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NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC

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Established 1867
School type Private
President Tony Woodcock
Location Boston, MA, USA
Enrollment 750
Campus Metropolis
Homepage [1]


The 'New England Conservatory of Music' ('NEC') in Boston, Massachusetts is the oldest independent conservatory in the United States.
Jordan Hall Building on 30 Gainsborough Street.

Today, NEC is widely known to be among the world's leading musical institutions, and is the only music school in the United States designated as a National Historic Landmark.
The school is home each year to 750 students pursuing undergraduate and graduate studies along with 1400 more in its ''Preparatory School'' as well as the ''School of Continuing Education''. The conservatory offers 5 year joint double degree programs with Harvard University and Tufts University as well as cross registration with Tufts, Northeastern University, and Simmons College.

Contents
History
Campus
Jordan Hall
Majors of study
Preparatory School
School of Continuing Education
Also of note
Notable alumni
Notable present and former faculty
Notes
External links

History


NEC was founded in 1867 by Eben Tourjee, who modelled it after the European conservatories of that time. Initially, it was located in the Boston Music Hall just off Tremont Street in downtown Boston. A few years later,1870 it moved to the former St. James Hotel in Franklin Square in the South End. It moved to its present location in the Symphony/Prudential Neighborhood on Huntington Avenue in 1903. In 1881, when Henry Lee Higginson established the Boston Symphony Orchestra, he drew heavily on school's faculty to serve as section leaders. Today, the school and the orchestra continue to share a close association - nearly half of the BSO is composed of conservatory faculty and alumni, a remarkable statistic. Not surprisingly, the BSO string section is also considered the orchestra's strongest asset, representative of the strings department at NEC. When Boston established its first full-scale opera company in 1908, the manager, conductors, soloists, orchestra, chorus, library, and rehearsal rooms were all provided by the conservatory. After the demise, Boris Goldovsky's Opera Theater gave local audiences their first fully-staged performances in more than a decade. In 1958, Goldovsky's protégé Sarah Caldwell founded the Opera Company of Boston, which gained international acclaim for its innovative programming.

Campus


Spauding Library on Huntington Avenue, with the John Hancock Tower seen in the background.

The NEC campus consists of three buildings occupying the block on Gainsborough Street between St. Botolph Street and Huntington Avenue, one block from the corner of Huntington and Massachusetts Avenue where the world renowned Boston Symphony Hall is situated. The Jordan Hall Building whose main entrance is located at 30 Gainsborough Street with a side door at 290 Huntington Avenue is NEC's main building, home to Jordan Hall, Williams Hall, Brown Hall, the Keller Room, the Isabelle Firestone Audio Library, the Performance Library, professor studios/offices, and practice rooms. The second building, at 33 Gainsborough street, is the Residence Hall, a coed dormitary which also houses the Harriet M. Spaulding Library and the "Bistro 33" dining center. The 3rd building, entitled the "St. Botolph Building", at 241 St. Botolph street, contains the St. Botolph Hall, a computer laboratory, the electronic music studio, the office of admissions, the financial aid office, classrooms, and additional practice rooms.

Jordan Hall


Jordan Hall, NEC's 1,019 seat central performing space, and one of the world's greatest recital stages.

Jordan Hall is NEC's 1019-seat, hundred-year-old central performance space. It is considered one of America's premier performance venues for classical music.
The famed Cellist Yo-Yo Ma once said, "I love Jordan Hall for its unbelievable acoustics. And for its warmth and intimacy. But most of all for the sense of event when you go there."[1] The hall is home to some 600+ student performances each academic year, and is also frequently used by 3rd parties including outside organizations, touring artists and guests. Both the Boston Modern Orchestra Project and the Boston Philharmonic hold residencies at Jordan Hall.

Majors of study



Strings

Woodwinds

Brass

Percussion

Piano

Voice

Composition

Jazz Performance

Conducting

Collaborative Piano

Musicology

Historical Performance

Contemporary Improvisation

Preparatory School


New England Conservatory's Preparatory School is an open enrollment institution for pre-college students that offers music classes and private instruction for young musicians, and fosters over 20 small and large ensembles. Students enrolled in New England Conservatory's Preparatory School may participate in the Certificate Program, allowing students to achieve their optimum performance skills, competence in music theory, and a knowledge of the literature that includes choral, orchestral, and chamber, as well as solo repertoire. New England Conservatory's Preparatory is home to one of the world's leading youth orchestras, the highly selective Youth Philharmonic Orchestra (YPO), headed by Benjamin Zander. In June of 2007, the orchestra embarked on a highly publicized 3-week tour of China. The Preparatory School also houses the Massachusetts Youth Wind Ensemble (MYWE), a highly selective touring wind ensemble open to advanced high school woodwind, brass, and percussion players directed by Michael Mucci. The Preparatory School routinely sends students to the finest conservatories and universities in the world.
The Greater Boston Youth Symphony Orchestra performing in Jordan Hall.

