Barbara Shearer

Barbara Shearer (September 16, 1936 in Ottawa, Illinois – December 6, 2005) was an American pianist and pedagogue at the University of California, Berkeley.[1]

Barbara Shearer
Born(1936-09-16)September 16, 1936
Ottawa, Illinois
DiedDecember 6, 2005(2005-12-06) (aged 69)
Occupation(s)pedagogue, performer, teacher
InstrumentsPiano

Early life and education

Shearer spent her childhood in the rural Midwest. She attended Carthage College for two years, then Wittenberg University in Ohio, where she graduated with a bachelor's degree in music. On the advice of her teachers, she went to New York City in 1958 to study piano with Leonard Shure, whom she later followed to Zurich and Munich.[2] A later influence was Karl Ulrich Schnabel, from whom she received valuable coaching and with whom she taught as a colleague.

In 1963 Shearer was about to take a teaching job in New York, but one of her teachers in Ohio dissuaded her, offering to buy her a bus ticket to San Francisco instead. She did graduate work at the University of California, Berkeley,[3] and in 1964 married singer and composer Allen Shearer. In 1978 she joined the faculty at UC Berkeley where she taught until shortly before her death.

gollark: The thing-specific diffusion/GAN things often do better.
gollark: I'm currently mid-application for computer science and maths, for purposes.
gollark: https://twitter.com/RiversHaveWingshttps://twitter.com/jd_pressman/status/1469474751525441536
gollark: Colab is kind of busy nowadays and my laptop's GPU isn't good enough, but I can probably dredge some examples up.
gollark: I don't know if I have any saved somewhere. Hold on.

References

  1. Biography on the University of California website
  2. Tribute on San Francisco Classical Voice by David Whitman, December 2005.
  3. Obituary in the San Francisco Chronicle by Joshua Kosman, 17 December 2005.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.