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Natalie L. Haslam College of Music

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Vance Thompson

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
School of Music
205 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-7087

Vance Thompson

Senior Lecturer of Studio Music & Jazz

Trumpeter, arranger and composer Vance Thompson is the director of the Knoxville Jazz Orchestra, a seventeen piece big band comprised of the top professional players in East Tennessee. Thompson founded the group in 1999 and established a non-profit organization to support it in 2000. It has since developed into one of the region’s most respected arts organizations.

The organization presents an annual six-concert big band series, a monthly small group concert series and an outdoor Summer series that runs weekly from May through August. It also sponsors an honors band for high school students and presents free, in-school concerts throughout the school year.

The Knoxville Jazz Orchestra has appeared at major jazz festivals in Europe, released five critically acclaimed CD recordings and sold-out dozens of events in venues ranging from 280 to over 1,500 seating capacity. Artists who have appeared with the band include pianists Hank Jones, Monty Alexander, Mulgrew Miller and Donald Brown; bassists John Clayton and Eddie Gomez; saxophonists James Moody, Maceo Parker, Vincent Herring and Greg Tardy; trumpeters Terrel Stafford, Marcus Printup, Sean Jones and Ingrid Jensen; trombonists Wycliffe Gordon and Conrad Herwig; clarinetist Ken Peplowski; vibraphonist Stefon Harris; and multi-instrumentalist James Morrison.

The orchestra’s CD recordings feature Thompson’s arrangements and have received heavy airplay across North America on Sirius satellite radio’s “Real Jazz” channel and other nationally syndicated broadcasts.  These recordings have earned four star reviews in Downbeat Magazine and All Music Guide, topped the sales charts on popular internet music sites like Emusic.com and been spotlighted on NPR’s All Songs Considered.

Thompson is originally from East Tennessee and is a graduate of the music programs at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville and DePaul University in Chicago. Thompson taught improvisation and small jazz ensembles at DePaul before moving back to Knoxville in 1999. In addition to teaching private trumpet lessons and coaching small jazz ensembles, Thompson teaches classes in jazz arranging, jazz history, jazz styles and music business.

Education

MM, Jazz Trumpet Performance – DePaul University (1997)
BA, Studio Music – University of Tennessee (1994)

Renée Tatum

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
315 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-7534

Renée Tatum

Assistant Professor and Area Coordinator of Voice

Mezzo-Soprano noted for her “commanding and dramatic presence” (Opera News), mezzo-soprano Renée Tatum continues to garner recognition in the most demanding of operatic repertoire. In the 2022-23 season, Ms. Tatum returns to the Metropolitan Opera for Rigoletto, performs a debut recital with The Boston Wagner Society, sings Suzuki in Madama Butterfly with Palm Beach Opera, sings a recital with the Needham Concert Society, Mozart’s Missa Brevis and Vesperae solennes de confessore with the Masterworks Chorale, and ends the season with Mahler’s Rückertlieder. Future seasons include Flosshilde and Waltraute in Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen in concert with The Dallas Symphony.

Last season, Ms. Tatum made her Atlanta Opera debut as Cornelia in Giulio Cesare, followed by a recital with the Boston Artists Ensemble. Later in the season, she debuted Fricka in Das Rheingold with Nashville Opera and Margret in Wozzeck with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. She also continued her long relationship with The Metropolitan Opera in their new production of Rigoletto and Ariadne auf Naxos. Ms. Tatum’s relationship with The Met spans 11 years and has included nearly 100 performances including Fenena in Nabucco, 3rd Lady and 2nd Lady in The Magic Flute, Emilia in Otello, Inez in Il Trovatore, Adonella in Francesca da Rimini, and Waltraute and Flosshilde in Robert LePage’s Der Ring des Nibelungen.

