President’s Corner: September 2023

Colleen Hunter, WSMTA President

Greetings! My name is Colleen Hunter and I look forward to being your WSMTA President! Thank you for joining me on this journey and engaging in conversation and action.  I look forward to our chapter visits over the next two years and meeting you, the members.

With each June conference comes a rotation of some WSMTA board positions. Thank you to the on-going dedication of these officers:  Karen Hollenback, NCTM, Immediate Past President, now joining the Education Board; Kathy Mortensen, Immediate Past President; Kira Miller, NCTM, President-Elect; Amanda Harris, NCTM, Vice-President; Krista Seely, completed term as Education Board Chair; Michelle Mielke, NCTM, Education Board Chair; District II Director: Katie Levine; District VI Director: Ben Walley.  Thank you to Amanda Harris and Margo Cox who served as District II and VI Directors, respectively. Mary Foster Grant, NCTM, continues as WSMTA Treasurer for another term.

It is a pleasure having Kirsten Carlson back with us as Administrative Coordinator.  Working remotely from Canada, but joining us annually in June, she brings a global association vibe!

Our 2023 June conference, chaired by Carol Cross and Lois Rhoads, was a splendid success. Their team worked diligently throughout the year planning for “Collaboration in the Cascades” at Sun Mountain Lodge. A host of volunteers, helpers, student and professional performers, and presenters made the three days a refreshing and informative time for our membership. Our 2024 conference, chaired by Lois Rhoads and Dorothy Bauer, will be at Gonzaga University in Spokane. Ask them how to be a part of the “dream team!”

While I am not new to WSMTA, I am new to this particular role. I am guessing some of you feel the same way with your roles as they have shifted with the start of a new season.  Something in every interaction with WSMTA or connection with someone a part of WSMTA has helped me in my journey to this point.  Now our collaboration will inform, enrich, and inspire us individually and collectively. I look forward to meeting you, the members who make this organization what it is. From the youngest to the oldest, the smallest chapter to the largest, the most remote or the closest chapter or member, I look forward to a dialogue about what gives you purpose and vision and how our association can come alongside our efforts to bring beauty to our lives, to our students, and to the families and communities we touch.

Keep moving forward!

Colleen Hunter, NCTM
WSMTA President

Announcement/Reminder:

As part of your planning for this school year, log in to the WSMTA website.  Check your profile to make sure it is up-to-date, (add NCTM if you are nationally certified), reset your password.  You will be ready to register your students for MAP and other WSMTA events.

Eastside Chapter Scholarship Concert

Congratulations to our 2023 Hall of Fame Inductees!

Chris VanBuskirk, WSMTA Hall of Fame Chair

Congratulations to our 2023 WSMTA Hall of Fame Inductees!

It was an honor to present Harriet West of the Moses Lake-Central Basin Chapter,  RoseMarie Tamburri of the Seattle Chapter, and Patti Robertson of the Tri-Cities Chapter, their Certificates and Medals of Honor this past June at the WSMTA Conference, held at Sun Mountain Lodge in Winthrop, Washington.

Marina Munter, friend and colleague, of Harriet West, along with Kristof Iverson, husband, friend and colleague of RoseMarie Tamburri, and Benjamin Walley, a friend and colleague of Patti Robertson, presented our recipients their Medals of Honor, confirming their induction into the 2023 Hall of Fame.

Do not go where the path may lead, but go instead where there is no path and leave a trail!”  I believe that is what each one has done these many years, by leaving a well-marked trail.

So, as our newest recipients of the WSMTA 2023 Hall of Fame, we are proud to have added these ladies to this prestigious list of Hall of Fame Inductees.  Thank you again for your noble and influential example to all of us. Congratulations!

September 2023: Commissioned Composer of the Year Updates

Louise Nedela, NCTM, WSMTA Commissioned Composer of the Year Chair

Mission Statement: The WSMTA Commissioned Composer of the Year is the Washington State segment of the MTNA Composer Commissioning Program.  MTNA is dedicated to encouraging the creation of new works by American composers, and annually assists its affiliated State Associations with the generation and performance of new music through the national Composer Commissioning program. A newly commissioned work receives its premiere performance at the convention of the State MTA, which is then submitted to a panel of recognized composers for selection of the MTNA Distinguished Composer of the Year.

Sean Osborn, 2023 WSMTA Commissioned Composer

Sean Osborn, 2023 Commissioned Composer of the Year

The performance of the 2023 Commissioned Composer of the Year was held at the June WSMTA conference: Sean Osborn’s commissioned work will now be forwarded to MTNA for the national portion of the Commissioned Composer project. We wish him success! A recording will be on the WSMTA website soon.

