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Sanford (Sandy)
Reuning is the director of Ithaca Talent
Education School, a private music school
devoted to the teaching methods and
philosophy of Shinichi Suzuki. He is an
adjunct Professor of Music at Ithaca
College, where he leads the masters degree
program in Suzuki Pedagogy, and is director
of the Chamber Music Institute and Suzuki
Institutes held each summer at Ithaca
College.
Sandy graduated
from the University of Illinois, where he
studied violin with Homer Schmitt of the
Walden Quartet, and with Paul Rolland. His
studies continued at Ithaca College, The
Eastman School of Music, Cornell University,
and Tanglewood (Lenox, MA), where he
performed for a summer under the direction
of Leonard Bernstein. He is a past
president of the New York chapter of the
American String Teachers Association (ASTA);
was chair of the violin committee for the
ASTA String Syllabus; and is a past
president and board member of the Suzuki
Association of the Americas.
Sandy’s
association with the Suzuki Talent Education
movement began in 1964 when he and his wife,
Joan, attended a concert in Philadelphia
given by Dr. Suzuki and his students from
Japan. During visits to the United States
between 1966 and 1969, Dr. Suzuki used
students of Sandy and Joan in workshop
demonstrations at the Eastman School of
Music and Syracuse University. In 1974,
Sandy visited and studied with Dr. Suzuki in
Matsumoto, Japan, and he has made numerous
return trips to Japan. He was on the
faculty for the 1978 International Suzuki
Conference in San Francisco and the 1999
International Suzuki Conference in
Matsumoto, and was director of the
“Friendship Concerts” (1978) tour of 100
Japanese and 100 American students,
conducting performances at The Kennedy
Center, Carnegie Hall, and Atlanta’s
Symphony Hall. He was chairman of the 1981
International Suzuki Conference in Amherst,
MA.
Sandy has taught
at workshops and institutes in over 22
states and 6 foreign countries. He has led
tours abroad with the ITE Violin Ensemble to
Israel (1982), Japan (1992), the Czech
Republic & Italy (1994), Denmark (1997), and
Mexico (2000), and the ensemble was one of
four groups chosen to perform at the
American Suzuki Teachers’ Conference in
1996.
During his
performing career, Sandy has been assistant
concertmaster of the Cayuga Chamber
Orchestra, and violinist with the Tri-Cities
Opera (NY), Erie Philharmonic (PA),
Northeastern Pennsylvania Philharmonic, and
the Wallenberg String Quartet. He was
conductor of the Ithaca College String
Orchestra, and a founder of the Binghamton
(NY) Youth Symphony. He is actively
involved in an ongoing project to train
Suzuki teachers and students in Guanajuato,
Mexico. |