Joy of Music School

Music Notes – Newsletter


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Q & A With Breyon Ewing

Breyon Ewing

 

Joy of Music School alumnus Breyon Ewing, who attended the University of Tennessee on a music scholarship, now works as a professional singer and music instructor—and that includes teaching piano with us! As the School celebrates its 20th anniversary, Breyon shared his thoughts on what JoMS has meant to him.

Q. What are your earliest memories of the School?

A. When I first got there, in 2006, I was 11. I was taking piano. I’d would come in and have lessons with Linda Wise. She was very nice. I’d see [Executive Director] Frank Graffeo. And [Director of Music] Julie Carter a whole bunch. I had no idea important she’d be, how integral she’d be to my growing up. I just thought I was taking lessons.

Q. Does anything you learned at the School – big or small – stand out as being most memorable?

A. I guess it was the first time that I ever bowed and accepted applause. [Laughs.] Before coming there I’d been in choirs, and sung solos with them, but you don’t bow after that. But in recitals, which I always loved to play in, they were like, “All right and now you bow,” and I was like, “Oh…cool. That’s… interesting!”

Q. Do you ever think about how your life would be different if you hadn’t found the School?

A. Oh yeah! I don’t even know which career path I’d be taking. In high school, I started taking voice lessons with [well-known tenor and UT associate professor] Andrew Skoog at the Joy of Music. And he was like, “You know, you could do this as a career…”

Q. Looking back, what do you know now that you wish you’d known as a Joy of Music School student?

A. When it comes to your voice and your art, you have to be diligent. That time you’re not practicing is not going to behoove you later.

Q. What’s it like to come back to the School as a teacher?

A. It’s so interesting. Sometimes it’s kind of surreal. I see pictures of myself as a younger person and … wow. They’ve done remodels and nice things to make it look even better, but it’s still the same place with the same people. Everybody’s working so hard and putting in all this effort, and I feel more a part of it now that I can contribute as a volunteer teacher.


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Search and Ye Shall Find Us

When you do a Google search and see those ads off to the side of your results page, there’s something more than meets the eye going on, and believe it or not, the Joy of Music School is in that realm. We have had a years-long relationship with a UT Business Analytics Prof. Julie Ferrara, who assigns her students to create and manage Google search-based ads for JoMS. This online visibility is made possible through an in-kind grant we get from Google for up to $10,000 value per month in Google Ads.

The result is, we get visibility when people type in terms that indicate they might be volunteer teacher material or might want to attend Holiday Sparkles & Spirits. This goes beyond the obvious person searching for volunteer opportunities or someone who types in “holiday charity benefi t parties in Knoxville.” The ads are based on words used in people’s searches. If someone local searches Google to buy or sell a guitar, for example, their search result might also get our ad on the side that says, “Teach Guitar to Disadvantaged Kids in Knoxville,” which clicks through to our site. Subtle, no?

The likelihood that our ad is at or near the top of the page depends on the amount we “bid” for those search terms. Fortunately, we don’t have to pay for the bid when our term is used to display an ad, because Google gives us an allowance to cover that expense. For-profi t companies pay lots of money for this kind of thing. But we get it for free thanks to Google, Julie Ferrara and her class, year after year.


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How You Can Help

Do you seal and stripe parking lots? Ours could use some love.

• Invite friends to Holiday Sparkles & Spirits.

• Volunteer to teach! We always need teachers!

• Help us with replacing instrument cases on Indiegogo at “Cases4kidz”

• Follow us on Instagram at @joyofmusicschool

• Do you do harpsichords? Ours needs some expert maintenance.

• Be Like Susan Brackney…

 

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The Waiting Game

One of our newest and most enthusiastic piano students is Nazaria, who is in the second grade at Emerald Academy. She started taking lessons with volunteer teacher Ashley Williams this fall after spending forever on our waiting list. Well, it wasn’t actually forever. It was only about six months. But that sure seems like forever when you are 7 years old and want to start learning piano SO BAD. Nazaria’s mom, NyKeesha, did a great job of managing our application process. NyKeesha first reached out to us when Nazaria was just 5 years old. We told her the earliest a student can start oneon- one lessons is 7. So NyKeesha waited patiently and when Nazaria turned 7, her mom applied for lessons. We put her on the waiting list last April.

Then — and this is important — NyKeesha continued to follow up with our Music Director Julie Carter. Do you have a spot for my daughter? Can she begin lessons anytime soon?

This was music to Julie’s ears. “I love to hear from parents,” she says. “The more parental involvement, the better. You know that saying about the squeaky wheel?”

When NyKeesha called Julie to check in back in October, the timing was perfect. “Nazaria’s schedule matched Ashley’s schedule and we were able to put them together,” Julie recalls. “I was really happy.”

