Arts and Entertainment

Two faculty members to present joint recital

Credit: Penn StateCreative Commons

Penn State's lecturer in horn Sarah Schouten and clarinet professor Anthony J. Costa will present a joint recital on Sunday, March 25 at 4 p.m. in 122 Music Building II. They will be assisted by collaborative pianist Amber Shay Nicholson.

Admission is free.

Sarah Schouten serves as instructor of high brass at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania.  In addition to her university duties, Sarah is an active free-lance artist, clinician, and teacher in northwest and central Pennsylvania.  She maintains a private studio and teaches at the Community Music School in Edinboro.  In addition to performing with the Altoona Symphony Orchestra, she freelances frequently with the Erie Philharmonic Orchestra, the Erie Chamber Orchestra, and the Williamsport Symphony Orchestra.

Sarah is also an active solo and chamber musician.  She was a featured soloist with the Concert Band of Northwest Pennsylvania (2017), with the Erie Philharmonic (2015), and with the Blue Lake Festival Orchestra (2008).  Sarah was honored to be a featured clinician at Graceland University’s Brass Day (2016).  She has also given recitals and masterclasses at Louisiana State University, Wright State University, SUNY Fredonia, Allegheny College, The Pennsylvania State University, Florida State University, Ouachita Baptist University, University of South Alabama, and Pensacola Junior College. 

As a chamber artist, she is member of Just Two, a horn/guitar duo with Tom Cody, and the ChambersSchouten Horn Duo with Rebecca Chambers. Both groups perform regularly; having lectured and performed as regional and contributing Artists at the Southeast Horn Workshop, the Northeast Horn Workshop, and the International Horn Symposium.

Schouten earned her DM from Florida State University, her MM from The Pennsylvania State University, and BA in history, Spanish, and music, from the University of Dayton.  She is also an alumnus of the Pierre Monteux School for Conductors and Orchestral Musicians.

Anthony J. Costa is associate professor of clarinet at Penn State and clarinetist with the Pennsylvania Quintet, the Prestige Clarinet Quartet, and the Chihara Trio.

Dedicated to his role as artist-teacher, Costa taught clarinet and music courses at Otterbein College, Ashland University, and the College of Mount St. Joseph in Ohio before joining the faculty at Penn State. For two years he was a collaborative artist with Chamber Music America’s “Rural Residency Program” and worked with communities in Mississippi County, Arkansas, as a performer and music educator.

In demand as an orchestral clarinetist, Costa served as utility clarinetist/bass clarinetist with the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra and Dayton Opera Orchestra from 1999 to 2011, and has performed as principal clarinetist of the Music at Penn’s Woods Festival Orchestra since 2009. Additionally, he has performed with the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, Columbus (OH) Symphony Orchestra, Akron Symphony Orchestra, Canton Symphony Orchestra, Lancaster (OH) Festival Orchestra, Erie Chamber Orchestra, Erie Philharmonic Orchestra, and the Wheeling (WVA) Symphony Orchestra. He has performed with such artists as “The Three Tenors” (Pavarotti, Domingo, and Carreras), Midori, Sarah Chang, “The Big Voodoo Daddy,” and Ray Charles. Recent solo performances have included the Bruch “Double Concerto” with violist Timothy Deighton with the Music at Penn’s Woods Festival Orchestra in State College, PA; Scott McAllister’s “Concerto X” and Michael Daugherty’s “Brooklyn Bridge” with the Penn State Wind Ensemble; and the Artie Shaw “Clarinet Concerto” with the Nittany Valley Symphony Orchestra. 

Costa is a devoted chamber musician and has performed across the United States as a member of the Pennsylvania Quintet, the Prestige Clarinet Quartet, the PC2 Trio, and the Razbia Ensemble. He has been featured as a soloist and chamber musician at the 2007 and 2011 International Double Reed Society conference, the International Clarinet Association’s ClarinetFest (in 1998, 2006, 2008, 2011-2017), and the Oklahoma Clarinet Symposium (in 2005 and 2008). A champion of contemporary music, Costa has collaborated with such renowned composers as John Corigliano, Gunther Schuller, John Harbison, Paul Chihara, and Osvaldo Golijov. Having recorded the works of composer Rick Sowash on recent releases (Eroica and Sanctuary at 3AM), Costa can frequently be heard on classical radio stations across the United States. With the Chihara Trio (Timothy Deighton, viola, and Enrico Elisi, piano), Costa presented newly commissioned works by several composers (including Paul Chihara, from whom the trio took its name), and presented a recital at Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall in March 2010. In the summer of 2010, Costa taught and performed in Alaska at the Fairbanks Summer Music Festival. Committed to mentoring young clarinetists, Costa’s students have participated in such esteemed festivals as Boston University’s Tanglewood Institute, the Interlochen Arts Camp, the Brevard Summer Music Festival, the Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp, and the Pennsylvania Governor’s School. His students have been finalists in the International Clarinet Association’s High School Competition and the Columbus Symphony Orchestra’s Concerto Competition and have performed as members of the Columbus, Cleveland, and Central Pennsylvania Youth Orchestras. 

Costa attended the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music and received a bachelor of music degree in music education and clarinet performance. He received his master of music degree in clarinet performance from Temple University in Philadelphia and his doctorate of musical arts degree from The Ohio State University. His teachers have included Carmine Campione, Anthony Gigliotti, Ronald Auffman, and James Pyne.

Costa is an artist-clinician for the Buffet-Crampon Corporation, and plays Buffet Tradition clarinets and a Prestige 1193 bass clarinet. He lives in State College, Pennsylvania, with his wife, oboist Robyn Dixon Costa, and daughter Zoey.

 

Last Updated March 20, 2018