[NEohioPAL]International Piano Competition & Festival at Oberlin

Marci Janas pjanas at oberlin.edu
Wed Jul 9 23:23:50 PDT 2003


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THE OBERLIN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
ANNOUNCES NINTH ANNUAL
INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION AND FESTIVAL JULY 20 -- 27

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:	MEDIA CONTACT: Marci Janas//440-775-8328
July 9, 2003			marci.janas at oberlin.edu

<Editors please note: biographies of guest artists, festival and 
competition backgrounder,
 and concert schedules are included.>

OBERLIN, OHIO -- The ninth annual Oberlin International Piano Competition 
and Festival, held on the campus of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music at 
Oberlin College and directed by Oberlin Professor of Pianoforte Robert 
Shannon, will take place Sunday, July 20, through Sunday, July 27, 2003. 
This year, for the first time, audience members attending the final round 
of the competition on Saturday, July 26, will be able to vote for their 
favorite performer.

The festival faculty -- composed of renowned professors from the Oberlin 
Conservatory of Music and distinguished guest artists -- will offer private =

lessons, master classes, recitals, and lectures that will provide teacher 
and student participants with intensive and in-depth opportunities to 
expand their knowledge of music history, theory, and pedagogy, as well as 
the vital connection of those three elements to on-stage performance. The 
competition is for pianists between the ages of 13 and 18. Some events, 
including all festival recitals and all rounds of the competition, are free =

and open to the public.

Some 35 young musicians from cities throughout the United States and Asia 
have been accepted for the competition following a preliminary taped 
audition round. Of that group, 12 to 16 pianists will be selected from a 
first performance round and will advance to the third round of competition. =

Up to six pianists remaining after the third round will perform in the 
finals, which will be broadcast live from Warner Concert Hall on WCLV 104.9 =

FM and wclv.com, Cleveland's classical music radio station, beginning at 7 
p.m. Saturday, July 26. Robert Conrad, co-founder and president of WCLV and =

host of the station's long-running national broadcasts of The Cleveland 
Orchestra, will serve as host of the finals concert, which is free and open =

to the public.

Guest judges for the final round of the competition and guest faculty for 
the festival are Hans Boepple and Robert Sherman of the United States and 
Ekaterina Murina of Russia. Final round judges from Oberlin are Professors 
of Pianoforte Alvin Chow, Monique Duphil, and Sanford Margolis. The judges 
expect to award cash prizes ranging from $4,000 for the first-prize winner 
to $100 for the sixth-place competitor. In addition, audience members 
attending the finals concert will cast their vote for the "Audience 
Favorite," which carries a cash prize of $100.

More information about the competition and festival is available on 
Oberlin's web site (www.oberlin.edu/con) or by calling Anna Hoffmann at 
440-775-8044.  For concert information please phone the Conservatory's 
Concert Hotline: 440-775-6933.

The Oberlin Conservatory of Music, founded in 1865, is the oldest 
continuously operating conservatory in the United States, and is renowned 
internationally for the intensive professional training opportunities it 
provides to aspiring professional musicians. Its students and alumni have 
won prizes in numerous international piano competitions, including the Van 
Cliburn, the Fryderyk Chopin, the Queen Elisabeth, the Arthur Rubinstein, 
the Walter W. Naumberg, the University of Maryland, the Kosciuszko 
Foundation Chopin Piano Competition, and the Concorsco Pianis-Otico 
Internazionale F. Busoni Competition. The Conservatory's collection of 
1,700 period and modern musical instruments includes 199 Steinway grand 
pianos.


Media Contact Only:  	   Marci Janas: 440-775-8328//marci.janas at oberlin.edu =

	7/10/03 #1-mj

	
 Ninth Annual Oberlin International Piano Festival and
Competition Guest Faculty

Hans Boepple

Pianist Hans Boepple has appeared as guest soloist with many distinguished 
American orchestras, among them the Denver, Long Beach, and Oakland 
symphonies, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Minnesota Orchestra, and the 
Metropolitan Opera House Orchestra. Also active in solo recital for more 
than 30 years, he has been listed on the Steinway International Artist 
Roster since 1982. Awarded first prize in the J.S. Bach International 
Competition (Washington, D.C.), Boepple's other awards include six Coleman 
Chamber Music Awards (Los Angeles), the Kosciuszko Chopin Competition, and 
the MTNA National Collegiate Competition. National Public Radio and Voice 
of America have broadcast his performances, and he has recorded the 
complete Bagatelles by Beethoven for Orion Master Recordings. A former 
member of the piano faculty at Indiana University, Boepple has been 
professor of music at Santa Clara University since 1978 and chair of the 
music department since 1995. In demand as an adjudicator, lecturer, and 
master class clinician, he continues to balance his performance activities 
with those of a dedicated and successful teacher; his students have won 
more than 100 state, national, and international awards.

