Joy of Music School

Music Notes – Newsletter


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An Anniversary of Note

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A little fanfare, if you please: a trumpet’s flourish for our Director of Music Education Julie Carter, who is celebrating her 10th year at the Joy of Music School this fall.

“Ten years. Can you believe it!?” asks Julie.

Yes we can—and we’re ever so grateful for them.

“Julie cares deeply about the kids, their families and the results, which go beyond the musical,” says Executive Director Frank Graffeo. “She is helping our teachers improve young lives. She is generous with big hugs to celebrate the triumphs. She holds little hands when a performance doesn’t go as planned. Julie supervises a first-class operation.”

Today Julie oversees a music program that includes 106 volunteers teaching 215 students in 21 different instruments, plus outreach programs reaching an additional 1,000 kids throughout our area. We had just 18 teachers and 45 students when she started in 2005.

Julie, who has a bachelor’s in music from the University of Tennessee, with additional studies at Juilliard and Stetson University, was working as part-time music teacher at Greenway School back then. She heard about an opening at the Joy of Music School and decided to apply.

Julie knew about the School because her mother had taught piano lessons to our founder, radio station pioneer An Anniversary of Note and philanthropist James A. Dick. But not everyone else in Knoxville was so familiar with it. One of her first projects was finding violin teachers for 25 students whose instructor had left. “That was really hard,” she says. “We didn’t have the kind of public awareness that we do now.” In typical fashion, she jumped right in and started fixing the problem. “

I got my daughter, Lili, to teach three of them and we just gradually started building up the teacher roster,” she says. The School’s “awesome” staff, a group that has been in place for the past few years, makes Julie’s job a lot easier these days, she explains. “They’ve taken a lot of stuff that I used to have to worry about off my desk.”

Now she can focus on our music programs themselves. As she puts it: “matching the students to volunteers, making sure they have the instruments and music they need, running the classes (we have five of them), and managing the outreach program, which has grown exponentially.”

The best thing about her job? “The people I meet,” she says. “The volunteers, the board members, the staff, the families, and the kids. My favorite is getting to meet all these people who love music and love kids and are right in there swinging for them.”

It’s safe to say nobody cares as much about them as Julie, and for that we say, THANK YOU!


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Pride and Joy and All That Jazz

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Following is a description of this summer’s Juilliard Jazz for Joy concert/fundraiser. It was written by Knoxville accountant Jenny Hines and originally posted on Facebook.

In 1997, I received a letter from James A. Dick thanking me for agreeing to serve on the Joy of Music School board and stating that the new organization’s fi rst board meeting would be the following Tuesday at noon. One thing you did not do was say no to James Dick—especially if he was your most important client.

I knew from a couple of long lunches and meandering meetings that James Dick had wanted to be a pianist. He settled instead for buying and owning radio stations, beginning with WNOX and expanding to WIVK in Knoxville. It wasn’t such a bad idea because he turned out to be a pretty savvy businessman.

His idea to form the Joy of Music School seemed like a natural investment for Jim Dick’s passion.

He told me that Knoxville was bound to have another young Mozart or Duke Ellington. Well, on July 9 his dream and his vision were realized when Taber Gable and friends Jonathan Barber, Andrew Renfroe and Lesly Valbrun took the stage at the Emporium in downtown Knoxville. They mesmerized a sold-out crowd at a benefit for the very school that James Dick founded. The vision was fulfilled and the hard work of many volunteer and sponsors had come full circle.

There are many success stories from the Joy of Music School, but perhaps Taber’s is the most satisfying because it started here in Knoxville, traveled to Connecticut, where he attended the University of Hartford on a music scholarship, and is now alive and well at Juilliard. Yes, Juilliard.

Taber brought us all to our feet with some original work and with a beautiful rendition of The Tennessee Waltz and a spiritual song where two of his friends sang alongside his brother, Dwayne Gable. It was truly a special moment.

Tom Jester and I had many of our best friends joining us, including Mary-Linda Schwarzbart, Mary Fran Darwin, Dara Canada, Drew Taylor, Rick Fox and Ralph Cianelli. We also were happy to see former Joy of Music School presidents Michael Combs and Rick Carl along with former executive director Marisa Moazen. There were lots of former and current board members including Eleanor W. Barron, Ann Hitch, and Ken Dobbins. And it made me especially happy to see Francis Graff eo, the organization’s current executive director there, full of JOY as he welcomed the full house. But perhaps the best surprise was seeing James Hundley, grandson of James Dick and a current board member, who had driven in from Nashville with his father to attend the event. And they had brought with them Marilyn Dick, wife of James and one of the School’s mainstay supporters.

