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Dr. Thomas Lanners

Dr. Thomas Lanners

Professor of piano

405-744-8994
SCPA 105
Thomas Lanners, Professor of Piano, has appeared as a solo and collaborative pianist and clinician throughout the U.S. and abroad, presenting his New York solo debut in Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in October of 2004. His performances have been broadcast nationally and internationally on programs such as National Public Radio’s Performance Today and RTÉ Radio 1’s Sunday Miscellany in Ireland. Lanners’ latest recording, Ned Rorem: The Three Piano Sonatas, was released in 2007 on Centaur Records. The disc has received much critical praise, including the following quotes from critic Mark Lehman’s review in American Record Guide: “It’s especially pleasing to have all three of Rorem’s sonatas on one disc, superbly played by Thomas Lanners, and in clear, vivid sound. … Anyone who cares about mainstream 20th Century piano music should seek out this superlative recording.” Thomas was awarded a grant from the Aaron Copland Fund for Music Recording in New York to record these works by the Pulitzer Prize-winning American composer. His previous CD, Touches of Bernstein: The Complete Published Piano Music of Leonard Bernstein, was released by Centaur in 2005. In a March 2005 review of the recording, critic Jed Distler wrote for ClassicsToday.com: "Thomas Lanners totally understands this music, pointing up the jazzy qualities to idiomatic perfection as well as projecting Bernstein’s lyrical generosity without milking it … All told, Lanners' loving mastery easily holds its own in any company. Warmly recommended." Thomas is now working on a second disc of Rorem’s works, and after this disc is completed he will have recorded nearly all of this renowned composer’s output for solo piano.

Among recent solo appearances, Lanners performed in November 2007 on the Pianistes à la Maison du Peuple series at the Centre Culturel Jacques Franck in Brussels, and at the Rode Pomp in Gent, Belgium. He also played a recital to conclude “American Music Week” at Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas that was broadcast live worldwide on WSUiR, the university’s Internet radio station. In October 2007 he performed on the Classical Mondays recital series in Preston Bradley Hall at the Chicago Cultural Center, the city’s preeminent recital venue. He was a guest artist on a recital series at the University of Western Ontario in Canada in November 2006.

tom lanners 07Lanners received his Master’s and Doctoral degrees in Piano Performance and Literature from the Eastman School of Music as a student of Barry Snyder, after earning his Bachelor of Music degree at Florida State University as a student of Leonidas Lipovetsky. He also studied under John Perry at the Aspen Music Festival and Jerome Lowenthal at the Music Academy of the West, and has performed in master classes for such renowned artists as Pascal Devoyon, Jeffrey Kahane, Dominique Merlet, Anton Nel, Cécile Ousset and Nelita True. Thomas presented a lecture-recital at the 2005 Music Teachers National Association conference in Seattle, having also presented sessions at the 2001 MTNA conference in Washington, D.C. and the 2000 Oklahoma Music Teachers Association conference. He will be a presenter at the 2008 OMTA Conference as well. Lanners has adjudicated at MTNA’s West Central Division piano competitions in 2006, South Central Division competitions in 2002, the Eastman School of Music’s International Piano Competition for High School Students in 2000, and at numerous Ohio, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas Music Teachers Association competitions. His feature articles have been published in American Music Teacher and Clavier magazines.

Professional activities for the 2005-2006 academic year included a recital and lecture at the University of North Texas; performing a chamber music recital at the OK Mozart International Festival; collaborating with tenor Richard Novak in a recital at the University of North Texas; adjudicating for the Texas Music Teachers Association’s District 4 piano competitions in Dallas; presenting a recital and lecture as the conference artist for the East District Conference of the Oklahoma Music Teachers Association; playing a solo recital at the University of Central Oklahoma in Edmond; and presenting a master class at the Amadeus Piano Festival in Tulsa.

Since 2001, Thomas has played solo recitals at Northwestern, Syracuse, Louisiana State, Wichita State and Baylor Universities, the Lawrence University Conservatory of Music, the Universities of Western Ontario in Canada, Northern Iowa, South Carolina, and Oklahoma, and the Tulsa Performing Arts Center. He presented a lecture and recital as the conference artist for the OMTA West District Conference in 2004, and gave a lecture-recital and master class (encompassing both solo and collaborative piano literature) at the University of Colorado-Boulder in 2005.

In 2003 he performed with Walfrid Kujala, Northwestern University professor of flute and former Chicago Symphony flutist, Richard MacDowell, professor of clarinet at the University of Texas at Austin, and Nancy Ambrose King, professor of oboe at the University of Michigan. He also collaborated with Leone Buyse, professor of flute at Rice University and former Principal Flutist, Boston Symphony Orchestra and Boston Pops, and with Swedish clarinetist Hakan Rosengren in 2001. Thomas performed as both a soloist and chamber musician at the Universities of Iowa, Wichita State, Iowa State, and Missouri-Columbia in 2000.

One of Dr. Lanners' former OSU students has worked at the Juilliard School of Music as an Associate Opera Coach since the fall of 2005, and other former students have been accepted into graduate piano performance degree programs at the Universities of Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Southern California, Missouri-Kansas City, and the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. They have had success in state and regional competitions, winning both OMTA competitions (including first place winners in 2003, 2005 and 2006) and MTNA Collegiate Artist honors. From 2002 through 2006 he served as College Faculty Forum chair for the Oklahoma Music Teachers Association, representing on the OMTA Board all collegiate music faculty in the state and acting as the organization’s liaison to MTNA.

Hear Thomas Lanners Perform: