| About the Conductor/Music
Director
Kyle Wiley Pickett
Following his graduate studies at Peabody Conservatory with Frederik
Prausnitz, Wiley Pickett was hired as music director by both the
Redding Symphony and the Chico Symphony in northern California.
Within a year of his appointments, Wiley Pickett devised and launched
a plan to merge the two orchestras to create a single professional
symphony that would join the two cities and ensure the future of
symphonic music in Northern California. A year later, the North
State Symphony was launched. The result has been the creation of
the only professional and high caliber orchestra north of the San
Francisco Bay Area in California.
Background
After receiving a bachelors degree in music in 1993 from Stanford,
Kyle attended California State University at Chico where he studied
choral conducting with William Ramsey and received an accelerated
masters degree in music.
He was accepted for graduate study at Peabody Conservatory in
Baltimore, and Frederick Prausnitz agreed to take Kyle as a student
in conducting. Along with the Juilliard School in New York City,
Peabody (part of Johns Hopkins University) graduates most of the
top classical musicians in the United States; its alumni includes
Andre Watts, celebrated classical pianist. Prausnitz, a world renowned
luminary in classical conducting, has made guest appearances around
the world.
According to Wiley Pickett, this was a turning point not only for
him, but also for his family and former teachers. “They all
sort of said, ‘If Prausnitz took him, he must have potential.’”
Wiley Pickett graduated from Peabody with his doctorate of music
in 1998, and he credits Prausnitz for making him the musician that
he is today: “As busy as we were with classes and homework,
Frederick would ask us, ‘What other books are you reading
now?’ ‘What museum did you go to last week’? And
that’s what makes conducting my thing. Prausnitz taught us
that conducting wasn’t all about technique or musical knowledge.
He insisted we also have knowledge of the world, art, drama and
literature.”
Conducting "style"
Musicians and students who work with Wiley Pickett praise him for
his knowledge of the score, conveying the composer’s motivation
and intention to the musicians, his efficiency during rehearsals,
and his unassuming nature.
It’s the latter trait that makes Wiley Pickett a refreshing
anomaly, because many classical conductors are notorious for their
arrogance. “Some…explode in a storm of wrath if you
play the wrong note,” but not so Wiley Pickett, says Bruce
Finch, bassoonist with the North State Symphony. In a music critique
filed with the Chico News & Review, Ernst Schoen-Rene said of
Wiley Pickett’s first North State Symphony rehearsal: “My
first impression was of [his] supremely efficient and gracious manner….Not
a harsh word was spoken, and the musicians seemed to have total
respect for their leader.” Eugene Nichols, a Redding architect
and president of the North State Symphony board, agrees: “Everyone
in the orchestra loves him, which is unusual. He has a facility
to endear musicians to him.”
|