There can be nothing more gratifying than giving a gift from the heart and then seeing it pay back beyond your expectations. The investment of James Dick and many others over the years got a huge return on investment as Taber Gable gave back through his performance. July 9 was one of those magical nights—a night for remembering those who mentored us, a night for being with very special friends, a night to meet new friends and anticipate the fun of future gatherings with them, and a time to celebrate the JOY of MUSIC!

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Our Students in the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra

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Five current Joy of Music School students are bringing their talents to the Knoxville Symphony Youth Orchestra Association, a highly selective group of the area’s top young musicians. Two of them, violinists Weston and Alex, recently won placement in the KSYO’s Chamber Orchestra, the second-highest level within the group. (Only the Youth Orchestra is higher.) They are the first JoMS students to reach the Chamber Orchestra. Maya, another violinist, recently won her first placement in the Preludium Orchestra while violinist Kimber and cellist Autumn are participating in the Philharmonium Orchestra. Congrats to all! The KSYO performs regularly at the Tennessee Theatre. You should come see for yourself how talented they are!

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In Tune with a Legacy

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When Joy of Music School volunteer Josh Gaither arrived at his mentor’s workshop one grey afternoon in 2013, he knew it would be no ordinary meeting. The man awaiting him, Knoxville’s venerated, prolific piano tuner Frank Hambright, was 89 years old and his health was failing.

As they sat down together, Frank told Josh how proud he was of his star student. Then, without fanfare, Frank handed him his worn bag of tuning tools. “Keep them,” he told the young man. “These are yours.”

A few weeks later, Frank passed away at age 90.

Josh and pianos go way back. He was a precocious child, already playing piano at age three. Later on he took up guitar, drums, saxophone and bass, and played plenty of rock band gigs. But his connection to piano was special.

After high school, Josh worked in restaurants to make ends meet while playing music. At 24, he enlisted in the Army and served two tours of duty in Iraq. When he returned home, he studied music at Pellissippi State Community College under Tom Johnson. While Johnson noted that Josh “was an excellent piano and saxophone player,” he recognized Josh’s special gift at the keyboard. Josh remembers that Johnson “steered me back to the piano, and toward jazz.”

Taking Tom’s advice, Josh went on to study jazz piano at University of Tennessee with Donald Brown. Late in his time at UT, Josh learned that the Joy of Music School needed volunteer teachers. So he applied, saying he wanted to “give back to the community, and I already loved working with kids.”

It was around this time that Josh met Frank Hambright, who had been tuning the School’s pianos for about a decade, and began to work with him. The inspiration of his mentor and his own keen interest in the piano as an instrument pushed him to pursue piano tuning and technology as a second career. With encouragement and support from Frank, Josh finally realized his dream and started Volunteer Piano, where he tunes, repairs, and rebuilds pianos for a living.

After Frank’s passing, Josh got so busy with his business that he had to stop teaching piano as a volunteer. So nowadays he devotes his time at the Joy of Music School to tuning and maintaining the pianos—a wonderful way to keep his mentor’s legacy alive.


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Experience The Joy of Music Firsthand!

Here’s your chance to be part of something really special. It’s free, it’s fun—and there’s food!

It’s the annual Joy of Music School Spring Recital, Saturday May 9, at 2 p.m. All are welcome at First Christian Church, 211 W. Fifth Avenue in Knoxville.

You’ll be amazed by the spirit and talent of our dedicated students. Sixty-five of our kids will be performing. They’ll play the drums, all manner of strings, the piano, and they’ll sing. This year we’ll even have a rock group that is sure to get your toes tapping.

And be sure to stick around afterward for delicious barbecue. The food will be donated by Joy of Music School board members and will be cooked by them and church members. We really, truly hope to see you there!

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Making Beautiful Music Together

Becca and Will Doran

The Dorans

 

It seems only fitting that Becca and Will Doran give their time so generously as volunteer teachers at the Joy of Music School. After all, the couple met when they shared the same piano teacher at James Madison University, where they were classical piano performance majors. Becca began teaching at the School in the spring of 2013, and talked Will into joining her last year. They both teach piano to two students a week.

“My students have all been so unique and watching them grow through a semester or a year is really fantastic,” says Becca. “They have always made me feel like I’m a special part of their lives, and I try to be a good role model for them.” “I love the enthusiasm my students have for music and learning in general,” adds Will, who recently earned his masters degree in studio music and jazz at the University of Tennessee. In addition to teaching piano lessons, he is music director at Fourth United Presbyterian Church. Becca is a full-time graduate student, working on a degree in information sciences at UT. She hopes to work as a children’s librarian, so she can add a love of books to the list of wonderful things that she will pass on to future generations.

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Big Ears Festival Lends a Big Hand

Simeon Coxe of Silver Apples teaching JoMS students.

Simeon Coxe of Silver Apples teaching JoMS students.