Ekaterina Murina

Awarded the title "Honored Artist of Russia" in 1981, Ekaterina Murina is 
chief professor and chair of piano at the St. Petersburg Conservatory, the 
oldest musical institution of higher education in Russia. In a repertoire 
that ranges from Bach to Rachmaninoff, her performances continue the 
traditions of the St. Petersburg Conservatory, where she also studied. Her 
first performance in St. Petersburg's Large Philharmonic Hall took place in =

1954 with the orchestra of Yevgeny Mravinsky. In 1956, she left the special =

music school of the Conservatory with a medal for excellent studies and 
entered the piano faculty, where she studied with the outstanding pianist 
P. Sirebryakov. In 1961, she graduated from the Conservatory and became a 
winner of All-Russia and All-Soviet Union music competitions (I and II 
awards). In 1959, she achieved III prize in the International Piano 
Competition. In 1964, she completed the Conservatory's postgraduate course 
and was appointed as a teacher. During her many years at the St. Petersburg =

Conservatory, Murina has taught a number of famous musicians, laureates of 
international competitions, concert pianists, teachers at conservatories, 
accompanists of theaters and operas, and soloists of philharmonic 
societies. Her students have included Sergey Szhepkin, Veronica 
Reznikovskaya, Ji Min Lee (South Korea), Stanislav Gallina 
(Czecholslovakia), Viktoria Lakisova, Yuhan Langerpest (Finland), and Bian 
Men (China). Murina judges music competitions in Russia and abroad and has 
given master classes at conservatories in Russia, Germany, Finland, South 
Korea, and Scotland. She gives open lessons for delegations of teachers in 
such countries as the United States, Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Korea.


Robert Sherman

Broadcaster, writer, teacher, and radio personality Robert Sherman is 
probably best known for his work at WQXR, the classical music radio station =

of The New York Times, where he has been program director and executive 
producer and where he is currently senior consultant. For 23 years he 
presided over the popular program The Listening Room. He continues to 
present The McGraw-Hill Companies=3F Young Artists Showcase for the =
station, 
and has included on many recent occasions student performances taped in 
concert at Oberlin. He has hosted the Avery Fisher Career Grant Award 
presentations at Lincoln Center and the annual Martin Luther King Jr. 
birthday specials from the Harlem School of the Arts since their inception. =

His multiple award-winning folk series, Woody's Children, is heard in New 
York on National Public Radio's WFUV. On the faculties of Fordham 
University, the Juilliard School, and the Manhattan School of Music, 
Sherman has given seminars at Oberlin, Yale, the Eastman School, the 
University of Arizona, and the Mannes College of Music, where he is also a 
member of the board of directors. A former music critic for The New York 
Times, Sherman continues to write music columns for the Westchester and 
Connecticut sections of the paper. He published two books with Victor 
Borge, is the co-author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Classical Music, 
and with his brother, Alexander Sherman, compiled a pictorial biography of 
their mother, the renowned pianist Nadia Reisenberg. He is on the advisory 
boards of many major cultural organizations and serves them variously as 
pre-concert lecturer, competition judge, panel moderator, and fund-raising 
emcee. Increasingly active as a concert narrator, he has performed with 
such ensembles as the Canadian Brass, the United States Military Academy 
(West Point) Band, the Hudson Valley Philharmonic and Philharmonia 
Virtuosi. Among his many performances are the world premieres of works 
written especially for him by Seymour Barab, William Mayer, Issachar Miron, =

and Soong Fu-Yuan.


