PEABODY INSTITUTE

Peabody Institute, c. 1902

Peabody Library

'The Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University' is a conservatory and preparatory school located in the Mount Vernon area of Baltimore, Maryland. The Peabody Conservatory of Music, one of the divisions of the Institute, is considered one of the leading music conservatories in the world, boasting a renowned faculty and students from across the globe.

Contents
History
Peabody Children's Chorus
Notable alumni
Faculty
External links

History


Founded in 1857 by philanthropist George Peabody, it was the first academy of music to be established in the United States. Under the direction of well-known musicians, composers, conductors, and Peabody alumni, the Institute grew from a local academy to an internationally renowned cultural center throughout the late 19th and the 20th centuries.
Since 1977, the Institute has operated as a division of the Johns Hopkins University, which U.S. News & World Report cites as one of America’s top dozen universities. Because of this affiliation, Peabody students are exposed to a liberal arts curriculum that is more extensive than those of other leading conservatories; likewise, Hopkins students have access to a world-class musical education and experience that they normally would not have access to at another university of such stature.
Peabody is one of 156 schools in the U.S. that offer a Doctorate of Musical Arts Degree. It houses two important libraries: the historical George Peabody Library and the Arthur Friedheim Library, established when the institute opened in 1866, a music library includes more than 100,000 books, scores, and sound recordings.
It is most mentioned in pop culture due to the expulsion of pop pianist Tori Amos.

Peabody Children's Chorus


The Peabody Children's chorus is for children ages 6-19. It is divided into 3 groups:-Training Choir, Choristers, and Chamber Singers-grouped by age in ascending order. They practice every week, and sing in concerts biannually, under the instruction of Doreen Falby, Bradley Permenter, and Chris Chadderton. The Chamber Singers, ages 12-18, often perform with other music groups, such as the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and the Baltimore Choral Arts Society.

Notable alumni



Tori Amos - An American pianist and singer-songwriter. At age five, she was the youngest person ever to attend the school.

Dominick Argento - A leading composer of lyric opera and choral music.[1]

Awadagin Pratt - Renowned concert pianist and violinist; Winner of the prestigious Walter W. Naumburg Foundation Competition.

Virgil Fox - Organist.[2]

Ellis Larkins - First African American to attend.[3]

Tommy Newsom - Saxophonist for The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson[4]

Lillian Smith - Author and social critic. (two stints, not a degree)[5]

James Morris - World famous Wagnerian Baritone, Grammy winner and Metropolitan Opera Star.

Phillip Glass - (Prep.) World famous composer of opera and contemporary music.

Andre Watts - World renowned Concert Pianist, Grammy winner and Professor of Music at Indiana University Jacobs School of Music.

Richard Cassilly - His generations leading interpreter of Wagnerian Tenor repertoire.

Faculty



Nasar Abadey, jazz

Clinton Adams, piano

Suhnne Ahn, musicology

Marin Alsop [6], conducting

Manuel Barrueco [7], guitar

Steven Barta, clarinet

Carol Bartlett, dance

Paul Bollenback, jazz

McGregor Boyle, computer music/composition

Risa Browder, violin/early music

Garnett Bruce [8], opera

Roger Brunyate, opera

Phyllis Bryn-Julson, voice

Marianna Busching, voice

Wayne Cameron, trumpet

Randall Campora, brass

Jeanne Chalifoux, harp

Ray Chester, guitar/pedagogy

Victoria Chiang [9], viola

Jay Clayton [10], jazz

Wayne Conner, voice

Eileen Cornett, ensemble arts/vocal accompanying/opera

Stanley Cornett, voice

Mark Cudek, early music

Victor Danchenko, strings

Vera Danchenko-Stern, voice/diction

Falby, music theory

David Fedderly [11], tuba

David Fetter, brass

Richard Field, strings

Leon Fleisher [12], piano

Michael Formanek, jazz/ensembles

Sidney Forrest, clarinet

Pamela Frank [13], violin

Brian Ganz, piano

Shirley Givens, strings

Linda Goodwin, ensemble office

Franca Gorraz, language/diction

Patricia Sayre Graham, music theory

Julian Gray; guitar

Herbert Greenberg, strings

Thomas Grubb, French language and diction/voice

Jonathan Haas, percussion

Michael Habermann, keyboard

Marian Hahn, piano

Asger Hamerik Director (1871-1898)

