berklee is indeed a fine school, and not limited to jazz alone. As part of my degree program, my graduation portfolio contained many chorales, madrigals, motets, fugues, a piano sonata, a full orchestral piece and numerous other classical works in addition to all of my small, mid and large ensemble jazz creations.

Best regards,
Roger


Music is the wine that fills the cup of silence.
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what are the most inspiring professors in the schools like Yale, Indiana, Eastman or Peabody?
What are you guys opinions?


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Boris Berman at Yale... Menahem Pressler at Indiana... Nelita True at Eastman... Leon Fleisher at Peabody... no?

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IC. THx. BUt I always think that people go to Yale because of Professor Claude Frank~ I like Pressler too. But I have also heard of Andre Watts teaching at Indiana...


CSY
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