About the Oberlin International Festival and Competition


This gathering of international members of the pianistic community has at 
its core a fundamental premise: those who attend do so because they care 
deeply about the piano, its repertoire, and the future of live piano 
concerts in our culture. The festival -- designed to bring educational 
opportunities to young and old, students and private piano teachers alike 
-- features a week long banquet of lectures, master classes, private 
instruction, and nightly concerts that complement the piano competition. 
The director of the Oberlin International Piano Competition and Festival, 
Robert Shannon, is professor of pianoforte at Oberlin, chair of the 
department, and a member of the Oberlin faculty since 1976.

Since its inception nine years ago, the festival and competition has 
included noted pedagogues and performers from around the world. Notable 
artists and teachers who have judged and taught here include Soo-Jung Shin 
from Seoul, Korea; Che Chen Wang from Shanghai; Menahem Pressler, Yoheved 
Kaplinsky, Martin Canin, and Jerome Lowenthal. Prominent teachers of 
younger students, such as Emilio del Rosario, Gary Amano, and John Weems, 
are also invited to lecture and judge.

This year, 35 invited competitors from Asia and North America ranging in 
age from 13 to 18 will spend an intensive week performing works by 
Beethoven, Haydn, Mendelssohn, Mozart, and Schubert in the preliminary 
rounds of the Piano Competition. Of these 35 young pianists, no more than 
six will survive the grueling examination. They will play for judges who 
have selected winners from some of the most prestigious piano competitions 
in the world -- members of the piano faculty at the Oberlin Conservatory of =

Music at Oberlin College and distinguished visiting artists and pedagogues 
from New York, California, and Russia.

Concert Schedule

Programs and artists are subject to change.

Faculty Recital
Monique Duphil
Sunday, July 20
8 p.m. Warner Concert Hall
Works by Beethoven and Aram Khachaturian

Faculty Recital
Peter Tak=E1cs
Monday, July 21
8 p.m. Warner Concert Hall
Works by Beethoven

Faculty Recital
Robert Shannon and Haewon Song
Tuesday, July 22
8 p.m. Warner Concert Hall
Works by George Crumb, Liszt, and Ravel

Faculty Recital
David Breitman
Wednesday, July 23
8:30 p.m. Kulas Recital Hall
Works by Schubert

Guest Recital
Representatives of Yamaha Pianos
Thursday, July 24
6:30 p.m. Kulas Recital Hall
Program tba

Faculty Recital
Sedmara Zakarian
Thursday, July 24
8:30 p.m. Warner Concert Hall
Works by Chopin

 Semifinalists' Concert
Friday, July 25
6:30 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

Guest Recital
Ekaterina Murina
Friday, July 25
8:30 p.m. Warner Concert Hall
Works by Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky,
 Prokofiev, Beethoven, and Chopin

Competition Finals Concert
Saturday, July 26
7 p.m. Warner Concert Hall
This concert will be broadcast live on WCLV 104.9 FM and on wclv.com.

# # #






________________________________________
Marci Janas
Director of Conservatory Media Relations
Oberlin Conservatory of Music
39 West College Street
Oberlin, OH  44074
vox: 440-775-8328
fax: 440-776-3006
marci.janas at oberlin.edu
www.oberlin.edu
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<fontfamily><param>Palatino</param><center><bigger><bigger><bold>THE =
OBERLIN CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC 

ANNOUNCES NINTH ANNUAL 

INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION AND FESTIVAL JULY 20 -- 27


</bold></bigger></bigger></center><flushleft><underline>FOR IMMEDIATE =
RELEASE:</underline>	<underline>MEDIA CONTACT:</underline> Marci =
Janas//440-775-8328 

July 9, =
2003			<color><param>0000,0000,00ff</param><underline>marci.janas at oberlin.ed=
u


</underline></color></flushleft><center><bold><<Editors please note: =
biographies of guest artists, festival and competition backgrounder,

 and concert schedules are included.>


</bold></center><flushleft>OBERLIN, OHIO --<bold> </bold>The ninth =
<bold>annual Oberlin International Piano Competition and Festival</bold>, =
held on the campus of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music at Oberlin College =
and directed by Oberlin Professor of Pianoforte <bold>Robert =
Shannon,</bold> will take place <bold>Sunday,</bold> <bold>July 20, through =
Sunday, July 27, 2003</bold>. This year, for the first time, audience =
members attending the final round of the competition on Saturday, July 26, =
will be able to vote for their favorite performer. 


