Megan Tiller Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/megan-tiller/ News from the 草莓社区 community. Tue, 23 Apr 2019 14:04:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Sidewalk art: Students bring music to the streets in HMTA Play-A-Thon /now/news/2019/sidewalk-art-emu-students-bring-music-to-the-streets-in-hmta-play-a-thon/ Thu, 18 Apr 2019 19:05:27 +0000 /now/news/?p=41882 草莓社区 students performed in downtown Harrisonburg last weekend as part of the first-ever Harrisonburg Music Teachers Association (HMTA) Play-A-Thon.

The four-hour benefit for music education was centered around an acoustic upright piano on the outdoor courtyard of the Massanutten Regional Library Central Library.

Elizabeth Eby and Isaac Longacre perform selections from “Beauty and the Beast.”

Performers ranged from beginners to professionals and spanned genres from classical to bluegrass. They included EMU musical theater artists聽聽Elizabeth Eby, Tyler Goss, Isaac Longacre,聽Andrew Stoltzfus, Richard Vo听补苍诲 Lucas Wenger,聽plus singer-songwriter Alexa Lahr, violinist Evelina Kilimnik, clarinetist Robert Chaplin and violinist Ada Zhang, who is dual-enrolled at EMU and Eastern Mennonite School.

EMU professor and HMTA president David Berry and preparatory music instructors Kelly Wiedemann and Megan Tiller also performed, as did local piano students.

Preparatory music instructors Kelly Wiedemann (left) and Megan Tiller perform bluegrass fiddle music.

The audience was also invited to participate in a walk-up community art painting project provided by Shenandoah Valley Arts Mobile. Additional event sponsors also included Whitesel Music, the library, and friends and family of the performing student musicians.

A grant from Harrisonburg Downtown Renaissance provided major funding for the event, a benefit for the Family Music Project, which helps provide music education to children with fewer resources.

Additional photos are available .

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Suzuki Strings camp adds workshop: learn tunes and jam with The Steel Wheels at Red Wing Roots Music Festival /now/news/2015/suzuki-strings-camp-adds-workshop-learn-tunes-and-jam-with-the-steel-wheels-at-red-wing-roots-music-festival/ Thu, 07 May 2015 20:47:26 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=24219 Young musicians in a special summer fiddle camp hosted by the 草莓社区 will end their week-long workshop by jamming on stage with at the at Natural Chimneys.

The traditional final concert on campus will also take place, but what better way to show off new skills and enjoy new friendships than to hop on stage with fellow violinist Eric Brubaker 鈥01 and one of the finest Americana roots bands in the country in front of hundreds of fans at a music festival.

The Steel Wheels Fiddle Workshop is a new addition to the program鈥檚 Suzuki Strings Day Camp, now in聽 its eighth year and typically attracting approximately 30 youth violinists. The strings day camp, from聽聽聽聽 July 29-July 2 on the EMU campus, has a range of classes depending on age and skill level.

Children ages 3-7 have two-hour lessons, while intermediate and advanced students can participate in a longer Day Camp, for ages 12 and under, or Multi-Styles Teen Camp, for pre-college musicians. Both of these camps include the special afternoon workshop, which youth musicians can also sign up for separately.

The collaboration between EMU鈥檚 preparatory music program, The Steel Wheels, and the Red Wing Roots Festival 鈥渃ame about very organically through a shared vision,鈥 said Megan Tiller ’07, who teaches in the program and has been on the festival staff since its inaugural year in 2013.

Tiller also teaches Brubaker鈥檚 daughter in the preparatory music program, and Brubaker himself is an alumnus of the same program, which makes his participation all the more meaningful to young musicians, she said.

Benefits of camp participation are multifold, says preparatory music program administrative director , who also teaches violin. Playing for several hours each day with friends and with different teachers not only motivates and inspires students, but also causes 鈥渁 new familiarity with their instrument that takes them to a new level,鈥 she said.

The Steel Wheels (from left) include Brian Dickel, EMU class of ’98; Trent Wagler ’02; Eric Brubaker ’01, and Jay Lapp. Members of the band will guest instruct at the fiddle workshop, then include students in a performance at the Red Wing Roots Music Festival July 10. (Courtesy photo)

The Steel Wheels workshop 鈥渨ill provide a window into what a band does and how they do it,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd just being around professional musicians, hearing their sound and watching their technique inspires students.鈥

During the workshop, Brubaker will guest instruct, joined by Trent Wagler 鈥02 and Brian Dickel, class of 鈥98. A special performance will be Thursday on campus with The Steel Wheels, followed by a jam session and performance on July 10 at the Red Wing Roots Festival (where fourth band member Jay Lapp joins). Admission to the festival and a t-shirt are included in the fee for students. Parents are offered a reduced-price day pass to the festival.

The deadline for registration is June 4. For more information, visit .

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Fostering community-wide music through Bach Festival, Children’s Choir, Prep Music Program /now/news/2014/fostering-community-wide-music-through-bach-festival-childrens-choir-prep-music-program/ Sat, 08 Mar 2014 18:34:44 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=20841 BACH FESTIVAL

Music lovers flock to Harrisonburg each summer for the annual Shenandoah Valley Bach Festival. With a week of performances ranging from baroque to modern, amateur to award-winning, they aren鈥檛 disappointed.

