Thursday, June 25, 2015

Alumni Spotlight - Beverly Stern (Slitt) Silver


Most of our recent alumni interviews have been of alumni from more recent vintages, but we wanted to spotlight an alumna with a more  experience than most of us.  
Beverly Stern (Slitt) Silver got her Music Education degree from Hartt in 1970.  She studied piano and voice at Hartt from 1966 to 1970.  She is currently living in East Hartford, CT. 

After graduating, Beverly general and choral music for 26 1/2 years in Windsor, CT.  She has also taught piano and voice privately for more than 20 years.  When not teaching, Beverly has performed with a number of community theatre groups, both in musicals and drama/comedy. And, both she and her husband, Marc Silver, have been active in Simsbury Light Opera Company since 1998. 

Sunday, May 17, 2015

Hartt 2015 Alumni Award and Commencement

The Hartt School 2015 Commencement was held today and 1995 alumnus Phillip Boykin was awarded the Alumni Award.



I was honored to address the graduating class and congratulate them on behalf of the Hartt Board of Trustees.  I told the students that I was particularly pleased to be sharing a stage, once again, with Phillip Boykin.  Moshe Paranov used to take Phillip and me out for performances in area elementary school cafeterias and gymnasiums.  Uncle Moshe was a passionate believer that all students deserved a proper music education rooted in the classics.  Hence, his oft-heard concern that "Kids today don't know the difference between Beethoven and a him sandwich!" 


I have since retired from my performing career but Phillip has gone on to great international acclaim and is currently featured in the Broadway revival of On The Town.  He is a worthy recipient of the 2015 Alumni Award.

Congratulations, Phillip!  Uncle Moshe would be pleased.






Sunday, May 3, 2015

The Gress-Miles Organ Finale

Here are a few photos from last night's Organ Finale.  Organ alumni spanning 6 decades gathered for a final concert on the Gress-Miles instrument.

Picture taken for the dedication.

Just before the May 2, 2015 Finale celebration.

Friday, May 1, 2015

Julius Hartt's "Letter to a Young Musician"

Nearly 100 years later, this letter is still rings true.  Originally published in 1918 in the Hartford Times newspaper it is the fifth in a series of six articles under the title "Letter from a Musician."

The great composer, Ernest Bloch, who after 36 years in America referred to Julius Hartt (1869-1942) as a brother, stated that this letter is "by far the best writing I have read on the subject."  Mr. Bloch was said to have carried the article in his pocket for years and introduced the set of articles to his students.

Find a quiet space and some time and let the beauty of the writing wash over you and the content sink deep.


Julius S. Hartt



Dear confrere: I have no other warrant for thus addressing you than the interest in your artistic and material welfare which and right-minded musician of mature years might be assumed to feel for a younger comrade. The impulse to write you in this intimate and unconventional way came to me the other day under circumstances of which I should like to tell you in some detail. The occasion was a late afternoon musical; the place a spacious and beautiful gothic chamber rich with the evidence of generous mean and perfect taste.  The composer whose spirit and voice settled down on this twilight hour was Johannes Brahms; the music brought forward was this master’s two rarely heard and lovely sextets for strings, Opus 18 and Opus 36. The performers were Mary Mukle, artist through and through and most accomplished of women cellists; Pablo Casals, artists., musicians, virtuoso of virtuosi; David Mannes, one of the most distinguished of contemporary violinists; and three players less well known, but artists every one – Reber Johnson played the second violin, and Rebecca Clarke and Giulio O. Harnisch the violas. The audience that quietly stole into the shadows of that great room included artists known world over, as well as humbler folk.  All alike were drawn thither by the call of art for art’s sake. For the beautiful thing about all this, my friend, was the spirit of the occasion. And the spirit of the audience no less than of the performers, really was the spirit of art for art’s sake. These great souled artist performers gave themselves over to the joy of noble music for sheer love of it; and their happiness they shared with their friends. That was all. But it was no impromptu undertaking. There had been much painstaking and careful preparation. It was my privilege to be present at the final rehearsal.  And please believe me, if the rank and file of lesser performers, whether as individuals, or groups of larger or smaller dimensions, were to bring to the preparation of their public musical undertakings half the loving care and scrupulous thoroughness with which these great artists made ready for a purely private appearance before their friends, the world over would be spared a vast amount of slovenly and impossible music. I wish you could have heard Casals’ frequent though gentle insistence upon repetition after repetition of delicate and exacting passages. I wish you could have witnesses Mannes’ affection defer to “Pablo,” and Casals’ generous rejoinders to “David.”  The spirit of it all was so beautiful. So unlike the deadening and deadly professionalism that cuts the soul out of art; it was all so like the music – as truly the essence of the music as the perfume is the essence of the flower. And when the next day I sat listening in that twilight hour to music as truly gothic in spirit as was that shadowy room or any venerable cathedral (music pointing finger-like towers of aspiration toward heaven) I gave myself up not only to dreamy realization of exquisite music but to half conscious musings upon the things that men live for and that we musicians strive for.