Tatum began the 2019-20 season as Flosshilde in Wagner’s Götterdämmerung with The National Theater in Taiwan, followed by her role debut as Kundry in Parsifal for Indiana University Opera Theatre. She also returned to The Metropolitan Opera as the Third Lady in The Magic Flute, Azucena in Il Trovatore with Pensacola Opera, and joined Rochester Philharmonic for The Mother of Us All. Scheduled performances in that season and in the 20-21 season included Giulio Cesare and The Champion with Boston Lyric Opera, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with Jacksonville Symphony and Indianapolis Symphony, Maddalena in Rigoletto with Mill City Summer Opera, and productions of Giulio Cesare and The Magic Flute at The Met. She has recently been heard as Flosshilde and Waltraute in San Francisco Opera’s Der Ring des Nibelungen, The Mother in Amahl and the Night Visitors with the Philadelphia Orchestra, Flosshilde in Das Rheingold at The Tanglewood Festival, Francisca in West Side Story at Grand Tetons Music Festival, Jenny in Threepenny Opera for Boston Lyric Opera, and Parsifal at The Metropolitan Opera. Concert performances included Penderecki’s Credo with Indianapolis Symphony, Durufle’s Requiem with Back Bay Chorale, Bach’s Christmas Oratorio with The Cecelia Chorus of NYC. She was also heard in concert with Warren Jones at Manchester Music Festival and in a concert presentation of Das Rheingold with New York Philharmonic.

She has appeared as Flosshilde and Grimgerde in Der Ring des Nibelungen with the Seattle Opera, Götterdammerung with the Houston Grand Opera and The National Taichung Theatre in Taiwan, Olga in Eugene Onegin with Boston Youth Symphony, Handel’s Messiah with Pacific Symphony, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis with Pacific Chorale, Mozart’s Requiem with Omaha Symphony and Rochester Philharmonic, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with San Diego Symphony. Additionally, she has been heard as Suzuki in Madama Butterfly with Toledo Opera, Flosshilde and Waltraute for Washington National Opera, Flosshilde in Gotterdammerung with Teatro Massimo di Palermo, Third Lady in The Magic Flute and Grimgerde in Die Walküre at Houston Grand Opera. Ms. Tatum also joined The Hyogo Performing Arts Festival in Japan as Flora in Verdi’s La Traviata, sang Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony and Mozart’s Requiem with The Eastern Music Festival, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with The Boston Symphony Orchestra at The Tanglewood Music Festival. Additional concert appearances include Salome with Andris Nelsons and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Mozart’s Requiem with the Santa Cruz Symphony, and Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony with The Indianapolis Symphony, NY Philharmonic and Orange County Philharmonic Society.

Ms. Tatum holds degrees from The Juilliard School, Manhattan School of Music, and California State University Fullerton. She was also an Adler Fellow with The San Francisco Opera and a graduate of the Lindemann Young Artist Program at The Metropolitan Opera. She has taught voice through the Office of the Arts at Harvard University, was an Artist in Residence at the Longy School of Music in Boston and is a regular masterclass presenter.

Her discography includes: Der Ring des Nibelungen on The Avie Label with Seattle Opera as well as a film version of Handel’s Giulio Cesare with The Atlanta Opera. Ms. Tatum has also appeared in Die Walkürie, Francesca da Rimini, Otello and Rusalka, all part of The Metropolitan Opera’s Live in HD Series released on Decca.

Education

Artist Diploma, Opera Studies – The Juilliard School  (2010)
Professional Studies Diploma – The Manhattan School of Music (2007)
MM, Vocal Performance – The Manhattan School of Music (2006)
BM, Vocal Performance – California State University Fullerton (2004)

Greg Tardy

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
250 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Website
https://www.gregorytardy.com/
Phone
865-974-5537

Greg Tardy

Full Professor of Jazz Saxophone

Associate Professor of Music in Jazz Saxophone Gregory Tardy is one of the most versatile jazz musicians of his generation, equally comfortable in a variety of musical and improvisational situations.  Born into a musical family, he began his musical career studying classical clarinet with Russell Dagon and Jack Snavely. In his early 20s, while preparing for a symphony career he discovered jazz saxophone and hasn’t looked back.

