澳门六合彩开奖结果 students gathered for an impromptu performance of Mendelssohn鈥檚 Elijah
澳门六合彩开奖结果 students, led here by Director of Orchestral Studies Mark Dupere, gathered for an impromptu performance of听Mendelssohn鈥檚 Elijah听just as Winter Term came to an end. Faculty are now finding new ways to enhance music instruction and maintain connections amid the COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by Danny Damiani)

As 澳门六合彩开奖结果 treads new territory with distance learning for Spring Term, a consulting site for prospective music students has given the school鈥檚 Conservatory of Music a major salute.

Music School Central named 澳门六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 Conservatory of Music one of the听听in the country. The top-10 ranking placed Lawrence at No. 3.

Bill Zuckerman, who oversees听musicschoolcentral.com听鈥 he previously authored a column on the Conservatory titled,听鈥 called Lawrence 鈥渢he definition of excellence in a liberal arts college music school.鈥

The ranking is music to the ears of Conservatory Dean Brian Pertl as he and his team launch into a Spring Term like none before. As are professors in departments across campus, the Conservatory faculty have taken up the challenge of keeping the community aspect of the Lawrence experience intact while shifting to distance learning amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Tears were shed when word first came down that Lawrence, like other colleges and universities across the country, would be quickly transitioning to virtual instruction during the spring, Pertl said. But the conversation among faculty shifted almost immediately to ways in which the learning experience could still be marked with close faculty-student interactions, community building, and opportunities to tap into skills that will be in demand in the music world going forward.

What鈥檚 happened over the past four weeks 鈥 Spring Term began Monday following Winter Term finals and a two-week spring break 鈥 has been nothing short of amazing, Pertl said.

In the horns studio, Assistant Professor of Music Ann Ellsworth has taken her practice of group warm-ups each morning in Music-Drama Center 163 and transformed it into a daily Zoom session with her horn students. And she鈥檚 invited prominent horn makers and horn players from around the globe to interact with her students via Zoom masterclasses.

Horn students join Ann Ellsworth (top middle) for daily warm-ups via Zoom
Horn students join Ann Ellsworth (top middle) for daily warm-ups via Zoom

鈥淪o, horn makers from the U.S. and horn players from places like the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and at least one from Germany will be Zooming in to speak to her horn students,鈥 Pertl said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of taking advantage of this opportunity that a lot of these great musicians in the world are stuck at home, too. They are actually eager to interact with students.鈥

Trombone professor Tim Albright is working on a virtual trombone ensemble project, recording Charles Ives鈥櫶Variations on America, arranged by Lawrence alumus Dominic Ellis 鈥17. Trombone students will be recording their parts remotely, and the music will be stitched together on campus, thus keeping the trombone ensemble alive, just in a different setting.

Assistant Professor of Music Matthew Arau, who is teaching a rehearsal techniques class for music education, is partnering with middle and high school music programs in Malaysia, led by Lawrence alumnus Dan Miles 鈥10, and Hong Kong. Lawrence students will direct those music students from afar.

A number of student music groups, most notably in the jazz and improvisation area, will be exploring live improvisation in virtual spaces, performing together even though they are spread across the country or around the world.

Students preparing for junior or senior recitals are re-imagining what those recitals might look like. While some remain on campus and will stream recitals from Harper Hall, others are prepping for remote recitals that incorporate elements and skills that might not otherwise have been considered, including turning a recital into an animation-infused music video.

鈥淎ll of sudden our students, instead of throwing up their hands and being dejected or saying, 鈥業 can鈥檛,鈥 they鈥檝e taken up the challenge, and they鈥檙e saying, 鈥業 can, and not only can I, I am going to do something that is going to push my boundaries,鈥欌 Pertl said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e redefining what a recital can be.鈥

Staying flexible and staying connected are front and center as faculty and students venture into these uncharted waters.

鈥淚t鈥檚 beautiful, creative flexibility,鈥 Pertl said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e working with our students all the time to say, 鈥楾his is what you鈥檙e going to need out there in the world, and this is what鈥檚 going to be exciting about being a musician in the world today.鈥 And they are going to be taking all of these forward-thinking practices, and they鈥檙e just going to be doing them, which is a sort of neat and beautiful thing.

鈥淚s it ideal? No, it鈥檚 not ideal. Nobody wanted this to happen. But can we make the very, very best of this and come away with skills and knowledge that we wouldn鈥檛 have otherwise had to acquire, but skills and knowledge that will be beneficial for our students once they leave here?鈥

Ellsworth said her daily warm-up sessions with horn students might seem like a small thing, but it鈥檚 that sort of personal connection that students most feared would be lost.

鈥淚 ask everyone to mute themselves and then choose one student for each exercise to unmute so we can all hear that one person,鈥 Ellsworth said of the sessions. 鈥淚 play a short exercise from our routine and they all repeat it after me. The purpose of the group warm-up for horn is that half of the benefit is getting the mouthpiece off the face in-between exercises; it slows us down, prevents injury while we鈥檙e still cold, and sets us up for the rest of the day.

鈥淏ut it turns out the real purpose for distance group warm-up is the time after our 45 minutes of playing, when I leave the room but leave the meeting running. I tell them they can hang out or not and that I鈥檒l be back in 20 minutes, and I鈥檒l come back and they are still there, hanging out, talking about student stuff. We had a prospective student join one meeting and I left them there to get acquainted because they can鈥檛 come to visit the campus. It鈥檚 super productive.鈥

There are dozens of other examples of collaboration and creativity taking place across the Conservatory as Spring Term gets rolling, Pertl said, all of which speaks to the ideals that landed Lawrence on the 鈥渉idden gems鈥 ranking in the first place.