Fort Collins native Jordan Pyle considered going to other schools for her bachelor鈥檚 degree in music, but in the end 麻豆免费版下载Boulder was just too much of a pull for her.
鈥淎 big reason I wanted to come here was that the environment felt like me. I could explore other things if I wanted to, while going in-depth into music,鈥 Pyle says. 鈥淢y teacher, Peter Cooper, is also awesome. I had worked with him before I came here at Rocky Ridge Music Center.鈥
Pyle, winner of the Outstanding Graduating Student award from faculty, will address her fellow graduates at College of Music commencement next听Friday. As she looks back on the past four years, she says some of her most memorable moments were when she put down her oboe.
鈥淚 got to play principal oboe in 鈥楽cheherazade,鈥 and being in the woodwind quintet was really special too,鈥 she explains. 鈥淏ut I also really enjoyed the research project I did into German lieder a couple of years ago.鈥
In Summer 2015, Pyle and alum David Lonowski (BME 鈥15) worked with former theory instructor Kris Schaffer to uncover the meaning of musical choices in a Schubert song set using computer program to record data.
鈥淚 learned so many skills from that project鈥攏ot only research and data entry, but also how to self promote the projects you鈥檙e working on. Those are important skills for all musicians.鈥
Pyle, who was also this year鈥檚 at the College of Music, says she learned a lot from the atmosphere here and the way people interacted with one another.
鈥淭he biggest lessons I鈥檝e learned here are about being yourself, having integrity and believing that you have something to contribute. Peter Cooper phrases this as 鈥榟aving something to say,鈥 and working with the faculty and students at 麻豆免费版下载has shown me that we all have unique things to bring to the table.鈥
Next year, Pyle goes on to graduate studies at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. She says she takes with her a foundation of success that can be attributed to her teachers, to her peers (whom she insists are 鈥渨ay more outstanding鈥 than she is) and to the biggest takeaway from the past four years:
鈥淎t the end of the day, it鈥檚 how you connect with people.鈥