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DownBeat Magazine Honors Lawrence Saxophone Quartet, Composer Garth Neustadter ’10

The short history of the current iteration of the Lawrence University Saxophone Quartet could be told in one word: successful.

When four Lawrence University saxophone students decided in the spring of 2010 to combine their talents to perform interesting music at a very high level, they had no idea just how rewarding that decision would prove to be.

The latest in a long line of successful ensembles in the conservatory’s saxophone studio, this quartet — seniors David Davis, Sussex, and Sumner Truax, Chicago, Ill., junior Will Obst, St. Paul, Minn., and sophomore Phillip Dobernig, Mukwonago — won the annual Lawrence Symphony Orchestra Concerto Competition last fall.

LU Saxophone Quartet: David Davis, Sumner Truax, Will Obst and Phil Dobernig

In March, they shared first-place honors in the annual Wisconsin Public Radio-sponsored Neale-Silva Young Artists competition in Madison.

And the nec plus ultra came this month via DownBeat magazine, which named the quartet its 2011 undergraduate college winner in the classical group category of its 34th annual Student Music Awards.

The classical group award was one of two Lawrence musicians received. Garth Neustader, a 2010 graduate, earning outstanding performance honors in the magazine’s undergraduate college jazz arrangement category for his work on “Tenderly.”

The awards were announced April 26 in DownBeat’s June edition. Known as “DBs” and presented in 12 categories in four separate divisions (junior high, high school, performing high school and college) the DownBeat awards are considered among the highest music honors in the field of jazz education.

“With their dedication and initiative, David, Sumner, Phil and Will are truly deserving of their success,” said Steve Jordheim, Lawrence professor of music and an award-winning saxophonist himself. “Though they’ve played together only one year, they have presented three full recital programs and premiered several works by Lawrence student composers. Their commitment to, and high level performance of, the art of chamber music is inspiring.”

The quartet was recognized based on a live recording of a diverse program they performed last fall that included Greg Wannamaker’s “Speed Metal Organum Blues,” “Just a Minute, Chopin” by Adam Silverman and “Quatuor pour Saxophones” by Jun Nagao.

Members credited the quartet’s success to a combination of chemistry, technique and great mentoring.

“Our personalities really allow us to work well together,” said Truax, who plays alto sax in the quartet. “Our rehearsals are very efficient because we don’t have a problem telling each other what we think needs to be fixed.”

“The way we rehearse is very methodical,” said Obst, the group’s baritone saxophonist. “We’ve informally devised a step-by-step process to work on intonation, rhythm, balance or phrasing.”

“I attribute much of our success to having truly amazing teachers,” added Davis, soprano saxophonist. “If it was not for the dedication and intense care and knowledge of Mr. Jordheim and Ms. (Sara) Kind, I would not be half as good as I am now.”

While thrilled with their DownBeat recognition, Dobernig said it’s important to keep the honor in proper perspective.

“One thing that we’ve found from doing competitions is that different judges have contrasting musical preferences that influence their decisions,” said Dobernig, the group’s tenor saxophonist. “The reality is that we played very well, and there were, without a doubt, many other groups that played very well. It’s certainly exciting, though, because of its prestige and national recognition.”

Although Davis will graduate in June, that doesn’t mean the quartet was a one-year wonder.

“We have a couple different possibilities in mind for the future,” said Truax. “All of us will be in the area next year, so we will continue to perform together. The plan is to enter some major national and international chamber music competitions in the future and if things go well, we’re definitely open to the idea of making a career out of it.”

Garth Neustadter '10

Neustadter, a first-year graduate student pursuing music composition at Yale University, was honored for his arrangement of the 1946 Walter Gross ballad “Tenderly,” a jazz classic that has been recorded by more than 80 major artists. He wrote his five-minute arrangement for studio orchestra and vocalist near the end of his senior year at Lawrence last spring.

