Before the 1962 groundbreaking for the Fuller Center, and before Hartt moved from its modest home on Broad Street to the University of Hartford campus in 1963, a great deal of planning was done. I recently came across this brochure published in 1957, which was the year the three founding members of the University of Hartford came together.
As you can see, the eventual (and current) design of the Fuller Center is actually quite different from the conceptual layout/design even though the main components remained - the large building with the classrooms, the large theater (now, Millard Auditorium), and the small theater (now, Berkman Auditorium).
Enjoy! If anyone has other photos, posters, etc. from this exciting period in Hartt's history, we would love to see them. Please feel free to contact me at menapace@hartford.edu if you have anything you wish to share.
Friday, August 9, 2013
Saturday, July 20, 2013
5 Questions with Lauren Bernofsky
Lauren Bernofsky (Bachelor of Music, 1990), studied Violin
Performance and Composition at Hartt from 1985 to 1990. She is currently living
in Bloomington, IN.
What have you been up
to since you graduated from Hartt?
I’ve had the good fortune to be able to do what I love,
which is teaching (violin and music theory), playing my violin, and, most
importantly to me, composing. After Hartt, I went on to do a master’s in
composition at New England Conservatory and then a doctorate in composition at
Boston University (thirteen straight years of college – whew!) I’ve taught
violin privately and through several school systems in the Boston area, and
music theory at The Cambridge School of Weston, Boston University, and the
Peabody Institute of Music. But I get the most joy from my life as a composer –
I’ve written for ballet, film, chamber groups, chorus, orchestra, you name it….
My most recent larger work is a children’s opera called
“Mooch the Magnificent,” on a libretto by Scott Russell Sanders. The opera had
an extensive run (34 performances!) with Roundabout Opera for Kids, and it was
recently published by Theodore Presser. I’ve had a bunch of pieces published,
actually – about thirty now. My publishers, besides Presser, are Alfred, FJH, Balquhidder,
Fatrock Ink, Boosey & Hawkes, and Hal Leonard. About half of these
publications are pedagogical works (so, works that would be played by, say, a
school orchestra), and the other half are professional concert works (brass
quintet, string quartet, orchestra, and assorted mixed ensembles.)
I should also mention another big part of my life, which is
my family. My husband is Christoph Irmscher, a writer and English professor at
Indiana University, and we have two kids, Nicholas (13) and Julia (8). And,
yes, my kids DO play stringed instruments!
What are you involved
with right now?
I’m currently getting a bunch of pieces ready for Theodore
Presser – they recently accepted a string quartet, a piece for trumpet and
piano, one for flute and piano, a work for soprano and string orchestra, one
for string orchestra alone, and one for full orchestra (which they’d like to
have in both full orchestra and chamber orchestra versions.) This is keeping me
fairly busy right now! I recently sent off the full orchestra version of my Three Portraits of a Witch, so the
biggest one is out of the way (that’s what I’m telling myself, because it’s
frankly quite a slog working through all these scores and parts, trying to make
them as player- and conductor-friendly as possible.) I’d rather be writing new
pieces, but as long as I bothered writing these other ones in the first place, I
may as well put in the time for getting them “out there.”
I’m also preparing for a position I’ve been recently
appointed to, and that is Music Director of the Musical Arts Youth Organization
(MAYO) in Bloomington, IN. I’m looking forward to hearing auditions in early
fall and then choosing some exciting repertoire for the young players to
perform. (And don’t expect me to stick to what was written before the year
2000!) I am pretty excited about this new prospect, this new opportunity to
bring truly engaging and, well, fun
music to the orchestra members. As their conductor, I’m the one who has to take
the heat for either boring or too-difficult or otherwise annoying repertoire,
so I take this challenge VERY seriously!
What is one of your
most memorable things about your time at Hartt?
I had a lot of important formative experiences while at
Hartt, but what comes to mind right now happens to be the words of a bassoon
teacher, Frank Morelli. I heard him perform in Musicianship class one day, and
he said that (and I paraphrase here) he listens to good singers as a model for
musicality. Simple, but so very important to good music-making. During my years
of working with players of all instrument groups (that is, not just the strings
I’m so accustomed to), and by “working” I include playing with as well as
coaching others playing my music, I have come to focus closely on the real
essence of the music, how to best bring out that music, in a way that
transcends the technical predispositions of any instrument. Wind players have
the limitation of needing to breathe, but we have to find ways of incorporating
breaths in a way that doesn’t interfere with the musical line. And strings have
the limitation of the bow – I’m closest to understanding (or at least being
able to point out) this problem, being a string player myself. It’s very difficult
to transcend the bow to play in a way that only supports the music and in fact
“overcomes” the difficulties of up-bows and down-bows and the relative lengths
of each (which result in the volume of a given note.)
