Condensed from a story posted on the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis Department of Music website
51勛圖窪蹋 Davis music student, and now graduate William Storz 20, an award-winning musician in his own right, helped lecturer with an ambitious project during the past year. Together, they cataloged and restored the music departments extensive collection of early music instruments. as anything between Gregorian Chant and Berlioz.
Said Craig: Last August we dared to open the closets in the back of Room 115 where the collection of early instruments is stored. William and I inspected, dusted, categorized, photographed, determined pitch, general quality and the need for cleaning these instruments. Then planning the weekly schedule of multiple ensembles began in earnest.
The instruments they unearthed included: harpsichords, a virginal, a clavichord, chamber organs, a consort of violas da gamba, a group of renaissance and baroque recorders, sacbuts, crumhorns, renaissance and baroque flutes, lutes, the shawm, the vielle, cornettos, percussion instruments and a few more.
Due to how diverse the collection is, finding repair shops that knew how to execute the repairs required contacting many different people who all offered more information about the instruments including the care they required. The final stage was finding a way for the instruments to play together in a class setting.
Storzs studies at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis centered on theory, history and ethnomusicology. He received the department's Davis S. Saxon Award for Excellence in the Performance of Early Music in both 2019 and 2020. Storz now plans to apply to graduate programs. Read the full story on the Department of Music site .