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General Information
Faculty
Directions
Schedule
Clinicians
Lodging
in Ellensburg
Dining in Ellensburg
Ellensburg Attractions
CWU Area Map
Student Registration Form
Chamber Registration Form
Teacher Registration Form
Graduation Information
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2009
SAWS Festival is October 16 & 17
Teachers’ workshops are on Friday, October 16, 12:00 - 5:00 pm. Sign in time is 11:30 am. We are
thrilled to again have three great clinicians this year! For the violins and violas, we have Michael
McLean. This is an amazing opportunity, arranged by Satoko Robert. The pianists are hosting Joan
Krzywicki, from Philadelphia. The cellists are hosting, Rodney Farrer. Please use the Teacher Registration
Form to sign up for these classes.
The Student Festival is on Saturday, October 17 from 8:30 - 5:00. It will be filled with master classes,
small and large group classes, and Scottish dancing and Theory enrichment classes, as well as graduation
ceremonies and celebration concerts. Enrollment is open to those studying the Suzuki Method
of violin, viola, cello or piano. We have a terrific faculty lined up again this year. Please submit your
Student Registration Form to sign up. Please remember to fill out the top portion, then photocopy
and hand out to your students. You do NOT need to send them in together this year.
Advanced Suzuki string students may apply to the chamber music program taught by members of the
Kairos Quartet, the resident quartet from Central Washington University. Registration for this program
is separate from the Student Festival, and can only be done through your Suzuki teacher. PREFORMED
GROUPS ONLY will be accepted, and each group will select their own music to prepare
well before coming to Ellensburg in October. If you are a single player wanting to find a group,
please call Priscilla Jones at 206-842-0124 for a connection to other players in the same position.
Early bird registration is the ONLY registration deadline for the chamber program. Please get these
forms in by June 30, 2008. Thanks!
The annual SAWS membership meeting will be held at lunchtime, in the Music Education Building..
General
Information
Teachers’ workshops are on Friday, October 12, 12:00 - 5:00 pm. Sign in time is 11:30 am. The Student
Festival is on Saturday, October 13 from 8:30 - 4:30. It will be filled with master classes, small & large group
classes, fiddling and enrichment classes, as well as graduation ceremonies and celebration concerts. Enrollment
is open to those studying the Suzuki Method of violin, viola, cello or piano.
The annual SAWS membership meeting will be held at lunchtime. If you plan to have lunch, please remember
to include $8 towards the cost on your registration form.
What to Bring
Label all belongings! Here is your checklist! Please bring yourself, your parent, your
instrument, your music book, paper and pencil, lunch or lunch money if desired, and a snack if
needed. A recording device would also be great for recording your master class and other sessions.
The cafeteria and espresso bar in the SUB should be open for our use. However, we ask that no
snacks be brought into the classrooms.
ADVANCED CHAMBER MUSIC STUDENTS: Please remember your music!
CELLISTS: Bring your chair, if you use a smaller than regular folding-chair size. Bring an endpin holder
of any kind to protect the floor and to keep your endpin from slipping on the ballroom floor. No dancing of
endpins this year! If you are in a reading or cello ensemble class, you will need a stand.
Faculty
Piano Teacher Trainer: Joan Krzywicki
Cello Teacher Trainer: Rodney Farrar
Violin/Viola Teacher Trainer: Michael McLean
Scottish Dancing: Autumn Hjort
Theory: Patty Nuernberg
Kairos Quartet
Accompanists: TBA
Suzuki Teachers from the States of Washington and Idaho
Directions To The Festival
(Located on the CWU Campus) And Local
Lodging
(campus map)
From the west off I-90,
take the first Ellensburg exit, following signs to the CWU campus.
From the east off I-90,
take the first Ellensburg exit and continue to the light at 8th and
Main and turn right.
STRINGS: Continue on University
Way to D Street, turn left, go two blocks and turn right into the parking lot behind Hertz Hall.
PIANISTS:
The Friday workshop will be at the home of Carol Cross, 103 W. 9th. Email
her (dccross@kvalley.com) if you need directions. Bring your slippers!
Schedule
Friday, October 16 (Teacher Workshops)
| 11:30 am |
Teacher Registration for piano, cello, and violin/viola
teacher workshops.
|
| noon-5 pm |
Teacher workshops. |
| 5-5:15 pm |
Short meeting for Saturday String faculty - in the violin teacher workshop room.
|
| 5:30 pm |
No-host dinner in Ellensburg - please sign up on the Teacher Registration Form. |
Saturday, October 17 (Student Festival Day)
| 7:30-8:30 am |
Registration. Strings in Hertz Hall, Pianists in Music Education Building. |
| 8:45-9:15 |
Opening Concerts - Strings in Hertz Hall, Pianists in Music Education Building. |
| 9:30-10:20 |
Class |
| 10:30-11:20 |
Class |
| 11:30-12:15 |
Lunch for students and families |
| 11:30-1:00 |
Teachers’ lunch and SAWS
annual meeting |
| 12:10-12:45 |
Piano Parent Talk in Music Ed Building and Strings Parent Talk – Hertz Hall |
| 1:00-1:45 |
Strings Graduation Concert (Trophies handed out here.)