In 1993, he started playing with the legendary drummer, Elvin Jones. As a sought after sideman he has played in the bands of many prominent jazz artists including: Andrew Hill, Tom Harrell, Dave Douglas, Wynton Marsalis, Jay McShann, Nicholas Payton, Roy Hargrove, Steve Coleman, Betty Carter, Don Byron, Bill Frisell, Rashied Ali, Ellis Marsalis, Brian Lynch, John Patitucci, and many more. He has also performed and/or recorded along with many other notable saxophonists, such as Joe Lovano, Mark Turner, Chris Potter, Dewey Redman, Ravi Coltrane, and others. In more recent years, Tardy has gone full circle, by focusing on his clarinets more, using them on recordings by Tom Harrell, Ohad Talmor/Steve Swallow, Stefan Harris, Chris Potter and Andrew Hill.

His performance schedule has taken him all over the world, playing at all of the major jazz festivals and on some of the biggest stages in jazz.  As a sideman, he has been featured on several Downbeat Albums of the Year and also several Grammy nominated recordings; including a Grammy winning CD with Brian Lynch in 2006.  Since 1992, he also has recorded fifteen recording projects under his own name featuring his unique compositions, blending his love of traditional jazz with a more modern seeking style. His latest project, Sufficient Grace was released in the fall of 2022 on WJ3 Records.

Michael Stewart

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
227 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
1741 Volunteer Blvd.
Knoxville, TN 37996-2600

Email
[email protected]
Website
https://www.utbands.com/
Phone
865-974-7523

Michael Stewart

Associate Director of Bands, Director of the Pride of the Southland Marching and Athletic Bands, WJ Julian Professor of Bands

Professor Michael Stewart is an Associate Professor of Music and serves as the Associate Director of Wind Studies and Director of the “Pride of the Southland” Marching Band at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Beyond directing the marching band, Professor Stewart conducts the UT Symphonic Band, Basketball Pep Bands, as well as teaching undergraduate courses in Music Education.

Professor Stewart received his Bachelor of Music Education from The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. His teaching career began within in the Delaware City School district (Delaware, Ohio) teaching music education to students from grades 5 through 12. Professor Stewart received his masters and doctorate degrees from The Ohio State University where he served as the Graduate Assistant Director with the Marching Band and Teaching Assistant within the College of Music.

Professor Stewart continues to actively serve as a clinician, adjudicator, drill writer, and guest conductor throughout the nation. Professor Stewart is a member professional organizations such as the College Band Directors Association, National Band Association, East Tennessee School Band & Orchestra Association, National Association for Music Education, Kappa Kappa Psi, Tau Beta Sigma (honorary), and Phi Mu Alpha (honorary).

Education

PhD, Music Education – The Ohio State University (2007)
MA, Music Education – The Ohio State University (2004)
BM, Music Education – The Ohio State University (1999)

K-12 Teaching Experience

1998-2002 – Band Director, Delaware City Schools (grades 5-12), Delaware, Ohio

Andrew Skoog

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
314 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-6145

Andrew Skoog

Professor of Voice

Andrew Skoog, tenor, is Professor of Voice and Voice Area Coordinator. Professor Skoog is also conductor of the University of Tennessee Men’s Chorale.

Professor Skoog made his New York debut at Carnegie Hall as tenor soloist in Handel’s Messiah with the Brooklyn Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by John Rutter, internationally acclaimed composer and conductor.  He returned to Carnegie Hall as tenor soloist in Orff’s Carmina Burana with Andrew Litton and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.  In addition, Skoog has sung the piece with the American Symphony Orchestra in Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center.  In demand for orchestral engagements, Skoog made his international debut singing Carmina Burana with the Bergen Philharmonic in Bergen, Norway.