Probably not as happy as Nazaria and her mom. “I was overjoyed,” says NyKeesha. “Nazaria is super-excited. It makes my heart so happy. We just went and picked up a keyboard for her yesterday. As soon as she gets home from school, she wants to get right on it.”

At the moment, our waiting list has about 15 students. Wouldn’t you like to help a kid like Nazaria experience the joy of music? If you’re a potential volunteer teacher, please call us at 865-525-6806 and let’s find a way to make it happen!

 

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A Donor That Really Gets It

CMA Grants Associate Falon Keith
and Frank Graffeo.

“I have never had a more in-depth conversation with a foundation representative,” says Executive Director Frank Graffeo, referring to a fruitful meeting in his office with Tiffany Kerns, Director of Community Outreach for the Country Music Association (CMA) Foundation last fall. “They don’t simply write checks. They direct their funding, time, and energy into specific areas of the School and focus on how, and how much, their support helps.”

The grant we got from the CMA Foundation—a generous $20,000—is designed to help us do a handful of important things, like getting better at measuring the positive effects of our program on the lives of the kids we serve. These include the relationship between kids’ study here and their attendance rates in Knox County Schools. The Foundation money is also helping us get a program for our alumni off the ground. It’s clear the CMA Foundation wants to help us set goals, meet them, and provide the extra resources required to achieve them. That’s a foundation providing foundational support.

 

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Big Ears, Big Fun

The annual Big Ears music festival bring so much to East Tennessee—and to our School. For the last few years, we’ve been part of the world-renowned festival through its Little Ears program, which provides an opportunity for our students and kids at the Community School of the Arts to engage, witness, cheer and be involved.

Our students Jacob and Joseph even got to perform at the event’s opening ceremony at the Knoxville Visitors Center this year!

The School has also proudly offered up our space for rehearsals. In March we were delighted to welcome the Sai Anantam Ashram Singers, and percussionist Ches Smith, who performed at Big Ears with legendary guitarist Marc Ribot.

 

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A Grand Use for One of Our Pianos

“Excuse me, what did you say?” asked a wide-eyed Jane Tolhurst. She had approached our executive director to begin what she assumed would be a long and potentially expensive hunt for a piano to place in the lobby of Maryville’s non-profit Blount Memorial Hospital.

“I said, ‘Would you like a piano?’ ” responded Frank Graffeo. “I have one I need to store for an indefinite length of time.”

The answer was a resounding “Yes!” and now a piano belonging to the Joy of Music School has a happy home at Blount Memorial, where volunteer pianists regularly play to lighten the mood of patients and visitors.

The idea for the piano at the hospital dates to last summer, when Blount Memorial board member Carolyn Forster thought it up. She and Connie Huffman, assistant administrator and director of the Blount Memorial Hospital Foundation, approached Jane Tolhurst, who has been involved for many years with musical programming, planning and fundraising in the community. When Jane later found herself talking with Frank, the idea got legs.

Donors often give us pianos, some of which we lend to families of our students when it’s practical. But this one, previously on loan to the Knoxville Jazz Orchestra, was a grand piano. School policy dictates we can only use grand pianos in our building or in a public setting.

A generous donor from the Blount community stepped forward to start a fund to pay for the piano’s needs during its stay, so just like that, there was money to pay for the moving expenses, a lock for the keyboard, a cover to keep the piano dust-free, and stanchions with black velvet roping to keep the piano even safer. There was even enough money left over to have the piano tuned twice a year.

Everyone who walks by now sees a sign explaining that the lovely piano was lent by the Joy of Music School to help further community appreciation and enjoyment of music.

It’s our great pleasure to help out!

 

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Our Special Advisors

The Joy of Music School has a wonderful and supportive board of directors, and we couldn’t be more thankful for them. But there are many other highly accomplished and influential people with special connections to our School, and we’ve decided to recognize a number of them as members of our Advisory Council.

These are leaders who, as Executive Director Frank Graffeo puts it, “have a heart for what we do but might not be able to serve on our board. Their prominence and accomplishments, whether publicly or solely within our sphere, make them candidates for nomination to our Advisory Council. We are fortunate to have a strong group of leaders whose advice and perspective will serve the organization well.”

In Memoriam

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A Wonderful Way to Greet the Season

Wouldn’t you love to get all your holiday shopping out of the way in one night? Though it may sound like a Christmas miracle, that’s easily accomplished at the Joy of Music School’s annual Holiday Sparkles & Spirits fundraiser!

The fun starts at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 5, in the elegant ballroom at Cherokee Country Club in Knoxville. Tickets are $125.

Children from the Joy of Music School will melt your heart with their beautiful holiday music performance. Delicious wine and hors d’oeuvres will lift your mood.