I am going to continue this tangent for a minute longer to
describe something I’ve come to call “string player musicality.” (I made that
up, by the way.) For me, it’s an acceptance of certain unmusical ways of
playing that result from the natural tendencies of the instrument. I am
referring especially to when string players play loud up-beats because that’s
what the bow does naturally. Ridiculous, you might think – shouldn’t we know
better than that? But many string players are used to hearing the music played
that way, and it’s within their concept of “musical” string playing. I’ve heard
way too many performances, even by professionals, where up-beats (or any
off-beats) are in fact louder than the main beats, because that’s what the bow
does naturally. It’s not what’s best for the music, and as I imagine Mr.
Morelli to have thought, it’s not the way a good singer would sing it.
What did you learn
during your time at Hartt that you did not appreciate or recognize until after
time passed and you had some time to reflect?
I got a B+ on my senior recital jury. I was perplexed – I’d
been considered a hard worker (my friends used to make fun of me, good
naturedly, on Friday nights when, after dinner, instead of going to a movie or
“hanging out”, I went back to the practice room.) I’d prepared and prepared and
prepared for this recital, or so I thought. But then just a B+? I asked David
Wells, who was on the jury, why. I remember his words that I had “one of the
best hearts and minds at Hartt,” but my performance wasn’t really
communicative. I THOUGHT I was communicating, moving with the music, whatever.
But obviously it didn’t come across to him that way. As I went on to do a lot
more performing in various situations where I could get direct audience
feedback, especially in informal settings (for instance, playing on the street
at Boston’s Quincy Market and playing at retirement homes), I learned how to
really communicate the music I was playing, because when I didn’t, the crowd at
Quincy Market would walk away (Pachelbel Canon notwithstanding – you always get
a crowd with the Pachelbel Canon.) Or the people at the retirement home would
lose interest. But people really do respond, I have found, when you “look like
the music” you’re playing, that is, convey the music through your body
language. And it certainly translated into money for me, as a graduate student
in Boston – more money in the case at Quincy Market, or maybe getting called
back for a gig the next year. But, more important than the money, why shouldn’t
a musician communicate to the audience how wonderful the music is? In fact, the
survival of classical music might just depend on it.
What is next for you?
This fall will mark the first season for me as Music
Director at the MAYO program I mentioned earlier, and I’m looking forward to my
adventures there! As far as composing goes, I’ve been collaborating with some
other artists (writers, graphic artists, poets, etc.) in the creation of an
online “novel” about a mysterious (and fictional) island called “Blaitholm.” I
have already composed the music to the introductory video, and I look forward
to contributing music to other aspects of this project, too. I’ve been asked by
the Cardinal Stage Company (Bloomington, IN) to write music for a new play by
Scott Russell Sanders (who was the librettist for my children’s opera.) And on
my wish list for the future … a commission to write a full-length opera on the
novel by Sanders, The Engineer of Beasts.
Do you have any
suggestions for current Hartt students?
Absolutely: make use of all the resources at Hartt that you
can. Don’t just attend master classes on your instrument, or even your area of
music; I call this developing “horizontally.” So, if you are a classical
player, try a jazz master class. If you play a brass instrument, go to a strings
or voice master class. The more you learn about other areas of music, the
stronger a musician you will be in your own area. For instance, while I was at
Boston University, I learned that the school had a great resource in the Empire
Brass Quintet, which was in residence there. I began attending their brass
quintet master classes. And there I learned some great stuff that string
players don’t necessarily think about (for example, the exact moment you end a chord), and I was able to apply it
to string quartet playing.
And take your history and theory classes VERY seriously –
believe me, you WILL use this information when you get out of school. It might
well be the reason that you get called again for a gig after something goes
awry in the performance but all the people who could hear that the group was on
the dominant chord found their way back – it’s these musical skills that will
really help you as a professional. This is the point in your life when you’ll
have the most time to spend on your music, so take in all that you can! And don’t
forget to have fun along the way.
If you want people to
get in touch, how can they do so?
Fee free to contact me through my website, www.laurenbernofsky.com, or via email
at lbernofsky@laurenbernofsky.com
.
Monday, July 1, 2013
5 Questions with Peter Boyer
Peter Boyer
(M.M. 1993, D.M.A. 1995, Alumnus of the Year 2002) studied composition and
conducting at Hartt from 1991 to 1995. He is currently living in the Los
Angeles area.
What have you been up to since you
graduated from Hartt?
That’s a big question. Many things! My career has been divided roughly
into three areas.
