Los Angeles Times

A SCHOOL OF MUSIC CELEBRATES A DECADE

Richard Colburn imagined a globally recognized L.A. conservato­ry. Ten years on, his wish has come true.

- By Rick Schultz calendar@latimes.com

Before Richard Colburn, music philanthro­pist extraordin­aire, amateur violist and virtuoso businessma­n, died in 2004 at age 92, he had hoped that L.A.’s Colburn Conservato­ry of Music would one day rival the Juilliard School in New York and the smaller-size Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelph­ia.

On the 10th anniversar­y of the conservato­ry, and with the school’s student body representi­ng 14 countries, his wish for an internatio­nally recognized music institutio­n in Los Angeles has come true.

“If my father was here, he’d be crying,” Carol Colburn Grigor said by phone from her home in Edinburgh, Scotland. “He’d be so proud and so moved. It’s everything he wanted: a conservato­ry with free tuition and room and board, worldclass young musicians, teenagers doing chamber music, getting out into the community.”

Not to be confused with the Colburn School of Performing Arts, the Colburn Conservato­ry counts some 120 highly gifted students, offering about 30 openings every year. The conservato­ry lives across the street from Walt Disney Concert Hall in the brick and glass campus of the Colburn School, a much larger tuition-based community music and dance institutio­n founded in 1950.

In a measure of the conservato­ry’s rising profile, Los Angeles Philharmon­ic music director Gustavo Dudamel will conduct the Colburn Orchestra — the conservato­ry’s flagship ensemble — in Tchaikovsk­y’s Symphony No. 5 at Disney Hall on Tuesday, having previously conducted the orchestra in a rehearsal in 2011.

The concert’s first half features Dietrich Paredes, 33 (a Dudamel conducting fellow), who will direct the young musicians in Revueltas’ “Sensemayá” and Copland’s Clarinet Concerto, with Korean soloist Sang Yoon Kim.

Kim, 25, a third-year student, came to Colburn after studying at the Paris Conservato­ry. But in Paris, he said he wasn’t given enough opportunit­ies to play concertos or chamber music. “The emphasis was on a solo career,” said Kim.

In 2012, the conservato­ry’s 116 students (several additional students recently left to take jobs in the profession­al world) collaborat­ed with conductors Neville Marriner, Giancarlo Guerrero and Gerard Schwarz. And in April, Los Angeles Opera music director James Conlon is scheduled to conduct members of the Colburn Orchestra and vocalists from L.A. Opera’s Domingo-Thornton Young Artist Program in Benjamin Britten’s “The Rape of Lucretia” at the Colburn School’s Zipper Hall.

Kim, like many Colburn musicians, has won internatio­nal awards, including last year’s Jacques Lancelot Internatio­nal Clarinet Competitio­n.

He found inspiratio­n, he said, in the conservato­ry’s accomplish­ed performers, including its internatio­nal prize-winning Calidore String Quartet and violinist Nigel Armstrong, a recent graduate who took third place — the highestran­king American — in 2011’s Tchaikovsk­y Competitio­n.

Kim said he was also impressed with the quality and commitment of the conservato­ry’s faculty. His teacher, Yehuda Gilad, a renowned clarinet pedagogue who is also the Colburn Orchestra’s music director, has helped 85 students win positions in profession­al orchestras worldwide.

“Gilad is very picky when we play in the orchestra,” Kim said. “Sometimes other conductors miss things, but since he’s a clarinetis­t, he doesn’t. When I was preparing for a competitio­n in Oslo, he texted me every day and before each round to give me confidence.”

Usha Kapoor, a 19-year-old vio- linist from Phoenix, began studying with the conservato­ry’s Robert Lipsett in 2011. She agreed with Kim that working with profession­al conductors is the best preparatio­n for a profession­al career.

“Every new conductor I work with brings fresh ideas, and they all have their own personalit­ies in the way they conduct,” Kapoor said. “We get to know them as people too, and that’s really unique.”

Last year, the Colburn Orchestra struck a deal with public television’s KCET to air 12 concerts for an original series, “Open Call.” One of the show’s creators and executive producers, Daniel Bee, is the Colburn School’s vice president of communicat­ions.

“The visual branding you see — the school’s name on the door to the Grand Avenue entrance, the pictures of the kids on the wall in the Colburn Cafe — all that happened since Daniel joined us in 2011,” said Richard Beene, dean of the conservato­ry and a bassoonist on the woodwind faculty.

“We were content with being a well-kept secret, and Bee’s changed that dramatical­ly,” Beene added. “Two years ago, we had maybe 300 people at our Ambassador Auditorium concerts in Pasadena. Now they sell out. It’s really important for these incredibly brilliant students to play to a full house.”

Or, as Colburn Grigor, once a concert pianist herself, put it: “It’s helping students grow into the person they need to be to walk onstage in front of 2,000 people and just smile, take a bow and play — without hurling your guts backstage first.”

Beene and the conservato­ry faculty recently establishe­d three seminars to enhance the traditiona­l focus on artistry and technique: “The Healthy Musician,” a course on physical and mental wellness that employs yoga and other techniques; “The Working Musician” and “The Teaching Musician.”

By maintainin­g close associatio­ns with Los Angeles Opera, the L.A. Chamber Orchestra and the Philharmon­ic — musicians from all three organizati­ons are Colburn Conservato­ry alumni or faculty members — the school has also become part of the city’s cultural fabric.

In 2007, the spacious, light-filled 12-story Olive Street wing was constructe­d, with teaching space, practice rooms, an orchestra rehearsal and recital hall, and housing. Used by the conservato­ry and the Colburn School of Performing Arts, the space has also become a public destinatio­n, offering the cafeteria-style Colburn Cafe, where the likes of Plácido Domingo, Dudamel and Conlon have been seen dining.

But this major addition put the school in the red, despite its endowment of roughly $200 million.

“The school has a $130-million debt, and before the economic downtown, the endowment was bigger than it is now,” said Sel Kardan, the Colburn School’s president and chief executive. “That said, with the economy picking up and enrollment in the community school and adult studies program starting to accelerate, we feel like we’re in a healthy position at the moment.”

Kardan cited positive trends in recent fundraisin­g and said the constructi­on will eventually pay for itself.

“Outside organizati­ons rent Zipper or Thayer Hall,” Kardan said. “They use our facilities for recordings. Major U.S. conservato­ries come to the Colburn to have their regional auditions. The side effect of lifting our profile so much has attracted a new donor pool.”

It may also be a case of build it and they will come. In August, two members of the Tokyo String Quartet — first violinist Martin Beaver and cellist Clive Greensmith — will head the conservato­ry’s string music program. And there are conservato­ry plans to develop a vocal and composer program.

But one of the school’s biggest draws remains its record in helping students find jobs. In the last three years, Kardan said, 94% of conservato­ry graduates either won jobs or continued their music studies.

“It’s this idea of a portfolio career,” Kardan said. “Teaching, chamber music, orchestral performanc­e and entreprene­urship are some of the viable, satisfying options. In my conservato­ry days, everybody wanted to be a soloist. Of course, only .01% ended up being a soloist. To survive, we all know they are going to have to be f lexible.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Photog raphs by
Liz O. Baylen
Los Angeles Times ?? MUSICIANS
follow the lead of L.A. Philharmon­ic Dudamel conducting fellow Dietrich Paredes during a rehearsal for Tuesday’s program at Walt Disney Hall.
Photog raphs by Liz O. Baylen Los Angeles Times MUSICIANS follow the lead of L.A. Philharmon­ic Dudamel conducting fellow Dietrich Paredes during a rehearsal for Tuesday’s program at Walt Disney Hall.
 ??  ?? ORCHESTRA members Sukyung Chun, left, who plays the bass, Marlon Martinez, who plays the bass, and Allan Steele, who plays the cello, fill an elevator after rehearsal at the Colburn School.
ORCHESTRA members Sukyung Chun, left, who plays the bass, Marlon Martinez, who plays the bass, and Allan Steele, who plays the cello, fill an elevator after rehearsal at the Colburn School.
 ??  ?? KOREAN SOLOIST Sang Yoon Kim came to the Colburn after studying in Paris. He’s found inspiratio­n in the school’s accomplish­ed performers and the quality and commitment of the faculty.
KOREAN SOLOIST Sang Yoon Kim came to the Colburn after studying in Paris. He’s found inspiratio­n in the school’s accomplish­ed performers and the quality and commitment of the faculty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States