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Carnegie Hall - One Stop In Young Pianist's Career

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  • Carnegie Hall - One Stop In Young Pianist's Career

    CARNEGIE HALL - ONE STOP IN YOUNG PIANIST'S CAREER
    By Pam Harkema

    Argus Press
    Friday, June 26, 2009 8:48 PM EDT

    Courtesy Photo Jon Beckwith, left, of Corunna, stands with Michael
    Krikor Brandt, of Chicago,Ill., in the Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie
    Hall in New York City

    NEW YORK - For most of us, entry to Carnegie Hall is granted through
    the box office. But local pianist Jon Beckwith's first experience
    in New York's premiere arts venue was on the stage as part of an
    international concert on Memorial Day.

    Beckwith, 19, a 2008 Corunna High School graduate, attends the elite
    Baldwin-Wallace College Conservatory of Music in Berea, Ohio. Another
    student at the Conservatory, Michael Krikor Brandt, of Chicago,
    was looking for a pianist to accompany him in a selection for the
    trombone. Both have just completed their freshman year.

    "I typically perform piano solo pieces," Beckwith said. "When working
    with another individual performer, the pianist's job is to make
    someone else look good. It's a whole other ball game."

    Brandt submitted a recording of his individual work to a scholarship
    competition sponsored by the Armenian Youth Cultural Organization
    which was open to students of Armenian descent. Brandt's heritage
    is Armenian and he was selected for the scholarship. The selected
    students, 17 in all, were invited to play in the Armenian Arts
    Festival, a concert being staged at Carnegie Hall and broadcast
    live to the former Soviet Republic country of Armenia. The concert
    was a major event honoring the more than 25,000 who died in the 1988
    earthquake that devastated the city of Spitak, an event that occurred
    before either of the musicians were born.

    For the concert, Brandt chose to perform the Concerto for Trombone and
    Military Band by Nikolai Rimski-Korsokov. The trombone line contains
    the melody while the piano score is a reduction of the orchestra. The
    music is complex and challenging in both notation and interpretation,
    so Brandt began to look for an accomplished pianist, which brought
    him to Beckwith.

    "When Mike invited me to play with him, there was such a burst of
    excitement," Beckwith said. "I never thought I would perform at
    Carnegie, certainly not this early in my career. And then I thought
    'This is going to look great on my resume.'" Beckwith practiced
    the music for a week and then joined with Brandt for a second week
    of practice. The selection the two would play lasted for just more
    than two minutes.

    Carnegie Hall was built in 1891 and includes three performance
    halls. The largest is the Main Hall, also known as the Issac Stern
    Auditorium/Ronald O. Perelman Stage. Below the Main Hall is the Zankel
    Recital Hall, and on the third floor is the intimate Weill Recital
    Hall, originally called the Chamber Music Hall, which served as the
    location for the Armenian Arts Festival Concert.

    "We did try to peek into the Main Hall," Beckwith laughed, "but the
    door was locked. I'd love to go back and play there another time."

    The day of the concert, the duet joined the other 16 performing groups
    in warming up. Their selection was placed far into the second half
    of the concert.

    "Neither of us were very nervous," Beckwith recalled. "We were well
    prepared and we knew the music well."

    So well in fact, that Beckwith had memorized his complex piano part.

    "Musically, we did a very good job conveying the mood of the piece,"
    he said.

    Beckwith's parents, Rev. Norm and Chris Beckwith, were able to be
    with their son for his New York debut. He saw them sitting in the
    fourth row as he looked out from the stage.

    "At least one of them has been there for almost every performance I
    have ever had," he said. "They were both extremely proud. My parents
    have been very supportive my entire life."

    Beckwith has been playing piano for 12 years and studied with local
    musician Glenda Davis for 10 of those years.

    "She developed my talent to the point of my entry to the Conservatory,"
    he said. "If you really want to be successful, you can't get by on
    just talent. All talent has to be developed and that takes working
    at your ability."

    Beckwith, who now lives with his parents in Oakley, practices
    piano four hours a day, even during the summer months. He plays for
    weddings, funerals, church services, and other events and is also
    teaching piano lessons for all ages. New students can reach him at
    [email protected].

    "I don't think being successful in music comes with a few big
    performances," he said. "Success is made in the everyday commitment
    to the music you play."

    Of course, adding a Carnegie Hall credit to your resume can't hurt.
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