Both concerts are included for Symposium participants and warmly open to the public ($25 general admission, $15 students)
| Ticket Type | Price | Cart |
|---|---|---|
| GENERAL ADMISSION | Wondering Worlds 7/27 | $25 | |
| STUDENT | Wondering Worlds 7/27 | $15 |
| Ticket Type | Price | Cart |
|---|---|---|
| GENERAL ADMISSION | Gershwin for Two 7/29 | $25 | |
| STUDENT | Gershwin for Two 7/29 | $15 |
WONDERING WORLDS
Sebastian Issler, piano
Anna Cavaliero, voice
Herbert Howells (1892-1983)
Come Sing and Dance (The words from an old carol)
Ivor Gurney (1890-1937)
From Five Elizabethan Songs
4. Sleep (John Fletcher)
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
From On This Island Op. 11
4. Nocturne (W. H. Auden)
3. Seascape (W. H. Auden)
From Thomas Moore’s Irish Melodies
The last rose of summer (Groves of Blarney)
Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
An den Mond in einer Herbstnacht, D. 614 (Aloys Schriber)
Frühlingsglaube, D. 686 (Ludwig Uhland)
Der Winterabend, D. 938 (Karl Gottfried von Leitner)
Rastlose Liebe, D. 138 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
Henri Duparc (1848-1933)
L’invitation au voyage (Charles Baudelaire)
Reynaldo Hahn (1874-1947)
Nocturne (Jean Lahor)
Francis Poulenc ( 1899-1963)
From Deux Poèmes de Louis Aragon, FP. 122
1. C
From Léocadia, FP. 106
Les Chemins de l’amour (Jean Anouilh)
Erich Wolfgang Korngold (1897-1957)
From Lieder des Abschieds, Op. 14
1. Sterbelied (Christina Rossetti-Alfred Kerr)
4. Gefasster Abschied (Ernst Lothar)
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
From Sechs Lieder, Op. 57
5. Venetianisches Gondellied (Thomas Moore)
Béla Bartók (1881-1945)
From 20 Hungarian Folksongs, Sz. 92
5. Székely “lassú” (Táncdalok)
From 8 Hungarian Folksongs, Sz. 64
5. Ha kimegyek arr’ a magos tetőre (Csík vármegye)

Sebastian Issler, a distinguished Swiss pianist and the inaugural pianist-in-residence at the City Music Foundation in London, won the Jean Meikle Prize for Best Duo with soprano Anna Cavaliero at the 2022 Wigmore Hall/Bollinger International Song Competition and the Paul Hamburger Prize for Lieder – awarded by Graham Johnson – in the same year. Chosen by the audience, he won the Armitage Prize together with soprano Caroline Taylor at the 2025 New Voices Singing Competition at The Northern Aldborough Festival. Twice a finalist at the International Schubert Competition in Dortmund, among others, Issler has also won several prizes at the Swiss Youth Music Competition.
Together with his duo partners, Issler has performed at major venues such as Wigmore Hall, St Martin-in-the-Fields, Wiltshire Music Centre, Laidlaw Music Centre, Milton Court Concert Hall, Barts Heritage Great Hall, and Tonhalle Zurich, Konzerthaus Dortmund, Abbey Library of Saint Gall, as well as at leading festivals such as Origen Festival Cultural, International Lied Festival Zeist, LIEDBasel Festival and Liedrezital Zurich. He also regularly performs as a soloist and is known for his collaboration in masterclasses with renowned figures such as Brigitte Fassbaender and Thomas Hampson.
In 2021, he undertook to record his signature programme 'The World of Song' in the esteemed confines of the Schubertiade Hall for the Montreux Jazz Festival China. 'The World of Song' was premiered in an immersive 360 Reality Audio Cinema at the Festival in Hangzhou, China, to great acclaim.
Trained at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama in London, he completed his Artist Diploma as a Guildhall Scholar with Julius Drake and was a member of Graham Johnson's Song Guild. Issler holds two master's degrees with distinction from the Zurich University of the Arts, where he studied with Eckart Heiligers and Christoph Berner. His style and pedagogy have been significantly influenced by his studies with Edna Golandsky, Robert Durso, and John Bloomfield at the Golandsky Institute in New York, where he was certified by the Board of Directors and became the first certified teacher of the Taubman Approach in Switzerland.
Issler is a member of the faculty at the Golandsky Institute in New York and at the Kantonsschule Hohe Promenade in Zurich. He has served as a fellow at the Guildhall School, a lecturer at the Zurich University of the Arts, and a teacher for piano accompaniment at the Zurich University of Teacher Education. He is supported by scholarships from the Guildhall School, the Golandsky Institute, Arosa Kultur, and LIEDBasel. Based in Zurich, he is passionate about sharing his knowledge with students around the world, both in person and online.