Critics hail him as ideal in Carmina Burana because of his “full, lyric delivery in the demanding, high tessitura.” As a Carmina specialist, Skoog has performed this role forty-seven times in his career, including with the Minnesota Orchestra, Colorado Symphony, Buffalo Philharmonic, Toledo Symphony, Columbus Symphony, Albany Symphony, Bangor Symphony, Baton Rouge Symphony, Oklahoma City Philharmonic, Tulsa Symphony, Victoria Symphony, Midland Symphony and Valley Symphony Orchestras. Other engagements include Rachmaninoff’s The Bells in a return appearance with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Mendelssohn’s Die Erste Walpurgisnacht with the Tulsa Symphony Orchestra, Berlioz’ Requiem with the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra, as well as performances of Britten’s Saint Nicolas, Handel’s Messiah, Brahms’ Liebeslieder Waltzes, Mozart’s Requiem and Ramirez’s Misa Criolla.  Prior to the COVID pandemic, he appeared in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Buffalo Philharmonic and Knoxville Symphony Orchestra, Britten’s Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings with the University of Tennessee Chamber Orchestra, Handel’s Messiah with the Knoxville Handel Society, Turandot with Knoxville Opera where he sang the role of Pong, and five performances of Carmina Burana with the Buffalo Philharmonic, Atlanta Wind Symphony Orchestra, Knoxville Symphony Orchestra, Chattanooga Ballet and Delta Symphony Orchestra.

Also sought after for Messiah, Skoog has performed this work with the Duke University Chapel Choir and Symphony Orchestra, the Shreveport Symphony Orchestra, and with numerous orchestras throughout the United States.  He has performed Dvorak’s Stabat Mater with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Mendelssohn’s Elijah with the Choral Society of Durham at Duke University, Franck’s Die Sieben Worte Jesu am Kreuz, Rossini’s Stabat Mater and Petite Messe Solonnelle, Beethoven’s Christus am Ölberge and Mass in C Major, and Dvorak’s Mass in D.

Skoog is recognized for his moving performances of the Evangelist in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion.  Other orchestral appearances include Mozart’s Requiem with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, Verdi’s Requiem with the Modesto Symphony Orchestra, and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Dallas, Corpus Christi, Victoria, and East Texas Symphony Orchestras.  He appeared for two seasons at the OK Mozart International Festival, and as tenor soloist with the Canterbury Choral Society in Bruckner’s Te Deum and Mozart’s Coronation Mass.  Mr. Skoog’s passionate, artistic performances of Benjamin Britten works have attracted attention, with praise for his performances of the Canticles, Abraham and Isaac with the Dallas Opera Project, and Saint Nicolas with members of the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra.

Twice a Metropolitan Opera regional finalist, Skoog made his professional operatic debut as Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly with the Lyric Opera of San Antonio.  His operatic credits include such roles as Sam Polk in Susannah, Alfred in Die Fledermaus, Camille in The Merry Widow, Tamino in Die Zauberflöte, Pong in Turandot, Satyavan in Savitri, The Prince in The Love for Three Oranges, The Teapot in L’Enfant et Les Sortileges, as well as roles in Carmen, The Pirates of Penzance, Rita, and Werther.  An alumnus of the Des Moines Metro Opera Apprentice Program, Skoog was a finalist in the Dallas Opera Career Development Grant Auditions, and coached in master classes with John Wustman and the late Jerry Hadley.

In 2011, Skoog was the recipient of a Sandra G. Powell Excellence Professorship. Earlier that year, he received the Distinguished Faculty Award in Teaching awarded by the student body of the UT School of Music. Skoog has served as faculty advisor for the Theta Omicron chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia fraternity since 2006. He is a charter member and past-president of the Tennessee chapter of National Association of Teachers of Singing and is past-president of the UT chapter of Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society.

Before his appointment at the University of Tennessee in 2003, Skoog was Instructor of Voice and Choral Music at Tyler Junior College (1995-2003) and the University of Texas at Tyler (1993-1995). During his tenure in Texas, his choirs performed at Carnegie Hall, Westminster Hall in London, England, the 2000 London New Year’s Day Parade, and for the Texas Music Educators Association.

