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Strings International Music Festival
The Strings International Music Festival, featuring members of the Philadelphia Orchestra and other internationally-acclaimed musicians, is conducted on the exquisite, estate-like grounds of Bryn Mawr College in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. The 14-day summer music program is designed for students at every age and skill level - from eight years of age through the college years - and includes seven orchestra levels. Students attend our program from throughout the United States and around the world.
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The Youth Orchestra of San Antonio (YOSA) has a new Music Director, Troy Peters. Read this article for full details: http://www.mysanantonio.com/life/Music_director_Troy_Peters_set_to_make_local_conducting_debut.html

For additional information right from the YOSA site, click here.
3 years ago | |
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Thomas Hampson, baritone and Wolfram Rieger, piano

Philadelphia Chamber Music Society America’s leading baritone returns to Philadelphia for a very special recital with accompanist Wolfgang Rieger. Part of Hampson’s continuing “Song of America” project, this concert is presented in collaboration with the American Musicological Society and commemorates the 250th anniversary of the first song written in America. Price: $25.00 215-569-8080 Thomas Hampson, baritone and Wolfram Rieger, piano Photo An evening of American song Hampson's PCMS recital is part of his continuing Song of America project, marking the 250th anniversary of the first song written in America. Thursday, November 12, 2009, 7:30 PM – 8:30 PM. Independence Seaport Museum 211 S. Columbus Blvd. For more info visit www.pcmsconcerts.org.
3 years ago | |
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Dear Fellow Strings and Families,

We have some exciting news! The Strings International Music Festival has opened an online store. The store can be accessed by clicking here or cutting and pasting the following link into your browser: http://www.cafepress.com/simf.

Just in time for the holidays, the Strings store has a variety of great gifts for your Strings fans, alumni and family members. T-shirts, sweatshirts, travel mugs, calendars, bags, and that’s just to name a few. Make sure you add a visit to the Strings store to your holiday shopping list.

Also, remember to stay up-to-date on Strings news and events on our Facebook page, and by following us on Twitter.





3 years ago | |
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Have you ever heard of the Mozart effect? Perhaps yes, and perhaps no, but it is a truly remarkable example of the beneficial effects of classical music. The term “Mozart Effect,” came out of a 1993 study conducted by researchers Frances Rauscher and Katherine Ky in which they studied the effects of listening to Mozart on the IQ scores of college students. Well, needless to say, the college students that had listed to Mozart had improved test scores. Rauscher and Ky repeated their study in 1995 on a larger number of test subjects, and the results were the same. In 1996 and 1997, another study was conducted at Ursinus College in Pennsylvania. The study showed increased brain activity in subjects after listening to Mozart. The study also found that music similar to Mozart, meaning other classical music, provided the same increase in brain activity.

Scientists and researchers have continued to study this classical music phenomenon, and have found increased spatial cognition, increased test scores, improved fine motor coordination, improved vision, and higher brain function. Perhaps most interesting, and most important, however, are the important effects of classical music on our health and well being.

According to the Institute of Brain Aging at the University of California, it has been found that listening to Mozart has improved the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale scores of patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease.

But is it only Mozart? According to Professor John Jenkins, and his study of the Mozart Effect on epileptic patients, it is Bach too. As published by the BBC, he found that “short bursts” of classical music decrease epileptic attacks. A hospital study on heart patients that was conducted also found classical music to be beneficial. The study reported that 30 minutes of listening to classical music had the same affect on their patients as the anti-anxiety drug Valium, and when you walk into a surgical room, it is usually classical music that you will hear.

Here are some other interesting facts on the benefits of classical music:

- According to a St. John’s University study, classical music aids in memory development from as young as 3 months
- It has also been found that listening to Baroque music enhances memory, specifically of spelling, poetry, and language
- According to a study conducted by the University of Washington of the effects of classical music listening on people in the workplace, it was found that those listening to classical music while editing a manuscript had a 21.3% greater accuracy rate, and those in the billing department of Mississippi Power & Lighting had a 18.6% increase in efficiency.
- In 2004 the British Transport Police started playing classical music in underground stations. After 6 months, robberies were down 33%, assaults were down 25%, and vandalism was down 37%.

The benefits of classical music are quite clear – improved health, improved work skills, lower crime; lower stress. There really is no reason not to listen to classical music.


3 years ago | |
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We have exciting news! Complimentary tickets to Saturday's Philadelphia Orchestra concert are available to all Strings Families and friends! That is for this Saturday, October 31st. To get your tickets just visit us on Facebook, and reply to the discussion board posting, “Complimentary Tickets to Saturday's Philadelphia Orchestra Concert” by posting your name, email address, and number of tickets you would like us to reserve for you. We will contact you to confirm the reservation, or if any additional information is required.

These tickets are compliments of The Philadelphia Orchestra, and will go QUICKLY. There are only a limited number available, so respond ASAP! Details on the concert are below.

Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto
Saturday, October 31st, 8:00 PM

Vladimir Jurowski Conductor
Sergey Khachatryan Violin

Stravinsky Scherzo fantastique
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto
Prokofiev Symphony No. 4 (1947 revision)

Energetic Armenian-born violinist Sergey Khachatryan joins the Orchestra for an all-Russian program that highlights Tchaikovsky's summery Violin Concerto. At the podium for his fourth Philadelphia Orchestra visit is Moscow native Vladimir Jurowski, principal conductor of the London Philharmonic and music director of the Glyndebourne Festival Opera. Jurowski opens the concert with Stravinsky's flamboyant early Scherzo fantastique, written when the 24-year-old composer was still under the tutelage of Rimsky-Korsakov, and closes with Prokofiev's rarely heard Fourth Symphony from 1930, in its sumptuous expanded version of 1947.

Additional Strings programs, news, and events can also be found on our Facebook page. So be sure to check it out regularly!




3 years ago | |
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Follow the Strings International Music Festival on Twitter now. Visit us at: http://twitter.com/stringscamp.
3 years ago | |
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This summer's Croatia trip was amazing. We visited Venice, well known for its classical musicians and history. Exciting to note is that our tour guide in Venice was actually an opera singer... how fitting!!

Check out the photos from the trip, and be sure to look on our website for 2010 registration information.
3 years ago | |
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The Strings International Music Festival has a standing relationship with the famous Cunningham Piano Company out of Philadelphia. The following are some fun facts about Cunningham Piano:

1. Voted 1st Place Winner for the 2007 and 2008 Best Musical Instruments on MyFoxPhilly.com.

2. You can tour the factory and see firsthand their musical crafting.

3. Cunningham Piano came to the rescue of a prodigy - watch below.

View more news videos at: http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/video.



4. Awesome!! As stated in the YouTube description for the below video: "The PianoDisc iQ Intelligent Player System can connect an iPod to a PianoDisc reproducing piano, allowing for audio output to speakers inside the piano case, video from the iPod, and MIDI signals embedded in the music track to actually play the physical piano in sync with the video. This demonstration was shot at the Cunningham Piano Company in Philadelphia (http://www.cunninghampiano.com/), with the audio directly recorded from the iQ playing through an acoustic Cunningham piano. Featured song "100 Years" by Five for Fighting. Video and audio engineering by pianist/videographer Hugh Sung (http://hughsung.com)."

4 years ago | |
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Strings International Music Festival's faculty member, and accomplished musician, Ranaan Meyer, has made yet another accomplishment in his musical career. Ranaan has been known at the Strings International Music Festival for quite a few summers now, first teaching alongside Hal Robinson, Principal Bass of The Philadelphia Orchestra, and then heading the double bass program at Strings. Ranaan is also well known for his fabulous, and famous string trio, Time for Three, for which he is the bassist and composer.

Ranaan Meyer has now started a summer workshop called Classical Jam Band. The program with Classical Jam Band is from August 10-15th, and is a residency program held at North Central Michigan College on the campus of the Bay View Music Festival.

The program at Classical Jam Band is a week-long music experience of collaboration and creativity in which students will form their own musical ensembles. All musicians attending will be taught improvisation, arranging and composing as an ensemble, as a “jam band,” by Ranaan Meyer. Groups will create original music and new arrangements. They will practice these skills within the framework of their prior musical experience and learn to apply them to their classical playing. They will perform for their colleagues as well as in open performances for the Bay View audiences.

So...

Step 1: study alongside members of The Phildelphia Orchestra at the Strings International Music Festival in order to practice and improve upon your technique and classical styling. The Strings International Music Festival's 2009 dates are June 13-26.. Limited spaces are still available, and when requesting information, be sure to inquire about the available scholarships.

Step 2: study alongside Ranaan Meyer at Classical Jam Band, and take your improved skills and styling and further them yet again, learning improvisation and composing.
4 years ago | |
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The Children's Orchestra Society, presents...

Discovery Gala Concert

Wednesday, June 3, 2009 at 7:30 PM
COS Young Symphonic Ensemble
Michael Dadap, Conductor
2009 Discovery Winner:
Sheena Tsai, Violin
Guest Artists:
Soovin Kim, Violin
Eric Jacobsen, Cello
Orli Shaham, Piano

Carnegie Hall
57th Street & 7th Avenue
New York, NY 10019

Tickets: $20, $30, $50

COS celebrates its 40th anniversary at Carnegie Hall! Join us for this momentous occasion as we present our 15th annual Discovery Gala concert, featuring the YSE, the 2009 Senior Discovery Competition winner, Sheena Tsai, performing the Saint-Saens Violin Concerto No. 3 and special guest artists, Soonvin Kim, Eric Jacobsen, and Orli Shaham performing the Beethoven Triple Concerto. The program also include Rossini's Barber of Seville Overture and Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 4.
4 years ago | |
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