A 150 celebration banner hangs on a light pole on the Lawrence campus.
Banners celebrating 150 years of the Conservatory are featured across campus. (Photo by Danny Damiani)

澳门六合彩开奖结果 will celebrate 150 years of the Conservatory of Music and the Lawrence Community Music School (LCMS) throughout the 2024-25 academic year.聽

Banners celebrating the 150 years of history now decorate campus. The logo marking the anniversary is showing up on T-shirts and other apparel as students begin classes. Concerts giving a nod to the brilliance of the Conservatory will be presented in the coming weeks and months. And a proclamation delivered at the Sept. 20 Matriculation Convocation by Appleton Mayor Jake Woodford 鈥13 applauds the Conservatory for building and sustaining 鈥渨orld-renowned programs in music and music education.鈥

鈥淎s we celebrate this milestone, we will honor our rich legacy and embrace our promising future through special events, commissioned music, and other showcases highlighting the talent of past, present, and future musicians,鈥 President Laurie A. Carter said in her Convocation address.

The Conservatory debuted in 1874, launched with a single faculty member. It has grown over the past century and a half into the celebrated music conservatory it is today. With more than 25 areas of study, 360 students currently pursuing one of three music degree options (plus a possible dual degree), and 48 full-time and 23 part-time faculty, the Conservatory prepares students for music careers of today and tomorrow.

See Lawrence web page celebrating the 150th anniversary, including a historical timeline

Student musicians fill the stage for the 2024 Major Works concert in Memorial Chapel.
Performances throughout the 2024-25 academic year will honor 150 years of the Conservatory of Music. (Photo by Aaron Lindeman '27)

LCMS, meanwhile, continues to provide an important connector to the Fox Cities community. A division of the Conservatory, it has delivered聽high-level music instruction to area residents of all ages since the Conservatory鈥檚 founding. Once a preparatory school, it was known as the Arts Academy and then Lawrence Academy of Music before assuming its current name, Lawrence Community Music School, in 2020. It now serves about 900 students via private lessons, ensembles, early childhood classes, and more, presenting more than 40 public concerts a year.

鈥淭he 150th anniversary of the Conservatory of Music and the is a momentous event,鈥 said Conservatory Dean Brian Pertl 鈥86.聽鈥淭hroughout our 150 years, the Lawrence Conservatory has produced exceptional musicians, scholars, and educators whose influence has聽extended across the nation and across the globe.鈥

As it has from the beginning, the Conservatory remains an integral part of the university. Music education, performance, composition, dance, technology, entrepreneurship, and arts leadership are all woven into the programming of today鈥檚 Conservatory. State-of-the-art recording studios are readily available. Award-winning ensembles explore everything from classical to world music to jazz. Internships take students to Carnegie Hall, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the New York Jazz Academy, among others. Conservatory faculty teach, mentor, perform, and inspire in studios, classrooms, and on stage.

It is all part of the university鈥檚 liberal arts landscape, a cohesive blend of a conservatory and a college of liberal arts and sciences that makes Lawrence distinctive. Alumni sing its praises for the ways their Conservatory experiences have informed their journeys.

Alexander York 鈥14, a member of the soloist ensemble at the State Theater in Linz, Austria, where he is singing Papageno in Mozart鈥檚 Magic Flute this season, said the Conservatory prepared him to reach high. He got a master鈥檚 at Northwestern University, received a Fulbright Award to study art song in Munich, Germany, and was a member of the Paris Opera Young Artist Program.

鈥淏ecause of the huge number of performances that I had as an undergrad, I was able to feel really confident going into my graduate work and then eventually into the professional world,鈥 York said. 鈥淚 developed such a wide set of skills during my time at Lawrence鈥擲hakespeare acting, dancing, language skills, text interpretation鈥攁nd I keep drawing on things that I never thought would be important at the time but have since shown themselves to be extremely useful in my chosen profession. The integration of the Conservatory and the College made me into a well-rounded lifelong learner, and I am very grateful for that.鈥

Kirsten Lies-Warfield 鈥94, a retired trombonist with the United States Army Band, said she and her classmates in the early 1990s were buoyed by the culture of the Conservatory, always supportive and inspiring. She went on to earn a master鈥檚 degree at Indiana University before becoming the first woman trombonist ever hired by the U.S. Army Band 鈥淧ershing鈥檚 Own.鈥

鈥淭he faculty and my peers gave me room to find my way and inspiration as to what was possible,鈥 she said.

