Lisa Pegher

Lisa Mae Pegher is an American drummer and solo percussionist.[1] In her International career she has performed throughout the world as a soloist, recitalist, and chamber musician.[2][3][4]

Lisa Pegher
Background information
BornPittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
GenresClassical, Jazz, Electronic
Occupation(s)Percussionist, Soloist, Drummer
InstrumentsPercussion, Drums
LabelsBMOP
Websitewww.lisapegher.com

Background

Lisa Mae Pegher grew up in rural western Pennsylvania, close to Pittsburgh. Her grade school teacher encouraged her early development by volunteering to pay for her first drum. She studied music in Pittsburgh where she became a student of Jack DiIanni, a timpanist with the ballet and later studied with members of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Pegher moved to Chicago to continue her studies at Northwestern University. She now lives in New York.[5]

While in her early twenties, Pegher made her solo percussion debut with the Pittsburgh Symphony in 2001. She was the first percussionist to win concerto competitions at both of the universities she attended. In the United States, she has been helpful in making several competitions allow solo percussion as a category.

Career

According to Symphony Magazine, Lisa Pegher is "blazing a particularly rocky, un-trodden trail" in the world of percussion.[6] She has premiered numerous works for solo percussion that have been written especially for her including a New Music USA grant commission with composer David Stock premiering his Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra, Mathew Rosenblum's Double Concerto for Percussion and Saxophone with the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, saxophonist Kenneth Coon, conducted by Gil Rose.[7] Brett William Dietz's Concerto for Percussion and Wind Symphony Richard Danielpour's "Wounded Healer" Percussion Concerto[8][9] with the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra and Paul Dooley's Northern Nights Percussion concerto that explores mixing orchestral music with electronic dance music.[10]

As a soloist, she has appeared across the globe in numerous venues and cities. She was one of two Americans chosen to compete at the TROMP International Percussion Competition in the Netherlands in 2007 and has been a featured artist at the Percussive Arts Society Convention on several occasions. She has appeared on many radio shows including on NPR's WGTE.

Prior to launching her full-time solo career, she performed regularly with the Baton Rouge Symphony Orchestra and as the principal timpanist for the Acadiana Symphony Orchestra.

Pegher has also fused elements of computer music, projection art and improvisation in a new multi-media show "Minimal Art", a collaboration with composer Andrew Knox and graphic designer Ben Hill. The premiere performance was supplemented a dance company, "Of Moving Colors" on November 7, 2009. She founded her own band Controlled Chaos in 2015 while living in Brooklyn, New York but later changed the name to the SideFire Trio.[11][12]

Discography

Awards

  • Aspen Music Scholarship awarded by the Minnesota Orchestra music competition recipient[1]
  • winner of the Vladimir R. Bakaleninkoff Memorial Fund Scholarship[1]
  • winner of Women’s Advisory Board Music competition at the Mary Pappert School of Music[1]
  • Director’s Prize at the Kingsville (Texas) International Music Competition [1]
  • recipient of the international YAMAHA Young Performing Artist Award.[1]
  • William J. Spencer award fund at Northwestern University[1]
  • first place honors at the Northwestern University Concerto/Aria competition[1]

Personal

Lisa is an avid runner, and frequently practices hatha yoga.

gollark: Ah, SpoutingOfSound.
gollark: It would of course swap out bad "SHA-256" for the superior Mersenne twister algorithm.
gollark: Idea: palaiologoscoin™ blockchain™.
gollark: Nope, none are safe.
gollark: Nothing in the code actually uses it apart from the ECC library, but it's there.

References

  1. "Lisa Pegher Official Website". Retrieved 1 Jan 2010.
  2. "lansing journal". Retrieved 18 May 2017.
  3. "Boston Globe Review". Retrieved 24 Jan 2011.
  4. "New York Times Review". Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  5. "Bio". Retrieved 2012-12-30.
  6. Green, Jayson (Jan–Feb 2007). "Six to Watch" (PDF). Symphony Magazine.
  7. "BMOP Artists: Lisa Pegher". Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  8. "New Jersey Advanced Media". Retrieved 19 Jan 2016.
  9. "Southbend Tribune Review". Retrieved 31 Jan 2017.
  10. "City Pulse Magazine". Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  11. "google play". Retrieved 1 March 2017.
  12. "SideFire Trio". Retrieved 2 Jan 2018.
  13. "iTunes". Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  14. "iTunes music". Retrieved 3 March 2017.
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