Parking and Dinning

General Information:

Parking is free everywhere on campus for the weekend. However, it will be a busy day for Baylor.
Please be there before 8:30 to register and find a desirable parking place.

All events and registration will take place at the McCrary Music Building across from the visitor center.

Concert dress would be nice Sunday clothing or Baylor Clarinet T-Shirt. ( for sale on site).

There are Baylor Clarinet T Shirts ($16), Dr. Jun Qian CDs ($15) , lunch ($10) and other stuff for sale at Baylor Sale table in MM 114.  All income will be collected for next year’s event.  Your support will be greatly appreciated !!!

The Registration Table will be open 7:45-11:00am.
Please bring cash only.
$5 for online preregistration
$10 for registration on site

Click here for our all day schedule!!

 

We ask that for your concert attire you dress for “Sunday’s best”.

There are many restaurants and dinning places on and off campus.
Please visit our website for a detailed list of off-campus dining.

On-campus dining includes Penland Cafeteria and Starbucks in the Moody Library.
Please see the online campus map.

We hope you have a wonderful day here at Baylor!

 

Dinning:

There are many restaurants and dinning places on and off campus.

On campus:

Chinese food delivered on site by Chopsticks of Waco, $10 each.  By choosing this option,  you are  supporting our event next year!!

Penland Cafeteria,  and Starbucks in the Moody Library.

See campus online map

Off campus :

1424 Restaurant
1424 Washington Avenue
254.752.7385
Wed.-Fri. 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
Sat. 5:00-10:00 p.m.
Sun. 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.

Reliable lunch and dinner option with a delightful outside patio. Especially good with their Greek dishes (like the grilled lamb chops) and their dessert options (white chocolate bread pudding). As an aside, their Austin cream pie is, in fact, a chocolate cake with creamy layers, and one that should be tried.

 

Amelia’s
1509 Austin Avenue
254.714.1229
Tues.-Sat. 11:00 a.m.-2:30 p.m.

A perfect place for ladies who lunch, but the desserts are so good that the men are willing to navigate the chicken salad plate, too. Do not miss the buttermilk pie. Try the one with coconut baked on top, too. While you’re at it, throw in a slice of Italian cream cake.

 

Bangkok Royal
215 South University Parks Drive
254.757.2741

Super-fresh Thai food only minutes from campus. You absolutely must end each meal with a scoop of their homemade coconut ice cream.

Baris
904 North Valley Mills Drive
254.772.2900

Best pizza in town. If you like sausage, pay a bit extra for the Italian sausage upgrade.

 

Barnett’s
420 Franklin Avenue
254.776.4013
Tues.-Wed. 4:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m.
Thurs. 4:00 p.m.-12:00 a.m.
Fri.-Sat. 4:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m.

Irish pub with some pretty good grub.

Café Cappucino
100 North 6th Street
254.756.0396
Mon.-Sat. 6:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Sun. 7:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

Good breakfasts and light lunches. For pancake fans, try the banana pecan.

Cathay House
825 Wooded Acres Drive
254.776.1072

Long-running Chinese restaurant with deliciously plump pan-fried dumplings.

Chuy’s
5501 Legend Lake Parkway
254.420.4242
Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
Fri.-Sat. 11:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.

Austin-based chain with delish Mexican food; top-notch tortilla soup.

Common Grounds
1123 South 8th Street
254.757.2957
Mon.-Sun. 7:00 a.m.-1:00 a.m.

The go-to destination for a morning coffee, an afternoon espresso meeting, and the occasional live music at night. Indoor couches, outdoor patios.

Cricket’s
221 Mary Avenue
254.754.4677
Sun.-Sat. 11:00 a.m.-2:00 a.m.

Pub grub with shuffleboard, pool, and video games.

D’s Mediterranean Grill
11503 Colcord Avenue
254.754.6709

Impeccably prepared, extraordinarily fresh Lebanese food. Made with love and care by the owners.

Diamond Backs
214 South 3rd Street
254.757.2871
Mon.-Thurs. 5:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m.
Fri.-Sat. 5:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m.

Steakhouse with a can’t miss happy hour with cheap, good appetizers like kobe beef sliders, spinach artichoke dip, and portabella quesadillas.

George’s
1925 Speight Avenue
254.753.1421
Mon.-Sat. 6:30 a.m.-12:00 a.m.

Iconic local joint with food that everyone loves; a favorite of former president George Bush, country singer Pat Green, and a host of other international figures. Order at least one round of crazy wings-a morsel of chicken breast and pepper-jack cheese wrapped in chopped jalapeno and a slice of bacon, and then deep fried. You dip it in ranch dressing, in case you were wondering.

