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Our Blog
featuring Chapel Hill and Carrboro musicians, music teachers, past and present students.

This blog page is for anyone with musical connections to Chapel Hill and Carrboro, to share their reminiscences of their time here.  Please use the contact page to send your story (with dates), and it will be posted on this page.

Mary Fran, January 2018

1/17/2018

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From Jane Salemson.
Mary Fran and I had a long chat last week and caught up on her Christmas holiday in Minnesota,  and how she is settling in. She is teaching a number of students and getting involved in many groups in the community, both musical and Bible study. 
Here is a photo of her and her sister in the middle. If anyone can identify the others, that would be helpful. 
Elaine had a beautiful quilt made for her (see below) using T-shirts from each of the past 26 years of Raspberry Ridge Camps. I hope eventually we can get photos of each T-shirt. 
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Mary Fran and her sister, seated in the middle with friends.
PictureThis beautiful quilt given to Fran by Elaine, is made up of the 26 T-shirts, one for each year of Raspberry Ridge String Camp, of which Fran was a founder.

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Thanks to Amy for sending this photo of her and Fran playing music together in Fran's new apartment.
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Amy and Mary Fran with a little friend at Breyer's Choice where they make carolers and life-size costumes.
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This is for you Fran. Who would have thought this in Chapel Hill? January 17, 2018 and it's still coming down. Your birdfeeder is in great demand.
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Mary Frances Boyce's move to Philadelphia

9/30/2017

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By Jane Salemson.
This is a blog about Mary Frances Boyce, which I am keeping on this website so all musicians from the area will be able follow Fran's new lifestyle and keep abreast of local music-related news. If you would like to add anything to this blog, feel free to send them to me (including photos, videos) britcellist@gmail.com
September 2017 was a time of several life-changing events of friends, which will impact many of our local musicians. Mary Frances Boyce, the doyenne of violin teachers in Chapel Hill and Methodist College in Fayetteville, has retired and moved up to a beautiful retirement community in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. There were parties all through the month for Mary Fran - cookouts, potlucks and a very formal dinner with our baroque group from the 70s-90s, I Musici di Cappella della Collina. (Florence Peacock, soprano, Joyce Peck (soprano, deceased), Eleanor Kinnaird and Mary Frances Boyce , violins, Jane Salemson, cello and bass viol, Jane Harris Harpsichord). Over the years additional musicians were added for some concerts - vocalists, recorder, but the 5 remaining in the group get together once a year. This year was extra special. 
I was very anxious to see where Fran and Elaine were going to live, so was glad to be able to drive Fran's car with her, up to Philadelphia on September 23. It was a special time to talk about our 44 year-old friendship, the past and the future. Elaine drove her own car and we managed to stay together for most of the trip. We were told to go on 301 after Richmond to avoid so much of I-95, and it was a beautiful run. The scenery of green fields with pristine farmhouses, high bridges gave wonderful vistas (unfortunately I didn't dare look around too much, those bridges are quite scary!) and a real feel of colonial buildings made it an interesting and easy drive. We stayed overnight in Dahlgren, VA  at the Marriott, then after a good breakfast, we were off again.  We continued the drive to Philadelphia, arriving at Lizzie's (Fran's sister) retirement community, and bundled all the instruments into her tiny apartment. It's about 40 minutes away from Fran's. I stayed there overnight and Fran was to stay there until the 29th when the movers were scheduled to arrive from NC  at the new apartment. Elaine went off to stay with her relatives until moving-in day. A very interesting history of Lizzie's community - the original building was the mansion house of the Cassatt family, railroad owners, (painter Mary was a cousin). Built in 1907, in the 50s, it was sold to the YMCA, then to the retirement community who restored to its original style. It has beautiful rooms for socializing, including a large ballroom, and the expansive gardens and lawns give a wonderful sense of space. Residents are encouraged to use the garden plots to grow flowers and vegetables.
On our way!
PictureFilling up with gas on our way north to Philadelphia.

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Waiting for Lizzie to return after an outing. We are looking a little weary!
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Their new abode! Monday was the big day for Fran, Elaine and her 5 siblings, to see the unit for the first time.  
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I love the stone walls all over the place. The patio and garden area is large, they have a corner unit with 3 bedrooms (one will be the music room).


