William Paterson University College of the Arts & Communication

Percussion Studio: Faculty

Payton MacDonald directs the percussion program at William Paterson University, taking over for Raymond Des Roches, who directed the program for over 30 years. For more information about Professor Des Roches's outstanding legacy, please visit the New Jersey Percussion Ensemble web site. (http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Parc/9441/)

Peter Jarvis, John Ferrari, and Gary Van Dyke also provide additional expertise as adjunct professors. For questions about the program please contact Dr. MacDonald (macdonaldp@wpunj.edu).

Payton MacDonald performs with Alarm Will Sound, a professional new-music group based in New York City and Verederos, a flute and percussion duo. Alarm Will Sound is currently regarded as one of the foremost new music ensembles in the country and has recorded two discs, on the Nonesuch and Cantaloupe labels. The New York Times wrote that they are "the future of classical music". With Verederos MacDonald has performed concerts nationwide and recorded two CDs under the Equilibrium label. Verederos won the 2002 National Flute Association chamber music competition. MacDonald also directs the Lahara Ensemble, an innovative new group dedicated to performing his music; and he frequently appears as a marimba soloist with Super Marimba. With Super Marimba MacDonald performs his own amplified music using looping machines and delay pedals. He has also appeared as a soloist in England and Croatia, performed with Present Music, and toured Japan with Keiko Abe and the Galaxy percussion group. He received the Barbara S. Butler composition award, as well as fellowships from Yaddo and Ragdale. Numerous professional and academic ensembles have performed his music in the U.S., Japan, Canada, and Europe. MacDonald has published articles in Percussive Notes, Twenty First Century Music, and he is a new music critic for American Record Guide.

MacDonald earned his BFA from the University of Michigan, where he studied percussion with Michael Udow. He earned his MM, DMA, and the Performers' Certificate from the Eastman School of Music where he studied percussion with John Beck and composition with Robert Morris and Augusta Read Thomas. Further studies include tabla with Bob Becker and Pandit Sharda Sahai. MacDonald is a disciple of Mr. Sahai. In 2004 MacDonald was awarded a grant from the American Institute of Indian Studies for further study in India.

www.paytonmacdonald.com
macdonaldp@wpunj.edu
(973) 720-3667

John Ferrari enjoys a varied career as a versatile classical and hand percussionist, drummer, conductor, and educator in the New York/New Jersey area. He is a founding member of the Naumburg Award winning New Millennium Ensemble and is drummer/percussionist for Meridian Arts Ensemble-Brass & Percussion. Frequent recipients of the ASCAP/CMA Award for Adventurous Programming, both groups have collectively released nine critically acclaimed recordings. Between these groups and others he has toured extensively as both performer and clinician in the U.S., Europe, Mexico, Central and South America, the Caribbean and Asia. A special cultural ambassador visa from the US State Department took Meridian Arts Ensemble to Cuba for that country's International Festival of New Music in October 2003. Mr. Ferrari is a frequent guest artist of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and has performed and recorded with most notable chamber-music organizations around New York, including: Bang On A Can All-Stars, Cygnus, Da Capo Chamber Players, Empire Brass, The Group for Contemporary Music, New Band, New Jersey Percussion Ensemble, New Music Consort, Orion and Peterson String Quartets, Patrick Grant Group, Riverside Symphony, Locrian, Sequitur, and Talujon Percussion Quartet. Musically active in chamber, orchestral, pop, jazz, Broadway, dance, film and television, he can be heard on the Albany, CRI, Centaur CGNJ, Channel Classics, Koch International, Santa Fe New Music and Strange Music record labels. Mr. Ferrari holds DMA and MM degrees from SUNY Stony Brook, and a BM from William Paterson University where he has been on the performing arts faculty since 2002.

Peter Jarvis, director of the highly acclaimed New Jersey Percussion Ensemble is active as a percussionist, conductor, educator, composer, and administrator. The New York Times remarked "Mr. Jarvis and his forces richly deserved the standing ovation they received." He has played with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the Group for Contemporary Music, the Contemporary Chamber Ensemble of Piccolo Spoleto, newband, Talujon Percussion Quartet, the Hong Kong based Kung Ensemble, New York Art Ensemble, and countless other groups including several orchestras and choruses. Jarvis has appeared as a soloist for numerous New Music Festivals including the Europe Asia Festival in Kazan Russia and as a guest of ISCM League of Composers in New York. As conductor, He has appeared with Saint Luke's Chamber Ensemble, Cygnus Festival Orchestra, Composers Guild of New Jersey Performance Ensemble, Ensemble21, on the San Francisco Symphony's New and Unusual Music Series and many others. Jarvis has appeared in the United States, Mexico, Canada, Asia, Russia and Europe. He can be heard on Nonesuch, CRI, Koch International, Composers Guild of New Jersey, October Music, Capstone, NAXOS, Gram and other recording labels. His compositions are published by Calabrese Brothers Music, LLC. In addition to performing, Jarvis has taught percussion and chamber music at Fairleigh Dickinson University and currently at William Paterson University, and Connecticut College.

Gary Van Dyke is an accomplished percussionist who is active as a performer, conductor and educator. He studied percussion with Raymond DesRoches for six years and earned music degrees from William Paterson College and the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Mr. Van Dyke performs and conducts with the New Jersey New Music Ensemble and the New Jersey Percussion Ensemble. He can be heard on Nonesuch, Composer's Recording Inc., New World and Capstone recording labels with the New Jersey Percussion Ensemble under Charles Wuorinen, Harvey Solberger and Raymond DesRoches. Mr. Van Dyke has held teaching positions since 1978 and currently teaches/conducts for the Teaneck Public School system in New Jersey, serving seven schools, grades 4 - 12, and is an Adjunct Faculty at William Paterson University, conducting and performing new music and percussion ensemble literature. Mr. Van Dyke makes his home in Ramsey, New Jersey with his wife, Linea and their three children, Amanda, Kyle and Briana.