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Graphic Design Graduate Wins Award from Kennedy Center

September 06, 2013 12:00 AM
BYU graduate Madalyne Marie Hymas recently won one of the 12 awards of excellence and a $2,000 prize in the Kennedy Center’s 2013 VSA/Volkswagen Group of America Exhibition Program. The program aims to showcase and support emerging artists with disabilities, and Hymas’ artwork, “The Dyslexic Advantage,” will appear alongside the works of the 15 other finalists in the exhibition In/finite Earth, showcased at the Smithsonian Institution’s S. Dillon Ripley Center in Washington, D.C., this fall.
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Annual “eviDANCE” to spotlight BYU touring dance groups Sept. 18-21

September 05, 2013 12:00 AM
The top ensembles from Brigham Young University's Department of Dance will present “eviDANCE” Wednesday through Saturday, Sept. 18-21, at 7:30 p.m. in the de Jong Concert Hall. There will also be a matinee performance Saturday at 2 p.m.
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The Viola, Barták, and 50 percent

September 05, 2013 12:00 AM
PHOTO: Summer hiking in the Tetons Professor Claudine Bigelow’s research and performance lead to international recognition By Sarah Ostler Hill Music is a part of every culture. Most people have an appreciation for it. A few people feel it deep inside their soul, knowing they were born with music almost literally in their blood. When Dr. Claudine Bigelow, associate professor of viola studies at BYU, speaks of music and how she got started, her voice pauses in wonder here and there, and when she says she feels music on a spiritual level, you believe her. Bigelow teaches and plays the viola both on-campus and around the world. Her studies have taken her across continents where colleagues have become close friends, and old composers feel like contemporaries. PHOTO: Bigelow's viola students go crazy at the Salt Flats Bringing Barták to BYU On September 7, Bigelow will present her most recent research on Béla Barták and his 44 viola duos, originally for the violin, in the Madsen Recital Hall of BYU at 7:30 p.m. The respected scholar Dr. Donald Maurice from the New Zealand School of Music, who worked with her on her research while she was there on a Fulbright Scholarship in 2012, will join her. This event is free to the public. Bigelow first met Maurice, considered one of the top Barták scholars in the string world, in 2000 when she was attending the International Viola Congress in Sweden. They became good friends and over the years had traveled to each other’s universities to play in concerts. In 2011, Bigelow began to consider a Fulbright scholarship, which would enable her to teach at Maurice’s school. “I looked it up and learned it was hard to get a Fulbright,” Bigelow says, with a little laugh. “But I’ve also learned over and over again that 50 percent of winning an audition is showing up.” In the past, violists had recorded some of Barták’s duos, and violinists had created recordings with all 44, but Bigelow discovered that no violist had ever recorded all 44 on one album. She talked with Maurice and he became an enthusiastic accomplice, writing a letter extending an invitation for her to come to the New Zealand School of Music, with or without the Fulbright. “One thing led to another, and then everything came together and helped me get this project,” Bigelow says. In January 2012, she and her family headed to New Zealand for the next six months. Bigelow and Maurice wanted to honor Barták’s original intent, so they weren’t going to just sit down and play the 44 duos for recording. These pieces were based on traditional Hungarian, Slovakian, Bulgarian and Romanian folk music. To get to know this music, Maurice acquired recordings from sources in Hungary, Slovakia and Austria, where the original wax cylinder recordings had been transferred to modern formats. “Thomas Edison had just invented the ability to record on wax cylinders,” Bigelow explains. “Barták felt a need to preserve the folk songs of his heritage, so in the early 1900s he took to the mountains and recorded people in their native villages singing these old songs. People were flabbergasted by the technology. It took him time to establish trust. But he felt like he was saving culture.” Barták was right to be worried. Most of the songs found in this agrarian society have since been lost. Bigelow marvels at how brave Barták was to undertake such an expedition. He had to rely on the hospitality of strangers. Inspired by the recordings, Barták then wrote the duos. “We’ve put the recordings from the wax cylinders side by side with our modern recordings,” Bigelow says. “There are different layers of meaning that come out when you look at all the details.” She talks about how the original folk music had distinct poetry associated with each one. Some were humorous, others were sad, and others appeared to be nonsense, similar to nursery rhymes. Barták’s music didn’t have lyrics, but after hearing the folk music, Bigelow and Maurice could replicate the un-notated musical slides and tempo changes present in the vocalizations. “Sometimes you’d hear giggles at the end and feel the humor,” remembers Bigelow. “We can add a gesture to mark that.” She went to great lengths to find people to help translate some of the poems. Even BYU, which has the most diverse language center in the country, did not have someone who spoke these rural dialects. Studying Barták’s efforts made Bigelow passionate about his music. “This brings more conviction to my own playing,” she says. “He went to such lengths to preserve his heritage. I feel more committed to him and what he has written.” Bigelow and Maurice will launch the CD of their recordings at their September 7 performance, which will include a presentation of photographs and music demonstrating some of their findings. After that, they will present their research at the International Viola Congress in Krakow, Poland, on September 14. Growing Up with Music It is surprising to discover that Bigelow didn’t start playing the viola until she was 14. Her exposure to music, however, began at a very early age. Her father was working on his doctorate in music at UCLA and played the guitar every day. “When I was a baby, my dad would practice at night to get me to fall asleep,” Bigelow says. Then, almost in wonder, she adds, “I remember that. I remember getting