The academy annually enrolls 136 pre-professional musicians in their late teens and early 20s, who receive merit-based full scholarships to workshops led by famous composers, conductors, and artists.[5] Programs of study are vocal piano, voice, collaborative piano, solo piano, and instrumental.[6] The eight-week summer music festival consists of concerts and operas,[5] as well as public master classes with famous musicians.[7]
The academy first hosted its summer sessions at Cate School in Carpinteria, before starting to relocate to a 10 acre (c. 4 hectare) property in Montecito in 1951. The former Montecito Country Club, regarded a showcase garden of Montecito and named Miraflores ("see flowers" in Spanish,) has been the academy's campus since the summer of 1952, though students had to be housed in dorms and at sorority and fraternity houses at the University of California, Santa Barbara for several years. Since 2016 accommodations are at Westmont College.[10]
From 1954 to 1980 the academy's music director was Maurice Abravanel.[12]Martial Singher was head of the Voice Department from 1962 till 1981.[13] The academy was initially administered by its board of directors, before the arts administrator, musicologist and writer Robert William Holmes[14] became its first president from 1988 till 1993.[15] He was followed in this position by tubist David L. Kuehn in 1993.[16]Marilyn Horne, who had attended the academy in 1953,[17] joined the faculty in 1995 and was named director of the voice program in 1997.[18] Violinist[19] NancyBell Coe was appointed as the academy's president in 2004.[20]
To preserve historic audio and video recordings of concerts, masterclasses and recitals held at the academy, recordings from 1961 till 2001 where housed at the UC Santa Barbara Library's Department of Special Research Collections in 2007.[21]
Since 2010, the academy has held the annual Marilyn Horne Song Competition, formerly known as the Marilyn Horne Foundation Vocal Competition. In the same year trained singer Scott Reed was appointed president of the academy.[22]
In 2014, the Music Academy of the West began an educational partnership with the New York Philharmonic. Under the collaboration, music director Alan Gilbert and orchestra members maintained residencies in Santa Barbara during parts of the festival, and selected Music Academy fellows trained with orchestra members in Santa Barbara and New York City.[23]
The academy's partnership with the UC Santa Barbara was renewed in 2017[8] and 400 early recordings were digitized, among them recordings of Lotte Lehmann, Marilyn Horne, and Jerome Lowenthal.[21]
In 2018, the academy launched a four-year partnership with the London Symphony Orchestra with music director Simon Rattle,[24] and a free after school choral program called Sing! for children ages 7–11 taking place in elementary schools in Santa Barbara County. Participants performed at the Music Academy of the West and collaborated with the London Symphony Orchestra.[25] In the same year, Marilyn Horne transitioned from active voice program director to honorary voice program director, a position she held till 2021 when she was named Faculty Emeritus.[26]
In 2022 the academy celebrated its 75th anniversary and adopted a new logo with simply the words Music Academy, the legal name remained Music Academy of the West. The academy consulted professional publicity and marketing agencies from New York and Los Angeles for the rebranding.[27] The brand makeover was deemed necessary because of the loss of weight of the long-standing moniker and the acronym MAW. The new logo was intended to reference sun rays and the circle of fifths,[28] whereas the old logo was referencing floral shapes. Singer Sasha Cooke and pianist John Churchwell took over as co-directors of the voice program in the same year.[29] In 2023 trained flutist Shauna Quill was appointed president of the academy.[4]
Alumni
Alumni of the Music Academy of the West, called fellows, are former attendants of the conservatory programs.[5] Many of them fill important professional music positions around the world, performing in top-tier orchestras, opera houses, and teaching on music school faculties. Others have gone on to leadership roles in other institutions. Notable alumni include:
Music students using the facilities for music training or performing with visiting orchestras without being enrolled are not considered alumni.[46] Among those students are:
Susan Allen (with the Santa Barbara Youth Theatre, 1963)
Judith Beckmann (singing lessons with Harold Reed and Lotte Lehmann)
Randel, Don Michael (1996). Randel, Don Michael (ed.). The Harvard biographical dictionary of music. Cambridge, Massachusetts, and London, England: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN0674372999. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
References
^"Financials". musicacademy.org. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
^Mineards, Richard (June 14, 2022). "A New Sun Rising Over the Music Academy". montecitojournal.net. Archived from the original on February 9, 2023. Retrieved February 9, 2023. The name will legally remain Music Academy of the West but will be known simply as Music Academy as seen in the new logo.
^Montgomery, Alice (September 15, 2011). Katy Perry – The Unofficial Biography. Penguin. ISBN9780718158248. Retrieved January 17, 2020. The reality is somewhat different, according to Tim Docherty, [sic] who works at the Academy: 'Katy was never involved in our programme,' he said. 'She was never a fellow, as we call our students. We are one of the most prestigious music schools on the West Coast, inviting vocalists from all over the world. What actually happened was that she might have taken a music lesson from rooms we rent out. There's no suggestion that Katy herself was responsible for the story, but it certainly didn't hurt her musical credentials to be associated with the school'