Jay Wanamaker

Jay Wanamaker is a percussionist and the president and CEO of Roland Americas and formerly held executive positions at Fender and Guitar Center. He also worked for Yamaha, Alfred Publishing, and the University of Southern California, and was chair of the Percussive Arts Society rudimental committee that published the 40 PAS Drum rudiments. He has also published over 50 music books and instructional DVDs.

Jay Wanamaker
Born1955
New York
NationalityAmerican
EducationBME - SUNY Potsdam, MM - Kansas University, Master of Management - Aquinas Grand Rapids
OccupationPresident and CEO Roland Americas
Known forPAS Rudiments Committee, Instructional Drum Books, Instrument Retail Management Expertise
Notable work
Drum Rudiment Dictionary, Championship Corps-Style Contest Solos
StyleRudimental Drumming

Biography

Jay Wanamaker was given a drum set by his uncle and by 4th grade was playing in a local drum corps in Utica, New York[1] He earned his bachelor's of music education at the Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam in 1977 and went on to earn his Masters of Music at the University of Kansas in 1980.[2] He then took a job teaching the marching band at the University of Southern California's Thornton School of Music from 1981 to 1985.[1] Concurrently, in the early 80s Wanamaker was working for Alfred Publishing as an editor of musical instruction materials and was serving on the Percussive Arts Society's rudimental percussion committee. In 1984, while serving as chair of the committee, he and the other members published the PAS 40 International Snare Drum Rudiments,[3] which are currently the standard American drum rudiments for teaching and learning the drums. Other prominent committee members included Fred Sanford, Marty Hurley, John H. Beck, Anthony Cirone, William F. Ludwig Jr., Rob Carson, and other music professors, industry executives, and notable percussionists. Also in 1984, he published one of his most popular books, Championship Corps-Style Contest Solos.[4] From 1985 to 2000, Wanamaker worked for Yamaha in various divisions, eventually becoming a Vice President.[1] He then moved to Guitar Center for 10 years,[2] where he worked as an Executive Vice President for Merchandise. He then spent 2 years with Fender and 6 months with Amati before attaining his current position in 2015 as the CEO and President of Roland Americas. After entering the corporate world he continued to publish drum books with Alfred, including rudimental solo collections and drum rudiment guides.[5] Wanamaker has worked on Super Bowl halftime shows and his music is featured in the film Drumline.[2]

Publications

  • Championship Auxiliary Units [6]
  • Championship Corps-Style Contest Solos
  • International Drum Rudiments Book
  • International Drum Rudiments DVD [7]
  • Alfred's Rudimental Duets [8]
  • Alfred's Rudimental Contest Solos [9]
  • Alfred's Intermediate Snare Drum Solos [10]
  • Drum Rudiment Dictionary [11]
  • Corps-Style Drum Dictionary
  • Corps-Style Cadences
gollark: This also implies that the perfect programming language does, in fact, exist. I wonder if anyone worked out which one it is.
gollark: Consider: it is better for a programming language to exist than to not exist. Therefore, the maximally great programming language exists. Macron does not exist. So it is not the maximally great programming language.
gollark: Well, I can actually disprove that.
gollark: Macron is not real and thus is bad.
gollark: The only language worse than Macron.

References

  1. "Five Minutes With...Jay Wanamaker, President/CEO, Roland Corp. U.S." msretailer.com. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
  2. "Jay Wanamaker | Oral Histories". NAMM.org. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
  3. Carson, R., Wanamaker, J., et al. International Drum Rudiments. Alfred Music Publishing, 1997.
  4. Wanamaker, Jay. Championship Corps-Style Contest Solos: For the intermediate-advanced snare drummer. Alfred Music, 1984.
  5. "Books by Jay Wanamaker (Author of Drum Rudiment Dictionary)". goodreads.com. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
  6. Wanamaker, Jay, et al. Championship Auxiliary Units Alfred Music, 1979.
  7. Carson, Rob and Wanamaker, Jay. International Drum Rudiments Alfred Music, 1994. DVD recording.
  8. Wanamaker, Jay. Alfred's Rudimental Duets: For Intermediate Snare Drummers Alfred Music, 1995.
  9. Wanamaker, Jay. Alfred's Rudimental Contest Solos: For the Intermediate Snare Drummer. Alfred Music, 1995.
  10. Black, D. Feldstein, S. and Wanamaker, J. Alfred's Intermediate Snare Drum Solos: 22 Intermediate-Level Contest Solos Alfred, 1998.
  11. Wanamaker, Jay.Drum Rudiment Dictionary: A Complete Reference Guide Containing the Percussive Arts Society's 40 International Drum Rudiments Alfred, 2002.
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