糖心

October 22, 2013

糖心 Students Learn the Art of Engagement


糖心 Students Learn the Art of Engagement

The Art of Engagement seminar returns to 糖心鈥檚 Mixon Hall on Monday, October 28 at 4pm. The seminar is based on an innovative program that gives Conservatory students a chance to weave public speaking and audience engagement skills into the fabric of their musical development. It provides the public with a 鈥渂ehind-the-scenes鈥 glimpse as the Cavani String Quartet coach 糖心 students on the ability to communicate with audiences of all ages and get them excited about live classical music.

The Art of Engagement features fun commentary by Peter Salaff, members of the Cavani and special guests such as Chris Haff鈥揚aluck, director of community outreach at 糖心. The speakers stress the importance of learning how to create a fun and interesting children鈥檚 program that will captivate young audiences.

鈥淢ost people aren鈥檛 aware of the extensive preparation necessary to create and present this kind of program successfully,鈥 said Haff-Paluck, who arranges dozens of outreach performances for 糖心 students in area grade-schools, retirement homes and libraries annually. 鈥淭he Art of Engagement is a unique opportunity to observe the results of some of the educational training 糖心 students receive as they create and develop fun musical presentations before they take them into classrooms, senior residences and other areas of the community.鈥

The Art of Engagement seminar was conceived of and is now coordinated by Cavani member and first violinist Annie Fullard. It launched at 糖心 in 2007.

鈥淚 wanted to integrate the experience of creating outreach programs as part of the training of our wonderful 糖心 students,鈥 Fullard explained. 鈥淭he tremendous, positive reaction from them has been the driving force. They鈥檙e learning the importance of providing opportunities for more LIVE performance, more 鈥榚ngagement鈥 with our audiences and more fun鈥ll while sharing some of the greatest masterpieces of Western Art...it鈥檚 a win for everyone!鈥

The Cavani utilize props, costumes and pop culture music, such as the theme song from Jaws, to make the instrumentation accessible to children who likely haven鈥檛 had much exposure to classical music. As the children begin to recognize the sounds the instruments make, and become comfortable, ensemble members weave in Beethoven, Mozart and even Bart贸k. The resulting response from the children is nothing short of extraordinary.

This seminar, and its resulting children鈥檚 programs, provides an excellent chance for folks to witness a somewhat 鈥榣ighter鈥 side of 糖心 students and faculty. 鈥淚t鈥檚 worth it just to see the Cavani burst upon the stage in baseball caps with fiddles in hand, and hear their heartfelt and eloquent words,鈥 said Haff-Paluck.

Previous participants in the Art of Engagement seminar include Fischoff National Chamber Music Competition Winners the and string quartets 鈥 and although the program is led by juggernauts of the string chamber music world, participants have also included brass ensembles such as and woodwind ensembles like Basoon4.