“I’ve written a lot of original music but wanted to try my hand at arranging a ‘classic,’” said Neustadter, who won four DB awards in composition, jazz performance and classical performance while a student at Manitowoc Lutheran High School. “‘Tenderly’ has been successful through the ages because it retains the sophisticated elegance of the great ballads without sounding ‘dated’ or ‘old-fashioned.’ With such a wealth and variety of previous recordings and arrangements, it was somewhat intimidating and difficult to bring a ‘fresh’ compositional voice to the arrangement.

“Winning the DB continues to be a huge honor,” Neustadter added, “and I’m indebted to the jazz program at Lawrence for fostering such an atmosphere of collaboration, as well as to [director of jazz and improvisational studies] Fred Sturm for his continued mentorship and guidance.”

The two awards push Lawrence’s total to 19 DBs — including eight in the past five years — since DownBeat launched its student music awards competition in 1978. This year’s competition drew a total of 964 ensemble and individual entries for all categories in all four divisions.

Senior Leonard Hayes Wins National Piano Competition

Lawrence University’s Leonard Hayes, a senior from Dallas, Texas, won the recent Young Artists’ Division of the 2011 Tourgee Debose National Piano Competition conducted at Southern University in Baton Rouge, La.

Leonard Hayes

This was Hayes’ second first-place showing in the competition having previously won the Tourgee Debose’s sophomore division in 2009.

Hayes received a first-place prize of $1,000 for his winning performance of Beethoven’s “Piano Sonata Op. 90,” Cesar Franck’s “Poco Allegro and Fugue” and two movements from George Walker’s “Piano Sonata No. 2.”

A third-place finisher in the 2010 National Association of Negro Musicians’ Piano Scholarship competition, Hayes studies in the piano studio of Catherine Kautsky.

Lawrence University Joins the Appleton Compassion Project

What does compassion look like?

The Appleton Compassion Project is a community art project led by inspired by Richard Davidson, PhD — a University of Wisconsin-Madison brain researcher who has studied people who practice compassion. Davidson’s research demonstrates that compassion can be learned and can be practiced as a skill. “A little more joy might be within everyone’s reach,” Davidson said.

Beginning last fall, more than 10 thousand Appleton K-12 art students and hundreds of others in the community received a 6-inch-by-6-inch white panel (tile) on which to portray their idea of compassion. More than five hundred tiles were distributed to Lawrence University student organizations, academic departments and offices at Lawrence. “It is our hope that as many members of the Lawrence community as possible will take a moment to have a conversation about the nature of compassion and to produce a visual image on a panel,” said Jonathan R. Vanko, a sophomore at Lawrence and president of the Lawrence University Community Council. “Through the Appleton Compassion Project, we have a unique opportunity to collaborate with others and to connect Lawrence with the Appleton  community, bringing many of our neighbors to campus.”

The exhibition opens Sunday, May 1, noon – 4 p.m. at Jason Downer Commons. The Trout Museum of Art, 111 W. College Ave., and the Appleton Area School District are sponsors of the Appleton Compassion Project. The Trout Museum’s gallery space will also feature compassion tiles from more than 10,000 Appleton Area School District students.

Gallery Hours:
Jason Downer Art Gallery
Tuesday – Saturday: 1:30 – 4 p.m.
Closed Sunday and Monday

Trout Museum of Art
Tuesday – Saturday: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Sunday: 12 p.m. – 4 p.m.
Closed Monday

For more information about the Appleton Compassion Project, visit www.appletoncompassion.org or search for Appleton Compassion Project on Facebook.

“Who Killed the Electric Car” Director Speaks at Lawrence University as Part of Earth Day Celebration

Environmental filmmaker Chris Paine, director of the thought-provoking 2006 documentary “Who Killed the Electric Car?,” examines the politics, personalities and cold hard cash involved in the return of the electric car in an address at Lawrence University.

Filmmaker Chris Paine

As part of the college’s Earth Day celebration, Paine presents “How Many Light Bulbs Does it Take to Plug in an Electric Car?” Tuesday, April 26 at 8 p.m. in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel. The talk is free and open to the public.