British-Hungarian soprano Anna Cavaliero is a member of the fest ensemble of the Mecklenburgisches Staatstheater. In the 2024/5 season her roles include Zerlina (Mozart/Don Giovanni), Frasquita (Bizet/Carmen), Hanako (Hosokawa/Hanjo), Belinda (Purcell/Dido and Aeneas) and Valencienne (Lehár/Die Lustige Witwe). She was formerly in Opera Fuoco’s Atelier Lyrique under David Stern in Paris, and the opera studio of the Opéra de Lyon. Further artist schemes have included City Music Foundation, Handel House Talent, Opera Prelude, Britten Pears and Samling.
In 2024, Anna made her debut at the Royal Opera House’s Linbury Theatre as Mme DuVal in Giant by Sarah Angliss, and she returned to the Royal Opera House to perform extracts of Die Zauberflöte as Pamina in a main stage schools performance conducted by Richard Hetherington.
Further operatic roles have included Governess (Britten/The Turn of the Screw) for Deborah Warner’s opera season at Bath Theatre Royal’s Ustinov Studio; Susanna (Mozart/Le Nozze di Figaro) at the Festival Les Étoiles du Classique; Grace (Samantha Fernando/glass human) Glyndebourne on Tour; Atalanta (Handel/Serse) at Opera Holland Park; Soliste (Blacher/Romeo and Juliet) at Opéra de Lyon; Musetta (Puccini/La Bohème) at the Festival de la Grange aux Pianos; Ninfa and cover La Musica (Monteverdi/Orfeo) at Garsington Opera; Die Prinzessin (Maxwell-Davies/The Hogboon) at Philharmonie de Luxembourg; Zerlina (Mozart/Don Giovanni), Belinda (Purcell/ Dido and Aeneas) and Fairy (Purcell/The Fairy Queen) at Waterperry Opera Festival; Fortuna/ Damigella/ Venere (Monteverdi/ L’incoronazione di Poppea), and cover Euridice (Gluck/Orfeo ed Euridice) at Longborough Festival Opera; Galatea (Handel/Acis and Galatea, serenata in tre parti) at Snape Maltings; Barbarina (Mozart/Le Nozze di Figaro) at Théâtre Blossac; Mab/ Adelaide (Dove/The Enchanted Pig) at Jacksons Lane Theatre.
Anna and pianist Sebastian Issler were awarded the Jean Meikle Duo Prize in the Wigmore Hall International Song Competition 2022. She also performs regularly in recital with Sholto Kynoch, including at the Oxford International Song Festival, Leicester International Music Festival, and LiedFest Berlin-Oxford. Further chamber music collaborators include The Brook Street Band, Sounds Baroque, Fuoco Obbligato, The London Mozart Players, The Temple Players, The Echéa Quartet, and The Academy of Ancient Music. 2024 saw the release of a song disc, ‘Songs of Faust’ for Champs Hill Records, and Anna also appears on John Weldon’s ‘The Judgement of Paris’ with the Academy of Ancient Music, released in 2025. Anna holds degrees from Trinity College, Cambridge and The Royal College of Music, and a Postgradualerlehrgang Gesang from the Mozarteum Universität Salzburg, where she studied with Barbara Bonney.
GERSHWIN FOR TWO
arrangements for two pianos
Logan Skelton, Sean Duggan, Mi-Eun Kim
George Gershwin (arr. Logan Skelton)
Four Gershwin Songs
Stairway to Paradise
Oh, Lady Be Good
Someone to Watch Over Me
Strike Up the Band
Piano 1 – Logan Skelton
Piano 2 – Sean Duggan
George Gershwin (arr. Percy Grainger)
Fantasy on Porgy and Bess
Piano 1 – Sean Duggan
Piano 2 – Logan Skelton
*** Intermission ***
George Gershwin (arr. Logan Skelton)
Four Gershwin Songs
I Got Rhythm
Somebody Loves Me
But Not for Me
My One and Only
Piano 1 – Logan Skelton
Piano 2 – Mi-Eun Kim
George Gershwin (arr. Logan Skelton)
An American In Paris
Piano 1 – Sean Duggan
Piano 2 – Logan Skelton
This presentation of Gershwin arrangements is given in collaboration with the George and Ira Gershwin Critical Edition.