stories and then music. Music has intensely been a part of my life from the beginning.” Bigelow’s smile is contagious as she reminisces about a family trip they took to Mexico when she was only four. There, her dad bought her a guitar, which she played the whole way home. When she was a little older, she and her sister used to choreograph elaborate rollerskating shows to her dad’s LP collection of the Brandenburg Concertos. “We were encouraged to listen to classical music as loud as we wanted,” Bigelow laughs. “Other kids listened to rock and roll. We turned up the classical music. I had a really fun childhood with music.” Her first instrument was the piano, learning from her parents. She took some formal lessons in third grade. Though these lessons weren’t consistent, her parents knew enough to keep her going, and Bigelow practiced a lot. “We lived in a branch, so they asked me to be the pianist in primary when I was still in primary,” Bigelow says. “So then I as really motivated to practice.” In high school, she played the hymns in sacrament meeting, young women’s meetings and seminary. She attributes this experience to teaching her a lot about music. The summer before Bigelow turned 15, however, changed her musical course for the rest of her life. “My dad had an acquaintance who was starting a new chamber music program for the summer,” she says. “She was desperate for violists. She offered me a scholarship to the camp if I would play the viola.” This acquaintance was Marjorie Aber, one of the people responsible for bringing the Suzuki method to the United States. She knew Bigelow was a musical person. She must have also known Bigelow had a gift. Bigelow was hesitant at first, so her father had a viola teacher at the local university give her a few lessons. She decided to give the summer camp a try. “They put me with 8 year olds,” she laughs. “But it was such a wonderful experience.” At this summer camp were some of the greatest musical instructors of the day: Bill Preucil, Sr., Roland Vamos and the famous Dr. Shinichi Suzuki. Preucil and his wife, Doris, helped bring the Suzuki method to violists and run their own music school. Vamos is on the faculty at Northwestern University. “I look back now and realize how good they were to me,” Bigelow remembers, warmly. “I was the big girl sitting at the back of the section, completely lost. They had compassion for me.” One of the tenets of the Suzuki method is that everyone is talented. With the amount of attention and encouragement she received, she believed she could learn this new instrument. Suzuki brought a number of child prodigies from Japan. Rather than be intimidated by such talent, Bigelow was deeply moved and inspired. Preucil took extra time to make sure Bigelow was holding the instrument correctly. She remembers how Vamos, on his lunch hour, would sit with her and work with her while eating his hamburger and milkshake. “Vamos made sure I learned the notes,” she says, fondly. “He was never disparaging. I was hooked from that time forward. I threw myself into it. I was deeply invested.” In learning her new instrument, Bigelow also looked to her younger sister for inspiration. “I would practice two hours a day, but my sister would practice her cello four hours a day,” Bigelow says. “She was a prodigy. I learned a lot from hearing her play all the time.” Through practice and summer camps, Bigelow gained a deeper appreciation for music and the life lessons it teaches. Dedication, diligence and endurance are all principles in action through music. But Bigelow still didn’t recognize she had a special gift until one day, as a BYU student, she was stopped by then-Professor Eugene England. He saw her pouring over a music score and tapped her on the arm. “He said, ‘You can hear all that right now, can’t you?’” she remembers. “That’s the first time I recognized that I did that. I had to have someone else tell me, ‘Look what you’re doing.’” Bigelow can look at music and hear it perfectly in her mind. This skill can be troubling, because she feels she never quite reaches the ideal, though others may find that hard to believe. Music Teaches She laughs at the great paradox that the more she learns about music, the more she realizes there is to learn. “Music isn’t for showing that you’re talented or the best at something, because someone will always be better,” Bigelow says, matter-of-factly. “Music is for communicating love. Music can be one of the highest forms of spiritual communication.” Empathy accompanies Bigelow’s words as she recounts how she has been able to touch people who don’t speak her language. As a teacher, she has seen how music can be the balm for a damaged person, helping them in times of emotional distress. “Music gives people a safe place to work with their emotions without directly addressing specific events from their life,” she says, with the wisdom of a philosophy professor. Music, to Bigelow, affirms that there is a God. She believes He created her to do music in this way, but while some people are really driven in their career, she never felt very passionate about working outside the home. Even though this tension is hard, she believes Heavenly Father wants her to be musical. “I discovered it was painful for me to not be musical,” she says, almost resignedly. “Every step of the way in my career, I have felt Heavenly Father’s influence in my life. He paved the way for me to do it. There are times I’ve felt inadequate and he’s magnified me and helped me do it. I’m not always sure I’m the best person, but I’m the person there to do it. So I’ve got to.” Bigelow is grateful for a husband and children who are extremely supportive. They must realize the innate need she has to create music. “When I’m playing music well and properly, in the way I had conceived it, and everything is going well, I get that same overwhelming feeling of joy as when you’re rocking your child to sleep and see their eyelashes flutter,” she says, almost poetically. “You realize you’re in the middle of a perfect moment.” Bigelow encourages students to work hard and be dedicated. They shouldn’t focus on what they can’t do, but what they can. She encourages balance, but also laughs at the idea, saying she’s never felt it. “And they need to show up for the audition,” she says, laughing.
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Claudine Bigelow, guest artist to perform Barták during Sept. 7 recital

