Piano professor set to give music's first Distinguished Research Lecture
![david korevaar playing piano](/music/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/ft_korevaar_article.png?itok=tMe59w6x)
Professor of Piano David Korevaar presents his Distinguished Research Lecture on the music of Chopin, Perrachio and Liebermann on Friday, Feb. 24.
Start with the score.
Thats David Korevaars method as he sits down to a new piano piece. Its also the advice he gives all his students.
A lot of musicians get to know a piece by listening to a recording. And thats something I almost always discourage. You have to start with notes on a page. Thats the primary source.
Korevaar, Helen and Peter Weil Professor of Piano at the College of Music, talks about the score as the root of context for any musical work this Friday as he presents The score is alive with the sound of music. The lecture-performance is part of the CU Boulder Research and Innovation Offices series.
Korevaar is the first music faculty member to be awarded the lectureship, which is awarded annually to faculty based on peer nominations and the nominees body of academic or creative achievement and prominence, as well as contributions to the universitys educational and service missions.
My primary focus is not on whats conventionally considered research, which makes this even more exciting, he says. The research component of my career tends to be very performance directed. 泭泭
The event will focus on three very different works by three very different composersand the three very different processes Korevaar goes through to prepare the pieces for performance. Hell run the musical gamut, from Fr矇d矇ric Chopin to early 20th-century Italian composer to living composer and friend Lowell Liebermann.
Each piece, the Juilliard-educated pianist explains, presents its own unique challenges to the performer.
Theyre all at different parts of the process. Chopin is a completed project for me; Liebermann is still alive, so I can get feedback from him whenever I want; and Perrachio is a composer that [Professor of Musicology] Laurie Sampsel and I discovered while we reassembled the collection at the music library here.
Unlike Chopin, whose work has a rich history and a long tradition of performances and recordings, Perrachio is a relatively unknown composer. His scores are rarely seen; recordings are even more rare.
[Perrachio was] much less intimidating than Chopin, Korevaar explains. You dont have the anxiety of influence. You feel irresponsible if you cant hear all the recordings that are out there before you play a piece by Chopin.
But, he says, there are other pressures associated with being one of the first people to perform a pieceeven if it is 100 years old.
Now youre the beginning of the performance tradition. You have to look at the notes on the page and begin to interpret themto figure out what the composer was trying to saywith only the score as your initial point of reference. From there you begin to grasp, through an understanding of the time period and the place the composer was active, a world of sound that is preserved in the page.
And then, in this case, Korevaar will have to talk about how he arrived at those conclusions.
As a pianist, you spend a lot of time alone. You dont often have to put your thoughts into words. But when youre teaching or demonstrating, you have to decide whats important and translate emotions into coherent verbiage.
For Korevaar, who has taught at the College of Music since 2000, the process of teachingwhether its students or a crowd of scholarsis also a process of learning.
There are plenty of pieces that my students play that Ive never heard, and I learn through them. And when I present this lecture, itll be aimed at an audience of people who are perhaps much more adept than I am in some of the fields Ill be dabbling in, such as language or philosophy or history.
But thats what makes it so exciting to be here in Boulder. Were surrounded by people who are extraordinary in their fields, and we get to collaborate with them. And back in my studio, the better my students get, the better I get.
is this Friday, Feb. 24, at 4 p.m. in Grusin Music Hall. For more information, visit the Events page.