Logan Skelton is a much sought-after pianist, teacher and composer whose work has received international critical acclaim. As a performer, Skelton is active in the United States, Europe and Asia and has been featured on many public radio and television stations as well as on radio in China and national television in Romania. He has recorded discs for Centaur, Albany, Crystal, Blue Griffin, Equilibrium, Supertrain, and Naxos Records, several times in collaborations with fellow composer-pianist, William Bolcom. He is a frequent international competition juror and popular presenter at music teacher organizations and summer festivals including numerous appearances at MTNA national conventions and EPTA World Piano Conferences, as well as serving as Convention Artist for many state conventions. As a composer, Skelton has a special affinity for art song, having composed almost 200 songs including 16 song cycles. In addition to his own composition, Skelton has creatively reimagined various works of Liszt, Mozart, Chopin, and Bartók, a number of which are published by Muse Press. He has contributed substantially to the Gershwin complete edition, as well as made arrangements of An American in Paris and numerous Gershwin songs, soon to be published by Schott Music. A devoted teacher himself, Skelton has been repeatedly honored by the University of Michigan including the Thurnau professorship, among the highest honors awarded by the university. Over many years, Skelton’s own piano students have repeatedly won awards in national and international competitions and hold positions of prominence in music schools and conservatories throughout the world. He has served on the faculties of Manhattan School of Music, Missouri State University, and is currently Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, Director of Doctoral Studies in Piano Performance, and the Artur Schnabel Collegiate Professor of Music in Piano at the University of Michigan.

Fr. Sean Brett Duggan is Professor of Piano and head of the piano area, at SUNY Fredonia. Previously he served on the piano faculty at the University of Michigan and as guest professor at the Eastman School of Music. A Benedictine monk and priest at St. Joseph Abbey in Louisiana, Duggan taught, music, Latin and theology at St. Joseph Seminary College and was organist and director of music at St. Joseph Abbey. He won first prize on two separate occasions in the Johann Sebastian Bach International Competition in Washington, DC. In 2000 he performed the complete cycle of Bach's keyboard (piano) works numerous times in various American and European cities. During that year he was featured on a special program on NPR's "Performance Today" hosted by Fred Child entitled "Stump the Monk" in which Child called out the name of any Bach keyboard piece and had him play it. Presently he is in the final stages of recording the complete cycle of Bach's keyboard works which will comprise 25 CDs. He has performed concertos with the Buffalo Philharmonic, Louisiana Philharmonic, New Mexico Philharmonic, Leipzig Baroque Soloists, Prague Chamber Orchestra, American Chamber Orchestra, Worcester Symphony, and the Pennsylvania Sinfonia. He has been adjudicator at the Gina Bachauer and New Orleans International competitions and has served on the faculty of the Golandsky Institute, Atlantic Music Festival, and the Chautauqua Institution. He continues to study the Taubman Approach with Edna Golandsky in New York City.

Praised for her “exquisite refinement” and “vast interpretative range” (The Boston Musical Intelligencer), Korean-American pianist Mi-Eun Kim has performed throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. 2025 season highlights include performances of George Gershwin’s Concerto in F with Boston Pops and the MIT Symphony Orchestra, drawn from the University of Michigan Gershwin Initiative’s new critical edition in celebration of the work’s centennial. A prizewinner at the Liszt–Garrison International Piano Competition, the Corpus Christi International Competition for Piano & Strings, and YoungArts, she has appeared at festivals including Piano Summer at New Paltz, Art of the Piano, PianoTexas, and the Gilmore Keyboard Festival. Mi-Eun is a teaching faculty at Brown University and Director of Keyboard Studies at MIT, where she oversees the Emerson/Harris Program for Private Study. She co-leads Biomechanics of Piano Playing, an interdisciplinary research initiative at MIT.nano’s Immersion Lab supported by the MIT Human Insight Collaborative and has presented this work at the Royal College of Music, the MTNA National Conference, and the International Symposium on Performance Science in Shanghai. She holds degrees from the University of Michigan and Columbia University and has studied with Logan Skelton, Christopher Harding, Richard Cass, Seymour Lipkin, Stanislav Ioudenitch, and Yong-Hi Moon. Each summer she is on faculty at Center Stage Strings and directs the Hansong Summer Music Festival in South Korea.
Be up-to-date with Golandsky Institute happenings!
After years of digital connection, we are bringing back the tactile, immersive environment that makes the Symposium a life-changing event for performing pianists, teachers, students, and amateurs.
The 2026 Golandsky Institute Summer Symposium will be held in person for the first time since the pandemic and we are gathering this summer for a week of world-class pedagogy, transformative presentations, masterclasses, and performances at SUNY Fredonia, a campus renowned for its musical tradition and exceptional facilities, providing an ideal setting for our Taubman community to reunite.
Open to pianists of all levels!
The pedagogy for the Taubman Approach involves more than learning how to apply the information to one’s own hands. An important initial observation is that we are all built the same — the same bones, muscles, ligaments and nervous system. In addition, the piano is governed by its own mechanical principles.