Celtic Sonata for Flute and Piano, Sean Osborn, 2023 CCOY

  1. Cerridwen
  2. Morrigan
  3. Taliesin

Sarah Bassingthwaighte, Flute
Dainius Vaičekonis, Piano

WSMTA 2024 Commissioned Composer of the Year

Nathan Campbell, 2024 WSMTA Commissioned Composer

Nathan Campbell, WSMTA Commissioned Composer, 2024

We are pleased to announce the 2024 Commissioned Composer of the Year, Nathan Campbell, composer, pianist, and music educator in Bellingham, Washington.  He earned a BM in Composition at Chapman University, and completed his MM in Composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.  Nathan was the winner of the 2013 San Francisco Shanghai International Chamber Music Competition.  He also was the winner of the 2014 Highsmith competition, and the 2023 Marsha Wright Sonatina Festival.  He has worked with such groups as Friction Quartet, FEARnoMUSIC, The Bellingham Symphony Orchestra, The SFCM Orchestra, The Firebird Ensemble, Beyond Pluck, Phonochrome, and the International Low Brass Trio.

More about Nathan and his music can be found on his website and on SoundCloud:

www.nathancampbellmusic.com

https://soundcloud.com/nathan-campbell-composer

Nathan’s Proposal for the WSMTA 2024 CCOY, to be performed at the 2024 WSMTA Conference:

“Having watched a few recent interviews with the crew of NASA’s next Artemis mission, I’ve found myself spending more time gazing up at the stars and thinking about the planets and their orbits around the sun. I’ve found myself comparing our own routines to the orbits of planets. We pass in and out of each other’s lives on a daily, weekly, or yearly basis, but yet somehow, we remain connected through the influence of these orbits as our routines bring us in and out of each other’s lives.”

“I plan to capture this idea in a composition for piano and cello. The piano will create a minimalistic texture of overlapping harmonic progressions moving at different speeds, with each progression representing an orbit. The cello will present a melodic line highlighting the shared notes of each progression and act as a representation of the connection and influence between the orbits.”

Louise Nedela, NCTM, WSMTA CCOY Chair

 

2023 WSMTA Outstanding Artist Piano Competition

November 10-12, 2023
Central Washington University, Ellensburg

In just a few short weeks, The Outstanding Artist Piano Competition will begin!  It is always exciting to see the repertoire choices students with their respective teachers have been studying and memorizing.  The Junior Division will begin on Friday morning and then continue to completion with Senior Division following. Once Registration closes, then work on timing commences and students/parents/teachers will be notified as quickly as possible so plans can be made for travel and reservations (as needed) for a hotel.

We are grateful to CWU and their welcoming and cordial hospitality towards WSMTA. Please check here for our 2023 OAPC Judges photos and bios. This annual event is open to the public and we encourage you to stop in to listen to some of the students that showcase WSMTA with such wonderful performances!

More Information about the 2023 OAPC

Cherie Felts, OAPC Chair
jscffelts@comcast.net

September 2023: Vocal & Instrumental News

Jane Melin, Vocal & Instrumental Chair


Minds Need Muscles!
Did you attend any workshops at the WSMTA Conference in June, or other professional development events? Read any books on improving performance? This summer I read “Peak” by Anders Ericsson. He is one of the originators of the famous “10,000 Hours” study, which involved college-level violin students in Berlin. He says that the study’s findings have been  misrepresented by subsequent authors. His focus in “Peak” is on how skills are built through “deliberate practice” – quality vs. quantity. I’m sure that’s not news to most music teachers! But some insights grabbed me in a new way, because I need to apply them for myself. Here’s one: “Attending lectures, mini courses, and the like offers little or no feedback and little or no chance to try something new, make mistakes, correct the mistakes, and gradually develop a new skill.

These bobblehead guys in my studio represent The Mind (Einstein) and The Muscles (Hulk). They help me explain to students that, while their mind may think it immediately understands a new technical concept, their muscles will need lots of correct repetitions to make that new technique a habit. Turns out, I need to “practice” what I preach! I have been challenged to try out the new tips and tricks I’ve gleaned as soon as possible, instead of filing them away in a “Presentations” folder. You have one of those, right? What are the top teaching insights you collected this summer, and how can you put them into practice right away?

2023-24 Program Updates for Vocal and Instrumental Teachers

  1. Music Literacy Program updates for viola, cello and bass teachers: Now that the most current versions of the Music Literacy Program tests can be downloaded directly from the WSMTA website, changes can be more quickly rolled out and put into immediate use. Updates and extensions of the Music Literacy Program tests just for bowed string instruments are coming for 2023-24! This summer a team of Kitsap Chapter teachers of viola, cello and string bass have been working on updating the Technique tests (10 levels of scales and arpeggios), and extending the Sight Reading and Theory tests to at least Level 6 for these instruments. The changes should be available on the WSMTA site no later than the end of September. The MLP Vocal and Instrumental Curriculum Guide will help you prepare your students before your testing date. When planning your MLP event, make sure you download your test materials and Curriculum Guide from the WSMTA site to make sure you have the most recent editions!
  2. Online Music Artistry Programs are available for teachers of all vocal/instrumental specialties that have WSMTA-approved Visiting Artists. Contact me or MAP Chair Jason Kuo for more information.

