MONTHLY MEETING

 

Please mark on your calendar for our SMEA April Program Meeting on Friday, April 12th, 10:15-11:45am at St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church, 124 Chestnut Street, Red Bank, NJ 07701.

It's our great honor to have Ingrid Clarfield and Kairy Koshoeva as the duo presenters of "Teaching Chopin From Early Intermediate Through Advanced: Same Concepts Just A Lot Harder!" It would be another fabulous presentation that you definately don't want to miss. Please extend our invitation to your colleges and friends who might be interested with this topic or a big fan of Ingrid and Kariy.
As Ingrid said:
" If you're curious as to how to get your Intermediate students prepared to play advanced pieces by Chopin, you don't want to miss this session! Beginning with a performance of Chopin Ballade No. 3 by the phenomenal pianist, Kairy Koshoeva, Professor Clarfield will discuss the essential technical and musical elements you need for a truly artistic performance of the Ballade. These elements will then be discussed and demonstrated in Early Intermediate and Intermediate pieces by Chopin. The session will also include a performance of a Nocturne by Dennis Alexander and a World Premier of a piece by Tom Gerou. You will enjoy receiving the suggested repertoire list."

On behalf of SMEA, I would like to express our sincere gratitude to Robert Rinaldi of the Jacobs Music who successfully secured this beautiful church and will kindly provide a Steinway Model B on site for Ingrid's presentation. And, Father Al of St. Anthony and music director Shawn Mack graciously offer us all possibilities to assure we will have a great learning experience at their church. Again, Don't miss this presentation!

About the parking- you can find street side parking spaces around the neighboring streets of the church. You should not have trouble to find one spot.

Please use the church's front door by the Chestnut Street. Once you come in, immediately turn right to enter the sanctuary area.
Please be advised - there are two nearby parking lots where you should avoid. First parking lot which right next to church property is the Train Station parking, you need to pay for the parking; another parking lot which right next to Parish Center is a private parking space. Please DO NOT park there.

Hope to see you there.

Ingrid Jacobson Clarfield, Professor of Piano Emerita at Westminster Choir College of Rider University is a is a nationally recognized performer, lecturer and author. She has presented workshops, lecture-recitals, and master classes in over 175 cities in 40 states across North America, including State and National MTNA Conferences, National Conference of Keyboard Pedagogy, and other prestigious conferences and festivals. Professor Clarfield has written twenty-six books, and is the subject of a documentary entitled: Take a Bow: the Ingrid Clarfield Story. 

In 2006, Professor Clarfield was named MTNA Foundation Fellow and in 2009 was the 1st recipient of the NJMTA Teacher of the Year award.  In 2012, she was awarded the prestigious MTNA Teacher of the Year and in 2015 she received the NCKP Lifetime Achievement Award. She received the first Jacobs Music Steinway Al C. Rinaldi Lifetime Achievement Award in 2017. In 2018, the Music Educators Association of NJ also awarded her their Lifetime Achievement Award. Professor Clarfield was inducted into the first Steinway and Sons Teachers Hall of Fame in 2019. In 2024 she was the recipient of the MTNA Distinguished Service Award.

Clarfield maintains a private studio where her pre-college students have won hundreds of awards in state, national, and international competitions resulting in performances in such venues as Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall, Weill Recital Hall, Kennedy Center, Merkin Concert Hall, Steinway Hall, and concert halls in Beijing. 19 of her students have won the MTNA Competition at the State Level, with 7 having won the Eastern Division progressing to the National Finals. One student, Damien Dixon, was the First Prize National Winner. Most significant to Professor Clarfield is her students’ involvement in community outreach concerts raising money for charities benefitting children and performing for nursing homes and other adult facilities.

Kairy Koshoeva, on the faculty of the New School for Music Study since 2015, holds a Doctorate in Musical Arts from the University of Missouri, Kansas City, in addition to Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from the Gnessin Academy of Music in Moscow and an Artist Diploma from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. Dr. Koshoeva has garnered awards from around the globe, including top prizes at the International Piano Competition in Vicenza, Italy, the N. Rubinstein Competition in Paris, the Gold Medal at the 2004 Rachmaninoff Awards in Moscow and first prize at the Chautauqua Music Festival concerto competition in New York.  She has studied with such great musicians as Bella Zubok, Faina Kharmatz, Michael Burshtin, Vera Nosina, Monique Duphil, and Robert Weirich; and had the privilege of being coached by renowned pianist Lazar Berman in Weimar Master Classes.

Dr. Koshoeva has played internationally in Israel, France, Germany, Russia, Turkey, Switzerland, and the United States. She has performed as a soloist with many prominent orchestras, including the Kansas City Symphony and the Chautauqua Music Festival, the National Symphony of Kyrgyzstan and orchestras in Houston and Jefferson City. She has also performed with the Moscow chamber orchestra “Cantus Firmus.”

Dr. Koshoeva has received significant awards for performances in collaboration with the Owen/Cox Dance Group. In 2013, she was awarded the prestigious title of Honored Artist of Kyrgyzstan. In 2019, The Royal Conservatory of Music honored her as a Teacher of Distinction in Carnegie Hall.

She won First Prize at the 2020 “Musica Classica” International Competition in Moscow, Russia. She was recently invited to perform as Guest Artist for the NCKP 2023 Piano Conference for Piano Stories on Stage concert series in Westin, IL.