Kevin - Creative Musicians Retreat
“My experience with Walden started as a 25th anniversary gift from my wife.
She felt I needed to broaden my musical horizons and connect with other like-minded composers so her gift was to send me to the 2012 Creative Musicians Retreat. The experience was exhilarating, challenging and uplifting! I have since returned for the Creative Musicians Retreat in 2014, 2015 and 2016.

But the Walden experience is much more than learning the nuts and bolts of a particular set of topics.
It is much more than just composing pieces and getting them performed. Simply put, Walden is a family affair. Of course many organizations aspire to create a “sense of family” with staff, instructors and students, but the difference is that Walden delivers! One leaves Walden with a sense of belonging to a musical community much bigger and far more important than whatever one might bring to Walden. And the proof of this is so clear when one considers that many of the staff and faculty at each of the Creative Musicians Retreats I attended had spent many summers in their youth at Walden’s Young Musician Program.
So you see, Walden is not about some event you attend or some particular set of subjects to be learned. Rather, it is a unique family environment where creativity is encouraged and where everyone (faculty, staff and students) learns from each other. It is an experience you don’t forget and a feeling that only grows each time you attend an event.
Kevin
Nathan - Guest Artist
In 1999, a Walden faculty member happened to be at the concert where Nathan’s sextet, Non Sequitur, was performing.

Nathan fell in love with Walden. He never could have imagined such a wonderful environment existed for young musicians, and he wished he had attended something like Walden when he was younger. He reached Walden at a crossroads in his early career as a professional, and Walden became an influential and inspiring part of his journey as a performer. It reminds him of why he does what he does, and he considers himself lucky to have played hundreds of world premieres by faculty and students during his time at Walden. Now, 18 years after he first played at Walden, he often finds himself working with composers with whom he last worked when they were children attending Walden.
Nathan appreciates that although the focus and content of Walden’s programs is primarily music, what Walden really addresses is a sense of community needed by everyone. It is an enduring community of talent that has the same feelings of acceptance and inspiration year after year. It benefits students, performers, and faculty alike. Nathan feels truly privileged to be a part of Walden’s influence in the music community.
Alex - Young Musicians Program
“I have been involved with the Walden School as a student, faculty member, and administrator for many years and I have found that my experience in each of these roles continues to shape all aspects of my life. As a student, Walden let me discover my passion for music and develop a work ethic that set me on my artistic and career path as a composer and educator.

What is particularly special about Walden is that it doesn’t just teach music. The people at Walden teach each other how to build and care for creative communities full of diverse perspectives. We just happen to do this through music. As a former student and current faculty member it is a privilege to be a part of this community, but it is not something that everyone gets to experience. The power of such a community is special and something worth creating in every part of our lives and sharing with the people around us.
There are plenty of musical programs and organizations that want to ‘make the world a better place.’ This is, of course, a daunting challenge and something that sometimes feels intangible or even unreachable. My time at Walden, however, has shown me that, under the right circumstances and with the right people it’s not so out of reach. I have witnessed time and time again how Walden creates creative, vibrant, and supportive environments for all of its participants. These environments are new worlds and by creating these worlds we also learn how to care for them and share them with others.
This is the most important lesson I’ve learned from my time at Walden and it is a lesson that can be applied to any field.
Walden students, faculty, staff, administrators, and supporters all create this community and are able to take this perspective into any other aspect of their lives. I think about it and live it every day when I meet with my students, when I design classes and curricula, when I collaborate with other artists, when I perform and compose, when I am in class, when I am with my friends and family, and when I think about what it means to be part of a community that is bigger than myself and bigger than music.
– Alex
Michael Daugherty, Composer-in-Residence ~ Lecture / Demonstration
Lecture / Demonstration
by Composer-in-Residence, Michael Daugherty
Young Musicians in Concert with the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE)
Young Musicians (YMP) perform on stage with
the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE)
To culminate their residency at The Walden School, ICE will feature the Young Musicians Program students as composers and performers. Eight world-premieres of student works will be given, which in August will receive their New York City premieres at Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival's 50th Anniversary Celebration. The program includes four Walden students joining ICE on stage for collaborative performances of a faculty commission by Terry L. Greene, and works by contemporary music luminaries George Lewis and Pauline Oliveros.
John - Young Musicians Program
Walden has been a kind of magical place for Jack, where he could be his best self in a warm, loving, supportive environment.
Over the last five summers, he has learned great fundamental musicianship, been challenged to listen to new and different styles of music with open ears, he’s written music in a range of musical genres, and has developed an increasingly clear voice as a composer. But while the musical training is the reason we sent him to Walden in the first place, there is much more to the experience than the music. We have watched him grow from an uncertain new student, trying to find his way in the new environment, to a confident leader among the students, helping others to succeed and feel welcome.
Year after year, Walden’s faculty and staff consistently create among themselves and among the students a supportive community where each student’s individual talents and idiosyncrasies are appreciated.
Students write music of all kinds, at all levels, and they are respectful of each other’s artistic journey and process, investing care and attention in each other’s success. It is a delight to see kids in these often socially and emotionally difficult years taking care of each other and enabling their success. Walden is a treasure!
Karina - Young Musicians Program
Three days after I leave the Walden School Young Musicians Program, I start to count the days until the next summer.

Between the friends I make at Walden and the hard work I put in to create the final festival composition, the five weeks at Walden is always extremely satisfying and special.
I take the knowledge I acquire at Walden into the rest of my year, and it makes my life better. I want to thank all the people who contribute and donate to Walden. All the things I love about my summers in Walden would not happen without you.
Thank you,
– Karina
Walden and Junior Conservatory Alumni Composers Forum with Face the Music
Walden is excited to announce this year's annual New York City Alumni Composers forum will feature the ensemble Face the Music and will be moderated by former Walden School Composer-in-Residence, Eve Beglarian.
New York Alumni Composers Forum
Join us in New York - bring friends and family for an afternoon of new music and discussion!
Sign up here! - http://bit.ly/VcuzBy
Moderators
Tamar Bloch and Sky Macklay
Composers
Kevin Becker
John Hennecken
Steven Kaplan
Robert Karpay
Sky Macklay
Ian Munro
Matt Siffert
Performers
Steven Beck, piano
Tierney O'Brien, clarinet
Sharon Park, violin
Walden and JCC students, alumni, parents, faculty, staff and friends will gather for an afternoon of music, discussion, reuniting with old friends, and making new ones. The composers forum is FREE and open to the public, and will be followed by a small reception for participants and attendees, so between new music, great people and delicious food, there are plenty of reasons to join us. The event is open to anyone who wants to attend.
Contact Marguerite Ladd if you have any questions mladd@waldenschool.org.
San Francisco Alumni Composers Forum
There are still a few spots left for composers and performers for this forum!
Sign up now - http://bit.ly/Ud2Stg
Moderators:
Alex Christie and Dana Jessen
Performers
Katy Luo, piano
Sophie Huet, clarinet
Esther Landau, flute
Jefferson Packer, voice - bass
Dana Jessen, bassoon
Composers
Gabe Kyne
Nick Benavides
Loretta Notareschi
Niko Korolog
Will Rees
Ann Callaway
Walden and JCC students, alumni, parents, faculty, staff and friends will gather for an afternoon of music, discussion, reuniting with old friends, and making new ones. The Forum is FREE and open to the public, and will be followed by a small reception for participants and attendees, so between new music, great people and delicious food, there are plenty of reasons to join us.

