Friday November 03, 2006
Katy Dickinson
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Warren Vache, Carnegie Mellon
My daughter Jessi and I wandered around the Carnegie Mellon campus in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania yesterday between official tours and interviews. We were invited to join the Music department's weekly noon Convocation in the Kresge Recital Hall and were lucky enough to be there the day famed jazz horn player Warren Vache played.
The hall was very full in the back 2/3. The front few rows were empty during the opening set until Mr. Vache pointed out that he and the other two players had bathed and had their shots and would someone please come sit nearer. He told a few funny stories and answered some questions but mostly expressed himself delightfully through his music.
CMU is a very impressive place. The integration of art, music, and computer science is particularly attractive to we from the Silicon Valley. The recital halls are fully linked into professional recording studios and there is also a professional sound mixing studio which is part of the art department on the top floor. The architecture school is in the same building as music and art. The Fine Arts Building floor at entry level is inlaid with marble diagrams of famous buildings - Athens' Parthenon, St. Peter's of Rome, and Notre Dame in Paris among them.
Jessi had fun staying over in the CMU dorms with her friends and visited with her cousin Joel who is attending U Pitt next door. She found CMU to be very much a 24x7 campus and was impressed by the size of the killer chocolate cookies with ice cream on top.
We were lucky enough to be able to sit in on a delightful music lesson by Douglas Ahlstedt (an associate professor of voice at CMU with a specialty in vocal health). CMU's music department only takes 35 to 40 students a year, only 15 of them in voice. So, Jessi's application may not be accepted (but what an amazing place to be trained if she did get in). Even I with no music training could tell that the facilities and teachers are world class. The staff were very helpful and answered questions both in email in advance and while we were there. Jessi points out that artists who email you back are a rare breed.
Posted at 02:54PM Nov 03, 2006 by katysblog in Home & Family |