Louisville Academy of Music

The Louisville Academy of Music is a non-profit community music school in Louisville, Kentucky in the Crescent Hill neighborhood. Founded in 1954 by Robert French and Donald Murray, the academy has had over 1,200 students in its over 50-year history. It originally operated from three rented rooms in Highlands area of Louisville and moved to its current location in 1971.[1]

The academy currently offers lessons in piano, strings, voice, woodwinds, brass, guitar, and percussion for students of all ages. The present building on Frankfort Avenue consists of studios, a recital hall, a library and archive that contains thousands of books, records, and files on Kentucky musicians and organizations. The academy has presented more than a thousand programs and has trained over ten thousand students, many of whom have become composers, teachers, chamber music performers and members of major orchestras. Today, the academy is still run by Robert French's wife, Ruth French.

Robert French won the 1999 Governor's Awards in the Arts for his work with the school.[2]

References

  1. Elson, Martha (2004-02-18). "Still striking the right chords". Courier-Journal. pp. 2B.
  2. Staff (2000-01-23). "Robert French heads list of Governor's Awards winners". Courier-Journal. pp. 3I.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, September 21, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.