First and foremost, I’ve been an orchestral composer for the concert
hall, and very active in that arena. I’ve been fortunate to have over 300
performances of my works by more than 100 orchestras; several recordings on
labels such as Naxos, Koch, Albany, BSO Classics, and FWSO Live; and hundreds
of radio broadcasts of my music in many countries. I’ve had a pretty steady
stream of orchestral commissions, starting shortly after my student days, and
continuing to the present. Recent commissions have included a work for the 50th
anniversary of the Eastern Music Festival from Gerard Schwarz; my Symphony No.
1 from the Pasadena Symphony; and the Boston Pops 125th anniversary commission,
celebrating the legacy of the Kennedy Brothers. Keith Lockhart chose me for
this project, which was narrated by actors including Robert De Niro, Morgan
Freeman, Ed Harris, and Alec Baldwin, and was recorded and televised, including
on the Fourth of July for 750,000 people! My most popular work to date has been
Ellis Island: The Dream of America,
the premiere of which I conducted with the Hartford Symphony in 2002; it’s had
nearly 150 performances, and was nominated for a Grammy Award.
The second area of my career has been as an orchestrator for films and
television. I’ve contributed orchestrations to more than 20 feature film
scores, by some of the top Hollywood composers, including Thomas Newman, James
Horner, Michael Giacchino, Alan Menken, Mark Isham, and others, for most of the
major film studios. Films I’ve worked on have included Skyfall, The Amazing Spider-Man, Star Trek, Up, Mission: Impossible
III, Super 8, Cars 2, and Dolphin
Tale. I’ve also arranged music for the Academy Awards on a couple
occasions, and have composed music for The History Channel.
The third area of my career has been teaching. I’ve been on the
faculty at Claremont Graduate University, part of the Claremont Colleges
(located east of Los Angeles), since 1996. I hold the Helen M. Smith Chair in
Music and the rank of Full Professor there. I should also mention conducting,
though that’s largely taken a back seat to my other work in recent years. I’ve
conducted various orchestras, mostly in my own music, including the Brooklyn
Philharmonic, Rhode Island Philharmonic, Pasadena Symphony, and Richmond
Symphony in concert; and the London Symphony Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra,
and various studio orchestras in recording sessions.
What is your current project?
I just returned from London, where I conducted the London Philharmonic
Orchestra in recording sessions at Abbey Road Studios. We recorded five of my
works for an upcoming release by Naxos in its American Classics series. The
centerpiece of the recording was my Symphony No. 1, a 24-minute, 3-movement
work dedicated to the memory of Leonard Bernstein, and premiered just recently.
We also recorded my works Festivities,
Silver Fanfare, Celebration Overture, and Three Olympians. The LPO are one of the world’s greatest
orchestras, and I had been hoping to work with them ever since I heard them in
Howard Shore’s Oscar-winning scores for the Lord
of the Rings trilogy. The LPO and I recorded nearly an hour of my music in
three sessions over a single day and evening—quite a feat, and quite a thrill!
I’m really looking forward to the Naxos release in early 2014.
Who were your most important
teachers during your time at Hartt, and why?
My two principal teachers at Hartt were Larry Alan Smith and Harold
Farberman. I studied with them both for three years, from 1992-1995. Larry was
my primary composition teacher, and Harold was my primary conducting teacher.
As I was focused on both composition and conducting, it was very valuable for
me that both of them were highly skilled and trained both as composers and
conductors. Their personalities and approaches were quite different, and I
benefited greatly from their different experiences and wisdom. I also studied
with Harold during the summers of 1992-95 at the Conductors Institute (which
was then at Hartt).
I should also mention some other instructors whose teaching was
valuable to me in different ways: Robert Carl was my composition teacher there
in my first year; I had James Sellars for 20th-century music; Steve Gryc for
orchestration; Anthony Rauche for counterpoint and other subjects; and Kenneth
Nott and Charles Turner for music history. They were all highly committed
teachers. I learned a great deal from all of them, and look back on all of
these courses with great affection. (I still have all of my class notes!)
What were some of the most valuable lessons
you learned during your time at Hartt?
My four years at Hartt were a time of incredible growth for me. I had
done my undergraduate work at a relatively small state college music department
(Rhode Island College), which was a very fine department, but limited in its
resources compared to a full-fledged conservatory like Hartt. Being surrounded
by so many excellent professional musicians on Hartt’s faculty was eye-opening
for me in many ways. Besides my primary work on acquiring techniques and skills
as a composer and conductor, probably the most important thing for me was
immersion in a huge variety of musical repertoire. My classes exposed me to so
much repertoire from so many different composers, and I spent countless hours
in the library exploring unfamiliar music. This practice of constantly
attempting to broaden one’s horizons was invaluable then, and still is now.