And the shopping! Among the live and silent auction items you’ll find: Signed sports memorabilia, including items autographed by football legend Peyton Manning; overnight stays in deluxe area lodging; sumptuous dinners; collectible wines and limited edition bourbon; Knoxville Symphony tickets and more.

Best of all, it benefits our School. When you attend Holiday Sparkles & Spirits and purchase items, you’re helping more than 215 children attend free music lessons with free instruments right here in East Tennessee, with our outreach efforts instructing almost 1,000 more.

For reservations please call the School at 865-525-6806.

Special thanks to our top Holiday Sparkles & Spirits sponsors— Pilot Flying J, the Haslam Family Foundation, Dr. Sharon Lord, and Marsha Hollingsworth.

 

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Tevan to the Top

Tevan

Our student Tevan recently got some exciting news from the Knoxville Symphony Youth Orchestra: He’d been admitted to the organization’s top-tier ensemble on bass trombone.

“We’re so proud,” says our Director of Music Education Julie Carter. “He’s made just extraordinary progress. He’s very dedicated to what he’s doing.”

Tevan, a senior at Powell High School, auditioned in late August. He played a solo from a Derek Bourgeois concerto, an excerpt from Rossini’s La Gazza Ladra and a sarabande from a Bach cello suite.

Though he was a little nervous in the audition room beforehand, Tevan says he felt confident about his playing. Not long after, he got an email from the KSYO saying he’d made the Youth Orchestra. “It’s been really fun so far,” he says. “We’ve been playing since the middle of September, once a week. We’re rehearsing for a fall concert in November.”

Tevan started trombone lessons as a sophomore. He gives a lot of the credit for his speedy improvement to Myron Percy, his volunteer teacher at the Joy of Music School. “He’s a very good teacher,” Tevan says. “He helped me a lot with all my prepared pieces and the solo I did at the audition.”

That may be, Tevan, but it was you alone in the KSYO audition room – and you nailed it. Congrats to you!

 

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Permission Granted

Southern culture has a lot going for it, including a heaping helping of music, and more than a skosh of generosity. We recently got grants from a trio of foundations with a distinctly Southern tone: the Country Music Association Foundation ($20,000), the Youth Endowment Fund of East Tennessee Foundation ($15,000) and the Bonnaroo Works Fund of the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee ($10,000).

This is our first gift from the CMA Foundation. Guided by the generosity of the country music community, the foundation’s focuses include improving and sustaining music education programs. The Youth Endowment Fund grant represents the largest gift from that fund in our history, although its parent, the East Tennessee Foundation, has supported our work over many years. Bonnaroo has generously enhanced our service to children and teens since 2012. Though our proper Southern manners might not allow for it, we just want to jump up and hug their necks. All of ‘em. Thank you!

 

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C-N Students Pitching In

We’re getting some extra volunteer help this year from a foursome of Carson-Newman University students, Liz Rogan, Sarah Akres, Peyton Bennett and Beth Ann Noble.

They’re working on maintaining and servicing our instruments, organizing our music library and assisting Executive Director Frank Graffeo. They’ll also be helping out at Holiday Sparkles & Spirits, our big fundraiser on Dec. 5.

The students are pitching in as part of a service-learning program called “C-Nvolved.” They’re all students in Prof. Jayme Taylor’s Music Teaching Methods class, the next-to-last course they take before graduating with degrees in Music Education. All intend to become music teachers.

Prof. Taylor describes their volunteering as “the perfect platform for this class and hopefully a great service for the School itself.”

It absolutely is, says Frank. “I hope this new program will continue to grow in the years to come. It benefits the students, serves the organization, and ultimately helps our Joy of Music School kids. That’s what we’re all here for.”

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“Fore!” the Benefit of our School

Ready to have a tee-rific time supporting your favorite cause? “Swing for Joy,” a golf tournament benefiting the Joy of Music School, gets underway Oct. 2 at Knoxville’s Gettysvue Polo, Golf & Country Club.

You don’t want to miss this one. There will be a putting contest and prizes for the longest drive, closest to the pin, the winning team, even the last-place team!

It costs $100 to play, or $400 for a foursome, and the price includes a delicious lunch and a fun awards ceremony after your round.

As this newsletter went to press, the event was nearly sold out. But there may be a few spots remaining, so if you want to play, call the School at 865-525-6806.

The tournament is co-chaired by Board Member Cindi Alpert and Executive Director Frank Graffeo. They’ve lined up a wonderful collection of sponsors to support the event, including Tom Spangler for County Sheriff, HomeTrust Bank and Knoxville Pediatric Associates. Special thanks, too, to Dr. Hash Hashemian, who donated through the East Tennessee Foundation.

 

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