Region XIX Orchestras

 

2010-2011 Clinicians

HS Symphony

Michael Alexander

Michael Alexander is the Orchestra Director at Kennesaw State University and serves as the Music Director of the Cobb Symphony Orchestra and Georgia Youth Symphony Orchestras. Previously he has also served as Music Director of the Green Bay Youth Symphony Orchestras and as the Orchestra Director at Ripon College. Active as a guest conductor, he has conducted in Europe, Australia and at various places in the United States, including a subscription performance with the Central Wisconsin Symphony Orchestra in 2002, the Maikop Symphony Orchestra and the Novgorod String Orchestra in Russia, the Bacau Philharmonic in Romania and the Catania Music Festival in Italy in 2003. In the summer of 2004 and 2009, he served as Music Director for the Madison Savoyards Opera Company and in 2007 as guest conductor of the Illinois Valley Symphony Orchestra. He has also appeared as a guest conductor four times with the Summer Music Clinic Orchestra at the University of Wisconsin and with the 2003-2006 Maud-Powell Music Festival Orchestra in LaSalle, IL.

 

In the summer of 2003, Dr. Alexander completed his Doctor of Musical Arts Degree at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in orchestral conducting. While at UW, he studied with David E. Becker and served as an Assistant Conductor with the Symphony and Chamber Orchestras and UW Opera. Previously he has served on the faculties at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. Dedicated to music education, for two years, Dr. Alexander conducted the Orchestra at Verona Area High School outside of Madison, Wisconsin; served on the artistic staff of the Wisconsin Youth Symphony Orchestra; and has contributed articles to the Teaching Music Through Performance book series. He has conducted several District Honor Orchestras and under his direction the KSU Orchestra has performed at the 2009 Georgia Music Educators Association Annual In-Service and will host and perform at the 2010 College Orchestra Directors Association National Conference. 

HS Philharmonic

Lawrence Wheeler

Mr. Wheeler the founding music director and GHYO orchestra conductor, is an associate professor at the University of Houston Moores School of Music. He has been the conductor of string ensembles at the University of Houston and The High School for Performing and Visual Arts and has guest conducted several Texas Region orchestras, as well as the Texas Private Schools All-State Orchestra. From 1988-1993 he was a conductor for the Houston Youth Symphony & Ballet. In 1993, he founded the Greater Houston Youth Orchestra.

Mr. Wheeler is former Principal Viola of the Pittsburgh Symphony and has served as Co-Principal of the Minnesota Orchestra and guest Principal with the Dallas and Houston Symphonies. He has appeared as soloist with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Minnesota Orchestra, Icelandic National Symphony, Texas Chamber Orchestra, Hilton Head Chamber Orchestra, and the UNAM Philharmonic in Mexico City.

Familiar to Houston audiences through numerous solo recitals and chamber music appearances, Mr. Wheeler has given viola recitals in New York at Alice Tully Hall, in London at Wigmore Hall, at International Viola Congresses in Stuttgart, Rekjavik and Houston, as well as recitals in Mexico City and throughout Texas. He has performed with the Tokyo, Pro Arte and Tallis String Quartets, the Mirecourt Trio, and with Da Camera of Houston.

For several years Mr. Wheeler was violist of the Lyric Art Quartet, whose compact disk, Classical Hollywood, was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1990. Two other compact discs include works with the Texas Festival and Picasso Quartet.  With pianist Ruth Tomfohrde, he has recorded several American works for viola and piano, released by Albany Recordings. His recorded performances have been heard in Houston on KUHF, nationally on National Public Radio'sPerformance Today, and throughout Europe on the BBC.

A graduate of the Juilliard School, his teachers include William Lincer, Walter Trampler, Bruno Giuranna, Francis Tursi and Leonard Mogill. For five summers he taught at the Meadowmount School for Strings, and for twelve summers at the ENCORE School for Strings, where he worked with many of the most gifted of the younger generation of string players. He has also taught and performed at the Musicorda Summer Musical Festival in Massachusetts, the Bowdoin Music Festival in Maine, and the Texas Music Festival in Houston. Being committed to music education, he has sent more of his viola students to Texas All-State orchestras than any private teacher of any instrument, which include fifteen Symphony and three Philharmonic first-chair players.

Larry's family includes his wife Linda, a professional violinist, and two sons, Erik, and Alex, both of whom are studying the 'cello and play in GHYO.