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Laura Barron
(541) 346-3790
lbarron@uoregon.edu
Laura Barron is excited to join the University of Oregon faculty
for the 2007-08 year. Since making her solo debut, at age 17,
with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, she has maintained a passionate
and diverse career in which she draws upon the inspiration of
her teachers Bonita Boyd, Sam Baron, and Tim Hutchins. Highlights
of her career include solo appearances with Alexander Schneider’s
Brandenburg Ensemble in Lincoln Center and Kennedy Center and
the performance of nearly 50 premieres with the Aspen Contemporary
Ensemble from 1990-92.
Hailed as "one of the finest flutists
of her generation" Flute Network, Barron fuses her passion
for teaching, yoga and music of all idioms in many endeavors.
These include her Carl Fischer 2003 book/CD Expressive
Etudes for the Flute, her Whole Musician workshop led throughout the
US and Canada since 1998, her folk music inspired recording, Echoes
of a Blue Planet, and her crossover duo, Forbidden
Flutes which
was featured on the Nashville 2004 NFA convention Gala. Barron
has served as principal flutist of the American Sinfonietta and
the Madison Symphony Orchestra, faculty at the University of Wisconsin
in Madison, and has performed with the Minnesota, Vancouver, and
Phoenix Symphonies.
In 2006, she left her post as assistant professor
of flute at Northern Arizona University to pursue a lifelong dream
for her and her husband, Geoff to travel the globe for
an entire year. During this unique experience, she presented recitals
and master classes for the Danish Flute Society, in Cologne, Paris,
and Ljubljana, while based in Scandinavia. From Europe, she and
Geoff studied French in a unique walled, coastal surfing town
in Morocco. As the pinnacle of their adventure, they traversed
India, first as guests of its premier flutist, Shashank, and then
to study yoga and, finally, a week of teachings with the Dalai
Lama. To conclude, they proceeded to South America, where they
began Barron's 40th year, trekking 70k to Machu Picchu,
and then they volunteered for a children’s organization
in Bolivia.
Upon returning from her epic journey, she and Liesa
Norman completed Forbidden Flutes' new jazz-influenced
CD, Take the L Train which includes numerous tracks that
they arranged or composed themselves. She also commenced plans
for the fifth annual Painted Sky Music Festival. She and her PSMF
co-artistic director, Michael Sullivan, have presented over a
dozen "chamber
music with a twist" performances annually, throughout Arizona
,since its founding in 2002. Currently, she is working on a book
project, Sell Art, Not Out which helps musicians and
other artists market their craft while maintaining their creative
integrity.
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