Lies-Warfield said she鈥檚 even more excited about what Lawrence Conservatory students now have available.

鈥淚 loved it when I was there, and I am a bit jealous of what is offered to students there now,鈥 she said.

Ongoing evolution

It was in 1894, 20 years after it debuted, that the Conservatory really started to take shape, hinting at what it would become. From 1894 to 1924, it grew from one faculty member to 16.

In 1918, the 1,200-seat Memorial Chapel鈥攆unded in a joint effort between Lawrence and the Appleton community鈥攐pened, a game-changer for the Conservatory and the community. In 1959, the Music-Drama Center was built near the Chapel. Shattuck Hall was added in the early 1990s, connecting the Music-Drama Center and Memorial Chapel, providing the infrastructure of today鈥檚 Conservatory.

Young students perform in a Lawrence Community Music School concert in Memorial Chapel.
Lawrence Community Music School connects aspiring musicians of all ages in the Fox Valley. (Photo by Danny Damiani)聽

In the 50 years since the Conservatory celebrated its Centennial in November 1974, it has continued to evolve and thrive. The jazz and improvisational music program that was launched in the early 1970s has grown into a widely recognized program, bringing home more than 30 national DownBeat Awards. The opera theatre program, with legendary leadership dating back to the early 1960s, took a major step forward in 2014 when a generous grant allowed for Copeland Woodruff to be brought in as the Conservatory鈥檚 first director of opera studies. The program has consistently drawn national honors while producing alumni who have risen to lofty levels in the opera world鈥攁mong them Dale Duesing 鈥67, a Grammy winner, Heidi Stober 鈥00, a lyric soprano performing in major opera houses around the world, and Emily Richter 鈥20, a rising star who won the 2024 Metropolitan Opera Eric and Dominique Laffont Competition.

In 2019, a Bachelor of Musical Arts (B.M.A.) degree was added to Lawrence鈥檚 degree options, providing new musical paths into and through Lawrence while complementing the existing degrees鈥擝achelor of Music (B.Mus.), Bachelor of Arts (B.A.), and Bachelor of Arts & Bachelor of Music Dual Degree (B.A./B.Mus.). The new degree expanded on the classical music component in the Conservatory, allowing students for the first time to audition with non-classical repertoire and focus on jazz and contemporary improvisation.

The Conservatory鈥檚 Presto! tours have taken students to Chicago, the Twin Cities, and Houston for a blend of music-making and community outreach. Kaleidoscope concerts are held at the Fox Cities Performing Arts Center to showcase the breadth of music within the Conservatory. Dance instruction was introduced. Arts entrepreneurship has been built into classes across the curriculum.

In addition to the LCMS, numerous community partnerships鈥攎ost notably with the Mile of Music festival, the Music for All program, and the Appleton Area School District鈥攈ave added layers to the Conservatory鈥檚 relationship with Appleton and the wider Fox Cities.

In addition, the Conservatory has frequently been graced by music superstars as part of the Performing Arts Series and the Fred Sturm Jazz Celebration Weekend. The likes of John Philip Sousa (1924, 1926), Marian Anderson (1941), Louis Armstrong (1960), Ella Fitzgerald (1961), Yo-Yo Ma (1986), Wynton Marsalis (1988, 2022), Joshua Bell (1990, 1998), and Marilyn Horne (1994) have come to Lawrence to perform at Memorial Chapel.

The Performing Arts Series continues that tradition with a wide-ranging roster of touring artists each year. That includes the 2024-25 season, with two-time Grammy Award-winning Roomful of Teeth, which features Lawrence voice professor聽Estel铆 Gomez, and聽S艒 Percussion with Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Caroline Shaw.

The 150th anniversary will be showcased on Lawrence and Appleton stages throughout this academic year. Kaleidoscope 2024 will kick off the events at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 12 at the Fox Cities Performing Arts Center. Featuring students from almost every corner of the Conservatory, it will be a non-stop music blitz that celebrates the Conservatory鈥檚 past, present, and future.

Upcoming performances also will feature commissioned pieces from Lawrence alumni, including composers Nicolas Bizub 鈥16 (Oct. 25) and Evan Williams 鈥10 (Nov. 20). Keep an eye on the calendar of events on the Conservatory 150 page for details on these and other performances throughout the year.