In the presence of the slow movements of those celestial born sextets, how tawdry, how coarse, how cheap, seemed the possession of mere things, how trifling fame, money, power, position. In the scherzos how vibrantly pulsated the joy that is the normal birthright of every human being whose deathless inner life is free under God’s jewelled [sic] heaven. In the allegros what horizonless expanses of imagination; what serene and all-reconciling outlook over the great world of humanity throbbing, surging with passion and pain, love and hate, hope and despair, joy and sorrow, plenty and want, ugliness and beauty, sickness and health, childhood and old age, death and decay, time and eternity! And yet what unity; what symmetry; what masterly adjustment of means to ends; what perfection of form; what balance of heart and brain! (Albeit Brahms’ scales incline toward the intellectual.) And, because it is great and true art, how surely this music pertains to the real life of Brahms; not less surely than that all true art is an expression of the inner life of its creator – God’s life. For every creative life is a spark of the great Creator’s life. Brahms’ personal history was simple and uneventful. He traveled comparatively little and gravely avoided the public gaze. His life was one of contemplation. He lived in an atmosphere of reality – God’s reality; reality of spirit, the reality of nature. And the incidentals which most men with gross and perverted vision mistake for essentials, and worship as ancient Israel worshipped [sic] the golden calf, Brahms looked upon as incidentals; and with austere disdain refused to be beguiled by the lure of mammon. He was devoted to the ideals of beauty. But he knew that beauty is a relative term. He knew that beauty implies ugliness; and he instinctively felt that as art must mirror life and nature it therefore must disclose beauty not as a universal element but as the sublime antithesis and conqueror of ugliness. And thus it is that the music of Brahms rings true to life. And thus it was that the noble Brahms Sextets came as a message of truth and beauty to the listeners in that darkening room on the occasion of which I am speaking.

You are wondering why I am writing you all this. Young musicians often seem to think of music as a professional garment, a sort of uniform that identifies the wearer as a member of a distinctive aesthetic cult. They do not very generally seem to realize that music is a life to be lived. True artistry is a creed; it is a religion. It is not primarily as most young musicians imagine, and many older musicians seem to believe, a means of livelihood. Artistry does not consist in the ability to perform creditably a larger or smaller amount of fine music. It does not consist in reputation.  Large fees bear no necessary relationship to it. Success, as the world views success, is not its symbol. Again I say, my friend, art is a life; it is a kind of living. And it is a kind of life and a kind of living far from the popular or fashionable among music’s nominal devotees. Again I say art is a creed; it is a religion. It is a creed and a religion that like all creeds and all religions that ennoble men and uplift humanity rests deep in the inexorable and eternal principle of the cross. Whatever the complexion of your religious thoughts or mine, please do not assume that I am using the word cross in any theological sense. I mean simply that the true artist’s life must conform to the principle of the cross. I mean that the true artist’s creed begins with self denial. I mean that the artist’s salvation hinges upon self forgetfulness. I would wish that every young musician like yourself would come early to realize that control and subjugation of self, in a hundred thousand ways, is the real technic to be acquired – the technic of right living. Now at the threshold of your career I wish that you could clearly see that no artist’s art is greater than his life. I wish that this great truth might sink deep into your inner consciousness – that art is life. Believe me what you play at your instrument is not only the music of your composer, but it is yourself. Your art is not a professional garment – it is you. If your soul is little soul, if your life is a little life, then your art is a little art, and you are a little artist. If your ideals rise no higher than your own personal concerns, your own advancement, your own success, your own glory, then you are a heretic to the only real creed of artistry; and whatever devices of concealment you may cultivate, your heresy will be branded large upon the thing you call art. And all real artists and all clear visioned lovers of art will see your shame. 