Homestead Heritage
608 Dry Creek Road
254.754.9600
Mon.-Fri. 11:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
Sat. 7:00a.m.-6:00 p.m.

Enjoy food from their fields, tilled by horse-pulled tools, cheese made from the milk of their cows and goats and sheep, loaves and loaves of freshly baked breads, and a jalapeno sweet potato soup to die for. Dessert would require another full paragraph.

Katie’s Frozen Custard
602 South Valley Mills Drive
254.754.5899
Mon.-Sat. 9:00 a.m.-12:00 a.m.

The best soft serve ice cream. In. The. Universe. (Especially during hot Texas summer nights.)

Kitok
1815 North 18th Street
254.754.1801

Greasy-spoon hamburger joint run by Koreans and written up in the New York Times; skip the bulgogi and order the double lip-locker with cheese and their oriental fries.

Lolita’s
1911 Franklin Avenue
254.755.8008
Tues.-Fri. 6:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Sat. 7:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Sun. 8:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

Local favorite for breakfast tacos and their unusual (but addictive) queso.

Ninfa’s
220 South 3rd Street
254.714.1228
Mon.-Thurs., Sun. 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
Fri.-Sat. 11:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m.

Houston-based Mexican food chain with a fantastic location here in Waco. The best Ninfa’s around, we promise!

The Olive Branch Bakery and Café
Shops at River Square
215 South Second Street
254.757.0885
Mon-Fri. 7:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
Sat.-Sun. 8:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

Students love their delicious quiche, soups, salads and sandwiches. You’ll want to save room for Leah’s homemade cookies and cupcakes. If you’re looking for breakfast, drop by for French toast or an omelet.

Schmaltz’s Sandwich Shop
1412 North Valley Mills Drive
254.776.3694

Local sandwich joint with made-to-order sandwiches reminiscent of Schlotsky’s.

Tony DeMaria’s Bar-B-Que
1000 Elm Street
254.755.8888
Mon.-Fri. 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.
Sat. 9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.

Barbecue, Waco-style, with high kudos from Texas Monthly. (Chosen as one of the 50 best in Texas, no less.) Don’t arrive too late. It officially closes at 2pm, but when the meat’s gone, the doors close.

Uncle Dan’s Barbeque
1001 Lake Air Drive
254.772.3532
Mon.-Sat. 11:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.

Waco natives love this place. The former US Ambassador to Sweden, Waco native Lyndon Olson, Jr., has been known to FedEx an entire fete of Uncle Dan’s ‘cue over to the embassy so the Swedes can get a taste of some slow-smoked beef and a side of his famous potato salad.

Hope you have a wonderful day here at Baylor!

Festival Personel

Update daily!!

Artistic Director:     Jun Qian

Special Guest:

Steve Ahearn, Dallas Symphony Orchestra

Mary Druhan, Professor, Texas A&M University, Commerce

Michael Isodore, conductor,  Houston Youth Symphony,  Baylor’97

Jun Qian, Professor, Baylor University, Baylor’99

Vanguel Tangarov, Professor, Texas State University, San Marcos

Gary Whitman, Texas Christian University

Guest Ensembles:

Baylor Clarinet Choir

Texas State University- San Marcos Clarinet Choir

Coppell High School Clarinet Ensemble

Copperas Cove ISD Clarinet Choir

Baylor Undergraduate Clarinet Quartet

 

Individual Participants from overall Texas!!

Combined Festival Clarinet Choir

 

 

Program for Baylor Clarinet Choir concert at 2015 TMEA

 IMG_3270

Members, please click here to download music

2015 Texas Music Educator Association

at San Antonio, TX, USA

presents

Baylor University Clarinet Choir

Conductor:  Dr. Jun Qian

John Baker

Guest Conductor:  Dr. Eric Wilson

 East Registration, 4:45pm-5:00pm,

Thursday, February 12th

Seasonal Sketches                                               Everett Gates

I Summer Caprice

II Autumn Pastel

  III Chorale for a Winter Day

IV Waltz for a spring night

Jun Qian, conductor

      Difference of Opinion                              Robert Roden

Jun Qian, conductor

     Introduction and Rondo                        Gordon Jacob

                                                                       (1895-1984)

John Barker, Conductor

Springtime “ The Olympics” for Bb Clarinet Solo and Clarinet Choir  arr. Guido Six.

