![Bassoon students perform on stage](https://www.uc.edu/news/articles/2023/02/n21149262/jcr:content/image.img.cq5dam.thumbnail.500.500.jpg/1676658061561.jpg)
CCM holds winds competition in memory of bassoonist William Winstead
Funded by Winstead's estate, the competition supports present and future generations of CCM students
The University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music (CCM) holds the second annual competition for wind players in memory of Cincinnati Symphony principal bassoonist and long-time faculty member, William O. Winstead. The competition will culminate with a public performance with finalists on April 22, 2023 at CCM’s Robert J. Werner Recital Hall.
William Winstead. Photo by Tina Gutierrez.
The competition for the William Winstead Prize for Artistry in Wind Playing is made possible by a bequest from the estate of William Winstead and will be open to undergraduate and graduate music performance majors in flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and horn. CCM's five wind studios may submit up to three semifinalist entries per department. The internal deadline for each studio is to be set by major faculty of each department, and three semifinalist entires must be submitted to CCM Bassoon Instructor Martin Garcia by March 1, 2023.
A jury of three professional wind players will select finalists to perform in the final round on April 22, 2023. One winner will be selected to receive a $2,000 cash prize. Additionally, there will be a $1,000 prize awarded to an outstanding collaborative pianist. The panel of judges also have the option of awarding an honorable mention winner for a prize of $1,000.
"Jennifer Monroe and I are very pleased that CCM is embarking on this dynamic way to remember our friend and teacher, William Winstead,” said CCM Bassoon Instructor Martin Garcia when the competition was launched. “As a bassoonist, composer, pianist, sometimes harpist and occasional singer, Bill's musical interests were deep and varied.”
“As his former students, it was a delight to sit alongside him in the Cincinnati Symphony week after week and hear his imaginative interpretations of the symphonic repertoire. Due to his probing musical intellect and associations with musicians like Rudolf Serkin and Pablo Casals, his impact on the sound of the musical culture of Cincinnati and CCM was profound."
The competition will be offered annually to support the studies of exceptional wind players and perpetuate Winstead’s memory.
CCM’s five wind studios (flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and horn) may nominate up to three musicians to participate in the initial video submission round of the competition. The deadline for video submissions is set by major faculty of each studio. Three semifinalist entires must be submited to Martin Garcia by March 1, 2023.
A jury of three professional wind players will select finalists to perform in the final round, which will be held from 1-4 p.m. on April 22, 2023, at CCM’s Robert J. Werner Recital Hall. The jury will select one winner and one collaborative pianist for recognition, with the option to award an honorable mention prize as well
The jury is to select one winner for the William Winstead Prize for Artistry in Wind Playing to be awarded $2,000 and one outstanding collaborative pianist to be awarded $1,000. The collaborative pianist prize may be awarded to any pianist independent of the result of the Winstead Prize. In the event that a second wind player has performed to a high musical level, an honorable mention prize in the amount of $1,000 may be awarded. Once a student has been selected as the winner of the Winstead Prize, they are ineligible for future competitions.
Repertoire should be a major work for wind instrument and piano. Sonatas and character pieces/fantasies are considered appropriate. A second short work may be played with or without piano as long as the student's total program does not exceed 20 minutes. There is a two-minute grace period for overage; concerti are not permitted.
Competition participants will be evaluated upon their musical interpretation, lyricism and technical prowess.
For further details, contact CCM Bassoon Instructor Martin Garcia at garciam@ucmail.uc.edu
2022 Winners
Pictured left to right.
- Chiaoyu Lin, winner of the outstanding collaborative pianist prize
- Vincenzo Volpe, flute, winner of the Winstead Prize for Artistry in Wind Playing
- Catherine Down, horn, honorable mention,
- Ay Kawasaki, flute, honorable mention.
About William Winstead
William Winstead.
Appointed as professor of bassoon at CCM in 1989, William Winstead was a dedicated member of the CCM faculty for 30 years. A recipient of UC’s Outstanding Adjunct Faculty Award, he guided multiple generations of students towards successful careers as performers and educators. Prior to his appointment at CCM, he was a faculty member at Oberlin Conservatory, Indiana-Purdue University, Florida State University and West Virginia University. He also served as the president of the International Double Reed Society — the world’s principal organization of student, amateur and professional oboists and bassoonists — and as a member of the National Endowment for the Arts Advisory Panel.
Winstead also performed with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra for over 30 years before retiring as Principal Bassoon in 2018. At the time of his retirement, the majority of the bassoon section of the CSO consisted of his former students.
Winstead enjoyed a long association with the music festivals of Sarasota, Aspen and the Marlboro School. It was at Marlboro that he collaborated and recorded with the likes of Pablo Casals (as principal of the festival orchestra), Rudolf Serkin and other 20th century musical luminaries. He toured the United States and Canada with the “Musicians from Marlboro.”
In addition to his performance career, Winstead was also an accomplished composer whose music has been performed by ensembles like the Pittsburgh Symphony and the Philadelphia Orchestra. In 1976, he received an NEA grant for a bicentennial work for narrator and orchestra. When the CSO celebrated its 125th birthday weekend in January 2020, the performance opened with the world premiere of Winstead’s “Passages in Time,” which was commissioned specifically for the anniversary celebration.
A native of western Kentucky, Winstead began his musical training as a pianist and composer before studying the wind instruments. He later received an Artist Diploma and a Bachelor of Music degree in bassoon from the Curtis Institute of Music and a Master of Music degree in theory and composition from West Virginia University.
Featured image at top: Andrew Higley/UC Marketing + Brand
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