The Young European Strings (YES) School of Music is located in Dublin, Ireland and specialises in the early development and training of young professional musicians. The YES School of Music provides tuition for the violin, viola, cello and double bass. The Young European Strings Chamber Orchestra (YESCO) has performed throughout Europe and has released three albums to date.
Young European Strings School of Music | |
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Location | |
Ireland | |
Information | |
Established | 1988 |
Founder | Maria Kelemen |
Website | http://www.youngeuropeanstrings.com/ |
History
editYoung European Strings was established in 1988 by Hungarian-born viola player Maria Kelemen.[1] Kelemen’s grandmother, pianist Emilia Schoffan, founded the first private music school in Budapest in the early twentieth century. Kelemen left Hungary in 1956 to study at the Brussels and Liège Royal Music Conservatories and began her professional career at the age of twenty as the leader of the viola section in the Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, where she remained until 1984. Kelemen moved to Ireland in 1987 and founded Young European Strings a year later for young children learning music from the age of two and a half years, integrating her own methods[2] with the Kodály Approach.[3][4][5]
YESCO made their international debut with a concert tour of Finland in January 2001. In 2006, YESCO won the Achievement Award from the Irish Association of Youth Orchestras (IAYO) and, in 2009, won first prize in the 'Orchestras' category in the international festival Jugend & Musik in Wien. In 2014, YESCO performed at the National Concert Hall in Dublin.[6]
Teachings
editThe YES School of Music employs a teaching method called the Kodály method, an approach through singing voice and game-playing.[7][8][9] Maria Kelemen emphasises ‘a personal and even physical experience of music’ in her teaching methods,[10] integrating the parts of Kodály’s philosophy that she believes in, specifically, ‘his priority of making children hear the notes they are singing or playing in their heads.’[11]
Students of the YES School of Music are annually presented in graded practical (instrumental) and theory examinations before ABRSM (Associated Board of Royal Schools of Music).
Orchestras
editThe orchestras of the YES School of Music comprise the Junior Orchestra (4 to 6 year olds), the Intermediate Orchestra (6 to 14 year olds), and the Young European Strings Chamber Orchestra (YESCO) under the direction of Professor Ronald Masin.[12]
The YES Chamber Orchestra has to date released three albums:[13] The first, a self-titled album, was released in November 2003, featuring music by Tchaikovsky and Grieg, amongst other compositions for strings. The second album, The Marino Suite (2006), was a collaboration between YESCO and John Sheahan of The Dubliners, including arrangements of Sheahan's melodies by Irish composer Raymond Deane.[14] The most recent release, Third Edition (2012), includes music by Mahler, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, and the world premiere of the 'Five Piece Suite' by Raymond Deane.
Teachers
editProfessor Ronald Masin[15] joined YES as Artistic Director in 2002 from the DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama[16] and instructs students in the Senior Programme at the School.[17] Maria Kelemen and violist Tanya Plavans provide instruction in violin and viola for children up to the age of 11 and the teaching faculty also includes cellist Martin Johnson, Section Leader with the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra;[18] cellist Eoin Quinlan; and double bass player Mark Jenkins, Associate Principal with the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra.[19]
Notable alumni
editPast students of the YES School of Music include Gwendolyn Masin, violinist, author and director of the GAIA Chamber Music Festival; violinists Catherine Leonard[20] and Gina McGuinness;[21] Martia Malherbe,[22] violist with the Cape Philharmonic Orchestra and Niall O’Briain, Director of Newpark Music School.[23]
References
edit- ^ Escape brings music to the ears by Andrea Smith, Sunday Independent, 31 May 2009
- ^ 'String Theory', Irish Independent, 22 February 2014
- ^ Playground Prodigy by Arminta Wallace, The Irish Times, 28 August 2010
- ^ ‘A string to their bow’ by Sheila Wayman, The Irish Times Magazine, 6 October 2007
- ^ ‘Never too young’ by David Denton, The Strad Magazine, September 1996
- ^ 19th Festival of Youth Orchestras National Concert Hall website
- ^ ‘String Theory’ by Eoin Butler, The Irish Independent, 22 February 2014
- ^ ‘A string to their bow’ by Sheila Wayman, The Irish Times Magazine, 6 October 2007
- ^ ‘Music hath charms’ by Sylvia Thompson, The Irish Times, 23 January 1996
- ^ ‘Weaving a kind of magic’ by Paul O’Kelly, The Irish Times, 13 December 1993
- ^ Denton, David (September 1996). ‘Never too young’. The Strad
- ^ Stringing them along is child’s play by Sarah Caden, Irish Independent, 08 December 2002
- ^ Young European Strings Chamber Orchestra on Amazon
- ^ Irish Association of Youth Orchestras website
- ^ ‘Escape brings music to the ears’ by Andrea Smith, Sunday Independent, 31 May 2009
- ^ DIT Conservatory of Music and Drama website
- ^ YES website
- ^ RTE National Symphony Orchestra website
- ^ RTE National Symphony Orchestra website
- ^ Personal website
- ^ Biography
- ^ Troika website
- ^ Newpark Music School website