Jun Qian, Solo Clarinet

Eric Wilson, Guest Conductor

BAYLOR CLARINET CHOIR:

Eb Clarinet:

Ashley Bogisch

Bb Clarinet I:

Jake Hale,  John Barker,  Derek Novak

Bb Clarinet II:

Iván Hernández , Julie Yu,

  Sarah Sauceda,  Lorin Mott, Megan Ritzi

B Clarinet III:

Taylor Gonzales,  Taylor Horn,

Stephan Brown,  Elaine Weaver, Angelia Schulte, Joseph Harwerth

Alto Clarinet:

Justin Vance, Luke Camarillo

Bass Clarinet:

Ben Quarles, Sarah Guhl

Contra Eb:

Brenden Hill

Contra Bb:

Giovanni Guardado

Jun Qian’s appearance is sponsored in part by Baylor University,

D’Addario Woodwinds and Selmer

Baylor Clarinet Choir’s appearance is sponsored in part by Baylor University

The 19-member Baylor Clarinet Choir is composed primarily of music education majors, performance majors and students from other department, many of whom who were all-state band and orchestra members. These students participate in the Wind Ensemble,Symphonic Band, Symphony and chamber ensembles. The members meet regularly to perform and study a wide range of clarinet chamber music, learning how to recognize and adjust for problems encountered on a variety of musical styles, and study clarinet ensemble and section problems encountered in various styles and performance situations. The choir rehearses and performs regularly and serves as the host ensemble for the “Baylor Clarinet Choir and Clarinet Chamber Music Festival”.

Jun Qian is Assistant Professor of clarinet at Baylor University and principal clarinetist of  Waco Symphony in Texas, USA. He won first prize in the Orchestral Excerpts Competition and third prize in the Solo Competition at 1997 International Clarinet Association’s Young Artist Competition, the first artist in the ICA’s history to receive both prizes in the same year.  As an endorsing artist for Selmer of Paris and D’Addario of New York, Qian performed as soloist with Eastman Wind Ensemble,  Shanghai Symphony, Shanghai Philharmonic, Xiamen Philharmonic, Pueblo Symphony, Eastman Chamber Orchestra, Baylor Symphony Orchestra, Baylor Wind Ensemble and Shangyang Opera Orchestra. He introduces many Western solos in full orchestral version to Chinese audiences (such as Copland Concerto) and presents new compositions by Chinese composers with his “East Meets West” project to Western audiences.  As formal principal clarinetist with Shanghai Philharmonic Orchestra, Eastman Wind Ensemble, he studied with Richard Shanley  (Baylor), Kenneth Grant and Stanley Hasty (Eastman) USA.

Baylor Clarinet Studio would like invite you to be part of the Third Annual Baylor Clarinet Choir and Chamber Music Festival on Saturday, March 28th, 2015.  You can perform with your own chamber ensemble, play with the joint clarinet choir, attend master classes and guest recital!     Please email us at Baylor.Clarinet.Studio@gmail.com for more information!!

Faculty Clarinet Recital “Spring Time” for Clarinet

QJ (286)Chinese New Year Concert Series III

Faculty Clarinet Recital

“Spring Time” for Clarinet

Jun Qian, Clarinet

Kae Hosoda-Ayer, Piano

Paul Sánchez, Piano

Kayleen Sánchez, Soprano

Eric Wilson, conductor

Baylor Clarinet Choir

 

Grand Duo Concertant, Op.48      Carl von Maria Weber

                                                                                (1786-1826)

I Allegro con fuoco

II Andante con moto

III Rondo: allegro

 

“Wu Song Fights the Tiger” For Clarinet and Electro-acoustic Music.  (2014)                                                          Qiuxiao Li  (b.1985)

US Premiere

Der Hirt auf dem Felsen , D. 965, for soprano,clarinet, and piano                         Franz Schubert

 

Intermission

Springtime “ The Olympics” for Bb Clarinet Solo and Clarinet Choir        arr. Guido Six.