Education

MA, Vocal Performance – Stephen F. Austin State University (1993)
BME,  Vocal Music Education – Arkansas State University (1989)

Music Samples

  • Olim lacus colueram from Carmina Burana
  • Not While I’m Around from Sweeny Todd by Stephen Sondheim

Froh, wie seinen Sonnen from Symphony No. 9
Ludwig van Beethoven
Knoxville Symphony Orchestra
April 11, 2019

Allerseelen
Richard Strauss
Guest Voice Recital
Carson-Newman University
April 25, 2017

Andrew Skoog, tenor · Allerseelen – Richard Strauss

Olim lacus colueram from Carmina Burana
Carl Orff
Symphony of the Mountains
March 29, 2014

Olim lacus colueram from Carmina Burana
Carl Orff
University of Tennessee Symphony Orchestra and Choirs
April 17, 2011

Andrew Skoog, tenor · Tanz – Carmina Burana – Orff – edited

The urgency of love from The Here and Now
Christopher Theofanidis
Columbus State University Wind Ensemble and Choral Union
World Premiere Performance (scored for wind ensemble)
November 20, 2009

Andrew Skoog, tenor · The urgency of love – The Here & Now (premiere) – Theofanidis

Ye people, rend your hearts / If with all your hearts from Elijah
Felix Mendelssohn
Columbus State University Philharmonic Orchestra and Choral Union
November 1, 2009

Andrew Skoog, tenor · Ye people, rend your hearts + If with all your hearts – Elijah – Mendelssohn

Then shall the righteous shine forth from Elijah
Felix Mendelssohn
Columbus State University Philharmonic Orchestra and Choral Union
November 1, 2009

Andrew Skoog, tenor · Then Shall the Righteous – Elijah – Mendelssohn

Robert Sivy

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
241 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
1741 Volunteer Blvd.
Knoxville, TN 37996-2600

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-7552

Robert Sivy

Senior Lecturer of Theory/Composition

Robert Sivy is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Music Theory at the University of Tennessee where he teaches undergraduate music theory courses including Fundamentals of Music, Music Theory I–III, Counterpoint, and Popular Music Styles and Analysis. Robert’s research interests include analysis of twentieth-century music and progressive rock. He has presented papers at regional and international conferences, including College Music Society, Society of Music Theory, International Association for the Study of Popular Music, and International Conference of the Progect Network for the Study of Progressive Rock. His paper “Interwoven Patterns and Mutual Misunderstandings: Binding R.D. Laing’s Psychology with Gentle Giant’s Knots” is published in Prog Rock in Europe. Robert’s current research projects include analyzing the music of 70s prog rock band Gryphon, uncovering serial techniques in the late music of Dmitri Shostakovich, and establishing music semiotics as a viable tool for the analysis of music of all styles and genres.

Education

PhD, Music Theory – University of Kentucky (2019)
MM, Music Theory – University of Tennessee (2011)
BS, Music Education – Geneva College (2003)
BA, Violin Performance – Geneva College (2003)

Andrew Sigler

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
104 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Website
https://andrewsigler.com/
Phone
865-946-3076

Andrew Sigler

Area Coordinator of Music Theory, Composition, and Technology; Associate Professor of Music Composition

Andrew Sigler’s concert music includes works for chamber ensembles, orchestra, dance, and theater. Winner of the 2014 Suzanne and Lee Ettelson award, he has twice been a prizewinner in The Robert Avalon International Competition for Composers as well as a finalist for the American Prize and the Earplay Donald Aird Composers Competition. Sigler has been a composer fellow at the Wellesley Composers Conference and the Seasons Festival, and has received commissions from both organizations. Upcoming commissions include new works to be premiered at the World Saxophone Congress, the International Tuba Euphonium Conference, and a commission from the Meir Rimon Commissioning Fund of the International Horn Society to be premiered at the International Horn Symposium. His music has also been featured at both NACUSA and SCI National Festivals, the Oregon Bach Festival, the International Brass Symposium, the TUTTI Festival, the American Prize, the Electroacoustic Barn Dance, Open Space Festival of New Music, and Fast>>Forward>>Austin, and has been performed by groups such as Fireworks Ensemble, Simple Measures, Hear No Evil, the University of Texas New Music Ensemble, the University of Tennessee Faculty Brass Quintet, Compositum Musicae Novae, the New Music Conflagration, Bold City Contemporary Ensemble, and Convergence Vocal Ensemble. Andrew has written for Opera News and he was for three years a regional editor for NewMusicBox, the online presence for New Music USA. His music is published by Editions Musica-Ferrum and he is a board member of the National Association of Composers, USA.

