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Dr. Glenn Schaft Director of Percussion Studies
Associate Professor of Percussion
2028 Bliss Hall
330/742-3643 (studio)
330/742-1490 (fax)
geschaft@ysu.edu
www.ysu.edu/percussion
Dr. Glenn Schaft is Director of Percussion Studies and Associate Professor
at Youngstown State University where he has served since 1996. He directs
the YSU Percussion Ensemble, teaches private and group lessons, percussion
methods, performs with the Faculty Jazz Group, serves as faculty advisor for
the Youngstown Percussion Collective, and is founder of the SMARTS RHYTHMS
Drum Circle Educational Outreach Program. He is an educational endorser with
Zildjian, Remo, ProMark, and Black Swamp Percussion.
Glenn hosted the 2006 PAS Ohio Day of Percussion and three Afro-Cuban Arts
Festivals at YSU. He recently completed a sabbatical leave to begin writing
an upcoming drumset book. He produced and performed on the recent recording Dark
Wood featuring the YSU Percussion Ensemble and the Youngstown Percussion
Collective. While at YSU, Glenn has studied drumset with John Hollenbeck,
John Riley, Lewis Nash, and drum circle facilitation with Christine Stevens
at the Remo Health Rhythms Workshop. As a drumset artist Glenn performs with
area musicians Teddy Pantelas, Cliff Barnes, Wilber Krebs, Dave Kana, Dave
Morgan, Kent Engelhardt, Dan Murphy, Jeff Grubbs, Joe Augustine, Frank Castellano,
Steve Cipriano, John Reese, and numerous others.
Glenn assisted the Youngstown Percussion Collective in commissioning composer/percussionist
John Hollenbeck to write Ziggurat for saxophones and percussion.
YPC presented the 2007 world premiere of Ziggurat at the Whitney
Museum of American Art in New York City and produced the recording of it
for an upcoming John Hollenbeck release. Glenn commissioned and recorded Dave
Morgan’s concerto Reactions for drumset and wind band with
the YSU Wind Ensemble on the 2005 Spin Cycle disc; whichwas
voted “winner” of the Downbeat magazine Outstanding College
Wind Ensemble Recording.
Glenn toured China in 2002 and 2004 with the YSU Faculty
Jazz Group presenting clinics and concerts at several acclaimed Chinese
universities. He performed Lou Harrison’s percussion and dance compositions
with the Youngstown Percussion Collective and the Cleveland Dance Theater
Collective at the 2003 Percussive Arts Society International Convention
and performed Edgard Vareses’ Ionization at
the 2004 PAS Pennsylvania Day of Percussion with Peter Erskine and the
Pittsburgh Symphony Percussion Section. Glenn has performed at the Skaneateles
Chamber Music Festival in New York with Trichi Sankaran, with the Akron
Symphony, Youngstown Symphony, Cleveland Jazz Orchestra, and numerous jazz
artists including Paquito D’Rivera, Jim McNeely, Sean Jones, Marvin
Stamm, Nick Brignola, Harold Danko, Chip Stephens, John Fedchok, Todd Coolman,
Randy Johnston, James Weidman, Ralph Lalama, Dan Wall, Ernie Krivda, Howie
Smith, Jeff Grubbs, Brad Goode, Hal Melia, Phil DeGreg, Pat Harbison, and
Tony Leonardi.
Glenn has attended Percussive Arts Society International
Conventions, (PASIC) since 1982 and has served on committees such as the
Drumset Educators Committee and the College Pedagogy Committee. He has appeared
as lecturer, clinician, and performer at various PASIC’s, including chairing a panel discussion “Teaching
Drumset in the University Percussion Methods Class” at the 2003 PASIC
and the 1999 PASIC “Drumset Educators Panel Discussion”.
Glenn has presented clinics at the University of Michigan, Indiana University,
Purdue University, Eastern Illinois University, University of Akron, Ashland
University, Kent State University, Southern Illinois University, Slippery
Rock University, and the Interlochen School of the Arts. He has adjudicated
MENC State Solo and Ensemble Events, Collegiate and High School Jazz Festivals,
and Percussive Arts Society Days of Percussion in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Minnesota,
Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana.
Glenn presently lives in Poland, Ohio with his wife Sara, a professional
violinist, and their twin boys Lewis and Karl.
Glenn was born in Berea, Ohio and began playing drums
at an early age. He began formal lessons in fourth grade with Cleveland
area jazz drummer and vibraphonist Harold Damas, with whom he studied for
twelve years. Glenn began playing professionally in tenth grade with the
Cleveland area band “The
Fudales” and began teaching privately while at Berea High School. He
also studied at the Baldwin-Wallace College Summer Music Clinics and the
Ludwig Percussion Symposiums.
