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Tuscaloosa, Ala. – The University of Alabama presents violist
Dr. Mark Neumann in recital in the concert hall of the Moody Music
Building on Feb. 18 at 7:30 p.m.
Neumann will be accompanied by pianist Dr. Enchi Anna Ho. The
program will feature “Suite Hebraique for Viola and Piano” by
Ernest Bloch, “Sonata in F Minor for Viola and Piano, Op.120
No.1” and “Sonata in E-flat Major for Viola and Piano,
Op.120 No.2” by Johannes Brahms.
The concert is free and open to the public. For more information,
visit www.music.ua.edu or
call 205/348-7111.
A native of Edmonton, Canada, Neumann is the professor of viola
at the University of Georgia in Athens. He studied violin since
the age of 4, leading to studies in violin at the University of
Victoria, the Cleveland Institute of Music, and at the Juilliard
School in New York, where he earned his doctor of musical arts
degree in 1995.
He is the recipient of numerous awards including Canada Council
Project Grants, British Columbia Cultural Arts Awards, the Winspear
Foundation Grant, and the Canadian Aldeburgh Foundation Scholarship.
He was the first prize winner in the Strings division at the British
Columbia Competitive Music Festival and a two-time winner of the
University of Victoria Concerto Competition. At Juilliard he held
the Richard R. Levien Scholarship and the John and Eva Post Scholarship.
His principal viola teachers included Karen Tuttle, Robert Vernon
and Jaroslav Karlovsky.
Neumann has pursued a versatile performing career including solo
appearances with the Calgary Philharmonic, Victoria Symphony and
Thunder Bay Symphony orchestras in Canada and the Straubing Collegium
Musicum in Germany, frequent performances at the music festivals
of Banff, Victoria, Sarasota and Aldeburgh, England, chamber music
recordings for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and Deutschland-Funk
in Germany, and the Victoria Symphony and Montreal Symphony orchestras.
In August 2002, Neumann began his current appointment as professor
of viola at the University of Georgia, where he maintains a highly
active schedule as a performer, teacher and clinician, and collaborates
regularly in performance with members of the University of Georgia
music faculty.
A native of Taichung, Taiwan, Ho has performed extensively in
her home country and in many parts of the United States. Her piano
studies began at the age of 5 as a private student of her uncle.
After studies at National Chung-Hsin University, Ho entered Morningside
College in Sioux City, Iowa graduating with a bachelor of music
degree. She graduated with her master’s degree at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison.
Ho returned to Taiwan in 1998 to take a position as orchestral
pianist for the National Taiwan Symphony Orchestra in Wu-Feng and
to concertize as a member of the Formosa Chamber Music Ensemble.
In 1999, she returned to the United States to pursue studies in
the doctor of musical arts program at Texas Tech University in
Lubbock, where she received her doctor of musical arts degree in
December 2003.
Ho has received many awards during her musical and educational
career, including an International Studies Scholarship and the
Klass Music Scholarship from Morningside College and a Graduate
Teaching Assistantship from Texas Technical University. She was
the winner of the first prize in the Chopin Piano Music Competition
at Morningside College in 1994 and was the official pianist for
the Morningside Choral Festival in 1993.
Ho now resides in Athens, Ga. where she maintains a private teaching
studio and collaborates frequently as an accompanist with both
students and faculty members of the University of Georgia School
of Music.
The UA School of Music is
located within the College of
Arts and Sciences, UA’s largest division and the largest
public liberal arts college in the state, with approximately 5,500
undergraduates and 1,000 graduate students. The College has received
national recognition for academic excellence, and the College’s
students have been selected for many of the nation’s top
academic honors, including 13 Rhodes Scholarships, 14 Goldwater
Scholarships, seven Truman Scholarships, and 16 memberships on
USA Today’s Academic All-American teams.
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