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For Elinor Armer, a Piano Festival With a Lifetime of History

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Presented by the 草莓视频福利院 International Piano Festival, longtime SFCM faculty member Elinor Armer will be one of two special guests for this Piano Legacy Program.

August 24, 2022 by Alex Heigl

By Alex Heigl

By any measure, Elinor Armer is a Bay Area icon.

Born in Oakland and raised in Davis, in the Sacramento Valley, Armer has been in the SFCM family since 1969, establishing its Composition Department (now headed by David Conte) in 1985 and chairing it for 11 years. 鈥淲e sort of grew up together,鈥 she said of her 50-year career at the Conservatory.

This week, her performance at the 鈥攁 duo with Lois Brandwynne鈥攕howcases another beloved Bay Area figure, and one with whom Armer has had a long association: Science-fiction and fantasy author Ursula K. Le Guin. Armer is a living tie to generations of Bay Area history: Her great-grandfather was a merchant in 草莓视频福利院; her grandfather was a commercial artist who originated the Del Monte logo and did work on the Sun-Maid Raisins; and her father was an engineer who developed stereophonic speakers (even coining the word) while working for Magnavox, which started in Emeryville, in Oakland. Her grandmother, who had lived with the Navajo with her grandfather, wrote and illustrated a series of books about the tribe for children, one of which won, Waterless Mountain, won an early Newberry Medal.

The SFIPF was founded five years ago by SFCM alum Jeffrey LaDeur, who will be performing in the program, as will mezzo-soprano Kindra Scharich, who is another SFCM alum. LaDeur wanted the program to focus on Armer鈥檚 compositions, as well as her longtime collaboration with Brandwynne, though Armer said that she doesn鈥檛 really consider their relationship a 鈥渃ollaboration at this point,鈥 having been friends since college when they were studying at Mills College under the same teacher, Alexander Libermann. 鈥淓verything I wrote for piano for the last 60 years, I wrote for her,鈥 Armer said, 鈥渦nless it was a separate commission. She鈥檚 played everything I鈥檝e written for piano.鈥 (Brandwynne comes from an impressive musical lineage herself: Her pianist father played with Frank Sinatra and Lena Horne, and her uncle Naftulah Brandwein was a famous klezmer clarinetist.)

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Elinor Armer and a student in 2016.

Part of Armer鈥檚 performance on August 24th will also be a tribute to her many years of friendship with Le Guin, widely hailed as one of the most influential figures in 20th-century fiction. Le Guin鈥檚 daughter Elisabeth was a student in Armer鈥檚 first counterpoint class, and the two kept in touch; Armer and Ursula met at Elisabeth鈥檚 wedding. But Armer says the two felt as if they鈥檇 known each other already: Her father grew up in the house next door to Ursula鈥檚 childhood home.

鈥淚 asked her very naively if she鈥檇 written any poems, and she sent me several volumes,鈥 Armer recalls of their first collaboration. Le Guin died in 2018, and Armer began getting a tribute recording in shape, which like so many others was stymied by the pandemic. However, the record, , will be finally seeing the light of day in October and will include a piece using the last poem Le Guin ever wrote, which is what Scharich will be singing this week.

The record鈥檚 personnel is another testament to the strength of the bonds Armer has to the Conservatory: Wendy Hillhouse, another SFCM alum鈥攁nd a voice professor at the school for 13 years鈥攕ings on it, as does mezzo-soprano Mariya Kaganskaya, whose mother, Alla Gladysheva, is also on SFCM鈥檚 faculty. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 a single musician on the record who hasn鈥檛 been affiliated with the Conservatory at one point or another,鈥 Armer added.

"I'm a shining example of how you can build a life by keeping the same collaborators and colleagues over the span of a lifetime,鈥 Armer concludes. 鈥淚t doesn't mean you can't get out in the world, but that base and that core is something to take root in and grow from."

Tickets for Armer鈥檚 performance . Learn more about studying piano or composition at SFCM here.