I have known musicians, young and old, whose everlasting inquiry centered in money. I have heard of musicians, or would-be musicians who could never be sufficiently interested in the very thing they professed to love, to live in close communion with it an hour or two a week without promise of financial reward. Think of that, will you! And then tell me if a lunatic could imagine anything more fantastic than such cheap musical jockeys posing musicians or as artists. So you think that a spirit like that pertains to real artistry? I say no. And it is at this point that I would like to make application of the little story of the twilight musical. It is the moral to be deduced from that musical that I would like this letter to suggest.  Several of the artists who played those Brahms Sextets on that February afternoon have world-wide reputations. They command the largest fees.  They stand unchallenged as consummate artists.  Their activities are many and important.  And yet here they were with their friends quietly communing with Brahms. There were no money considerations. There was but one motive, and that motive “art for art’s sake.” That was like the music they were playing too. That was like Brahms. And that was like, and is like, world without end, all true art, and all true artists.

The moral is plain.

Julius Hartt - Dated 2 March 1918 for the Hartford Times

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Hartt Grants Emeritus Status to Three Professors - Gryc, Provost, and Lucarelli

Hartt recently announced that it was granted the status of "Professor Emeritus" to three long-time faculty members.  Stephen Gryc, Richard "Dick" Provost, and Humbert "Bert" Lucarelli have a combined 137 teaching years at Hartt and have influenced generations of Hartt alumni. 

I can't imagine to guess how many music students at Hartt have been influenced by and have benefited from these Hartt gentlemen.  I, personally, was fortunate to learn from and teach aside each of them and I congratulate them on this honor, which adds to the long list of honors and accomplishments each has earned throughout their careers.



Steve has taught composition and music theory at Hartt since 1980.  Steve's website is here.



Dick is a Hartt alumnus and has taught guitar at Hartt since 1960.  Dick's website is here.



Bert has taught oboe at Hartt since 1968.  Bert's website is here.



Saturday, March 28, 2015

5 Questions with Kim (Deluccio) Collins



Kim (DeLuccio) Collins (BM 1992) studied Flute at Hartt from 1988 to 1993.  She is currently living in Trumbull, CT.


What have you been up to since you graduated from Hartt?

So many things have happened in the last 20-plus years!  I got married to Steve Collins (BM Percussion, 1989).  On the teaching front, I taught at Hartt Community Division for about 7 years, maintained an active private teaching studio, and also did some teaching at Fairfield University, Choate Rosemary Hall, and Neighborhood Music School.  As far as performing is concerned, I never stopped after school.  I decided early on that I really enjoyed the freedom and variety of being a freelance artist, and I have been fortunate to play with so many great musicians along the way.  I have played solo recitals, chamber music, orchestral music, been featured soloist with orchestra here and there, lots of shows including some work on Broadway, and a few recordings…a really fun variety.

In 2007 we had the first addition to our family, and now have two little boys in Elementary School, so that keeps things in perspective and is a huge project in itself.

What are you involved with right now?

I am currently performing in a freelance capacity with the Vermont, Springfield, Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, and Albany Symphonies as well as in the pit for nationally touring shows that come through the state.  I am also Principal Flutist with the Waterbury Symphony.  I am teaching at home and at Southern Connecticut State University.  I’m always looking for new and interesting projects so I’m open to ideas for fun collaborations and concerts.  Sometimes I feel as if, although I really enjoy orchestral music, that I have some untapped spark for other genres that I want to explore.  I hope I can do more of that in the coming years.

I enjoy running and cooking, and being the best mom I can be to my two boys.  I’ve been known to hit local boot camps and flip some tires and push some prowlers around here and there and always enjoy a good physical challenge like an obstacle race.

What is one of your most memorable things about your time at Hartt?

I hate to repeat what others have said, but…there are so many!

Mr. Lepak with his cigar hanging out of the corner of his mouth, performing Concerto for Orchestra at the MENC conference with Arthur Winograd conducting, playing with the Emerson String Quartet, coachings with Moshe Paranov, our trips to NYC to play in Town Hall and Alice Tully hall, working in the Information Booth, Mr. Rauche stamping my papers with a dancing pig in a tutu, and especially my lessons and studio classes with John Wion.  I loved getting the chance to play the flute in so many different settings.  A huge thank you also for the life-changing moment in which Dr. Feierabend said that we shouldn’t use a Music Education degree as something to fall back on.  I recall being wracked with guilt at that statement, and feeling like a sham.  He inspired me to change my major to performance, and I know it was the right choice for me.

What did you learn during while at Hartt that you did not appreciate or recognize until after time passed and you had some time to reflect?