Thompson Hanks, brass

David Hardy, strings

Michael Hersch [14], composition

Edward Hoffman, brass

Ah Hong, voice

John Hood, strings

Ruth Inglefield, harp/pedagogy

Mark Janello, music theory

Ingrid Jensen [15], jazz/trumpet

Ken Johansen, music theory

Paul Johnson, strings/preparatory strings

Michael Kannen, chamber music/jazz

Alan Kefauver, recording arts

Steven Kellner, brass

Seth Knopp, piano/chamber music

Phillip Kolker, bassoon

JoAnn Kulesza, opera

Maria Lambros, chamber music

Ron Levy, liberal arts/humanities/writing

Sharon Levy, music theory

Ernest Ligon voice/coach

Gary Louie [16], saxophone

A. T. Michael MacDonald, recording arts

Ellen Mack, vocal accompanying/ensemble arts

Jane Marvine, oboe/woodwinds

Stacey Mastrian, voice/Italian language and diction

Paul Mathews, music theory

Nicholas Maw [17], composition

Ursula McLean, library

Gustav Meier, conducting

Violaine Melancon, chamber music/strings

Yong-Hi Moon, piano

John Moran, viola da gamba & baroque cello

Robert Muckenfuss, vocal accompanying

Philip Munds, brass

Hajime Teri Murai, conductor/orchestra/ensembles

Timothy Murphy, jazz

Katherine Needleman, oboe

James Olin, trombone

Paul Oorts, French

Courtney Orlando, [18], ear training/sight singing, violin

Edward Palanker, clarinet

Harlan Parker, [19], conducting/ensembles/music education

Laura Parker, music education/pedagogy

Benjamin Pasternack, piano

Amit Peled, [20], strings

Marina Piccinini, [21], flute

Edward Polochick, [22]director of choral activities/ensembles

Pamela Poulin, music theory

Kevin Puts, [23], composition

Steven Rainbolt, voice

Hollis Robbins, [24], humanities/liberal arts

Gwyn Roberts, early music

Nancy Roldan, piano special studies

Neil Thompson Shade, recording arts

William Sharp, [25], voice

John Shirley-Quirk, [26], [27], voice

Alexander Shtarkman, piano

Emily Skala, woodwinds

Boris Slutsky, piano

Tracey Smyser, language

Sarah Snyder, humanities/language

Laurie Sokoloff, woodwinds

Eileen Soskin, associate dean for academic affairs

Elam Sprenkle, music theory/musicology

Colin St. Martin, early music

Cherie Stellaccio, music education

Alan Stepansky, cello/strings

Stephen Stone,music theory

Donald Sutherland, organ

Andrew Talle, musicology

Mark Thakar, [28], conducting

Chris Theofanidis, [29], composition

Gary Thomas, jazz

Charles Thompson, recording arts

Elizabeth Tolbert, musicology

Chai-Jung Tsay, music education/humanities

Keng-Yuen Tseng, violin/strings

Robert van Sice [30], percussion

Sebastian Vogt, German

John Walker, organ

Dame Gillian Weir, organ

Jeffrey Weisner, double bass/strings

Barbara Weiss, early music

Piero Weiss, musicology

Weiss, Susan, musicology

Alison Wells, strings

Kip Wile, music theory

Geoffrey Wright, computer music/composition

Stephen Wyrczynski, viola/strings

Shirley Yoo, music theory/keyboard studies

Gene Young, conductor/preparatory

Zack Wylde, ear training

External links



Official site

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