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What a kitchen!
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This garden and patio are going to be spectacular when Elaine get her hands on them!
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The fancy dining room for evening meals and special occasions.
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Flowers for the tables.
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The Grill for lunches and other occasions. Extensive menu.
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A complimentary lunch for us all in the atrium, delicious sandwiches and salads.
After lunch it was time to go to nearby Warminster, to catch the train to the airport for my flight to Milwaukee. A very sad goodbye, but happy in the knowledge they are in a place that is right for them and their families. Dear friends. 
Oct. 27, 2017 - New photos of the apartment Fran has sent in. 
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The music room (of course!).
Nov. 1, 2017 Fran flew down to Chapel Hill on Nov. 1st to attend the 26th Chapel Hill Cooperative String project workshop  with clinician Dr. Timothy (Terry) Durbin. Another round of meeting friends and then the 3-day workshop. 
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52 years ago Mary Fran, Nancy Brooks and Mary Alice Bierk formed the Chapel Hill Cooperative Suzuki Project. Still going strong and the annual workshop is a fixture for students of all ages.
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Passing on the violin bow to newcomer Suzuki teacher Amy McKinnis.
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Amy, Rebecca, Terry Durbin, Fran and Wanda after the outstanding workshop concert.
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Nov. 5th. With Brent Wissick after a monumental concert of music in memory of Mstislav Rostropovich - together with the UNC Cello Choir.
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Wilhemina, Jane and Fran. Ladies in pink. Honestly, we didn't plan it. Just great minds think alike!
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Fran doing library work with posters and programs of the baroque ensemble, I Musici di Capella della Collina which we started in 1974.
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1975 Concert in the DI Phi room. From L-R Fran, Jane, Beverly, Ele, Joyce, Florence, Lydia,
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1988, Fran, Florence, Jane Harpsichord Jane Cello, Ele.
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The Chapel Hill Cooperative String Project 2016 Cello workshop.

2/8/2016

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The 2016 Suzuki Cello Workshop in Chapel Hill, Feb. 26-27
Contact Phil Warren prwarren@yahoo.com for details.
Leslie Alperin, guest clinician. Leslie Alperin comes to us from Albuquerque, New Mexico. She taught cello for many years in Chapel Hill, performed widely in the area, and conducted the Piedmont Youth Orchestra. We are lucky to have her join us in Chapel Hill to work with our students!

Below is  a photo of the some of the 2014 workshop participants. 
The 2014
Suzuki Cello Workshop in Chapel Hill,  March 21-23 (Friday-Sunday)

Sponsored by the Chapel Hill Cooperative Suzuki Project
                                                                                            
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Students of Jane Salemson participated in the Volume 1-4 classes.

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Jenny Douglass - viola

5/29/2014

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Jennifer Curtis and Friends at UNC

4/17/2014

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PictureFrom L - Andrea Bohlman, Jennifer Curtis, Caroline Shaw.
Jennifer Curtis at UNC.  Musical Conversations with Caroline Shaw  Caroline Shaw has a voice with many overtones. A celebrated artist in the chorus of contemporary composer-performers—musicians—, her creative projects grow out of the spark generated by learning, hearing, and crafting sound in close-knit communities. These vibrant and intimate musical conversations nourish and support music-making in the twenty-first century: her visit to UNC invites us to listen into her sound world. Many of Shaw’s compositions grow out of making music for and from the places she has lived and traveled, and the gleaming textures her works invite audiences to join her on personal journeys, sometimes to her native North Carolina.

                                     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTnwdQbN3vY

Shaw generously joins the UNC Department of Music in conversation and musical improvisation to discuss her North Carolina roots, share reflections on her Pulitzer-prize winning “Partita,” and make music with fellow NC-violinist-composer Jennifer Curtis.


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Daniel Becton and Ubuntu News

4/17/2014

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 So thrilled to be a founding member of the Ubuntu Global Network, joining leaders from South Africa, Russia, Austria, Portugal, Brazil, Australia and the UK! More to come soon about the remarkable Ubuntu Mail, The Ubuntu Project, Academia Ubuntu, The Jimmy Mizen Foundation, Rede Ubuntu and Ubuntu 4 Schools (connected to The Guild, powered by The Grubb Institute)
Completely life-changing experience in Lisbon with the launch of the Ubuntu Global Network. I've never been somewhere for the first time and left feeling like I... was leaving home. It was surreal to meet ubuntu warriors from around the world and to enjoy such a sensational welcome from our Portuguese hosts. I will post photos and videos on the Project Ubuntu page in the coming days and especially info about more amazing ubuntu projects!

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Joshua Starmer

2/20/2014

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A native of Chapel Hill, Joshua Starmer’s first cello, at age 7, was a cardboard box with a 12 inch ruler taped to it.  Mary Frances Boyce, followed by Brent Wissick, were both incredibly patient with him and over the years he grew to love the instrument. Since graduating to a real instrument, he’s played and recorded with REM’s Michael Stipe and Mike Mills, The Love Language, The Old Ceremony, The Rosebuds, Chris Stamey, Birds and Arrows, Katharine Whalen and many more. In addition to playing the cello, Joshua writes songs, composes and records original music for movies, television, theater and dance.