The <bold>festival</bold> <bold>faculty</bold> -- composed of renowned =
professors from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and distinguished guest =
artists -- will offer private lessons, master classes, recitals, and =
lectures that will provide teacher and student participants with intensive =
and in-depth opportunities to expand their knowledge of music history, =
theory, and pedagogy, as well as the vital connection of those three =
elements to on-stage performance. The <bold>competition</bold> is for =
pianists between the ages of 13 and 18. Some events, including all festival =
recitals and all rounds of the competition, are free and open to the =
public.


Some 35 young musicians from cities throughout the United States and Asia =
have been accepted for the competition following a preliminary taped =
audition round. Of that group, 12 to 16 pianists will be selected from a =
first performance round and will advance to the third round of competition. =
Up to six pianists remaining after the third round will perform in<bold> =
the finals, which will be broadcast live from Warner Concert Hall on WCLV =
104.9 FM and wclv.com, Cleveland's classical music radio station, beginning =
at 7 p.m. Saturday, July 26. Robert Conrad, </bold>co-founder and president =
of WCLV and host of the station's long-running national broadcasts of The =
Cleveland Orchestra, will serve as <bold>host of the finals concert, which =
is free and open to the public.


</bold>Guest judges for the final round of the competition and guest =
faculty for the festival are <bold>Hans Boepple and Robert Sherman of the =
United States and Ekaterina Murina of Russia. Final round judges from =
Oberlin are Professors of Pianoforte Alvin Chow, Monique Duphil, and =
Sanford Margolis. </bold>The judges expect to award<bold> </bold>cash =
prizes ranging from $4,000 for the first-prize winner to $100 for the =
sixth-place competitor. In addition, audience members attending the finals =
concert will cast their vote for the "Audience Favorite," which carries a =
cash prize of $100. 


More information about the competition and festival is available on =
Oberlin's web site =
(<color><param>0000,0000,00ff</param><bold><underline>www.oberlin.edu/con</u=
nderline></bold></color>) or by calling Anna Hoffmann at 440-775-8044.  For =
concert information please phone the Conservatory's Concert Hotline: =
440-775-6933.


The Oberlin Conservatory of Music, founded in 1865, is the oldest =
continuously operating conservatory in the United States, and is renowned =
internationally for the intensive professional training opportunities it =
provides to aspiring professional musicians. Its students and alumni have =
won prizes in numerous international piano competitions, including the Van =
Cliburn, the Fryderyk Chopin, the Queen Elisabeth, the Arthur Rubinstein, =
the Walter W. Naumberg, the University of Maryland, the Kosciuszko =
Foundation Chopin Piano Competition, and the Concorsco Pianis-Otico =
Internazionale F. Busoni Competition. The Conservatory's collection of =
1,700 period and modern musical instruments includes 199 Steinway grand =
pianos. <bold>



</bold><underline>Media Contact Only</underline>:  	   Marci Janas: =
<color><param>0000,0000,00ff</param><underline>440-775-8328//marci.janas at obe=
rlin.edu</underline></color>	7/10/03 #1-mj


</flushleft><center>	

<bold> Ninth Annual Oberlin International Piano Festival and 

Competition Guest Faculty

</bold></center><bold><flushleft>

</flushleft><center><underline>Hans Boepple

</underline></center><underline><flushleft>

</flushleft></underline></bold><flushleft>Pianist <bold>Hans Boepple</bold> =
has appeared as guest soloist with many distinguished American orchestras, =
among them the Denver, Long Beach, and Oakland symphonies, the Los Angeles =
Philharmonic, the Minnesota Orchestra, and the Metropolitan Opera House =
Orchestra. Also active in solo recital for more than 30 years, he has been =
listed on the Steinway International Artist Roster since 1982. Awarded =
first prize in the J.S. Bach International Competition (Washington, D.C.), =
Boepple's other awards include six Coleman Chamber Music Awards (Los =
Angeles), the Kosciuszko Chopin Competition, and the MTNA National =
Collegiate Competition. National Public Radio and Voice of America have =
broadcast his performances, and he has recorded the complete Bagatelles by =
Beethoven for Orion Master Recordings. A former member of the piano faculty =
at Indiana University, Boepple has been professor of music at Santa Clara =
University since 1978 and chair of the music department since 1995. In =
demand as an adjudicator, lecturer, and master class clinician, he =
continues to balance his performance activities with those of a dedicated =
and successful teacher; his students have won more than 100 state, =
national, and international awards.