School of Continuing Education


New England Conservatory's School of Continuing Education allows members of the surrounding community to experience the benefits of New England Conservatory's world class instruction, offering classes, lessons, and ensemble opportunities to musicians of any background. At NEC's School of Continuing Education members can participate in chamber, jazz, and vocal ensembles, an opera studio, an adult chorale, a Klezmer Band, and a Community Gospel Choir. In addition, NEC's School of Continuing Education offers classes in several fields including music history, music theory, and Alexander technique, many of which are instructed by members of the New England Conservatory college faculty.

Also of note


NEC is co-founder and educational partner of ''From the Top'', a weekly radio program that celebrates outstanding young classical musicians from the entire country. With its broadcast home in Jordan Hall, the show is now carried by National Public Radio and is heard on 250 stations throughout the United States.
The unofficial mascot of NEC is the Fighting Penguin.

Notable alumni



Richie Barshay, jazz drummer

Zacai Curtis, jazz pianist

Ted Atkatz, percussionist

Herbert Blomstedt, Conductor Laureate, San Francisco Symphony

Lon Bronson, trumpeter and bandleader

Don Byron, jazz clarinetist and composer

Sarah Caldwell, conductor

Colin Carr, cellist

Regina Carter, violinist

John Clark, jazz horn player and composer

Marilyn Crispell, jazz pianist

Phyllis Curtin, soprano

Roberto Diaz, violist, Curtis Institute president

Marty Ehrlich, saxophonist

Halim El-Dabh, composer

Frank Epstein, percussionist

David Franco, music producer

Anthony Glise, classical guitarist, composer, author

Fred Hersch, jazz pianist

Katrina Holden, soprano

Dave Holland, jazz bassist

Christopher O'Riley, pianist (''From the Top'' host)

Dave Douglas, jazz trumpet

Everett "Vic" Firth, percussionist

Michael Gandolfi, composer

Reed Gratz, jazz pianist, composer, educator

Denyce Graves, mezzo-soprano, Metropolitan Opera's "Carmen of Choice"

Bud Herseth, trumpet, Chicago Symphony

Matthew Hoch, voice, Shorter College professor

Stefan Jackiw, violinist

David J. Kim, violist

Louis Krasner, violinist

Yura Lee, violinist

Max Levinson, pianist

John Medeski, jazz pianist

John Moriarty, conductor, stage director, pianist

Susie Park, violinist, Eroica Trio

Parker Quartet

Amit Peled, cellist, Peabody Conservatory faculty

Timothy Pitts, bassist, Principal Houston Symphony, Rice University faculty

Marcus Rojas, tubist

Eleanor Steber, soprano

Coretta Scott King, voice (civil rights leader)

Luciana Souza, Jazz vocals

Marylou Speaker-Churchill, violinist

Jupiter String Quartet

Biava String Quartet, 2003 Naumburg Chamber Music Award

Stephen Ferrera, music producer

Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, Kennedy Family matriarch

Lara St. John, violinist

Cecil Taylor, jazz pianist

Nestor Torres, Latin jazz flutist, Grammy Award winner

Tom Varner, jazz French hornist, composer

Raymond Wilding-White, composer

Bernie Worrell, pianist/rock musician

Rachel Z, jazz performer

Notable present and former faculty



Jeanne Baxtresser

Jerry Bergonzi

Ran Blake

Natasha Brofsky

Bob Brookmeyer

James Buswell

Jaki Byard

Wha-Kyung Byun

Robert Cogan

Vinson Cole

Francis Judd Cooke

Patricia Craig

Dorothy Delay

Robin Eubanks

John Ferrillo

Eliot Fisk

Miriam Fried

Michael Gandolfi

George Garzone

Bernard Greenhouse

Billy Hart

Rakalam Bob Moses

John Heiss

Fred Hersch

Dave Holland

Lee Hyla

Veronica Jochum

Kim Kashkashian

Martha Katz

Paul Katz

Nicholas Kitchen

Laurence Lesser

Joe Maneri

Cecil McBee

Ossian Everett Mills

Michael Mucci

Donald Palma

Ann Hobson Pilot

Danilo Perez

Malcolm Peyton

Quincy Porter

Paula Robison

Carol Rodland

Peter Row

Eric Rosenblith

George Russell

Mark St. Laurent

Charlie Schlueter

Gunther Schuller

Joseph Silverstein

Lucy Stoltzman

George Russell

Larry Scripp

Russell Sherman

Richard Stoltzman

Lawrence Wolfe

Vivian Hornik Weilerstein

Donald Weilerstein

Douglas Yeo

Edward Zambara

Benjamin Zander

Notes



1. "Jordan Hall History" — Handel and Haydn Society (retrieved 06 June 2006)


External links



New England Conservatory of Music

Art of the States: New England Conservatory Festival Orchestra

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