Sigler’s background in the commercial field includes studio work as a guitarist and vocalist, as well as composition and sound design for video games, advertising, and animation for a number of clients including Microsoft, Google, T-Mobile, and Blue Cross/Blue Shield. Broke Down Outside El Paso won the 2006 East West Quantum Leap composition award for best use of their “Colossus” software. His string arrangements were featured in the award-winning Barbara Smith Conrad documentary When I Rise.

Andrew holds degrees in Theory/Composition and Classical Guitar Performance. He has studied composition with Russell Pinkston, Donald Grantham, Dan Welcher, and James Guthrie, and participated in master classes with composers Mario Davidovsky, Robert Beaser, Melinda Wagner, Eric Chasalow, Michael Torke, Stephen Hartke and Daron Hagen, as well as guitarists Manuel Barrueco, Eliot Fisk, Tom Wolfe, and Adam Holzman.

Education

DMA, Composition – University of Texas (2014)
MM, Classical Guitar Performance – University of Louisiana (1998)
BM, Theory/Composition – University of Louisiana (1995)

Kimberly Roberts

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
318 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-2600

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-9434

Kimberly Roberts

Assistant Professor of Practice

Kimberly Roberts, Assistant Professor of voice, was a regional finalist in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and has enchanted audiences across the nation with her performances of Countless Almaviva in Le Nozze de Figaro, Helena in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Magda in La Rondine, Magda in The Consul, and the title role in Susannah. She has also performed as the soprano soloist in Strauss’ Vier Letzte Lieder, Barber’s Andromache’s Farewell and Knoxville: Summer of 1915, Handel’s Messiah, Verdi’s Requiem, Bach’s Magnificat, Haydn’s Lord Nelson Mass, and Rutter’s Requiem. She is a frequent recitalist throughout the US and Western Europe and specializes in the works of Sven Lekberg and other American Neo-Romantics. Dr. Roberts holds a Bachelor of Music in Education from Simpson College, as well as Master of Music and Doctor of Musical Arts degrees in Vocal Performance from Louisiana State University.

Additionally, Dr. Roberts maintains a private studio of emerging professional singers and is the voice instructor for the Des Moines Metro Opera. Her students perform with many of the nation’s great houses and programs, including Merola, Glimmerglass, Wolf Trap, St. Louis Opera Theatre, Spoleto, Winter Opera St. Louis, Chautauqua Opera, Central City, Santa Fe Opera, Utah Opera, Tri Cities Opera, Minnesota Opera, the Kansas City Lyric, and the Des Moines Metro Opera. Her students are also consistently national and regional finalists in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, in addition to other national and international competitions.

Education

DMA, Vocal Performance – Louisiana State University (2007)
MM, Vocal Performance – Louisiana State University (2003)
BM, Education – Simpson College (1998)

Joni Pappas

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
242 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-3241

Joni Pappas

Lecturer of Music

Joni Pappas is a board certified music therapist specializing in early childhood intervention, special education and older adults.  Her private practice has included work in pre-schools, early childhood centers, and special education programs in Iowa, Mississippi, Indiana and West Virginia.  She has also developed Time for Music, a music therapy based early childhood music program.

In addition to her work as a music therapist, Mrs. Pappas has served as an adjunct faculty member at Mississippi State University, Ball State University and Marshall University.

Mrs. Pappas received her Bachelor of Arts in Music Education and Vocal Performance from Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Michigan and her Master of Arts in Music Education with an equivalency in Music Therapy from the University of Iowa.

Education

MA, Music Education, equivalency in Music Therapy – University of Iowa (1997)
BA, Music Education and Vocal Performance – Calvin College (1994)

Jeffrey Pappas

March 23, 2023 by

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ADDRESS

University of Tennessee
College of Music
117K Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
Knoxville, TN 37996-4040

Email
[email protected]
Phone
865-974-3241 (main office)

Jeffrey Pappas

Natalie L. Haslam Founding Dean of the College of Music

Jeffrey Pappas holds a Bachelor of Music degree in Vocal Performance from Northern Kentucky University, a Masters of Music degree in Choral Conducting from the University of Illinois, and the Doctorate of Musical Arts degree in Choral Conducting and Pedagogy from the University of Iowa. His conducting teachers have included William Hatcher, Don Moses, Chester Alwes and James Dixon.