</flushleft><center><bold><underline>Ekaterina Murina

</underline></bold></center><bold><underline><flushleft>

</flushleft></underline></bold></fontfamily><flushleft><fontfamily><param>Ti=
mes</param>Awarded the title "Honored Artist of Russia" in 1981, =
<bold>Ekaterina Murina</bold> is chief professor and chair of piano at the =
St. Petersburg Conservatory, the oldest musical institution of higher =
education in Russia. In a repertoire that ranges from Bach to Rachmaninoff, =
her performances continue the traditions of the St. Petersburg =
Conservatory, where she also studied. Her first performance in St. =
Petersburg's Large Philharmonic Hall took place in 1954 with the orchestra =
of Yevgeny Mravinsky. In 1956, she left the special music school of the =
Conservatory with a medal for excellent studies and entered the piano =
faculty, where she studied with the outstanding pianist P. Sirebryakov. In =
1961, she graduated from the Conservatory and became a winner of All-Russia =
and All-Soviet Union music competitions (I and II awards). In 1959, she =
achieved III prize in the International Piano Competition. In 1964, she =
completed the Conservatory's postgraduate course and was appointed as a =
teacher. During her many years at the St. Petersburg Conservatory, Murina =
has taught a number of famous musicians, laureates of international =
competitions, concert pianists, teachers at conservatories, accompanists of =
theaters and operas, and soloists of philharmonic societies. Her students =
have included Sergey Szhepkin, Veronica Reznikovskaya, Ji Min Lee (South =
Korea), Stanislav Gallina (Czecholslovakia), Viktoria Lakisova, Yuhan =
Langerpest (Finland), and Bian Men (China). Murina judges music =
competitions in Russia and abroad and has given master classes at =
conservatories in Russia, Germany, Finland, South Korea, and Scotland. She =
gives open lessons for delegations of teachers in such countries as the =
United States, Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Korea.


</fontfamily><fontfamily><param>Palatino</param><bold>

</bold></fontfamily></flushleft><fontfamily><param>Palatino</param><bold><ce=
nter><underline>Robert Sherman

</underline></center><underline><flushleft>

</flushleft></underline></bold><flushleft>Broadcaster, writer, teacher, and =
radio personality <bold>Robert Sherman </bold>is probably best known for =
his work at WQXR, the classical music radio station of <italic>The New York =
Times</italic>, where he has been program director and executive producer =
and where he is currently senior consultant. For 23 years he presided over =
the popular program <italic>The Listening Room</italic>. He continues to =
present <italic>The McGraw-Hill Companies=3F Young Artists =
Showcase</italic> for the station, and has included on many recent =
occasions student performances taped in concert at Oberlin. He has hosted =
the Avery Fisher Career Grant Award presentations at Lincoln Center and the =
annual Martin Luther King Jr. birthday specials from the Harlem School of =
the Arts since their inception. His multiple award-winning folk series, =
<italic>Woody's Children,</italic> is heard in New York on National Public =
Radio's WFUV. On the faculties of Fordham University, the Juilliard School, =
and the Manhattan School of Music, Sherman has given seminars at Oberlin, =
Yale, the Eastman School, the University of Arizona, and the Mannes College =
of Music, where he is also a member of the board of directors. A former =
music critic for <italic>The New York Times</italic>, Sherman continues to =
write music columns for the Westchester and Connecticut sections of the =
paper. He published two books with Victor Borge, is the co-author of =
<italic>The Complete Idiot's Guide to Classical Music</italic>, and with =
his brother, Alexander Sherman, compiled a pictorial biography of their =
mother, the renowned pianist Nadia Reisenberg. He is on the advisory boards =
of many major cultural organizations and serves them variously as =
pre-concert lecturer, competition judge, panel moderator, and fund-raising =
emcee. Increasingly active as a concert narrator, he has performed with =
such ensembles as the Canadian Brass, the United States Military Academy =
(West Point) Band, the Hudson Valley Philharmonic and Philharmonia =
Virtuosi. Among his many performances are the world premieres of works =
written especially for him by Seymour Barab, William Mayer, Issachar Miron, =
and Soong Fu-Yuan. 



