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We are so excited to announce that Beckettfest will be held this Spring, 2024! Even though we have changed the name of the school, we are honoured to maintain our founders' name in this historic event.
Beckettfest 2024: For those that might be new to our community, Beckettfest is an annual non-competitive performance event where students perform prepared repertoire in small groups with peers at a similar music level and instrument-specific area for an adjudicator, who will provide comments and performance suggestions to each student. This is a celebration of learning and musical growth event and is a positive, fun experience and a great opportunity to perform for a small, supportive group.
The cost of each class depends on level of playing. Beginners start at $20 and advanced go up to $30. The registration form will tally up the total amount owing automatically, based on your selections. There is a $10 processing fee for students not currently registered at the ³Ô¹ÏÍø Academy of Music and Arts.
Registration closes February 29, 2024.
Registration is now closed. Please email LAMA@wlu.ca to be considered for a late registration.
Join us in the newly renovated Savvas Chamberlain builing at WLU!
Group sizes will be kept relatively small and will be spread out over three different days. The schedule is as follows:
Date | Instruments | Location |
April 6, 2024 | Piano, voice, winds, brass, guitar |
75 University Ave. W (Faculty of Music, Savvas Chamberlain Building) |
April 7, 2024 | Violin, viola, cello |
Violin/viola: 75 University Ave. W (Faculty of Music, Savvas Chamberlain Building) Cello: 190 Lester St (LAMA) |
April 13, 2024 | Piano |
75 University Ave. W (Faculty of Music, Savvas Chamberlain Building) |
First, speak with your teacher to find out how many classes you will register for.
Next, register participants in your family by clicking on your instrument below. You will be taken to the online registration form. One registration form per student will need to be filled out. Not sure what repertoire you’ll be playing yet? No problem! Just insert your instrument and grade level; we’ll place you in the right class.
Registration fees are detailed on each of the registration forms. There is a $10 processing fee for any student not registered with LAMA.
Upon completion of the form, please allow 2 weeks to receive an invoice to your email to pay for your registration. Payments will be taken via credit card on the secure platform Stripe.
Registration fees are non-refundable. We thank you for your support!
Registration Links:
We have a fantastic group of seasoned adjudicators joining us this year. Adjudicator biographies are listed below. More biographies will be added as they become available.
Toronto-based pianist Cheryl Duvall has established herself as one of Canada's foremost contemporary music interpreters, immersing herself in a wide variety of compositional aesthetics and collaborative endeavors.
In 2012, she co-founded the "adventurous and smartly programmed" (Musicworks Magazine) chamber group Thin Edge New Music Collective. Their tours and residencies across Europe, and in Japan and Argentina have positioned them as ambassadors for Canadian music abroad. TENMC was awarded the 2020 Friends of Canadian Music Award from the Canadian League of Composers and the Canadian Music Centre for being ‘an important musical innovator, working creatively across disciplines with an unwavering commitment to diverse and equitable programming.’ Their most recent album, ‘Dark Flower’ featuring the chamber works of Linda Catlin Smith was chosen amongst the top 10 best Modern Recordings of 2023 by ‘The Wire Magazine’ and Bandcamp’s Classical Recordings Year End list.
In 2016 her formidable skill was recognized with a nomination for the KM Hunter Award. She was appointed the Artistic Director of the Chamber Music Society of Mississauga in February 2022. She operates a full private teaching studio, is a member of the College of Examiners with the Royal Conservatory of Music, and adjudicates piano competitions across Canada.
Daniel Warren has held the title of music director, conductor, occasional arranger and soloist with the Kitchener Waterloo Community Orchestra since 1998.
Through his tenure, the orchestra has undergone a significant rise in artistic excellence, size, and viability in the community.
On a personal level Daniel and his wife Rosanne have instilled the love of music and arts in their 2 adult children, one pursuing Theatre, the other Violin performance. He thrives as a music director & mentor to the Orchestra@UWaterloo Alumni and students since 2017.
Daniel served as Resident Conductor of the KWS for fourteen years and more recently, as Creative Advisor and conductor for Orchestra London, Canada. Guest conducting appearances include orchestras and chamber orchestras throughout Canada and the US and at the Westben Arts Festival Theatre. His opera experience includes the standard repertoire as well as the world premiere of “the pencil salesman” by Canadian com-poser Brian Finley. His most recent engagement was “Cendrillon” by Massenet with the WLU opera department.
As a conductor and trumpet soloist Dan has recorded both on CD and live television broadcast. He has toured extensively throughout Canada, the US, England, parts of Europe and Central and South America.
