Kim Walker (bassoonist)

Kim Walker is a bassoonist of Scottish/American origins. She has performed throughout Europe and the US, and in China, and been prominent at leading Music Festivals such as Ravinia, Wolf Trap, Marlboro, Mostly Mozart in the US, Prades, Luzern, Korsholm, Schleswig-Holstein and London Proms in Europe. As a soloist she has performed with the London Philharmonia Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic, the London Mozart Players, Berlin RIAS orchestra, Württembergisches Kammerorchester Heilbronn, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, and many other orchestras under the batons of Oliver Knussen, Gennady Rozhdestvensky, Richard Hickox, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Jane Glover, Arvo Volmer and others.[1]

Early life and education

Walker graduated from Interlochen Arts Academy in 1975, receiving the Young Artist Award, a Presidential National Merit Scholarship award and academic distinctions. She then studied at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, with Dr Sol Schoenbach and later with Roger Birnstingl at the Geneva Conservatory in Europe where in 1979 at the Conservatoire de Musique de Geneve she achieved their highest award—"Premier Prix de Virtuosite". She furthered her studies on period instruments, working with Walter Stiftner at the Scuola Cantorum Basel, 1982–83. In 2002 she attended the Executive Non-Profit Leadership (ENPL) course at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business and in 2009 the Australian Institute of Company Directors (AICD) company director’s course.[2]

Career

Following a career performing internationally, she was recruited to serve as Professor of Music at Indiana University, Bloomington. In 2000, she served as Artistic Director of the Summer Music Festival at Indiana University and was invited to serve as Associate Dean in the Office of Vice-Chancellor for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculties while still serving as Professor of Music. In 2003, President Myles Brand asked her to serve in a new statewide position as Director of Arts and Cultural Outreach and Associate Dean of Research for Arts and Humanities. After 10 years at Indiana University, Walker became Dean of Music at Sydney Conservatorium of Music in 2004.[3] Walker's career as a bassoonist is well documented with a catalogue of well over 23 solo recordings available.[4] She continues to perform worldwide.[5]

On May 24, 2018 Walker was named the new director of the Texas Tech University School of Music and assumed the role on July 1, replacing interim director Keith Dye.[6] She resigned the role on July 8, 2020 and was replaced by Robin Germany. [7]

Controversy

In 2007 Kim Walker was accused of plagiarism. A university investigation found no case to answer and Walker was exonerated. In late 2009 she was accused of having misrepresented her qualifications. University inquiries found there had been "no intention to mislead", and cleared Walker.[8] In 2012, the year her term as dean ended,[9] Kim Walker filed a multi-million-dollar lawsuit against the University of Sydney, seeking damages, international reputation loss and loss of potential earnings resulting from a seven-year tenure dogged by allegations of plagiarism and mismanaged funds.

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gollark: > extra invariants
gollark: As in, Rust ones aren't that, or are that but wrong?
gollark: Rust is, of course, right, with its strings which are just vectors of bytes with extra invariants.
gollark: And can't append to strings above a certain length.

References

  1. "Kim Walker - Bassoonist". kimwalker.com.
  2. "Kim Walker - Executive Coaching - Consultant". kimwalker.com.
  3. "News | The University of Sydney". Usyd.edu.au. 1 July 2004. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  4. "Research Supervisor Connect - The University of Sydney". Usyd.edu.au. 3 November 2011. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  5. North, Richard (25 July 2008). "News | The University of Sydney". Usyd.edu.au. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  6. "School of Music Names New Director - Texas Tech Today - TTU". today.ttu.edu.
  7. http://www.depts.ttu.edu/music/aboutus/administration.php
  8. "Smeared, cleared and still playing on" retrieved 7.22.11
  9. "Sydney Conservatorium's new dean is bold as brass" retrieved 1.27.12
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