Paine, who tours nationally to speak on behalf of sustainable transportation, will discuss the challenges of electric vehicles to the car industry and the reasons behind their re-emergence.

His latest film, “Revenge of the Electric Car,” is scheduled to make its world premiere on Earth Day (April 22) at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. In “Revenge of the Electric Car,” Paine interviews the CEOs of Renault-Nissan, maker of the electric Leaf, Tesla Motors, which makes a high-performance electric vehicle and former GM vice chairman Robert Lutz, who has become an advocate for the company’s new Chevy Volt.

Paine, who lives in Los Angeles and drives a Telsa Roadster, sees electric vehicles as “something that is fundamentally similar to an iPhone or iPod.” In addition to his advocacy for electric cars, Paine has been active in campaigns to stop deforestation, nuclear testing in Nevada and freeway expansions in California.

Principles of Servant Leadership Examined in Lawrence University Presentation

The principles of servant leadership and how they can be used to build a more just, caring and sustainable world will be the focus of a Lawrence University presentation.  Kent Keith presents “The Case for Servant Leadership” Monday, April 25 at  7 p.m. in the Warch Campus Center.

Kent Keith

Keith, an author and speaker who seeks to help people “find personal meaning in a crazy world,” is the chief executive officer of the Greenleaf Center for Servant Leadership in Westfield, Ind.  The non-profit organization promotes the awareness, understanding and practice of servant leadership by individuals and organizations.

A graduate of Harvard University and Rhodes Scholar, Keith is the former president of Chaminade University in Honolulu and the author of the Paradoxical Commandments, which was first published in a booklet for student leaders. He has since published four books related to the commandments, including “Do It Anyway: The Handbook for Finding Personal Meaning and Deep Happiness in a Crazy World.”

The term “servant leadership” was coined by Robert Greenleaf in his 1970 paperback “The Servant as Leader,” in which he argued that the most effective leaders wish to serve rather than command and control.

In 2007, Lawrence received a $1 million gift from the S & R Pieper Family Foundation in Mequon to establish the Pieper Family Servant-Leader Professorship to foster and promote the concept of altruistic leadership at the college. The chair is currently held by Associate Professor of History Monica Rico.

Paul Rusesabagina, Inspiration Behind Film “Hotel Rwanda,” Brings Message of Hope to Lawrence University

The man whose courage during the horrific 1994 Rwandan genocide inspired the Academy Award-nominated film “Hotel Rwanda” brings his message of hope, peace and “never again” to the Lawrence University campus.

Paul Rusesabagina presents “A Lesson to be Learned” Monday, April 25 at 7 p.m. in Stansbury Theatre of the Music-Drama Center. The event is free and open to the public.

Paul Rusesabegina

Portrayed by actor Don Cheadle in the film, Rusesabagina, 56, is credited with saving the lives of more than 1,200 people during the 100-day killing spree by Rwandan Hutu extremists. As the manager of the Hotel des Mille Collines in Kigali, Rusesabagina bravely risked his life to shelter and protect those who were seeking refuge from the genocide that killed more than 800,000 people.

Rusesabagina’s life-changing journey from hotel manager to humanitarian has been recognized with numerous prestigious awards, among them the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the National Civil Rights Museum Freedom Award and the Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award.

He retraces his accidental path to heroism and the 100 days in which he was the only thing standing between his “guests” and death and his subsequent life as a refugee and activist in the autobiography, “An Ordinary Man,” which he co-wrote with 1991 Lawrence University graduate Tom Zoellner.  In 2005, he founded the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation to provide support, care and educational assistance for orphans of Africa’s civil wars, genocide and AIDS epidemic.

Lawrence Alumnus Examines Human Rights, Democratic Politics in Argentina, Chile

Alexander Wilde, a senior scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C., examines the role social movements for human rights played in shaping politics in Argentina and Chile as they moved from dictatorships to democracies in the third installment of Lawrence University’s 2011 Povolny Lecture Series in International Studies “Latin America: Past, Present and Future.”