Please be tuned by 1:00 & ready
to play your graduation piece. |
| 1:00-2:30 |
Piano Graduation Concert |
| 1:45-3:45 |
Strings Classes |
| 2:30-4:30 |
Piano Classes |
| 3:30-3:45 |
Set up for Grand Finale
Strings "Play-In" |
| 4:00-4:30 |
Grand Finale Strings "Play-In" |
Clinicians
Piano
Joan Krzywicki has a Bachelor of Music Education degree from Indiana University where she also
carried a second major in Piano Performance with Abbey Simon. She also holds a Master of Music
degree from Youngstown State University. She has been a Suzuki piano teacher since 1981 and became
an official SAA Teacher Trainer in 1993. In addition to a home studio, she does teacher training
classes at Temple University, both on the main campus and at the Music Preparatory division. Joan
has served as a clinician at Suzuki workshops and institutes in the U.S., Canada, England, and Sweden.
She is also recognized as a nationally certified teacher by the Music Teachers National Association.
Joan has had the opportunity to visit Matsumoto, Japan, more than once and observe both Dr. Suzuki
and Dr. Kataoka teach at the Talent Education Institute. Two of her students participated in the Matsumoto
Ten Piano Concert in 1997. She has served as President of the Greater Philadelphia Suzuki
Association and the Philadelphia Music Teachers Association. She was the Assistant Coordinator for
Piano for the 2008 National Conference of the Suzuki Association of the Americas and will be Coordinator
for the 2010 National Conference.
Violin/Viola
Michael McLean is an internationally noted composer of orchestral, chamber, and film music, as well
as a violinist and pedagogue. He teaches violin and conducts various ensembles at the Colburn
School of Performing Arts. Michael received his Bachelor of Music in Violin Performance from
Northwestern University, and has recently completed the prestigious Scoring for Motion Pictures and
Television program at the University of Southern California. He has taught violin at the Music Center
of the North Shore in the Chicago area, Texas Christian University, and various workshops and institutes
throughout the United States, and has also been invited to teach and perform in Argentina, Singapore,
and Tanzania. He is an active member of the SAA and studied Suzuki pedagogy with Yuko
Honda, Barbara Barber, and John Kendall. Michael is also is founder and president of Oak Cliff Publishing, which features more than 100 of his compositions and four CDs: Care to Tango? (with Brian
Lewis and Barbara Barber), New World, Pieces, and Kokoro (with Yuko Honda). His concerto for violin
and string orchestra, Elements, was recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra at Abbey Road
Studios with Brian Lewis, soloist, and Hugh Wolff, conductor. He is currently working on his second
violin concerto and composing the film music for a future PBS documentary on Louis Sullivan.
Other works in progress include a suite for viola, works for four solo violins, a violin sonata, and a
large-scale choral work, The St. Thomas Passion.
Cello
Rodney Farrar is a former University of Kentucky Cello Instructor. Farrar is nationally recognized as
one of the foremost teachers of young cellists. An ambassador of the Suzuki Method for cello, he engages
youth with the magic of music and the variety of sound possible on the magnificent cello. lives
in Littleton, Colorado, has been a professional cellist for 30-plus years, enjoying a varied career ranging
from symphony, chamber music, and solo recital performance to university teaching and private
instruction for students of a wide range of ages and levels.
He has been actively involved in the development Suzuki cello teaching in this country and as been
guest clinician at hundreds of institutes and workshops throughout the U.S. and Canada sponsored
by Suzuki programs, public school music programs and private cello studios.
A native of Ann Arbor, Michigan, Rodney attended Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Eastman School
of Music and Indiana University School of Music. His cello teachers have included Gretchen Dalley,
Peter Howard, Ronald Leonard and Janos Starker. He was professor of cello at the University of Kentucky
for many years. He also taught at the Crane School of Music in Potsdam, New York, summer
sessions at the University of Illinois in Champaigne-Urbana and at the Brevard Music Festival in
Brevard, North Carolina.
Rodney currently teaches a large class of private cello and bass students from the Denver area and is
principal cellist of the Musica Sacra Chamber Orchestra. |