Joshua’s most recent album, “Postcards From Home, Volume 1”, is a collection of songs and stories, one written and recorded each month for a year, that kept him in touch with friends and loved ones.  The music played the role of a picture with writing on the back saying “wish you were here”.  Featuring his singing,
stringed instruments, foot stomps and claps, the pieces convey messages ranging from simple observations about the weather, to coping with a friend’s departure, to getting lost underneath one of the great Egyptian pyramids.

You can follow Joshua’s music and stories on the web at: http://joshuastarmer.com/
Feb. 2016

Since the start of 2013, I've written, arranged and recorded a song each month. I recently finished my third year, and thus, third album. Each album ends up being a bit like a musical diary. Seasons change, and so does the tone of the music (fall, for instance, is almost always darker than summer). A vacation can inspire a song, and so can the ups and downs of daily life.
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Doris Powers -Violin and Viola

11/20/2013

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Dr. Doris B. Powers – Teacher, Violinist, Violist, Musicologist,
Writer
Following a lifetime passion for music, Doris finds satisfaction
through numerous avenues. Since arriving in Chapel Hill in August, 1983, she has maintained a teaching studio for 26 years (in addition to some 30 years previously teaching in Seattle, WA, and Kansas), and takes keen enjoyment in seeing young people learn and grow musically. It was a special privilege to run
her own booking business, Evergreen, for 11 years, which furnished small ensembles and solos, including strolling, for many people as they celebrated their important social events.
Dr. Powers has been a member of Duke Chapel’s Orchestra Pro Cantores for about 20 years, a member of Carolina Baroque in Salisbury, NC, and has also performed with members of the Ciompi Quartet. 
As an author, Dr. Powers has researched and published Carl
Philipp Emanuel Bach: A Guide to Research
(New York: Routledge, 2002) and
C.P.E. Bach’s Keyboard Trios I,
II/3.1 (Los Altos, California, The Packard Humanities Institute, 2011), an
edition of the violin and keyboard works in the series Carl Philipp Emanual Bach: Complete Works. She also wrote a monthly column about music, “Classical Themes,” for the Chapel Hill News from 2000 to 2004.
Currently, Dr. Powers reviews concerts for the online arts journal in North Carolina, Classical Voice of North
Carolina. 

She sat on the board of the Raleigh Chamber Music Guild from 2002 to 2008, participating in the committees handling the Master’s Series, initiating the September Prelude Festival, and organizing for the first time
 the master classes for young chamber musicians conducted by the visiting artists. Doris was associated with UNC’s Chamber Music Workshop for Adults for about 20 years, coaching and later assisting its artistic director, Donald L. Oehler, as director of the Introductory Chamber Music Program for adults. 
Dr. Powers received a B.A. in Music Education (University of Washington), M.M. in Violin Performance (with a specialty in baroque performance practices), and a Ph.D. in Eighteenth-century Musicology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (with areas of expertise in north German intellectual history, including rhetoric, and late eighteenth-century performance practices).


 

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Laura Thomas - Violin

11/20/2013

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Laura was born and raised in Chapel Hill—that’s right, a true native. She began her
violin studies at age 10 with Susan Black and became a bonafide Tarheel by
attending UNC-­‐CH, studying with Richard Luby and Ann Woodward, and earning
a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology. A curiosity about the greenness of other
grasses led her to Wichita, Kansas where she continued her violin studies with
Andrzej Grabiec and Nancy Luttrell, winning a position with the Wichita Symphony
in 1988. Realizing she wanted to raise her children on her native soil, Laura
and family moved back to Chapel Hill in 1998, much to the delight of her
parents. Over the years in NC, Laura has enjoyed playing with the Durham,
Raleigh, Wilmington, Greensboro and North Carolina Symphonies, and is a member
of the recently formed Carolina International Orchestra. She’s thrilled to be
entering her seventh year with the Chamber Orchestra of the Triangle and feels
fortunate to be a part of the vibrant freelance community here that gives her
opportunities to play opera, ballet, choral, chamber, wedding music and so much
more. In addition to serving as concertmaster of the Tchaikovsky Virtuosi and
the Masterworks Reading Orchestra, Laura is a founding member of The BarHop
String Quartet, specializing in non-­‐classical arrangements of jazz, rock,
and alternative music. Her latest venture as a member of the band, Hindugrass
has been a wild journey into a fusion of Indian and Bluegrass music that has
been both challenging and exciting. Laura also enjoys many recording gigs,
spanning a wide spectrum of musical styles. Along with her husband and two
children, Laura lives in the same neighborhood where she was raised. 
 


