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CONTRIBUTORS
Chris Algar (barleycorn@concertina.co.uk) is head of
Barleycorn Concertinas (Stoke-on-Trent), which is generally thought to have the largest
selection of concertinas in the world, including rare and unusual ones. A longtime Morris
musician, he now plays Irish music with a couple of bands.
Allan Atlas (aatlas@gc.cuny.edu) is on the Musicology
faculty at The Graduate Center of The City University of New York. His
performancetogether with mezzo-soprano Julia Grella OConnellof The
Confession of Devorgilla (Music Supplement) can be heard at the online version of PICA.
Benjamin Bierman (ben@benbierman.com) is a
composer-arranger-trumpet player with a wide range of musical experience. As a trumpeter,
he has performed and recorded with the likes of B. B. King, Machito, Tito Puente, and Ray
Barretto; as a composerhe is completing the Ph.D. in Composition at The Graduate
Center of The City University of New Yorkhe has studied with David Del Tredici,
Tania León, and John Corigliano, and his Proximities for orchestra was recently accorded
special recognition by the Los Angeles Philharmonics Synergy Project
competition. Currently a Graduate Teaching Fellow at Baruch College/CUNY, he arranged The
Confession of Devorgilla for English concertina and mezzo-soprano on commission from the
New York Victorian Consort.
Faye Debenham was born in Western Australia and
immigrated to British Columbia, Canada. Though Vancouver was a step in a working
holiday around the world, it was there that she met and married Albert Debenham and,
most latterly, enjoyed a career encompassing politics and government circles. Sparked in
part by her husbands tale of two grandparents of artistic meritgrandfather
Edwin, a prominent Victorian photographer, and grandmother Marie (Lachenal), a kind and
gentle lady who played the concertina, she undertook research on the Debenham
family, which in turn led to research on the concertina and the partnership with her
co-author, Randall C. Merris.
Roger Digby has been playing Anglo concertina for over
thirty years. Playing in a fiercely English style when performing with Flowers and
Frolics, he extends the instruments range far beyond its assumed limitations,
stretching it most fully when accompanying the wide repertoire of Bob Davenport. He has a
passionate belief in the integrity of traditional music.
Eric Matusewitch (ematuse@aol.com) is the Deputy
Director of the New York City Equal Employment Practices Commission and author of the
Managers Handbook on Employment Discrimination Law (Andrews Publications, 2000). The
son of the late concertina virtuoso Boris Matusewitch (1918-1978) and himself an amateur
concertinist, he often performed with his father during the 1960s-1970s, with programs at
Carnegie Recital Hall and the New-York Historical Society among their many joint
performances (yes, they do use a hyphen in New-York).
Randall C. Merris (rmerris@imf.org) is an economist at
the International Monetary Fund and an amateur concertinist. He has been an economist at
the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, has taught economics and finance at the Kellogg
Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University, and has consulted with Asian
governments on economic policy and financial reform. He writes mainly on economics and
occasionally on the concertina and its history, and he is the author of Instruction
Manuals for the English, Anglo, and Duet Concertina: An Annotated Bibliography, The
Free-Reed Journal, 4 (2002), which is also available online at
<http://www.concertina.com/merris/bibliography>.
Harry Scurfield (harry@scurfieldh.fsnet.co.uk) plays
and sometimes teaches the Anglo concertina. His repertoire includes adaptations of blues
and early jazz, English traditional dance tunes, and raucous singing accompanied on the
instrument. An interest in the broad range of possible contexts for the Anglo led, amongst
other things, to a lasting interest in African concertina playing.
Tom Tonon (ttonon@bluesbox.biz) received a BS in
Mechanical Engineering from Pennsylvania State University and an MA and Ph.D. in Aerospace
and Mechanical Sciences from Princeton University. He has worked in several areas,
including literature (writing), carpentry, factory assembly, liquid propellant rocket
engines, thin film photovoltaics, and catalytic combustion, and is currently Senior
Engineer at AIL Research, Inc., working in the field of liquid desiccant air-conditioning.
He has several publications and patents in these areas, and is currently developing an
acoustic pitch-bending technology for free-reed instruments.
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