Over the past 40 years thousands of musicians have passed through the ensembles of the WA Youth Orchestras Association. The Association has played a significant role in building the futures of many Western Australian musicians. Some have gone on to become part of major orchestras around Australia and abroad, while others have forged careers outside the music profession.
Connect & Share with the WAYO Alumni Program
If you have particiated in any WAYO program you are a part of our extensive alumni family and we would love to hear from you!
Register Today
- Fill in a registration form and stay connected with WAYO.
- Drop us an email at [email protected] and let us know what you’ve been up to – become a featured alumni artist on our blog.
- Subscribe to WAYO’s e-News and keep up to date with what we’re up to!
WAYO Alumni Profiles
Other works include an opera for children, chamber music for the Brodsky String Quartet, scores for dance projects (including Lawn and Drover’s Wives) and many collaborations with indigenous musicians, initially as musical director and arranger for the national tours of Jimmy Chi’s multi award-winning Corrugation Road and subsequently with the Spinifex people of central Australia and the Black Arm Band. He says: “WAYO is the reason I’m a musician. The experiences I had under the batons of Richard Gill and Roy Rimmer for me exemplified what music is about. They were uninhibited, committed and passionate – probably not note perfect, but we were made to feel that anything was possible. That stays with me still.”
read about Iain...
Ms Glover earned three scholarships to continue her studies: The WA Art Council Award, an international Study Grant from the Music Board of the Australia Council and the John Hind Memorial Scholarship. This gave her the opportunity to study for a year in Amsterdam with Han de Vries and then in Zurich with Emmanuel Abbuel and Thomas Indermuhle for three years, where she gained a postgraduate degree in Performance. During this time she was also awarded a grant from the City of Zurich. Upon her return to Perth, Leanne obtained a permanent position with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra where she is currently the Associate Principal Oboe. She also teaches oboe at the University of Western Australia.
read about Leanne...
In 1981 Catherine Hewgill gave solo performances with the University of Southern California Orchestra and the American Youth Symphony Orchestra. She completed her Bachelor of Music degree and received awards for Outstanding Chamber Music Graduate, and an Aspen Fellowship to the Aspen Summer Music Festival in Colorado, where she was Principal Guest Cellist with the Chamber Orchestra. In 1984 she won the Hammer-Rostropovich Scholarship and was invited by Mstislav Rostropovich to appear in a special recital at the Second American Cello Congress in Arizona. A period of private study with Rostropovich followed. She returned to Perth in 1985 to appear as soloist with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra. Then followed a European concert tour with ‘I Solisti Veneti’, and study with William Pleeth in London. On her return to Australia she joined the Australian Chamber Orchestra. In 1989 Catherine Hewgill joined the Sydney Symphony, and was appointed Principal Cello a year later. She has performed as a soloist of distinction with most of the major Australian symphony orchestras and in solo recitals. Recent performances with the Sydney Symphony have included Haydn’s Sinfonia concertante and C major Cello Concerto, Elgar’s Cello Concerto and the Brahms Double Concerto with Concertmaster Michael Dauth. In 2003 Catherine and Michael toured Japan with the Orchestra Ensemble Kamazawa, performing the Brahms in amongst other cities Tokyo and Osaka. In December last year she featured as a soloist with violinist Nigel Kennedy in performances with the SSO.
read about Catherine...