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Meet Our Students: Sarah Smith

Marathon Concert to Benefit Waterville Homeless Shelter

May 2014 Combined Augusta Symphony and Maine Youth Orchestra:

"Sarah Smith, now eighteen, is a student of Julia Adams. She started playing violin when she was five (because she wanted to be like her brother), and viola at twelve (because she didn't). Sarah is a long-time member of the Pineland Suzuki School and its advanced string ensemble, Capital Strings. She has performed on viola and violin in concerts, recitals, chamber music workshops and community events around the state. Sarah played with the Colby College Orchestra during 2012-13. In 2013, Sarah won the Maine String Teachers and Players Association solo competition, performing the Rapsodie from Bloch's Suite Hébraïque. She earned a place with the Karger Scholarship program for pre-professional music students at the Portland Conservatory of Music in Portland for 2013-14. She was principal violist in Maine's All State High School Orchestra, first as a sophomore in 2012, and again in 2013. During 2013-14, she earned places in and performed with three high school honors orchestras, including All Eastern (Hartford, CT), All-National (Nashville, TN), and the American String Teachers Association Honors Orchestra (Louisville, KY), where she was seated as principal after on-site auditions. Sarah is about to graduate from Cony High School, where she is an honor student and a Varsity soccer and track athlete. Sarah plans to pursue a degree in viola performance in college."

"For many years now the Maine Youth Orchestra has collaborated with the Augusta Symphony to bring young and old alike together in creating music. It has always been a part of MYO's mission to showcase young and amazing artists in our Concerto Concert each year."

"For 16 consecutive Good Fridays, Betsy has led a string quartet in the sacred performance of Joseph Haydn’s Seven Last Words of Christ. On April 18 at 7:00 pm, her “Halleluiah String Quartet” (comprised of members of the Pineland Suzuki School Faculty and Student Quartet) will perform Haydn’s masterpiece at Columbia Street Baptist Church (CSBC) in Bangor. . . The Good Friday concert will be offered at no charge to the public as a gift to Bangor from CSBC."

December 2012:

When Betsy Kobayashi raises the bow of her violin straight up high, some 50 young string musicians follow suit, pointing to the high vaulted ceiling of South Parish Congregational Church and giving her their absolute attention.

With an emphatic downstroke, Kobayashi launches the violin, viola and cello players into the first notes of “Minuet No. 3” by Johann Sebastian Bach. The sound is startlingly powerful yet sweet, filling the sanctuary of the church. None of the boys and girls has any sheet music in front of them.

This is a rehearsal of the Pineland Suzuki School for two benefit concerts at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 8, in Oakland and 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 9, in Augusta.

About 100 young musicians, most of them violinists, will perform. The Oakland concert will be at the Duke Albanese Performing Arts Center at Messalonskee High School. The Augusta concert will be at South Parish Congregational Church, off State Street.

The Oakland concert will raise money for scholarships to Pineland Suzuki School, while the Augusta concert will raise money for Bread of Life Ministries, which operates a soup kitchen, a homeless shelter and transitional housing in Augusta.

After the concerts, there will be a silent auction, chamber music and refreshments.

The Pineland Suzuki School for students age 3 to 18 was founded in Augusta by Kobayashi and Ellen Gawler, based on the principles of Sinishi Suzuki, in 1994.

“Ellen and I got our students together in our living rooms,” Kobayashi said. “That was the real beginning.”

Kobayashi said she started teaching music in Buffalo, N.Y. Then she studied for two years with Sinishi Suzuki in Japan where she met her husband, Naoto Kobayashi. She stayed five more years in Japan before moving to Maine.

Kobayashi said Suzuki, who lived to be 99, believed “all children could play music just like they could speak their mother tongue. If all Japanese children can speak Japanese, and all English children can speak English, then all children can learn to play music, he believed.”

“There’s a lot of listening at first. Then you play without looking at music,” said Kobayashi. “They continue to play the first pieces that they learn. Depending on their age, they probably wouldn’t read music for a couple of years. They start to read music separately.”

She said, “They learn to hold the violin. They learn to hold the bow and make a beautiful sound.”

Pineland Suzuki students take private lessons that cost from $30 to $50 per hour and group classes that cost from $245 to $370 per year. They can rent or buy their instruments. “We try to make this available for everybody,” said Kobayashi.

“With the economy the way it is, we have many more people who need scholarships,” she said.

Pineland Suzuki has students who come from as far away as Orono and Portland, though most are from the Augusta area.

“It’s really heartwarming to see how well kids can play,” Kobayashi said. “I think this is just the best investment people can make. It’s just so much more than music that the kids are learning.”

In a letter to benefit concert-goers, Kobayashi writes of Suzuki students, “They learn discipline, responsibility and teamwork. They learn humility. They learn the confidence that comes from knowing how to solve really difficult problems. They learn that attention to details really matters. They learn that preparation really matters.

“They learn that love, respect and kindness make a more beautiful sound.”

The benefit concerts will include a Christmas carol sing-along and will culminate with “Lord of the Dance,” which will involve all 100 students and feature dancing and singing as well as music.

Michael Warren of Augusta has a 10-year-old daughter, Georgia, who has been a Pineland Suzuki student since she was 7.

“My wife and I consider music a gift we can give to our daughter,” said Warren. “We are just amazed how far she has come in three years. They’re not just playing ‘Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.’ They are playing Beethoven and Bach. It’s like learning a language. We couldn’t be happier with the way she has progressed. When you have children at a young age working with music, it lends to creativity in other areas.”

Georgia Warren said of playing in concerts before a big audience, “It’s fun, but sometimes I get a little nervous. It means a lot to me because I really like playing it. It’s fun and enjoyable. It’s challenging sometimes, but it varies, too.”

In addition to the benefit concerts, a small group of Pineland Suzuki students will join with the Augusta Symphony Orchestra in presenting Handel’s “Messiah” at 7 p.m. Dec. 14 at High Street Congregational Church in Auburn and at 7 p.m. Dec. 15 at Hope Baptist Church in Manchester.

In addition, some Pineland Suzuki students will join Suzuki students from other parts of Maine and play before the Portland Symphony Orchestra’s “Magic of Christmas” concert at Merrill Auditorium in Portland on Dec. 16.

Kobayashi said a group of Pineland Suzuki students will be traveling to Japan for an international Suzuki conference next spring.

In January, Pineland’s group classes will move from their base at South Parish Congregational Church to Hope Baptist Church on U.S. Route 202 in Manchester.

"When the curtain rises at the Pineland Suzuki School’s annual benefit concert at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 5 at Cony High School Performing Arts Center, more than 100 of Maine’s most accomplished young musicians will lift bows to instruments and transport a packed auditorium on a voyage through a thousand years of Classical and folk traditions."

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