Jane Melin, NCTM
WSMTA Vocal/Instrumental Chair
jane@melinmusicstudio.com



Greetings from Mary Kaye Owen, NCTM, MTNA Northwest Division Director

Mary Kaye Owen, NCTM, MTNA Northwest Division Director, 2022-2024 Term

It has been a joy to be on the MTNA Board of Directors! My favorite aspect of being Northwest Division Director is the added friendships I’ve made around the country and the Northwest. My least favorite thing is being in the Pacific Time Zone while most of the others on the board and in the division are in other time zones – but that is not an insurmountable problem, and I do not spend a lot of time stressing about it!

The 14-member BOD consists of seven Directors, President, President-Elect, Immediate Past President, Vice President of Diversity-Equity-Inclusion, Vice President of Membership, Secretary, Treasurer, as well as the MTNA Chief Executive Officer, who is non-voting. We meet in-person for a full day twice a year. When we are not in-person at the annual Leadership Summit in Cincinnati, or the national conference, the BOD meets together on Zoom every month for one hour so that the national business gets taken care of in a timely manner.

Once a quarter, I meet via Zoom with our six Northwest Division State Presidents (from Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming), and our Northwest Division Director-Elect (Steven Hesla from Montana). Because we also have other national leaders from the Northwest Division (MTNA President Peter Mack, and MTNA Vice President of DEI William Chapman Nyaho – both from Washington State), I invite them to join us. It’s a time of sharing what’s going on in our division’s states, as well as discussion and advice-sharing if a state president requests our help. How does a person get invited to be nominated for a BOD position? It probably helps to have been an officer in your state. And to be an officer in your state, it probably helps to have been a leader in your local association. My advice is to say “YES!” if possible, to every opportunity to serve.

My personal MTNA Origin story may or may not be as boring as the previous paragraph. I’d never heard of MTNA until in college 40+ years ago, (Multnomah University in Portland, OR), my Piano Pedagogy professor quickly mentioned many professional associations, including MTNA. But it wasn’t until I was given my pastor’s wife’s piano studio in Atlanta, GA five years later that I joined MTNA, and that was because she said, “Mary Kaye, you should join MTNA, because that will get your name out there and potential students might call you. All you have to do is pay your dues – you never have to go to meetings or anything like that!” With that recommendation and advice, I sent in my application and dues. Easy-peasy, just like she said!

About two years later, I moved back to Washington State and again was given a piano studio from a retiring teacher I’d met at church. I transferred my MTNA membership from Georgia to Washington – again, very easy. I kept paying my dues. I would get the national and state magazines, but rarely read them – I was very busy with my 9-to-5 job at the heavy construction office that transferred me around the country.

And then, I met Dan-the-Man. After a lovely courtship, we married. He had a great job, and we decided I could quit the construction job and get my masters degree at the University of Washington! What fun!! I kept paying my MTNA dues. I had a nice little piano studio, and was able to earn my MA in Music Education, with an emphasis on Piano Pedagogy. After graduation, I thought, “Maybe I should check out an MTNA local association meeting.” I’ll always remember the elegant home of that first meeting experience. The attending teachers were welcoming, and I kept going back to the meetings.

I soon met other piano teachers my age with the same life situations – babies and toddlers, enough that the chapter hired a babysitter during our meetings! (My kids still remember Mrs. Manny 25 years later!) Since the students of those two studios I was given grew up, I admit all of my students came to me because of my membership in MTNA! It’s been a financially beneficial, educational, and socially wonderful experience to be a member of Music Teachers National Association!

Congratulations State Honors Recitalists!

Congratulations to our State Honors Recitalists, who performed at the WSMTA State Conference in Winthrop, WA in June 2023.

Honors Recital No. 1

Honors Recital No. 2

Honors Recital No. 3

Honors Recital No. 4

Honors Recital No. 5 Vocal & Instrumental

Congratulations Clark County Chapter!

Elizabeth Morris, Clark County Chapter President, and Harriet West, WSMTA COY Chair

Elizabeth Morris, Clark County Chapter President, and Harriet West, WSMTA COY Chair

Congratulations to the Clark County Chapter, recipients of the 2023 Chapter of the Year Award!

You can apply for the Chapter of the Year Award for your chapter here: https://wsmta.org/teacher-programs/chapter-of-the-year.

MusicLink Foundation

Amanda Snell, MusicLink Coordinator

The MusicLink Foundation (www.musiclinkfoundation.org) is a national non-profit organization linking music teachers with low-income students who are not able to afford music lessons.  MusicLink teachers volunteer to teach these students at up to half of their normal fee, while MusicLink handles the process of determining a student’s financial eligibility and provides support and discounts for participating teachers.

Please consider signing up to be a MusicLink teacher! This strengthens the WSMTA presence in our community by promoting access and widespread availability of music instruction to students in need.

It’s free and easy to register whether you are already teaching a student at a discounted rate, or whether you are looking to begin teaching a new student waiting to be linked.  To become a MusicLink Teacher, contact State Coordinator Amanda Snell (amandacs87@gmail.com) or visit www.musiclinkfoundation.org.