A 1962 Lawrence graduate, Wilde presents “Argentina and Chile: Democratic Transition and Human Rights,” Tuesday, April 19 at 7 p.m. in the Wriston Art Center auditorium.  The event is free and open to the public.

Alexander Wilde '62

Argentina and Chile exemplify two of the most successful democratic transitions in Latin America, overcoming legacies left by the harshest dictatorships in their respective histories. Wilde will discuss how both countries, through official truth commissions, hundreds of trials and a range of public memorials and museums, have embraced the idea that their citizens possess fundamental human rights that no government must ever again be allowed to violate.

The former director of the Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA), an independent nongovernmental organization concerned with human rights and U.S. foreign policy, Wilde lived and worked in Chile for more than a decade during its long transition to democracy after 1990.

He served as vice president for communications of the Ford Foundation (2000-04) after directing Ford’s regional office in Santiago, Chile from 1994-99 where he developed new programming in human rights, historical memory, freedom of expression, and audiovisual documentary.

Wilde returns to his alma mater again this fall as the college’s Stephen Edward Scarff Memorial Distinguished Visiting Professor. He will spend four weeks in October teaching in the government department.

After graduating from Lawrence, Wilde studied politics, philosophy and economics at Keble College, Oxford, on a Marshall Scholarship and earned his Ph.D. in political science from Columbia University.

The “Latin America: Past, Present and Future” lecture series is sponsored by the Mojmir Povolny Lectureship in International Studies. Named in honor of long-time Lawrence government professor Mojmir Povolny, the lectureship promotes interest and discussion on issues of moral significance and ethical dimensions.

Lawrence University Unveils “Stunning” 2011-2012 Performing Artist and Jazz Series Lineup

Eleven time Grammy® winning jazz pianist and composer Lyle Mays returns to Wisconsin in November in one of eight thrilling Lawrence University Performing Artist and Jazz Series concerts lined up for the 2011-2012 season.

Recognized around the world as a master of the keyboard, Mays has toured with Woody Herman’s Young Thundering Herd, performed with jazz and pop icons Ricky Lee Jones, Joni Mitchell and Bobby McFerrin, and established a 35-year musical collaboration as an integral member of the Pat Metheny Group.

Lyle Mays

A native of Wausaukee, Mays takes the Lawrence Memorial Chapel stage Nov. 5, 2011, with the Lawrence Faculty Jazz Trio, the Lawrence Studio Orchestra and the Lawrence Jazz Ensemble as part of Jazz Celebration Weekend.

“We’ve put together a stunning lineup of musical performances with something for everyone,” said Brian Pertl, dean of the Lawrence Conservatory of Music. “If you’ve never been to Lawrence for a concert, the performers in this series will blow you away.”

The series kicks off Oct. 14, with the Turtle Island Quartet, winners of the 2008 Grammy Award for Best Classical Crossover Album, “A Love Supreme.” Turtle Island fuses a classical string quartet aesthetic with contemporary American musical styles, redefining the state of the art. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma called Turtle Island “a reflection of some of the most creative music-making today.”

On Oct. 24, renowned pianist Richard Goode brings his tremendous emotional power, depth and expressiveness to the Lawrence campus. Goode’s music making has inspired critics around the world to utter such praise as “you’d swear the composer himself was at the keyboard, expressing musical thoughts that had just come into his head.”

Joining Mays for Jazz Celebration Weekend Nov. 4-5 is the Tierney Sutton Band, which celebrated its third consecutive Grammy nomination for Best Vocal Jazz Album for 2009’s “Desire.” The album was described as a “conceptual masterpiece” by the Chicago Sun Times and critics call the Tierney Sutton Band’s music enduring, conveying “a sense of spiritual meditation… and a pure jazz spirit.”

The artist and jazz series continues Feb. 17, 2012 with the Jeremy Pelt Quintet. One of the most talked about jazz trumpeters of the past decade, Pelt and his band mates “swing hard, and they swagger in their arrangements,” said reviewer Jeff Krow. “Pelt is at the peak of his powers with the power and range of Lee Morgan and Freddie Hubbard in their seminal years.”