September 05, 2013 12:00 AM
PHOTO: Claudine Bigelow and her duo partner, Donald Maurice when they first met at the International Viola Congress in Sweden. Read more about Claudine Bigelow here. Brigham Young University School of Music faculty member Claudine Bigelow and guest artist Donald Maurice of the New Zealand School of Music will present a viola recital Saturday, Sept. 7, at 7:30 p.m. in the Madsen Recital Hall. Admission is free. They will perform selections from Béla Barták’s 44 Duos for Two Violins transcribed for two violas, a repeat of a June 12, 2012 performance in New Zealand when Bigelow was a Fulbright Scholar there. The pair will be recording a CD of Barták’s 44 Duos for the BYU-based Tantara Records. It will include the relevant field recordings made by Barták (some examples will be played in the concert) and a selection of the field transcriptions and photographs that he took during his ethnomusicological journeys. They are working in close collaboration with the Barták Archive in Budapest. Bigelow is head of viola and chamber music studies at the School of Music. Recital appearances have taken her around the United States, Europe and New Zealand. Claudine has played with the viola sections of the National and Utah Symphonies, Smithsonian Chamber Orchestra and the National Chamber Orchestra. She served on the executive board of the American Viola Society for six years. In 2005 she hosted the Primrose International Viola Competition and has since served as jury chair, adjudicator and on the advisory board. Maurice is also a member of the New Zealand Piano Quartet and performs regularly as a soloist. He has presented at more than a dozen international viola congresses. In 2001 he was awarded the Silver Alto Clef by the International Viola Society and in 2007 was made an Honorary Life Member of the American Viola Society. For more information, contact Claudine Bigelow at (801) 422-1315, claudine_bigelow@byu.edu. Source: BYU News
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Registration open for BYU Young Musicians Academy

August 27, 2013 12:00 AM
The Brigham Young University School of Music is now accepting applications for its 2013-2014 Young Musicians Academy, where two-, three- and four-year-old children and their parents can learn to make music together.
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BYU CLARINET PROFESSOR PRESENTS RECITAL AT INTERNATIONAL CLARINET FESTIVAL

August 23, 2013 12:00 AM
August 22, 2013–Provo, UT–Jaren Hinckley, Associate Professor of Clarinet at the Brigham Young University (BYU) School of Music, performed a half-hour recital at this summer’s International Clarinet Association’s (ICA) ClarinetFest® 2013 in Assisi, Italy. Hinckley was selected to perform after a peer review by the conference committee.
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BYU graphic design student finds success in re-branding

August 20, 2013 12:00 AM
Recent BYU graphic design graduate Andrew Collin Beck has been featured on Fast Company's design website for his successful re-branding of a travel bookstore in New York City:
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Enter to win eviDANCE tickets and umbrella

August 19, 2013 12:00 AM
In honor of the upcoming eviDANCE concert, we are holding a sweepstakes! Like the BYU College of Fine Arts and Communications Facebook page in order to enter a drawing to win two eviDANCE tickets for opening night and a red eviDANCE umbrella. The short application to enter the drawing can be found by clicking the eviDANCE tab under the CFAC Facebook cover photo, or by clicking here. Enter before the drawing closes on Wednesday, September 4!
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Tony-winning Audra McDonald to perform at BYU Sept. 5-6

