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	<title>Communications and Marketing Office &#187; Lon Sherer</title>
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		<title>Lon and Kathryn Sherer endowment brings Chicago-based Spektral Quartet to Goshen</title>
		<link>http://www.goshen.edu/news/2013/01/03/lon-and-kathryn-sherer-endowment-brings-chicago-based-spektral-quartet-to-goshen/</link>
				<comments>http://www.goshen.edu/news/2013/01/03/lon-and-kathryn-sherer-endowment-brings-chicago-based-spektral-quartet-to-goshen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2013 15:46:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>brianas</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Campus Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Community School of the Arts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kathryn Sherer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lon Sherer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spektral Quartet]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.goshen.edu/news/?p=6357</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Spektral Quartet, one of the nation’s fastest-rising young string quartets, returns to Goshen College Music Center on Friday, January 18 at 7:30 p.m. for a program of quartets by Mozart, Verdi and Hugo Wolf.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_6358" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://www.goshen.edu/news/files/2013/01/SpektralQuartet.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-6358" title="SpektralQuartet" src="http://www.goshen.edu/news/files/2013/01/SpektralQuartet-300x200.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Doyle Armbrust, Austin Wulliman, Aurelien Fort Pederzoli and Russell Rolen make up the Spektral Quartet.</p></div>
<p><strong>Visiting Artist Recital:</strong> The Spektral Quartet<br />
<strong>Date and time: </strong>Friday, January 18 at 7:30 p.m.<br />
<strong>Location:</strong> Goshen College Music Center’s Rieth Recital Hall<br />
<strong>Cost:</strong> $7 adults, $5 seniors/students. GC faculty/staff/students free with ID. Tickets available one hour before the concert.</p>
<p><a href="http://spektralquartet.com" target="_blank">The Spektral Quartet</a>, one of the nation’s fastest-rising young string quartets and the ensemble-in-residence at the University of Chicago, returns to Goshen College Music Center on Friday, January 18 at 7:30 p.m. for a program of quartets by Mozart, Verdi and Hugo Wolf in Rieth Recital Hall.</p>
<p>Spektral violinist Austin Wulliman, a Goshen native, received musical training as a youth in the Goshen College Strings Preparatory Program, a progenitor of what is now the <a href="http://gcmusiccenter.org/lessons-ensembles/" target="_blank">Community School of the Arts</a>. He also attended Goshen College before receiving degrees from Northwestern University and the University of Michigan.</p>
<p>Spektral’s Friday concert and Saturday coachings of young musicians in the Music Center’s Youth Honors Orchestras are presented in part through the Lon and Kathryn Sherer Preparatory Music Endowment. It carries on the legacy established through their more than 60 combined years of teaching music, most of them at Goshen College. In addition to college teaching, Lon and Kathryn taught hundreds of pre-college students; Lon in violin and Kathryn in piano. Throughout their careers, they were advocates for making music accessible to young people. The activities of this endowment will continue to support their interests of accessibility and excellence in pedagogy in the life of the Goshen College Community School of the Arts.</p>
<p>Lon Sherer and Kathryn Summers met as college students at Michigan State University in the early 1950’s. Throughout their marriage, their music-making was a shared life work, first at Woodstock School in Mussoorie, India (1956-59) and then at Goshen College (1959 onward). In the early 1960’s Lon earned his Doctorate in Music Performance from the University of Michigan. Kathryn earned her Masters in piano performance from Southern Methodist University in 1979.</p>
<p>Lon and Kathryn arrived at Goshen College at a time when interest in instrumental music was beginning to expand at the college and more generally in the Mennonite Church. Their energy and creativity helped raise music-making at Goshen College to new heights and spurred programmatic innovations. Lon built up the college orchestra, expanded the WGCS classical music collection, brought recorders, early music and opera to the college, and started high school music week. Kathryn, along with John T. O’Brien, launched the piano pedagogy program and the annual piano workshop. In 1979 Lon studied with Shinichi Suzuki and later founded the GC string preparatory program, incorporating the tenets of the Suzuki method into his teaching of children and youth from the community.</p>
<p>In addition to their lives as performers, as teachers Lon and Kathryn gave uncommon attention to the learning process and how students achieve mastery of their chosen instruments. During their careers, they studied and worked with master teachers such as Frances Clark, Kato Havas, George Sebok, John Owings and Shinichi Suzuki, ultimately becoming master teachers in their own right.</p>
<p>Lon continues to connect in various ways to the musical life of the Goshen community. Kathryn died this past February from pulmonary fibrosis. Their life-long interests in seeing musicianship developed to a high level in young students, and in promoting excellence in ensemble music-making will be honored in these events.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<title>Musician’s guide to learning still resonates 25 years later</title>
		<link>http://www.goshen.edu/news/2012/07/01/musicians-guide-to-learning-still-resonates-25-years-later/</link>
