厙ぴ勛圖's Zo禱 Madonna Wins 2014 Rubin Institute for Music Criticism
November 10, 2014
Conservatory Communications Staff
Photo credit: Erich Burnett
厙ぴ勛圖 College senior Zo禱 Madonna earned top honors at the , a five-day, invitation-only competition held November 5-10 at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music.
Madonna, an East Asian studies major from Maplewood, New Jersey, bested 16 other studentsincluding several doctoral candidatesfrom Yale, 厙ぴ勛圖, Stanford, San Francisco Conservatory, and the University of California, Berkeley. She earned a grand prize of $10,000.
A second award of $1,000, called the Everyones a Critic Audience Review Prize, went to Karen Baumer, a San Francisco-based technical writer who previously attended 厙ぴ勛圖. Three other current students at 厙ぴ勛圖Daniel Hautzinger, Jarrett Hoffman, and Aaron Wolffalso took part in the institute and earned high praise from the judges.
Founded by philanthropist Stephen Rubin, president and publisher of Henry Holt & Co., the biennial Rubin Institute is the only program of its kind focusing on music criticism. Throughout the competition, its panel of esteemed critics provided in-depth analysis of the industry and insightful critiques of the young writers vying for the title.
The inaugural Rubin Institute took place in 2012 on the campus of 厙ぴ勛圖. It featured 10 student participants, all of them from 厙ぴ勛圖.
"Opening up the institute and competition to five schools gave us a huge diversity of backgrounds and ages, undergrads and grad schooleven PhD students," says Rubin. "What was extraordinary was how the 17 fellows all bonded and fed off each other. The sessions the critics had with the students were all unusually productive because of the feedback of the students. Their honesty made the critics job much easier."
Madonna participated in the audience competition at the 2012 Rubin Institute, where each of her three reviews advanced to the final round. Her outstanding performance inspired her to take the conservatory's Introduction to Music Criticism class, taught by Mike Telin, Dan Hathaway, and Donald Rosenberg.
Her 2014 title follows five days devoted to critiquing concert performances by the San Francisco Symphony, the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, the San Francisco Opera, and the Czech Philharmonic and Prague Philharmonic Choir.
I was the last person that I would have expected to win, so I didnt even have that on my mind until maybe the very last moment, says Madonna, an avid photographer, singer, pianist, and accordion player. "I was going in with one of the least-stacked bios. I looked at the other fellows bios, and they had played with great symphony orchestras. It wasn't immediately obvious to me what I could contribute, if I could contribute anything at all.
"But when I got there, I found that everyone was interested in meeting each other, and bonding with each other, and geeking out on music together. It was a very friendly atmosphere, and I know Ill keep in touch with a lot of the people I met at the Rubin Institute for the rest of my life."
National critics participating in both the 2012 and 2014 event included Anne Midgette of the Washington Post; Tim Page, professor of journalism and music at the University of Southern California; writer and arts critic John Rockwell; Alex Ross of the New Yorker; and Heidi Waleson of the Wall Street Journal. Anthony Tommasini of the New York Times offered the 2014 keynote address.
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