We do not, however, all end up with the same technical problems. For example, some people may come with a technique that involves too much relaxation, while others come with excessive tension. One person may have difficulties with a particular skill, while another person may find the same skill easy. In the first stages of learning, a person is given the information to help overcome problems related to his/her particular limitations. It is only after one has solved these technical problems and has internalized the information so that it begins to become automatic that one is ready to start teaching others.
Successful teaching demands that a teacher see the big picture, understand how to diagnose problems, implement solutions and know how to integrate the many various components of the technique and the music. It is also crucial to know how long to stay on a given track and when to move on.
The only way to develop the skills necessary to become an expert teacher is to learn by doing. For that reason, we have a system where each teacher can be mentored by taking his/her students to one of the teachers who has produced consistenly good results. The principles of the technique are logical and straight-forward, but the application is highly individual. A teacher needs to see many different problems in a variety of contexts in order to begin to develop true expertise.
The success of the mentoring approach has been dramatic. Once it was understood that the art of teaching could be taught, results became consistently better. Some people have more natural ability in this area than others; they identify problems more accurately and inculcate solutions more directly. However, we see over and over that with the right input from a more experienced teacher, most teachers can develop their own pedagogical skills to a much higher level.
The proof of this is in the results of the teaching. Students are learning faster and more thoroughly than ever before. With the right information from a teacher, skills can develop more predictably.
In a real sense, all teachers of the Taubman Approach are students too. We never stop refining our skills. The principles of the technique are clear, but we are constantly developing more insightful ways to describe them and help others understand them inside their own bodies. By having teachers with the most experience be available to help those who want to become experts, there is a way to nourish and train teachers at every level.
The teacher training Workshops are one of the mainstays of the mentoring system. The workshops take place several times a year in New York City, Philadelphia, and Berkeley. We teach students of our most experienced students in front of the group, and these students, in turn, teach the students of other teachers who are trying to boost the level of their own teaching. In addition, we present new developments and insights that facilitate the learning and teaching of the Taubman Approach.
The collaborative approach has proven beneficial to students and teachers alike. It might be thought that a naturally competitive spirit would undermine the process, but on the contrary, a sense of collegiality and community support has been the result. Every teacher knows that there is help around the corner if he/she comes to an impasse with a student. In fact, the only mistake a teacher can really make in the mentoring system is not to ask for help, which is the very thing that stops progress.
We are always happy to recommend experienced teachers for those looking for help on any level, whether it is to solve occasional passage problems, to address greater limitations, to correct serious problems, to improve in general or to gain greater insight into the Taubman Approach.
Many people exposed to the Taubman Approach have become excited by its possibilities and present themselves as Taubman teachers. They sometimes use the Taubman name in their biographical information and in the promotion of their workshops. While some may be gifted musicians, their results can be poor when they try to implement Taubman work without being thoroughly trained. In some cases, the results have been detrimental to the students.
Occasionally, teachers with this type of limited background combine Taubman concepts with other pedagogical approaches and different types of body work. These may bear a superficial resemblance to Taubman work, but they are not recommended by the Golandsky Institute, because they fundamentally alter the nature of the Taubman Approach.
The pedagogy of the Taubman Approach is highly specialized. Currently, successful instructors have rigorous, on-going training in order to be able to diagnose and solve problems effectively.
The Institute will be happy to recommend qualified teachers or clinicians, as well as to offer an assessment of anyone who claims to be teaching the Taubman Approach.
Decades ago, Dorothy Taubman’s genius led her to analyze what underlies virtuoso piano playing. The result of that investigation has produced a body of knowledge that can lead to an effortless and brilliant technique. It can also prevent and cure fatigue, pain and other playing-related injuries.
The Taubman Approach is a groundbreaking analysis of the mostly invisible motions that function underneath a virtuoso technique. The resulting knowledge makes it possible to help pianists overcome technical limitations as well as cure playing-related injuries. It is also the way that tone production and other components of expressive playing can be understood and taught.
Edna Golandsky is the person with whom Dorothy Taubman worked most closely. In 1976 Ms. Golandsky conceived the idea of establishing an Institute where people could come together during the summer and pursue an intensive investigation of the Taubman Approach. She encouraged Mrs. Taubman to establish the Taubman Institute, which they ran together as co-founders. Mrs. Taubman was Executive Director and Ms. Golandsky served as Artistic Director. Almost from the beginning, Mrs. Taubman entrusted Ms. Golandsky with the planning and programming of the annual summer session. She gave daily lectures on the Taubman Approach and later conducted master classes as well. As the face of the Taubman Approach, Ms. Golandsky discusses each of its elements in a ten-volume video series.
Mrs. Taubman has written, “I consider her the leading authority on the Taubman Approach to instrumental playing.“