From 1978-92 he attended Baldwin-Wallace College; Conservatory, studied
percussion with George Kiteley, and earned the Bachelor of Music in Percussion
Performance. He was the Concerto Competition Winner in 1981, founded a vibe/marimba
duo with Michael Wimberly, and freelanced in northeast Ohio with local bands,
his own jazz quartet, and the Tommy Dorsey Band.
From 1982-83 Glenn attended Eastern Illinois University,
studied percussion with Johnny Lee Lane, jazz composition with Alan Horney,
served as jazz and percussion teaching assistant, and earned the Master
of Arts in Percussion Performance. He performed at EIU and professionally
with the Kevin Gainer Quartet, whom received the “Outstanding Combo” award at the Notre
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival and the Memphis State University Jazz Festival.
After graduation, Glenn did an extensive US tour with the 1940’s Radio
Hour Show based in Dallas, Texas, recorded with the Air Force Band of Mid
America, and taught at the EIU Summer Jazz Camp.
From 1984-86 and again in 1987-88 Glenn studied percussion
at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana with Tom Siwe, ethnomusicology
with Bruno Nettl, Charles Capwell, and Tom Torino and earned the Doctor
of Musical Arts in Percussion Performance and Literature. While at UI, Glenn
was a member of Jazz Band I, Graduate Percussion Group, and the New Music
Ensemble. His doctoral thesis was entitled “Jazz Drumming 1960-65; Transcriptions
and Analysis” and he was invited to lecture on this topic at the 1993
PASIC convention in Columbus. His recorded Scott Wyatt’s multiple percussion
and tape solo Time Mark, various commercialjingles, and with singer/songwriter
Nancy Hill. As a teaching assistant he taught jazz improvisation courses
and at the UI Summer Youth Music Jazz and Percussion Camps. As a freelance
artist he appeared as soloist with the Champaign-Urbana Symphony, performed
with the Springfield Symphony, The Rovers - country-rock band, jazz artists
Laurence Hobgood, Michael Stryker, Bryan Lynch, Michael Weiss, Brad Kirk,
Jeff Helgeson, Kim Richmond, with popular artists Les Elgart, Larry Elgart,
Red Skelton, Engelbert Humperdink, and performed at the International Association
of Jazz Educator’s Convention in Detroit.
In 1986-87 Glenn accepted his first full-time university teaching position
as tri-college visiting lecturer at Moorhead State University, North Dakota
State University, and Concordia College where he taught applied percussion,
percussion ensemble, percussion methods, and coached the NDSU drumline. He
also served as principal timpani/percussion with the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony.
From 1988-94 Glenn worked as a freelance artist living in Lakewood, Ohio.
He was a member of the world percussion quartet BATTU in-residence at Baldwin
Wallace College. BATTU toured Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Texas and presented
performances and clinics for Young Audiences of Greater Cleveland. Glenn served
as assistant principal and principal percussion with the award winning Cleveland
Chamber Symphony, which included myriad world premieres, tours to Ball State
University New Music Festival and Harvard University, and three recordings
on the GM label.
During this period, Glenn performed with Cleveland Ballet,
Cleveland Opera, Ohio Chamber Orchestra, Colorado Music Festival in Boulder,
Robert Page Singers, and appeared as soloist with the Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory
Symphony Orchestra. He performed the Cleveland Opera’s world premiere of Stuart Copland’s
opera “Holy Blood and Crescent Moon” and played with rock & roll
legend Chuck Berry. Glenn completed two years of post-doctoral studies
at Cleveland State University, studied contemporary music with Edwin London,
served as personnel manager and principal percussion with the New Music
Associates - a professional ensemble in-residence at CSU, and studied orchestral
percussion with Tom Freer and Jay Burnham of the Cleveland Orchestra. Glenn
taught at the Baldwin-Wallace College Preparatory Department, taught timpani
and drumset for twelve years at the United States Percussion Camp, and taught
world music at Cuyahoga Community College. In 1994 he was awarded a professional
research grant from the Ohio Arts Council to study Afro-Cuban folkloric percussion
with Roberto Vizcaino, Fermin Nani, and Santiago Nani at the National School
of the Arts in Havana, Cuba.
From 1994-96 Glenn served as visiting assistant professor of percussion and
jazz studies at the University of Minnesota-Duluth, where he taught applied
percussion, percussion ensemble, percussion methods, jazz history, African
Roots of American Music, directed big bands and combos, and founded an Afro-Cuban
Music course. He served as principal timpanist with the Lake Superior Chamber
Orchestra, section percussion with the Duluth-Superior Symphony, founded a
Latin-Jazz Group, and performed with jazz artists Anthony Cox, Harvey Weinapple,
and Michael Pagan. Glenn received a UMD faculty research grant to study at
the Berklee College of Music World Percussion Festival with Giovanni Hidalgo,
Horacio Hernandez, Glen Velez, Jamie Haddad, and Trichi Sankaran.
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