So Percussion creates music not easy to define, exploring all the extremes of emotion and musical possibility. The quartet, performing March 10, 2012 at Lawrence, has been called an “experimental powerhouse” by the Village Voice, “astonishing and entrancing” by Billboard Magazine and “brilliant” by the New York Times. Edgy (at least in the sense that little other music sounds like this) and ancient (in that people have been hitting objects for eons), they are among today’s most exciting composers and their own original music has quickly helped them forge a unique and diverse career.

Chanticleer

Hailed as “the world’s reigning male chorus,” by The New Yorker magazine, Chanticleer performs at Lawrence Memorial Chapel April 13, 2012. Chanticleer is known as “an orchestra of voices” for the seamless blend of its 12 male voices ranging from countertenor to bass and its original interpretations of vocal literature, from Renaissance to jazz, and from gospel to new music.

The Performing Artist and Jazz Series closes May 11, 2012, with a performance by the extraordinary Panamanian pianist and composer Danilo Perez.  His distinctive blend of Pan-American jazz has attracted critical acclaim and his abundant talents and enthusiasm make his concerts memorable and inspiring. Perez will perform with the Lawrence Faculty Jazz Trio.

Subscriptions for the series are on sale now and subscribers may choose from the artist, jazz, or “favorite 4” concert packages, with discounts available to senior citizens and students. Single-concert tickets go on sale Sept. 15, 2011. Contact the Lawrence University Box Office at 920-832-6749 or visit http://www.lawrence.edu/news/performingartsseries for more information.

Student Musicians Perform in Live WPR-Broadcast Recital

Eight Lawrence University student musicians will be featured Sunday, April 17 at 12:30 p.m. in a recital broadcast live statewide on the Classical Music Network of Wisconsin Public Radio.

The students will reprise their winning performances from last month’s Neale-Silva Young Artists competition in a recital at the Wisconsin Union Theater in Madison.

Performers and programs include:

• Pianist Daniel Kuzuhara ’14 — “Prelude and Fugue in D minor” from Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II by Johann Sebastian Bach; the first movement of “Sonata No. 49 in E-Flat Major” by Franz Joseph Haydn: and the concert etude “Gnomenreigen” (‘Dance of the Gnomes”) by Franz Liszt.

• Piano duo Dario LaPoma ’10 and Hazim Suhadi ’10 — Francis Poulenc’s “Concerto in D Minor for Two Pianos.”

• Pianist James Maverick ’13 — “The Italian Ground” by Orlando Gibbons and “Ballade no. 4 in F, Op. 52” by Frederic Chopin.

• The Lawrence Saxophone Quartet of David Davis ’11, Phillip Dobering ’13, Will Obst ’12 and Sumner Truax ’11 —  “Chercher” from Jun Nagao’s “Quatuor pour Saxophone” and “Andante et Scherzetto” by Pierre Lantier.

LU to Participate in Outagamie Co. Mock Tornado Warning April 14

The National Weather Service  will issue a mock tornado warning for northeastern Wisconsin tomorrow, April 14, testing sirens from 1:10 to 1:15 p.m. In addition, the Outagamie County Emergency Management Office will conduct a second tornado drill at 6:45 p.m. April 14, to allow parents to show their children how to take shelter at home and to allow businesses to practice their tornado plan with employees who work second shift.

To ensure that the Lawrence University community is prepared in the event of a tornado, we ask students, faculty and staff to do the following tomorrow from 1:10 to 1:20 p.m.:

When warning sirens sound, quickly seek inside shelter, preferably in a basement evacuation location. In a multi story building, seek shelter in an interior hallway on the lowest floor possible. STAY AWAY FROM OUTSIDE WALLS, GLASS WINDOWS OR PARTITIONS. Remain in the shelter until 1:20 p.m., then return to your previously scheduled classes and activities.

The Lawrence University Crisis Management Team (CMT) apologizes for the short notice but, given last weekend’s storms, the CMT believes this 10-minute mock tornado warning will help ensure the safety of the Lawrence community.