Knoxville’s 2015 Big Ears Festival was not just a huge hit among music fans. It was highly supportive of our mission at the Joy of Music School.

“We felt it was important to give back to the community through local organizations focused on music and the arts,” says Neeley Rice, Community Programs Organizer at the event’s producer, AC Entertainment. “The Joy of Music School was a natural fit.”

Through its “Little Ears” project, the festival donated a portion of ticket sales to the Joy of Music School as well as Knoxville’s Community School of the Arts. Big Ears also gave us a few passes to the shows for our students and volunteer teachers, and it allowed students and family members to sit in on four Kronos Quartet rehearsals!

We got a special treat the day before Big Ears, when the pioneering electronic duo Silver Apples came by the School for a performance and discussion. Saturday of the festival, Found Sound Nation invited our kids to record at its open air studio in downtown Knoxville, posting the results at foundsoundnation.org.

Let’s give a big hurrah, too, to our friends at Tomato Head. They contributed net proceeds from their sale of commemorative Big Ears pint glasses, and their Market Square and Bearden restaurants displayed photos of our kids practicing and performing.

 

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Peyton’s Place: The Joy of Music School

Peyton Manning - Joy of Music School

One of the most famous names in sports, legendary University of Tennessee Knoxville quarterback Peyton Manning, threw a tight spiral of funding our way earlier this year. The now Denver Broncos QB’s PeyBack Foundation gave the Joy of Music School a grant for $7,500 to help underwrite Midsummer Music Mentoring, a program of instruction that introduced kids to basic music-reading skills and practical experience. It was the largest grant we’d ever secured from Manning’s foundation and the first since 2007. We were so grateful we nearly got flagged for excessive celebrating!


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What the Kids Need Now

Gig Bag

The School has a dire need for sturdy, padded “gig bags” for acoustic guitars, says Music Director Julie Carter. We could use half a dozen of them—those simple bags used for carrying a guitar between lessons at the School and home. They’re really a better solution than boxy guitar cases, which tend to get dinged up. They cost about $40 each. We could also really use a couple of good-quality baritone ukulele cases. Generally they go for about $20. Care to help us out? Please call Julie at 865-525-6806. You can also send a check or donate online, indicating where you want your gift applied. Thank you!


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Student Profile: Caleb Lukkarila

Caleb plays his sax in performance.

Caleb plays his sax in performance.

“Just your typical teenager” are words you never would use to describe Fulton High School senior Caleb Lukkarila. Unless your idea of the average teenager is a polite, responsible, humble, hardworking, friendly young man, who fully recognizes and appreciates the blessings in his life. But, don’t let this quiet maturity fool you. It’s simply cover art for the soul of a jazz showman. A gifted alto saxophonist, Caleb takes to the spotlight like the rest of us take to the couch. While many kids, and grown-ups, spend years trying to fi nd their place in the world, Caleb came upon his in a rare moment of typical adolescence—by trying to look cool. When made to choose an instrument as part of his school band requirement, sixth-grade Caleb admittedly didn’t even know what a saxophone sounded like. He just thought it looked cool. Little did he know that while he was busy looking cool on the outside, he forever was changing on the inside. Gone was the shy boy. Confi dent, accomplished Caleb was taking over, one note at a time. A presentation at his high school by a Joy of Music School staff member two years ago inspired the young musician to expand his music network beyond the high school marching and concert bands. And expand it, he did, via JoMS volunteer teachers Joe Jordan and Lynlee Robinson, and jazz great Jerry Coker. Coker calls him “one of the most talented students I’ve known in my 55 years of teaching.” Recognizing that Caleb belongs on big stages, the School also has sent Caleb to the prestigious Jamey Aebersold Summer Jazz Workshop for two summers. “The Joy of Music School has given me the best education I could ever dream of,” says Caleb. “Aside from the amazing musicians I get to play with, [Director of Education] Julie Carter has been so helpful and supportive of my life beyond music.” Though many listening to him play would swear he was born with a gift, Caleb is convinced that it simply takes hard work, like the many hours of practice he puts in. With the School’s continued guidance and his work ethic, his dream of continuing his music education at the University of Tennessee may well come true.


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The Burger Benefit

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The Joy of Music School got four nights “on stage” at one of Knoxville’s premier restaurants in August – and made the most of it. We were part of the Kobe Burger Mondays at the Orangery series, in which the restaurant generously donates $5 to charity for each American Kobe beef burger it sells. Over the course of the month, scores of volunteers, board members and friends of the School (new and old) enjoyed a fun night out and delightful live music. “We were impressed with the turnout, and the musical guests thrilled everyone,” says Rebecca Bonano, the Orangery’s catering sales manager. So, too, DID the burgers. Many thanks to the Orangery for supporting our School!