The flagship performances are held in EMU鈥檚 Lehman Auditorium, but in an effort to share the experience with the widest possible audience, concerts are also held in downtown Harrisonburg venues on weekdays.

Many of the performances are free, to allow as many as possible to attend, said Mary Kay Adams, Bach Festival executive director and principal flutist. She recruits volunteers for each summer鈥檚 festival: to house traveling musicians, work as ushers for the performances, and even sing as choir members.

鈥淭he Bach Festival is one of the signature arts events in Harrisonburg every year, and adds to what is a growing and vibrant community for artists and arts enthusiasts,鈥 says Kai Degner, Harrisonburg City Council member.

Last season, 4,000 people attended the festival. In 2014, there will be a new concerto competition for youth, for a chance to earn a spot in the opening concert. Up-to-date information can always be found at .

CHILDREN鈥橲 CHOIR

The Shenandoah Valley Children鈥檚 Choir gained a new director,  Janet Hostetter 鈥87, after a careful sifting of dozens of applicants.
The Shenandoah Valley Children鈥檚 Choir gained a new director, Janet Hostetter 鈥87, after a careful sifting of dozens of applicants. (Photo by Jill Koeppen)

Whether at the White House for the lighting of the national Christmas tree, at festivals in Hawaii or in Italy, the sound of the Shenandoah Valley Children鈥檚 Choir (SVCC) blows its audiences away, assistant director Joy Anderson is pleased to say.

Now in its 22nd year, the children鈥檚 choir is open to youths aged 5-18.

They are trained to perform at the same level as nationally recognized choirs from urban areas, but their mission isn鈥檛 to compete, Anderson says.

The choir鈥檚 main goal is to instill high standards 鈥 in music and in character 鈥 in an atmosphere of cooperation, she says.

In the spring of 2014, Janet Heatwole Hostetter 鈥87 was named SVCC鈥檚 new artistic director, chosen from a stack of applicants from across the country and beyond. After majoring in at EMU, Hostetter earned a master of music degree in choral conducting from James Madison University. In the spring of 2008, she served as SVCC guest director during founding director Julia White鈥檚 sabbatical.

鈥淭he SVCC, under the direction of Julia White and [interim director] Joanne van der Vat-Chromy, has brought a quality of music education to our community that has impacted the lives of many,鈥 said Hostetter. 鈥淚 am honored to have been chosen for the artistic director position and desire to continue the same level of musical excellence we have all come to enjoy.鈥

Combining music theory and practice in their earliest non-auditioned classes, with performing artistry from age seven and up, the choir seeks to encourage a sense of connection, pleasure and belonging alongside instruction. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a rigorous program, but it鈥檚 fun,鈥 Anderson says.

The children expand their social repertoires, too: Those who are homeschooled meet and sing alongside children from the city schools, who mingle with those from county schools, plus some from even an hour鈥檚 drive away, living in Winchester and Charlottesville. Around 150 choristers are part of the program each year, which is housed at EMU.

For more information,
visit .

PREPARATORY MUSIC

Although part of EMU鈥檚 music department, the Shenandoah Valley Preparatory Music Program isn鈥檛 focused on grooming future music majors. 鈥淥ur main goal is to give students the skills to be able to use their music in whatever setting they find themselves in the future,鈥 said program director Sharon Miller, who teaches violin, viola and Suzuki pedagogy courses. That may be in orchestras, churches or living rooms.

Megan Tiller 鈥07 teaches strings at Spotswood Elementary (pictured) and Waterman Schools, as well as helping with the strings programs in  other schools throughout the region. She also runs Tiller Strings, a local option for obtaining stringed instruments and accessories.
Megan Tiller 鈥07 teaches strings at Spotswood Elementary (pictured) and Waterman Schools, as well as helping with the strings programs in other schools throughout the region. She also runs Tiller Strings, a local option for obtaining stringed instruments and accessories. (Photo courtesy of Megan Tiller)

The preparatory music program is a combination of community outreach offerings: Musikgarten for exposure from infancy to 7 years, to Youth Symphony, a high-level ensemble of high school juniors and seniors. The only program of its kind in a 60-mile radius, the program became part of EMU鈥檚 music department in 1988. It has served an average of 375 students each year.

The program鈥檚 community-building efforts continue with the Harrisonburg City Schools Strings Program, offering children an after-school opportunity for string instrument instruction that they might not otherwise have. Megan Tiller 鈥07, for example, is a Suzuki-trained teacher of strings at both Waterman and Spotswood Elementary schools. Since 2007, a group of highly diverse students in grades 3-8 have picked up violins and learned to play, regardless of their financial situation. The after-school program is funded in part by Harrisonburg City Schools, student tuition, and individual donations. About 150 children are in the program, 71% of whom are low-income.

In the late spring and summer, music day camps are organized for Musikgarten and Suzuki Strings.

For more information, visit
.

鈥 Samantha Cole 鈥11

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