快猫成版视频 State鈥檚 Percussion Students, Alumni Hitting It Right in Marketplace

KENNESAW, Ga. | Dec 13, 2022

Bailey School of Music鈥檚 percussion students in demand across U.S. and Europe

Percussion students in the Bailey School of Music (BSOM) at 快猫成版视频, led by , are hitting it hard. These percussionists often have a vision early in their academic careers, and by the time they graduate, many have fully carved out鈥攁nd realized鈥攖heir career paths. 

Alumna is a good example. As an undergraduate percussion major at KSU, 鈥淜atelyn laid out exactly what she wanted to do. She knew she had to get additional degrees and do her type of music in Europe. Now, she is pursuing her doctorate degree and lives in Vienna, Austria, doing contemporary music in one of the world鈥檚 best concert halls. She often goes to Germany鈥攁nd beyond鈥攖o play her music,鈥 explains Lawless, Director of Percussion Studies and Senior Lecturer. 

katelyn king
A native of Atlanta, Georgia, Katelyn Rose King is a performer and conceptual artist working in the fields of theater, music, and everywhere in-between.

King is not the only success story to come out of the percussion program. In Austria, she recently attended a concert featuring fellow KSU alumnus , a student of both Lawless and , Artist-in-Residence in Jazz Percussion at BSOM. Boone was there as the drummer for The Legendary Count Basie Orchestra鈥檚 European tour. 

image of brandon boon at drum set
Robert Boone Jr. is a Grammy-nominated drummer/percussionist originally from Augusta, Ga. Believing in giving back to the community, Boone has played in a plethora of venues including local nursing homes, elementary schools, but also has toured in Japan, Africa, New Zealand, Australia, and Europe.

King and Boone are not rare exceptions, either, because most of the percussion students 鈥渁re already working. They are in high demand with drumlines, teaching at high schools, and [freelance] gigging, too, before they leave KSU,鈥 says Lawless. Student success is happening before they leave KSU, he explains. 

The secret behind their success may lie in never being bored. Percussion students may expand their knowledge by exploring the vast array of percussion instruments available worldwide, making it continually exciting and enjoyable. 

Lawless says, 鈥淲hen I play, I enjoy it, and my students have the same experience. I also perform for young audiences, and when you see their eyes light up when you hit a drum, it鈥檚 infectious. If students choose that path, there鈥檚 always a next step, and they are all good ones. [Percussion] chose us from the beginning.鈥 (Lawless took up drums at the age of two and began subbing for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra at the age of 17, something he still does to this day.) 

john lawless holding percussion instruments
John Lawless, Director of Percussion Studies and Senior Lecturer with the Bailey School of Music, has performed, toured, and recorded with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra while maintaining a thriving freelance career as a studio and pit percussionist. (Image by Brooke Marier.)

He doesn鈥檛 want to take much credit, but when he put out a call to Percussion alumni for a reunion concert, over 20 alumni agreed to participate. Percussionists from different generations played together on stage in Morgan Hall, including the song Feeling of Coming Home, also the concert鈥檚 title. The alumni all still play and are either teaching or playing professionally. Boone, based in Atlanta, was still on tour in Europe and couldn鈥檛 make it, but many others did. King came back to KSU from Vienna鈥檚 Burgtheater, and Levi Cull made it home from the U.S. Air Force. 

image of colorful red drum
Percussion students may expand their knowledge by exploring the vast array of percussion instruments available worldwide, making it continually exciting and enjoyable. (Image by Lauren Liz Photo.)

The musician with the most seniority to join the group was , an alumnus who still plays professionally. He now teaches Applied Percussion Studies and conducts the Percussion Ensembles at University of North Georgia (UNG). Previously, Walker was an assistant band director in Cobb and Fulton Counties in metro Atlanta. 

He was the first student for Lawless, the 鈥渘umber one鈥攊n fact, my only student when I arrived [in 1998]. I thought, here we go!鈥 Walker was impressed by the Dr. Bobbie Bailey & Family Performance Center; it had not yet been built when he was a student at KSU. 

What鈥檚 next for this group of percussion visionaries? Lawless has a vision of his own: to create a new piece as vast and unique as both KSU campuses.

鈥淓verything is an instrument; if you hit, scrape, or ding something, they all sound great. I have a vision of individual students playing everything on campus. Then, for the ensemble concert, to have all those segments individually playing at the same time, then also playing live! It would be like 鈥榟ow does KSU sound?鈥欌  

His goal is to turn common things into music, including the poles between the Bailey Performance Center and the Wilson Annex, or even the handrail going down the steps. Graduating seniors have told Lawless they don鈥檛 want to miss it, so he has reassured them that if it happens, he will invite them back for a cameo. 

鈥淟et鈥檚 play KSU! I want to turn this campus into music,鈥 he says. 

--Kathie Beckett

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