Mary Pappert School of Music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Type | Private |
|---|---|
| Established | 1926 |
Parent institution | Duquesne University |
| Location | , , 40°26′12″N 79°59′21″W / 40.43656°N 79.98908°W |
| Website | https://www.duq.edu/academics/colleges-and-schools/music/index.php |
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The Mary Pappert School of Music is one of the ten degree-granting divisions that comprise Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The Mary Pappert School of Music was founded in 1926, offering a Bachelor of Music degree. The Bachelor in Music Education program was added in 1930. The building which houses the school was dedicated on 29 April 1967. To commemorate the event, eminent pianist Van Cliburn was awarded an honorary degree. The school has been NASM-accredited since 1966. The School of Music became an all-Steinway institution in 2001[1] and is also an "all-Fender" school.[2]
The current collegiate enrollment is approximately 350, and there are about 500 non-credit music students studying in the City Music Center, an elementary through high school program hosted by the school which was founded in 1989.
Programs offered
The School of Music confers four different bachelor degrees, in Performance, Music Technology, Music Education, and Music Therapy. Graduate programs include master's degrees in Performance, Theory/Composition, Sacred Music, Music Technology, and Music Education, as well as an Artist Diploma. In addition to undergraduate and graduate programs, post-baccalaureate certification is offered in Music Education and Music Therapy.
Ensembles
The Mary Pappert School of Music offers the following large ensembles:
- Symphony Orchestra
- Wind Symphony
- Symphony Band
- The Voices of Spirit
- Pappert Chorale
- Jazz Ensemble
Additionally, all university students interested in music are invited to perform with the Dukes Pep Band at football and basketball games.
Notable faculty
- Claudia Pinza Bozzolla, Voice
- George Vosburgh, Trumpet
- David Stock, Composer-in-Residence
- Joseph Willcox Jenkins †, Composition
- Sean Jones, Jazz Trumpet
- Joe Negri, Jazz Guitar
- Thomas Kikta, Classical Guitar
- Bill Purse, Jazz Guitar
- Multiple Grammy winning Engineer Jay Dudt
- Ann Labounsky, Pipe Organ
- Mike Tomaro, Jazz Ensemble
Notable alumni
- Van Cliburn - (honorary)[3]
- Joseph Carl Breil – The first person to compose a score specifically for a motion picture[4]
- Gene Forrell – Composer and conductor
- Sammy Nestico – composer and arranger of big band music[5]
- William Schultz (1950)[6] – President and CEO of Fender Musical Instruments Corporation
- Bobby Vinton (graduated 1956; honorary Doctorate in Music in 1978)[6]
- H. Robert Reynolds, conductor (honorary)[7]
- John Adams (composer), Minimalist composer[8]
- Mike Tomaro – saxophonist, composer, and arranger of jazz and commercial music[9]