Jun Qian, clarinet

Eric Wilson, conductor

Baylor Clarinet Choir

Program Notes

Qiuxiao Li graduated from Central Conservatory of Music with Bachelor degree and from CEMC (Center for Electronic Music of China) with Master degree, majoring in electro-acoustic music composition. Currently, She is a second year student for the DMA degree and visiting scholar of University of Missouri of Kansas City. She studies electronic-acoustic music with Prof. Xiaofu Zhang and Prof. James Mobberley. Her works have been presented multiple times in various major music festivals, such as the Central Conservatory of Music Festival, Beijing Modern Music festival, MUSICACOUSTICA-BEIJING. Her work “Bristle with Anger” was performed in Rutgers, Sate University of New Brunswick in 2009. “The Dancing Shadow” was commissioned by ELECTROACOUSTIC-BEIJING in 2013.  Her thesis “A study on early Chinese Electronic music composition” was awarded the third prize of the 3rd. Electronic Music Academy Award in 2012. In the same year, her thesis was read out in public on the 5th Round Table Discussion and Forum of Development about Asian Electroacoustic Music and was published in“Music communication” in 2013.
Wu Song Fights the Tiger—For Clarinet and Electro-acoustic Music was written for Dr. Jun Qian’s “East meets West” recording project.  The music structure is based on the original plot in the play The Water Margin.  Wu Song, nicknamed “Pilgrim”, is a fictional character in the play. One day, Wu Song passes by a tavern near Jingyang Ridge, where a large sign reads “Do Not Cross After Three Bowls.”  The waiter explains to Wu Song that the wine sold at the tavern is so strong that customers would become too drunk after having three bowls to cross the ridge ahead, hence the sign.  By the end of his meal, Wu Song had consumed 18 bowls of wine and ignores the waiter’s warning about the presence of a fierce man-eating tiger at Jingyang Ridge and proceeds with his journey. While crossing Jingyang Ridge, he really encounters a ferocious tiger. While trying to fend off the beast, Wu Song accidentally breaks his staff, rendering himself weaponless. Under the stimulation of alcohol, he ends up slaying the beast by pinning it to the ground and bashing its head repeatedly with his bare fists.  The composer has applied various musical elements of Beijing opera throughout the work. The theme played by the Clarinet uses a swing rhythm to portray Wu Song’s half drunken state. The electronic section uses extensive percussion sounds, with a preponderance of drum sounds, to describe the drama of the scene when Wu Song fights the tiger.

 

Text for Der Hirt auf dem Felsen

 

Wilhelm Müller – “Der Berghirt” [1]

Wenn auf dem höchsten Fels ich steh’,

In’s tiefe Tal hernieder seh’,

Und singe.

Fern aus dem tiefen dunkeln Tal

Schwingt sich empor der Widerhall

Der Klüfte.

Je weiter meine Stimme dringt,

Je heller sie mir wieder klingt

Von unten.

Mein Liebchen wohnt so weit von mir,

Drum sehn’ ich mich so heiß nach ihr

Hinüber.

When, from the highest rock up here,

I look deep down into the valley,

And sing,

Far from the valley dark and deep

Echoes rush through, upward and back to me,

The chasm.

The farther that my voice resounds,

So much the brighter it echos

From under.

My sweetheart dwells so far from me,

I hotly long to be with her

Over there.

Varnhagen – “Nächtlicher Schall” [2]

In tiefem Gram verzehr ich mich,

Mir ist die Freude hin,

Auf Erden mir die Hoffnung wich,

Ich hier so einsam bin.

So sehnend klang im Wald das Lied,

So sehnend klang es durch die Nacht,

Die Herzen es zum Himmel zieht

Mit wunderbarer Macht.

I am consumed in misery,

Happiness is far from me,

Hope has on earth eluded me,

I am so lonesome here.

So longingly did sound the song,

So longingly through wood and night,

Towards heaven it draws all hearts

With amazing strength.

Wilhelm Müller – “Liebesgedanken” [3]

Der Frühling will kommen,

Der Frühling, meine Freud’,

Nun mach’ ich mich fertig

Zum Wandern bereit

The Springtime will come,

The Springtime, my happiness,

Now must I make ready

To wander forth.

 

BAYLOR CLARINET CHOIR:

Eb Clarinet:

Ashley Bogisch

Bb Clarinet I:

Jake Hale,  John Barker,  Derek Novak,

Bb Clarinet II:

Iván Hernández , Julie Yu,

 Sarah Sauceda,  Lorin Mott, Megan Ritzi

B Clarinet III:

Taylor Gonzales,  Taylor Horn,

Stephan Brown,  Elaine Weaver,

Angelia Schulte, Joseph Harwerth

Alto Clarinet:

Justin Vance, Luke Camarillo

Bass Clarinet:

Ben Quarles, Sarah Guhl

Contra Eb:

Brenden Hill

Contra Bb:

Giovanni Guardado

 

Guest Artist

 

Kayleen Sánchez is an imaginative, inspiring, and deeply communicative artist and teacher, equally effective whether performing opera, singing art song, or teaching historically-informed performance practice and healthy vocal technique.

