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July
2008 | by the Schneiderman
family
Barbara
Schneiderman,
pianist, and nationally
acclaimed author,
lecturer and teacher
who brought music
into the lives of
hundreds of grateful
young students and
their families died
June 14 at her home
in Del Mar. She was
73. The cause of death
was pancreatic cancer.
Barbara
Schneiderman's public
recognition as a pianist
began when she performed
on the radio at age
11. An admiring listener
recommended her to Sydney
Foster, the first of
several renowned teachers,
including Walter Piston,
Horazio Frugoni and
Aube Tzerko. She acquired
degrees from Harvard,
the Royal Academy in
London, and UCSD, and
enjoyed a long career
of amateur and professional
chamber-music recitals.
Also, while in college
she was the pianist
for the Radcliffe Choral
Society.
Her
teaching career began
in the living room of
her married-student
apartment at Harvard
with an original concept,
a “Musical
Nursery” for
the children of graduate
students. She introduced
musical concepts in
a playful atmosphere.
From there she progressed
to providing private
lessons to award-winning
students of all ages
in both the Suzuki and
traditional system.
In the last several
decades her master classes
were in great demand
around the country.
As
a Suzuki Association
of America Teacher Trainer,
she lectured and wrote
numerous articles on
a wide range of musical
topics at national and
international conferences.
She served on the Suzuki
Association Piano Committee
and was a regular piano
columnist for the American
Suzuki Journal. She
also taught courses
on performance at UCSD
and served as an invited
Visiting Artist in other
academic settings. As
a certified Suzuki Teacher
Trainer, Barbara trained
her daughter, Tanya,
to teach the Suzuki
Method and together
they shared a studio,
teaching students of
all ages in what Barbara
called "a
one-room schoolhouse."
Her
book, Confident
Music Performance: The
Art of Preparing ,
is considered a classic
in the field, praised
for its value and comprehensiveness
by professional musicians,
psychologists, and neurologists,
including Oliver Sacks.
When
Barbara moved to Del
Mar in 1970, she soon
became involved in political
activism at the national
and local level. During
the Vietnam War era,
she engaged in organized
non-violent efforts
to protest and end the
war. On the local level,
she originated and oversaw
popular gatherings called “Evenings
in the Neighborhood. ” These
provided stimulating
occasions in Del Mar
homes ranging from Greek
poetry to controversial
topics led by local
experts to entertaining
folk song fests. She
was also an early participant
in developing and supporting
the Del Mar Community
Plan.
Barbara
Schneiderman was born
in Perth Amboy, New
Jersey, in 1935, where
she also had a remarkable
career. She was valedictorian,
class president and
head cheerleader at
Perth Amboy High School.
From there she went
to Radcliffe College
(at that time the woman's
college affiliated with
Harvard) where she met
her husband, Larry,
then a student at Harvard
Medical School and now
an emeritus professor
at UCSD School of Medicine.
She is survived by four
children, Rob who resides
in New York, Claudia
in Pacific Palisades,
Heidi in Niagara, Ontario
Canada, and Tanya in
Del Mar; and four grandchildren;
and sister Anita Hannoch
of Livingston, New Jersey.
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