</flushleft><center><bold>About the Oberlin International Festival and =
Competition

</bold></center><bold><flushleft>


</flushleft></bold><flushleft>This gathering of international members of =
the pianistic community has at its core a fundamental premise: those who =
attend do so because they care deeply about the piano, its repertoire, and =
the future of live piano concerts in our =
culture</flushleft></fontfamily><fontfamily><param>Times</param>.</fontfamil=
y><fontfamily><param>Palatino</param> The festival -- designed to bring =
educational opportunities to young and old, students and private piano =
teachers alike -- features a week long banquet of lectures, master classes, =
private instruction, and nightly concerts that complement the piano =
competition. The director of the Oberlin International Piano Competition =
and Festival, <bold>Robert Shannon</bold>, is professor of pianoforte at =
Oberlin, chair of the department, and a member of the Oberlin faculty since =
1976.


Since its inception nine years ago, the festival and competition has =
included noted pedagogues and performers from around the world. Notable =
artists and teachers who have judged and taught here include Soo-Jung Shin =
from Seoul, Korea; Che Chen Wang from Shanghai; Menahem Pressler, Yoheved =
Kaplinsky, Martin Canin, and Jerome Lowenthal<bold>. </bold>Prominent =
teachers of younger students, such as Emilio del Rosario, Gary Amano, and =
John Weems, are also invited to lecture and judge.


This year, 35 invited competitors from Asia and North America ranging in =
age from 13 to 18 will spend an intensive week performing works by =
Beethoven, Haydn, Mendelssohn, Mozart, and Schubert in the preliminary =
rounds of the <bold>Piano Competition</bold>. Of these 35 young pianists, =
no more than six will survive the grueling examination. They will play for =
judges who have selected winners from some of the most prestigious piano =
competitions in the world -- members of the piano faculty at the Oberlin =
Conservatory of Music at Oberlin College and distinguished visiting artists =
and pedagogues from New York, California, and Russia.

<flushleft><bold>

</bold></flushleft><center>C<bold>oncert Schedule

</bold></center><bold><flushleft>

</flushleft></bold><center><italic>Programs and artists are subject to =
change.

</italic></center><italic><flushleft>

</flushleft></italic><center><bold>Faculty Recital

Monique Duphil

</bold>Sunday, July 20

8 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

Works by Beethoven and Aram Khachaturian


<bold>Faculty Recital

Peter Tak=E1cs

</bold>Monday, July 21

8 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

Works by Beethoven


<bold>Faculty Recital

Robert Shannon and Haewon Song

</bold>Tuesday, July 22

8 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

Works by George Crumb, Liszt, and Ravel


<bold>Faculty Recital

David Breitman

</bold>Wednesday, July 23

8:30 p.m. Kulas Recital Hall

Works by Schubert 


<bold>Guest Recital

Representatives of Yamaha Pianos

</bold>Thursday, July 24

6:30 p.m. Kulas Recital Hall

Program tba


<bold>Faculty Recital

Sedmara Zakarian

</bold>Thursday, July 24

8:30 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

Works by Chopin


 <bold>Semifinalists' Concert

</bold>Friday, July 25

6:30 p.m. Warner Concert Hall


<bold>Guest Recital

</bold>Ekaterina Murina 

Friday, July 25

8:30 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

Works by Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky,

 Prokofiev, Beethoven, and Chopin


<bold>Competition Finals Concert

</bold>Saturday, July 26

7 p.m. Warner Concert Hall

<italic>This concert will be broadcast live on WCLV 104.9 FM and on =
wclv.com.


</italic># # #

</center><flushleft>

<color><param>0000,0000,00ff</param><underline>

</underline></color><bold>

</bold>



________________________________________

Marci Janas

Director of Conservatory Media Relations

Oberlin Conservatory of Music

39 West College Street

Oberlin, OH  44074

vox: 440-775-8328

fax: 440-776-3006

marci.janas at oberlin.edu

www.oberlin.edu</flushleft></fontfamily>
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