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The Chapel Hill Philharmonia

11/10/2013

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Here is a summary written by long-time member cellist, Richard Clark.

The Chapel Hill Philharmonia: the first twenty-five years

 In early 1983 Joel Carter, retired choral director at UNC-Chapel Hill, and Ed 
 Jackson, an amateur French horn player, with the encouragement of other Chapel 
 Hill instrumentalists, including Susan Strobel and Jerry and Barbara Hulka, 
 organized a community-based recreational reading orchestra. From the beginning 
 the Village Orchestra was a model of positive town/gown interaction -- in fact 
 the bass player was Mayor Ken Broun. The orchestra's first conductor was George 
 Taylor, violist of Duke's Ciompi Quartet. Thursday evening rehearsals in Hill 
 Hall were special times for the approximately fifty founding members, primarily 
 amateur musicians from Chapel Hill and Durham. Many had not been able to play 
 regularly in the Triangle, and the opportunity to play orchestral music
together  in friendly atmosphere under professional leadership was highly
motivating. With  Taylor's imminent departure to the Eastman School of Music,
the baton passed to  the husband and wife team of Brent Wissick, UNC faculty
cellist, and Ruth  Johnson, professional violinist and Suzuki teacher. Brent and
Ruth emphasized  the recreational aspects of the musical experience. They
established the  tradition of twice yearly performances, termed "open dress
rehearsals" or  informal "publick actes," avoiding the stressful "C word"
(concert). Small but  enthusiastic audiences in Hill Hall auditorium consisted
almost entirely of  close friends and family members. Programs were dominated by
short, light works  and occasional excerpts from symphonies, followed by
receptions.

In the spring of 1989, Edgar Alden, retired UNC violin professor and Music 
Department chair, became conductor. His wife Dorothy, also a fine professional 
violinist, became principal second violin. The Village Orchestra grew and for 
the first time tackled entire symphonies. Performances were now called "Musical 
Evenings" and the orchestra began to attract attention beyond the confines of 
the "Village" of Chapel Hill. Membership, as it does today, consisted almost 
entirely of amateur musicians with widely varying levels of expertise. Players 
range in age from teens to octogenarians, and their day jobs reflect the unique 
academic community in which we live. Membership is open without audition to all 
who love to play their instruments, and are willing to donate a modest sum each 
semester to help pay the conductor and cover music costs.

Since 1993 the orchestra has been directed by Professor Donald Oehler, UNC-CH 
faculty clarinetist and a devoted supporter of amateur musicians. Under his 
enthusiastic "can do" leadership, the orchestra's repertoire has become more 
ambitious. Recent concerts have included commissioned works and premieres by 
local composers and orchestra members. We no longer avoid the "C word." This 
season we performed four concerts, including one for a young audience. Our 
winter concert usually features amateur soloists from the orchestra's 
increasingly experienced membership of over 80 instrumentalists.

A satisfying function of the orchestra since its inception has been the 
sponsorship of an annual concerto contest for local pre-college musicians. 
Winners receive cash awards and, more importantly, the opportunity to perform
in  the orchestra's spring concert. Many of our previous winners are now 
accomplished professional musicians or students at nationally ranked 
conservatories. In keeping with the amicable town/gown relationship fostered by 
the founders, the Music Department continues to graciously provide practice and 
performance spaces in Hill Hall, and to make available sheet music, stands, and 
percussion instruments. The orchestra in turn encourages select UNC students to 
participate and schedules an annual "Diva Fest", affording UNC voice students a 
chance to rehearse arias with a live orchestra. We also contribute each year to 
a Music Department scholarship and donate new sheet music to the university 
library.

In 2002 the Board decided to adopt our present name -- the Chapel Hill 
Philharmonia. Our informal and undisciplined small reading orchestra of 25
years  ago has morphed into the larger, more sophisticated community cultural
resource  that you hear today, and can learn more about at our web site (www.chapelhillphilharmonia.org).  However, we
remain unique in the Triangle as a non-auditioned amateur group that  "pays to
play," and our concerts are still free! We are now a tax-exempt  organization
and receive financial help from an increasing list of patrons and  charitable
organizations. We look forward to what the next twenty-five years may  bring and
appreciate the continued support of our community and UNC-CH.

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    Jane Salemson
    I am just the conduit to enable the stories to be told of those who lived or grew up in this area making music.

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