Also active as an arranger, Daniel’s work was recently played by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London, England. His symphonic arrangements span Classical, Jazz, Broadway and Rock styles and have been performed by orchestras and artists in Canada, the USA, England and Asia.
Dr. Daniel Ramjattan has become an ambassador for the classical guitar in Canada, having premiered dozens of chamber and solo works for guitar. He has given recitals in Vienna, Austria, Italy, and various locations across Canada, the United States, Trinidad and Tobago, and Japan, and has received an array of top prizes in provincial and national solo guitar competitions.
He has performed in festivals such as Koerner's 21C Festival, Open Ears, Waterloo, Guitar Alla Grande, INNERChamber, Ottawa Chamberfest, the Livorno Music Festival, Italy, the Alte Schmiede Kunstverein, Vienna’s Contemporary music series, Toronto Guitar Society’s Guitar Weekend, and many more. He also gave his concerto debut with Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aranjuez in 2023 with the Stratford Symphony.
His debut studio album, "Inspirations: New Works for Solo Guitar," features his interpretation of six brilliant works by Canadian composers, including three world premiere recordings, available for streaming on all major platforms. CBC Radio’s Paolo Pietropaolo featured the album as the Record of the Week in March 2022, and WholeNote Magazine described his playing as "beautifully clean."
Violinist Elspeth Durward was a member of the Kitchener Waterloo Symphony for 17 years,performing as Assistant Principal Second since 2016. She holds a B.Mus. in Performance from the University of Toronto and a M.Mus. in Performance (with an emphasis in Suzuki Pedagogy) from the Hartt School of Music.
Prior to joining the KW Symphony, Elspeth spent three years performing with the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, Florida under the direction of Michael Tilson Thomas. Highlights of her time with the NWS include residencies with MTT at Rome’s National Academy of Saint Cecilia and New York’s Carnegie Hall. As an orchestral performer, Elspeth has appeared with the Pacific Music Festival in Japan, Spoleto Festival USA, the Britt Festival Orchestra, the Elora Festival Orchestra, the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and the Toronto Symphony. She has been featured in concert with the Emerson String Quartet and participated in masterclasses and chamber music at the American Conservatory in Fontainebleau, France, and attended the Pinchas Zukerman Young Artists Program in Ottawa.
Since 2005, Elspeth has been a Faculty member of the Suzuki String School of Guelph where she teaches private lessons and group classes to students of all ages and abilities.
Daniel Armstrong is a retired member of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s bass section. A native of Canada, Armstrong has an unusual bond to Chicago. His first bass was a plywood instrument that his father bought from a hardware store in his hometown of Kitimat, British Columbia. That bass was manufactured in Chicago.
By June 1995, when Music Director Daniel Barenboim appointed Armstrong to the CSO bass section, he was playing a classic 18th-century Italian instrument. Before joining the CSO, Armstrong was assistant principal bass of the Milwaukee Symphony for 12 seasons. He also spent four seasons as a bass in the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra.
During his CSO tenure, Armstrong has performed in concerts across Chicago and the world, including many CSO tours and the 2017 and 2018 Concerts for Peace organized by the CSO’s Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant Yo-Yo Ma and the Negaunee Music Institute.
After starting piano studies at age 4, Armstrong taught himself ukulele, guitar and bass; he took his first formal bass lesson during his third year at the University of British Columbia. He switched from engineering to the music department, and he went on to earn music degrees at the University of British Columbia and the Juilliard School.
Brett Kingsbury is a multi-faceted performer, active in both solo and collaborative music. He has worked with many ensembles and performers including the Madawaska String Quartet, Magisterra Soloists, London Symphonia, the Cathedral Bluffs Symphony Orchestra, and members of the Hamilton Philharmonic and Toronto Symphony Orchestras. He is very active as an adjudicator and masterclass clinician, working frequently with pianists across the province.
His doctoral dissertation was written on Busoni’s Fantasia Contrappuntistica, a rarely heard work he has performed on numerous occasions. He has also been involved in the world of opera as a repetiteur for Vancouver Opera, TripTych concert and opera, Opera York, and other companies in Ontario.
Brett is an assistant professor at the Don Wright Faculty of Music at Western University, where he teaches studio piano, Performance Research, and undergraduate and graduate level Piano Literature. Brett is also a former sessional lecturer at the University of Toronto Scarborough and at Brock University. He is in demand as an adjudicator for music festivals across the province. While a student at the University of British Columbia, he was named R. Howard Webster Fellow at Green College.
Contact Us:
³Ô¹ÏÍø Academy of Music and Arts
E: LAMA@wlu.ca
T: 519.578.3640
³Ô¹ÏÍø location: 190 Lester St., Waterloo
South Kitchener location: 68 Biehn Dr., Kitchener