 

Since 2012, Sánchez has appeared in over 50 performances in the Midwest, including operatic roles with the Haymarket Opera Company in Chicago, Renaissance Polish music with the Newberry Consort, multiple performances with the St. Charles Singers, and recitals at the Winnetka Recital Series in Winnetka, Illinois, the Winterpast Recital Series in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and recitals at the Dakota Sky International Piano Festival in Sioux Falls. In December, she was the soprano soloist for Handel’s Messiah with the South Dakota Symphony Orchestra, directed by Maestro Delta David Gier. She has been a featured soloist in two commercially released CDs of Mozart choral works with the St. Charles Singers and the Metropolis Chamber Orchestra: St. Charles Singers: MAGNIFICENT MOZART (St. Charles Singers, 2012), and St. Charles Singers: LUMINESCENCE (St. Charles Singers, 2013). In April of 2014, Kayleen recorded songs by composer George Morey, which will be featured in a CD titled Music of George Morey (expected release 2015). This February, she will release a CD featuring Scottish lute songs of the 16th century. Past performances have been broadcast on Chicago’s WFMT and on South Dakota Public Broadcasting television and radio.

 

In 2013, Sánchez and lutenist Dr. Laudon Schuett formed Bedlam, an early music duo. They have performed five concerts in the Chicagoland area, have been invited to perform and give workshops at Duke University and Arizona State University, as well as two tours of upstate New York. Her interest in early music blossomed during her five years performing in lutenist Paul O’Dette’s early music ensemble at the Eastman School of Music, and she had the privilege of studying with Mr. O’Dette in private coachings and in his two-semester Baroque Performance Practice course at Eastman. In Bedlam’s first tour, their program of 16th century Scottish lute songs gave her the opportunity to marry her passion for historically-informed performance practice with her love of languages, and resulted in a performance featuring improvised ornamentation, rhetorical gestures, quicksilver changes in affect, and original pronunciation of 16th century Scottish. This past year, Sánchez has also had the opportunity to sing in English, French, German, Italian, Polish, Russian, Spanish, and Swedish.

 

Kayleen’s passion for early music has as its counterpoint her love of new music. American composer Dr. David M. Gordon, who praised her performance of his piece “Fader, stilla våra andar,” as “the first perfect performance” of any of his music, is writing a 30-minute song cycle for Sánchez to premier in the 2014–2015 season; the cycle is set in Syriac. Other recent performances of new music have included compositions by Dr. Jacob Bancks, George Morey, Dr. Shawn Okpebholo, and Dr. Paul Sanchez.

 

Sánchez believes in teaching healthy technique, informed musicianship, refined and responsible diction, deeply committed communication, and finding one’s own unique voice. She has taught privately for seven years, and has taught lessons for non-majors at the Eastman School of Music, at the Kanack School of Music in Rochester, New York, and at the Vero Voce Performing Arts School in St. Charles, Illinois. She has presented master classes at the Wheaton College Conservatory of Music, was a clinician at the SING! workshop in St. Charles, Illinois, and has coached pianists in the performance of lieder at the Dakota Sky International Piano Festival. Her students have gone on to pursue degrees in music at North Central College in Naperville, Illinois, and the American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York City.

 

Sánchez received her Bachelor of Music and Master of Music degrees in Vocal Performance and Literature from the Eastman School of Music, and resides in Waco, TX with her husband, pianist Paul Sánchez.

Solo with the Eastman Wind Ensemble

IMG_0009

Eastman Wind Ensemble

Mark Scatterday, Conductor

features

Kenneth Grant and  Jun Qian

 

Free Birds for Two Clarinets and Wind Ensemble

by

Scott McAllister

Ingle Auditorium, Student Alumni Union, RIT,  Rochester, NY, Friday, 8:00pm, September 19th,  2014,  

Eastman Theater, Eastman School of Music, Monday, 8:00pm,  Monday, September 22,  2014

Jun Qian Clarinet Master Class,  Eastman School of Music, Saturday,  3:30- until 5:30,  September 20, 2014

20140917_170131

 

Baylor Clarinet Choir Trip to International Clarinet Association Conference in Baton Rouge, LA, USA.

Led by Dr. Jun Qian, the 24-member Baylor Clarinet Choir, comprised of current students as well as several guest artists and alumni, will travel to Baton Rouge, Louisiana to present a concert on July 30th at 4:00 PM.  Senior Jake Hale will also compete in the preliminary round of the ICA Orchestral Audition competition, having submitted a tape and been selected as the youngest of only ten participants.

Click here for more details

Click here for downloading music  ( members only)