				<comments>http://www.goshen.edu/news/2012/07/01/musicians-guide-to-learning-still-resonates-25-years-later/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jul 2012 18:16:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jodi Beyeler</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[English]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GC News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Bulletin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lon Sherer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pinchpenny Press]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A 35-page book that urges music students to become “better ‘practicers’ and learners” and to regard such time as a vital personal liturgy continues to be the top-selling Pinchpenny Press book, nearly 25 years after its publication.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<div id="attachment_5582" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 204px"><a href="http://www.goshen.edu/news/files/2012/08/ShererPracticingBook.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-5582" title="ShererPracticingBook" src="http://www.goshen.edu/news/files/2012/08/ShererPracticingBook-194x300.jpg" alt="Practicing cover" width="194" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">The cover of &#8220;Practicing: A Liturgy of Self-Learning,&#8221; by Lon Sherer, a professor emeritus of music at Goshen College</p></div>
<p>GOSHEN, Ind. – A 35-page book that urges music students to become “better ‘practicers’ and learners” and to regard such time as a vital personal liturgy continues to be the top-selling Pinchpenny Press book, nearly 25 years after its publication.</p>
<p>The book, <em>Practicing: A Liturgy of Self-Learning</em>, by Lon Sherer, a professor emeritus of music at Goshen College, sits in first place on the Pinchpenny best-seller list, with 2,082 copies having been sold. <a href="http://www.goshen.edu/english/publishing/ppp/" target="_blank">Pinchpenny</a> is a Goshen College press for chapbook-size books written by students, faculty members or friends of the college, and is managed by the English Department. The press has published 220 titles since its inception in 1969.</p>
<p>In 1975, as Sherer notes in the foreword to the book, after nearly 20 years of teaching, conducting and performing as a violinist, he underwent surgery to remove an acoustic tumor. The surgery in California saved his life, but left him without hearing in the right ear and with a partial loss of muscle and nerve control on the right side. He returned home to Goshen, a violinist who could no longer play the violin.</p>
<p>“After my surgery, my most challenging tasks involved re-learning both basic and advanced bowing techniques that I was no longer able to do because of paralysis on my right side,” Sherer said. “I needed to master these techniques, one at a time—using different sets of muscles and nerves that still worked.</p>
<p>“In the process I began to realize that confronting my actual learning the second time around was a rare gift that illuminated areas of learning in countless and often vivid ways,” he said. “The re-learning changed my approach to the instrument and changed my teaching, and I decided to share some of the experience in a talk I gave to the Georgia chapter of the Music Teachers National Association.”</p>
<p>He expanded the talk into a magazine article published first by the American Music Teacher, and soon after by the Emerson Flute Journal. The Pinchpenny book is a further expansion of the article. Pinchpenny Press sells <em>Practicing</em> for $4 a copy. The brown cover presents a modest appearance, with a simple title atop art professor Ezra Hershberger’s sketch of a violinist seated before his music stand.</p>
<p>Sherer, who said he has been “surprised that it has sold well for so long,” credited Kenneth Warren &amp; Son, violin dealers in Chicago, and Shar Products, a world leader in mail-order music materials, for having driven sales. James Warren, who represents the third generation of family ownership of the one of the oldest violin dealerships in the nation, said they have sold more than 200 copies over the years (copies remain in stock, selling for $5).</p>
<p>“Buyers have been from a wide variety but probably in the main teachers who buy it, read it and recommend it to all of their students,” Warren said. “On more than several occasions they have been bought in lots by a teacher and given to their students as Christmas gifts.”</p>
<p>Over the years, Sherer has received accolades from some of the most esteemed musicians in the country.</p>
<p>Nelita True, who debuted with the Chicago Symphony at 17 and went on to become a professor of piano at the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester, paid tribute to the chapbook in a letter that she wrote in 1992: “Lon, your book is a treasure from which I will no doubt quote – with full attribution, of course! It so clearly represents a distillation of what appears to be a lifetime of serious reflection. I found many things I hadn’t thought of, but which instantly seem so ‘right.’ Practicing as liturgy alters my view of this regimen in a fundamental way &#8230; I love your attitude toward, and your joy for, the ‘richness in the journey.’ ”</p>
<p>In 1987, György Sebők, a pianist and distinguished professor of music at the Indiana University School of Music, read the article on which the book was based. He wrote: “First of all, I want to congratulate you on your article about practicing. I have seldom read a text as illuminating and meaningful as your article.”</p>
<p>That same year, during a sabbatical, Sherer and his wife, Kathryn, who was an assistant professor of music at the college, attended Sebők’s master class in Emen, Switzerland. On the first day, Sebők asked Lon to speak to the class, drawing on lessons from the book.</p>
<p>Later in the sabbatical year, Sherer visited the Menuhin School in Stoke d’Abernon, south of London, where Peter Norris served as the headmaster. Shortly afterward, the great violinist himself, Yehudi Menuhin, wrote: “Mr. Peter Morris gave me your excellent booklet on practicing with its kind inscription. There are many points of particular interest that are enlightening. I thought especially the ‘10,000 times indeed’ was excellent.”</p>
<p>Given that he continued to teach at the college for two decades after the book was published and that he still offers private lessons in his home, Sherer was asked what changes to the book he would make, if any, in a new edition.</p>
<p>“I would update my advice about brands of string choices, along with some of the other practical bits of advice that have become out of date,” he said. “I would also add some new ideas that have emerged in my thinking in the ensuing years, and I would write at least a whole chapter on the ideas of György Sebők.”</p>
<p>And would he, in fact, consider writing a new edition? “Perhaps,” he said. At any rate, a reprint of the old one may be in the offing. A review of the Pinchpenny reserve shelves shows that the book is sold out.</p>
<p align="right"><em>– By Duane Stoltzfus, Goshen College Professor of Communication</em></p>
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