August 15, 2013 12:00 AM
Five-time Tony Award-winning actress and singer Audra McDonald will bring her acclaimed concert to Brigham Young University for the first time Thursday and Friday, Sept. 5 and 6, at 7:30 p.m. in the de Jong Concert Hall. Tickets start at $40 ($10 off with a student ID, $3 off for senior citizens and BYU alumni) and can be purchased at the Fine Arts Ticket Office, (801) 422-4322, or at byuarts.com/tickets. The performance will be 70 to 90 minutes long with no intermission. She will be accompanied in the performance by music director Andy Einhorn, bassist Mark Vanderpoel and drummer Gene Lewin. McDonald is unparalleled in the breadth and versatility of her artistry as both a singer and an actress. Blessed with a luminous soprano and an incomparable gift for dramatic truth-telling, she is equally at home on Broadway and opera stages as she is on film and television. With a record-tying five Tony Awards, two Grammy Awards and a long list of other accolades to her name, she is among today’s most highly regarded performers. New York Timesonce praised her for her “devastating theatrical impact, it’s hard to imagine any hurricane matching the tempest that is the extraordinary Audra McDonald.” Most recently the star of the Broadway revival of The Gershwins’ “Porgy and Bess” in New York and featured on the ABC television series “Private Practice,” McDonald’s resume of acclaimed Broadway performances also includes “Carousel,” “Master Class,” “Ragtime,” “A Raisin in the Sun,” “The Secret Garden” and “110 in the Shade.” In addition to her theatrical work, she maintains a major career as a concert and recording artist, regularly appearing on great stages throughout the world, including an appearance as the featured guest soloist with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra at Temple Square in December 2004. This concert is the first event of the BYU’s new performing arts series, “BRAVO!” — a new season that features a dynamic roster of celebrated guest artists. For more information, contact Jeff Martin, (801) 422-6340 or visitbyuarts.com. Return to BYU News page.
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Professional singer, BYU alumnus Nathan Pacheco to perform at BYU Spectacular

August 13, 2013 12:00 AM
As a freshman at Brigham Young University, Nathan Pacheco attended a fireside and heard Elder Jeffrey R. Holland talk about the importance of pursuing and holding onto dreams – and then never giving up.
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Summer DanceSport event at BYU Friday, Aug. 9

August 07, 2013 12:00 AM
Will include 'Special Olympics' event for special needs dancers The Brigham Young University Department of Dance will host this year’s Summer DanceSport Challenge Friday, Aug. 9, at the Wilkinson Student Center Ballroom.
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Opera “A Parking Lot for Hyacinths” debuts at BYU Aug. 9-10

August 07, 2013 12:00 AM
An experimental opera filled with young energy, “A Parking Lot for Hyacinths” will make its debut at Brigham Young University Friday and Saturday, Aug. 9-10, at 7:30 p.m. in the Nelke Theatre of the Harris Fine Arts Center.
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Upcoming Events

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NSO at the MOA!

4:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Friday, August 29
Get to know the best place on campus to relax, study, socialize, learn, and grab a bite to eat!
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Labor Day Closure

Monday, September 01
The Museum will be closed on Monday, September 2 for Labor Day.
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Opening Day: 'Earthbound and Heavenward'

Friday, September 12
Be among the first to see this new exhibition featuring sacred art of discipleship.
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FHE Tour

7:15 PM - 7:45 PM
Monday, September 15
Join us Mondays at 7:15 for a special FHE tour or to explore on your own with your family or FHE group.
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Print Study Room: Dürer

Wednesday, September 17 - Friday, September 19
Witness Albrecht Dürer's iconic works from 10 AM - 4 PM.
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Yoga at the MOA

7:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Thursday, September 18
Namaste! Join us for a one-hour yoga class in the MOA atrium under Gabriel Dawe's Iconic 'Plexus no. 29'. Registration is required.
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Saints in 'The Sense of Beauty' with Elliott Wise

2:00 PM
Friday, September 19
Join Professor Elliott Wise for a themed tour of 'The Sense of Beauty'!
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Arts & Entertainment

Song of the North

7:30 PM
Friday, September 19
Song of the North is a large-scale, cinematic performance combining the manual art of shadow puppetry with projected animation to tell the courageous tale of Princess Manijeh, a heroine from ancient Persia.
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Arts & Entertainment

Song of the North (Matinee)

11:00 AM
Saturday, September 20
Song of the North is a large-scale, cinematic performance combining the manual art of shadow puppetry with projected animation to tell the courageous tale of Princess Manijeh, a heroine from ancient Persia.
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Arts & Entertainment

Song of the North

4:00 PM
Saturday, September 20
Song of the North is a large-scale, cinematic performance combining the manual art of shadow puppetry with projected animation to tell the courageous tale of Princess Manijeh, a heroine from ancient Persia.
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Arts & Entertainment

American Piano Quartet

7:30 PM
Saturday, September 20
The American Piano Quartet moves into its 41st year, performing thrilling arrangements and original works for two pianos and eight hands.
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FHE Tour

7:15 PM - 7:45 PM
Monday, September 22
Join us Mondays at 7:15 for a special FHE tour or to explore on your own with your family or FHE group.
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College Construction

Updates on the Arts and Music Buildings

Academic Areas

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