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Show .Page D8 - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Sunda , 23, 1990 September Young pianists honored! at fair The following young Provo pianists have been declared first prize winners of the Utah State Pair Piano Competition, held in Gardner Hall at the University of Utah. V 4 Janae Codner, daughter of John and Nancy Codner 1 fa "n 4 V- captured first in the Senior Divi). Christie Peery, sion (ages daughter of Drs. Craig and Irene Peery, took the top prize in the Junior Division (ages and Dustin Gledhill, son of Mike and Leslie Gledhill, won the InterAll ). mediate Division (ages three pianists have just returned from Moscow, Russia, where, in July, they participated in a Russian Music Institute at the Gnessin Conservatory. All three are students of Dr. Irene Peery of Provo. - Janae Codner has won first prize the International Young Key. in board Artists Association contest in Michigan, and the International Stravinsky Awards competition in winIllinois. She was second-priz- e ner in the Youn Chang division of the Gina Bachauer Piano Contest in Utah. Concerto performances have been with the Utah, Utah Valley, and Murray symphonies as .veil as with the Mormon Symphony in Oakland, Calif. As soloist, she has performed in Sarasota, Florida for the Stravinsky Awards Benefit Concert, in northern California as a guest artist of the Yamaha Piano Competition, and at the World Conference of Gifted and Talented Children in Symphony Hall in Salt Lake City. Christie Peery has received first prizes in the International Young Keyboard Artists Association contest in Michigan in both solo and concerto, the Ithaca High School h 16-1- START YOUR WEEK SAVING! Prices Effective: Sept. 23rd to 25th, 1990 r 10-d- W il 111;-- Dustin Gledhill Janae Codner competition in New York, Concerts Atlantique in New York City, the Missouri Southern International, the Kawai America in Utah, and the Jefferson Symphony in Denver. She also won first place in the Junior Baldwin and the Yamaha High School divisions (six states) of the Music Teachers National Association. She has won second prize in the Young Chang division of the Gina Bachauer and the International Joanna Hodges competitions. She has performed with the Utah Symphony, the Utah Valley Symphony, and with orchestras as well as solo recitals in Texas, Colorado, and Michigan. This summer she performed two concerts in Geneva, Switzerland, under the auspices of Concerts Atlantique in New York Christie Peery City. Also this summer she studied at Tanglewood in Massachusetts. While there she performed in a d Master Class of the teacher and pianist, Leon Fleisher. In Russia, Christie was one of four American pianists seworld-renowne- lected to study with the famous Russian teacher, Bashkirov. Dustin Gledhill has won first place in the International Stravinsky Awards in Illinois, and in the International Young Keyboard Artists Association contest in Michigan. In Utah he has been top winner in the Utah Symphony Youth Guild as well as the Arlette Day Piano Contest. He has also won second prize in the National PTA Reflections contest for his own composition. Dustin has performed with the History of Tabernacle organ published Brigham Young asked Ridges to build a second organ for the Taber- 12, 1857, a cluster of watertight metal cases from Australia arrived in Salt Lake City by wagon train. The contents of the mysterious boxes: a seven-sto- p organ built by Joseph Ridges, an English carpenter who had been hunting for gold in Australia. A recent convert to Mormonism, Ridges brought the organ with him on the schooner Jenny Lind to San Pedro, Calif., then traveled across the desert to get it to the home of his newly-foun- d religion, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. It was a gift to his church, the first organ for Temple Square. On June "The Mormon Tabernacle Or- An American Classic" tells the story of the famous organ in 128 pages, including 16 pages of color photographs and 22 pages of gan: nacle that presently stands on Temple Square. That organ has been enlarged and renovated several times since then, and is perhaps the most-hear- d pipe organ in America. It's heard each Sunday morning on the CBS Radio Network broadcast of the Tabernacle Choir, as well as on numerous recordings. For music lovers, a definitive history of the Tabernacle organ has been compiled by internationally-known organ historian Barbara Owen, director of Church Music at the First Religious Society (Unitarian) of Newburyport, Mass. . black and white historical and contemporary photos. The book is available for $19.95 from the Organ Historical Society, Box 26811, Richmond, Va. 23261. "People interested in American music and its trends, or simply people who have heard the organ in person or on the radio should be interested in the book," says Owen. "The Tabernacle organ has always been something of a mirror of what was going in the American organ world at large." Utah, Utah Valley, Murray, and Las Vegas Symphonies. As a solo recitalist he has performed in Palm Desert, California, in Madsen Recital Hall at BYU, at the World Turn Conference of Gifted and Talented Children in Symphony Hall, and at the Stravinsky Awards Benefit Con- cert in lorida. As UuM rw Sarasota, first-priz- e winners, Janae, Christie and Dustin, will perform in a concert of first prize winners' in the Assembly Hall in Salt Lake City, as well as for Utah Symphony conductor, Joseph Silverstein, in the Salute to Youth Auditions. Other local pianists receiving honors in the State air competition were Amy Greenwood, American Fork (third in Intermediate M.D. Division), Stephen Thomas, Provo (Honorable Mention in Senior Division), Corinne Teichert, Provo (Honorable Mention in Junior Division), and Melissa Haney, Orem (Honorable Mention in Elementary Division). All the prize winners were invited to perform in concerts held in the new Grand Building at the State Pair Grounds. They are stu- dents of Pkg. 4-R- oll BATHROOM TISSUE Irene Peery. Finalists from the area were: James Mar-gett- s, Stacey Gilchrist, Lara Lambert, Trisha Fackrell, Terra Das-trup, Adrianne Jarvis, Lael Stander, and Ruth Anne Williams. In freestyle wrestling, a competitor may use his legs to take his opponent to the mat. It is illegal in Greco-Roma- n events. jmnEaoSar 9 68 .Without Sacrificing Quality! r TOP GRADE COWHIDE LEATHER NO SPLIT LEATHER, NO VINYL ANYWHERE! 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