He is currently a professor of music and the Natalie Haslam Founding Dean of the College of Music at the University of Tennessee. Prior to this appointment, he was the Chair of the Department of Music at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, and the Director of Choral Activities and Coordinator of Ensembles and Conducting at Ball State University where he conducted the Chamber Choir, taught upper-level undergraduate conducting, masters and doctoral level choral literature and conducting, and administrated the choral area.  He has also served as the Director of Choral Activities at Mississippi State University and at Clarke College in Dubuque, Iowa and on the music faculty at Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio.

His choirs have performed throughout the Midwest, in Southern California, Colorado, Atlanta and New Orleans, (over 18 states total) and as the conductor of the Clarke Collegiate Singers were enthusiastically received during a concert tour of Ireland in 1993. In 1996 they toured the Czech Republic, Austria and Germany where they were one of only two non-Austrian choirs invited to sing in the famed Salzburg Domkirche that year.  In May 2003, he conducted the Mississippi State University Chamber Singers in a concert tour of France and Italy that included invited appearances at the Cathedrals of Nice and Monaco.  Reviews of these performances hailed the Chamber Singers as an “ensemble of exceptional level that presented an a cappella concert the audience will not soon forget” and further stated that “the Chamber Singers…possess an impressive cohesion and musicality without exception, and throughout the concert the ensemble unfolded a thread of silky, shimmering sound that delighted and left the audience totally under the spell of these effective ambassadors of the American musical cause.  The Ball State University Chamber Choir was an invited ensemble at the 2006 Indiana Music Educators Conference and at the Regional Music Educators Conference in Lincoln, Nebraska in November 2006.  In May 2007, he conducted members of the BSU Chamber and Concert Choirs in a concert tour of Hungary, Austria and the Czech Republic, which included performances at the Stephansdom, St. Vitas Cathedral and Elte University.

He has also been active in church music having led ministries at Fifth Avenue Baptist Church (Huntington, WV), First Methodist Church (Columbus, MS), Roberts Park Methodist Church (Indianapolis, IN) and High Street Methodist Church (Muncie, IN).

Pappas has presented at the International Vocal Symposium in St. John’s Newfoundland on three occasions, and is frequently called on to be a guest conductor, clinician, and adjudicator at choral festivals, workshops, and competitions.  In 2003, he guest conducted the Mississippi All-State Choir and in February 2007 returned to conduct the Kenai Alaska Choral festival.  In 2009, he conducted a high school honor choir in Maryland and a community college choral festival in Chicago, IL.  He has also conducted the annual Messiah performance by the Columbus (MS) Chorus and Orchestra on numerous occasions.

A proponent of all styles of music, Pappas is particularly proud of the new works he has commissioned and/or conducted.  In 2005, the Ball State Chamber Choir began a commissioning project entitled First Hearing.  Joseph Harchanko’s Visions was the first work in this series.  Jody Nagel’s I stood musing in a black world was premiered in 2006.

He has also been active in the American Choral Directors Association, serving as Repertoire and Standards Chairperson for 4-Year Colleges and Universities in Iowa and Mississippi, Membership Chair and President-Elect in Mississippi, the Repertoire and Standards Chair for Music and Worship for the Indiana Choral Directors Association and the Membership Chair for the Central Division.

As a tenor soloist, his concert and/or opera performances have included Mozart’s Cosi fan tutte, Massenet’s Herodiade, Handel’s Messiah, Bach’s Mass in B Minor, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, Beethoven’s 9th Symphony and Stravinsky’s Les Noces.

He is joined in Knoxville by his wife, Joni, daughter, Amara and son, Case.

Education

DMA, Choral Conducting and Pedagogy – University of Iowa (1997)
MM, Choral Conducting – University of Illinois (1988)
BM, Vocal Performance – Northern Kentucky University (1986)

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Natalie L. Haslam College of Music

117 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
1741 Volunteer Blvd.
Knoxville TN 37996-2600

Phone: 865-974-3241
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The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

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