Friday, March 20, 2015

5 Questions with Shana Mahoney



Shana Mahoney (B.M. ‘93) studied Music Theatre at Hartt from 1989-1993.  She is currently living in New York City.


What have you been up to since you graduated from Hartt?

Right after I graduated from Hartt I got my first job at a summer-stock theatre in the Catskills doing 7 musicals over the course of 5 months.  I actually couldn't even attend my graduation ceremony from Hartt because I had already started rehearsals, and was working, which I thought was a great sign.  I was lucky enough to work non-stop performing in musicals for several years after graduation.  I performed in summer stock, regional theatre and national tours including: Forbidden Broadway, and Evita.  

While on tour with Evita, I auditioned for and booked the European tour of Cats playing Gumbie/Griddlebone.  I was lucky enough to perform in Switzerland, Italy, France and Austria.  While in Austria I auditioned and booked the European premiere company of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast in Vienna, which I performed in for a year.  After that I was also cast in the world premiere of Roman Polanski and Jim Steinman’s Dance of the Vampire, which I also recorded the original cast album for. 

After a year’s run of Dance of the Vampire, (and getting married to an Austrian), my husband Andreas and I moved back to New York after several years in Europe. I booked a job that summer as the lead singer in the Supper Club’s Andrews Sisters and Swing Dance show in Manhattan, which was a lot of fun.  After that, I booked the Broadway 1st National tour of Cabaret starring Teri Hatcher and Norbert Leo Butz.  I toured for several years with Cabaret- and I even took a leave of absence to give birth to my first daughter Sophia and returned to the tour just in time to spend a month in Tokyo, Japan with the show.  We also performed on the Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and us Cabaret-girls recorded a National commercial for Degree deodorant, which was a lot of fun!  Why they wanted to feature girls with hairy armpits for a deodorant commercial is beyond me, but I was happy for the opportunity to have a national commercial!

After landing back in New York, and having a second daughter, I tried to station myself in the city and not travel as much, doing local off-Broadway shows, and singing concerts and church jobs.  I was hired as a professional cantor at St. Barnabas Church, and did several concerts with them over the years.  I also started a voice studio, which has grown so big now that I have a long waiting list.  My vocal studio is one of my biggest joys of my career, and I enjoy it immensely.

I am also a teaching artist at the Riverdale Children's Theatre.  www.riverdaletheatre.org  RCT was just named in Backstage Magazine as "one of the 12 Great Children's Theaters Across the U.S."  It is an amazing place to work.  I am currently the music supervisor of Annie, and playing the role of Grace.  I love being able to share my love of music theatre with children.  I was also hired last year to be the music director of The Saint Barnabas Church in Bronx, NY.  www.stbarnabasbronx.org  It’s the largest Irish-Catholic parish in the country actually, and I direct 4 choirs there, as well as plan the music for Masses, weddings and funerals. 

Next year, our Saint Barnabas children s choir is invited to perform in Rome for Pope Francis in the Sistine Chapel with the Sistine Chapel Choir.  This is a huge honor for us, and I’m really looking forward to the opportunity to take the choir there for the Epiphany Mass.

I am also currently attending the Saint Cecelia Academy of Music at The Saint Joseph’s Seminary in Dunwoodie, NY pursing a Master’s Degree in Theology/Sacred Music.  http://nyliturgy.org/st-cecilia-academy-for-pastoral-musicians/

What are you involved with right now?

A few years ago, in a Manhattan restaurant, I happened to meet a platinum award-winning record producer by chance.  I convinced him to listen to a demo recording of my voice.  After several meetings and discussions, he offered me a recording contract under his label.  For a few years, we developed a concept for an album, and wrote songs together.  He helped me to develop a unique style of classical-type vocals, combined with electronic pop production.  I am happy to say that I just finished the album entitled Beyond The River under my artist name “Shalyma”. The album is available as a special “friends and family pre-release sale” before it becomes officially released in the late Spring/Summer.  I’m very proud of the work I did on the album.  I am especially proud to have some of the pieces that I composed featured on it.  I also featured the Children’s Choir of St. Barnabas on Caccini’s Ave Maria, which I wrote a children's choir part to accompany Caccini’s vocal line.  I think it’s a really unique twist to a traditional sacred classical piece, being that it is produced in a pop-style.  I am hoping that my friends and colleagues will purchase a copy of the album, and give me their feedback and support before the album is officially released and on iTunes. The album can be purchased on my website www.SHALYMA.com