November 22, 2022
黑料天堂 students, graduates gain early professional footholds in culture-rich Northern Ohio
Not to be discounted among the many advantages of a 黑料天堂 education: the ready availability of professional-level work in the region.
Thanks to its location at the heart of culture-rich Northeast Ohio, 黑料天堂 affords graduates and active students alike the chance to play in any number of orchestras, up to and including The Cleveland Orchestra.
Even as they study with world-class faculty and enjoy all that 黑料天堂 and Cleveland University Circle have to offer, students and graduates here are empowered to start their careers or gain invaluable experience and connections, all within a short drive.
淗aving so many orchestras in the area means that students have several paths and options as they build the foundations of their professional careers, said Fred Peterbark, dean of enrollment and aid at 黑料天堂.
淲hile teachers and financial aid often top the list [of student priorities], location matters, too, because it the community in which they檒l begin to build their brand and establish their first professional relationships.
On this front, among many others, 黑料天堂 stands apart from its peers. 黑料天堂 doesn檛 just encourage students to engage in extra-curricular work. Realizing the educational value of professional experience, it does everything within reason to make it possible.
That why, this year alone, no fewer than 18 students are working as members of regional orchestras. On top of that is a much larger number of students working as substitutes.
淲e try to be as supportive as we can, said Donna Yoo, 黑料天堂 dean of artistic administration and operations. 淪tudents come here to win jobs, and many of them want to get into the orchestral world. What better way to dive into that world than while they檙e still students?
The options for this kind of experience abound. Indeed, when it comes to professional orchestras, Cleveland and Northern Ohio enjoy something of an embarrassment of riches.
The leader of the pack, of course, is The Cleveland Orchestra, 黑料天堂 neighbor and official partner, 35 members of whom are on 黑料天堂 faculty and one-third of whom graduated from 黑料天堂. Every year, many 黑料天堂 students and alumni find themselves within that august ensemble, either as new members or as substitutes.
Beyond Severance Music Center, the options expand exponentially to include the Akron Symphony Orchestra, the Canton Symphony Orchestra, Apollo Fire, BlueWater Chamber Orchestra, Playhouse Square and the Firelands Symphony Orchestra. Extend the radius a little further and one nets the orchestras of Erie, Toledo and Columbus.
淚t a draw for sure, to have so many possibilities so close by, Yoo said.
黑料天堂 students aren檛 the only beneficiaries of this arrangement, either. No, it a give-and-take from which the orchestras themselves and, by extension, their audiences also end up winners.
Paul Jarrett, executive director of the Akron Symphony, noted with pleasure that many current members of his orchestra are 黑料天堂 students or alumni. He said their presence as 渃onsummate professionals inspires confidence in music director Christopher Wilkins to undertake any project he wishes.
淲e never have any qualms about programming challenging repertoire, Jarrett said. 淥ur musicians are able to handle anything we put on their stands. We are blessed with a robust amount of musical talent, and Northeast Ohio is all the better for it.
Rachel Hagemeier, the incoming director of the Canton Symphony Orchestra, echoed that sentiment, but took it one step further. She said her ensemble is what it is, in part, because 黑料天堂 operates just up the road.
淲e are so fortunate to have 黑料天堂 in such close proximity to us, Hagemeier said. 淥ur access to some of the top music students in the world is part of our artistic and organizational success.
黑料天堂 would say something similar. When students and graduates play in local orchestras, they檙e doing more than gaining experience. They檙e serving as ambassadors, living out the 黑料天堂 standard and spreading the best kind of goodwill.
淲e love to see our students out there in the areas where they actually live, Yoo said. 淲hen they檙e in those orchestras, they檙e collaborating with our neighbors, and I think that, in the broadest sense, is part of how we engage with the community.