Page 50 • (549 results in 0.022 seconds)

  • well, and as young as possible. So many of the opportunities in music come when you are very young—make the most of those years you’ve got to practice and improve! Read Previous Travel with our music students in the footsteps of the Masters. Read Next PLU’s Wind Ensemble upcoming CBDNA performance LATEST POSTS PLU’s Director of Jazz Studies, Cassio Vianna, receives grant from the City of Tacoma to write and perform genre-bending composition April 18, 2024 PLU Music Announces Inaugural Paul Fritts

  • MUSICAL THEATRE Prepare 5 minutes of music demonstrating both musicality and technique. We want to hear you at your best and most confident. Two selections: (1) art or folk song (Suggested Repertoire includes songs presented for Solo and Ensemble competition, art songs, or folk songs for which you have sheet music. One in a language other than English is preferred but not required.); and (2) a selection from the musical theatre repertoire that showcases your range and musicianship. Please bring a

  • Studies, Women’s and Gender Studies. Activities: Twelve choral and instrumental ensembles, dance ensemble, theatre, speech and debate, newspaper, radio, television, literary magazine. Seventy-two clubs including community service, religious, environmental, social justice, political, cultural/ethnic, business, non-traditional student, nursing, science, computer and outdoor recreation. Athletics: NCAA Division III. Women’s intercollegiate sports: Soccer, cross-country, volleyball, basketball, swimming

  • does it all with great humility. He performs extremely difficult music at the highest level. Max has been a regular cellist and mandolin player in the Jazz Ensemble and The Choir of the West premiered one of his choral pieces at their Spring concert. Max embodies all that our students strive to be. He was recently a standout performer in the North American premiere of Sandstrøm’s St. Matthew Passion, where he was a leader in the Evangelist quartet. Our faculty witnessed Max’s sharp attention to

  • Intel500MarchPS MESA DayTacoma/South Puget Sound MESA300-400MarchPS Bjug Harstad Memorial LectureScandinavian Area Studies Program50+MarchPI Provost Transfer Scholarship AwardsAdmission & Enrollment Services200AprilPI, PS Alumni BoardOffice of Alumni and Constituent Relations70AprilPI Dance Ensemble PerformancesSchool of Art and Communication500April OverKnight II (Passport Weekend) Admission & Enrollment Services400AprilPI, CP, PS Spring Career FairCareer ConnectionsApril Jolita Benson LectureSchool of

  • Breckenridge Music Festival Orchestra, Bach’s St. John Passion with Vocal Arts Ensemble and Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, A Salute to Opera with the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, Berlioz’s Les Nuit D’Eté with Opera Philharmonic of Bourgas in Bulgaria, and John Rutter’s Feel the Spirit with the Valley Symphony Orchestra and Chorale. Other concert performances as a soloist include Bach’s St. Matthew Passion and Magnificat, Corigliano’s Fern Hill, Falla’s Three Cornered Hat, Handel’s Messiah, Mahler’s Symphony

    Contact Information
    Office Hours
    Mon - Fri: -
  • the resident faculty brass ensemble at Pacific Lutheran University. Members include Zachary Lyman and Edward Castro on trumpet, Gina Gillie on the French horn, Rebecca Good on trombone, and Paul Evans on tuba. Its members teach private lessons at PLU and are all active solo, chamber, and orchestral performers throughout the Pacific Northwest and beyond. The players enjoy performing a wide range of repertoire from the Renaissance to the twenty-first century, including several works that have been

  • things I love to see,” he said “This needs to continue and I want to make it happen.” In the future, Markuson said, the club will hopefully have the opportunity for more public exposure. He plans to look into public appearances, or rides, and there has even been talk of including club members in Dance Ensemble 2011. Markuson said, however, this will depend on the progress of group members. The club meets either in the UC or the Columbia Center Wednesdays at 7 p.m., and Markuson encourages anyone who

  • the time he can allot to playing. “Going to college has really limited me in my ability to practice,” he says, in the same way someone might describe having not seen a good friend in a long time. As the kicker for PLU’s football team, sports writer for the Mooring Mast, tubist in PLU’s Wind Ensemble, and a full-time student majoring in communications, he stays busy. Concerning his future with the instrument he says, “I just want to keep on playing and play for gigs on the side. I don’t want to

  • Annual KPLU Christmas Jam, 88.5 KPLU’s much-anticipated FREE holiday concert, will feature jazz vocalist Gail Pettis and her trio. Gail will perform Christmas selections with the University Jazz Ensemble under the direction of Dr. David Deacon-Joyner. Gail’s trio includes bassist Clipper Anderson and drummer Mark Ivester. The event will be hosted by KPLU’s Kevin Kniestedt and broadcast live on KPLU. Free to the public.       German Advent Dec. 11 at 5 p.m. Scandinavian Cultural Center The Department