What is next for you?
The most significant upcoming career milestone for me will be the
Naxos release of my recording with the London Philharmonic in early 2014. I’ll
be on sabbatical leave from my teaching gig for the 2013-14 year, so I’ll be
focusing completely on my freelance musical work. It looks like there will be
some exciting film orchestration gigs in the near future, but since they’ve not
yet begun, I can’t discuss them “on the record” yet. Please stay tuned.
How can your fellow Hartt alumni get in
touch with you?
My website is www.PropulsiveMusic.com,
and on Facebook, I have both a personal page and a “fan page” for Propulsive
Music.
New Series added to HarttBlogs - Help Wanted
We are pleased to start a new series on HarttBlogs. We will continue to post items of interest concerning events at and around Hartt, but now we will also post interviews with Hartt Alumni titled "5 Questions with __."
The "5 Questions" project is just another way we are trying to help Hartt alumni and friends stay abreast of all the wonderful events at Hartt and news about post-Hartt experiences.
Look for our first installment soon! Peter Boyer is the first interviewee.
HELP WANTED - Joe and I would like to encourage some additional people to help out with this blog.
Joe can be reached at jfm1@mulready.biz
The "5 Questions" project is just another way we are trying to help Hartt alumni and friends stay abreast of all the wonderful events at Hartt and news about post-Hartt experiences.
Look for our first installment soon! Peter Boyer is the first interviewee.
HELP WANTED - Joe and I would like to encourage some additional people to help out with this blog.
- If you have ideas for a post, let us know. Joe or I can post about it or, even better, we would welcome guest bloggers! If you want to contribute, let us know.
- If you know of a Hartt alum that you would like to see as a subject for our 5 Questions series, please tell us who that is.
Joe can be reached at jfm1@mulready.biz
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
CT ARTISTS INITIATIVE PAYS TRIBUTE TO HARTT'S NAT REEVES
|
This past weekend, the Connecticut Artists Initiative paid tribute to world-renowned bassist Nat Reeves, faculty member of Hartt’s Jackie McLean Institute of Jazz, as part of Elizabeth Park’s Rose Weekend. The celebration included a variety of activities and performances throughout the weekend. The events included a performance by Prof. Reeves and his ensemble. Along with Nat, featured artists from the Jackie McLean Institute included Josh Bruneau, trumpet; Andrew Renfroe, guitar; Taber Gable, piano; Jovan Alexandre, tenor saxophone; acclaimed Hartt faculty member Steve Davis, trombone; and Mike Dick, percussion. Prof. Reeves, along with Eric Alexander, tenor saxophone; Harold Mabern, piano; and Joe Farnsworth, drums, will tour extensively throughout Japan this July and August, performing more than a dozen concerts. |
Friday, June 7, 2013
Paul Olefsky Obituary - Hartt Cello Prof.
The link below is for the obituary of former Hartt faculty member Paul Olefsky. Prof. Olefsky taught cello at Hartt in the 1960s and 70s. He passed away on June 1, 2013.
http://wcfish.tributes.com/show/Paul-Olefsky-95933605
http://wcfish.tributes.com/show/Paul-Olefsky-95933605
Saturday, June 1, 2013
Streaming Hartt Performances Online
Hartt Performances Streaming on the Web
Did you know that some Hartt performances are now accessible
by live streaming online?
Alumni know that Hartt has a vast collection of recordings of
performances at the school. Many are available at the Allen Memorial
Library. The Allen library’s website is accessible here. http://library.hartford.edu/universitylibraries/allen_library.aspx
Also, if you would to own a copy of a specific recording, you can contact
the Hartt Recording Studio to order a recording. Link is here. http://harttweb.hartford.edu/about/services/purchase.aspx
Now, certain performances are being streamed live!
With streaming, you can listen to the live performance as it
is happening. Most of us would rather listen to a live concert in person,
but if you cannot make it to the performance, or if the concert is sold out, you may
have the option to stream the concert from the comfort of your home.
This Saturday, at 1:00, you are invited to the saxophone
recital of DMA candidate Collete Hall in Millard Auditorium. But, if you
cannot attend in person, you can stream the live performance.
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/colette-s-dma-recital
Here is what you will Collete perform:
Lessons of the Sky - Rodney Rogers
Like Lightnings - Hilary Tann
Sonata - Edison Denisov
Distances Within Me - John Anthony Lennon
Klonos - Piet Swerts
Lessons of the Sky - Rodney Rogers
Like Lightnings - Hilary Tann
Sonata - Edison Denisov
Distances Within Me - John Anthony Lennon
Klonos - Piet Swerts
You can check out future streaming
performances here.
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