MARY
CAY NEAL, Founder and Music Director
Buffalo Suzuki Strings was founded in 1969 by Mary Cay Neal,
beginning with two students, studying one instrument, in her studio
home in Kenmore, New York. Since that time Buffalo Suzuki Strings
grown to touched the lives of thousands of children and their
families.
Buffalo Suzuki Strings exists today because of the strong pioneering
spirit of our Founder, Mary Cay Neal. Mary Cay continues to be
the inspiration, innovator and driving force which makes BSS not
only successful but outstanding in our local musical community
and in international Suzuki circles as well.
Mary Cay Neal studied directly with Dr. Suzuki on over a dozen
occasions between 1969 and 1991, and has been an Invited Clinician
and Invited Speaker at International
Suzuki Teachers Conferences since 1972. She is an SAA
registered Teacher Trainer and Master Teacher of Violin, and has
also served on the Suzuki
Association of the Americas Board of Directors. Mary Cay
holds a Bachelor of Music degree from Georgia
State University and has taught graduate and undergraduate
courses in Suzuki
Pedagogy at SUNY Buffalo.
Mary Cay Neal today serves as BSS Executive Director, Music
Director and Director of the BSS Friendship Touring Ensemble.
She continues to teach a range of private students as well as
BSS Saturday Morning Repertory Classes. Mary Cay is also a member
of the Amherst
Symphony Orchestra and continues to make her home in Kenmore,
New York,
| “From Dr. Suzuki I came to understand that the challenge was going to come from teaching all children and not just the gifted few.” |
Mary Cay Neal became interested in the Suzuki
Method when it was still a very controversial phenomenon.
She was one of the first Americans to pioneer the Suzuki Method;
she reminisces,
“I was introduced to the Suzuki Method of teaching
the violin when I was in college in the 1960s. Although Dr. Suzuki’s
ideas were already well established in Japan, they were very new
here at the time and highly innovative. I was captivated by his
ideas as well as his ideals.
“What Dr. Suzuki did for me, personally, was to help
me translate my convictions into a vital pedagogical method. He
made me see that every child has musical potential and that it
is the teacher’s primary function to help him develop it.
Through Suzuki I came to understand that the challenge was going
to come from teaching all children and not just the gifted few.
At the same time it became clear to me that you can deprive a
child of extraordinary future happiness if you say ‘no’
to him because he is not as talented as another. Perhaps that
child will only be a future listener of the Philharmonic, goodness
knows we need them, but at least he will have had hands-on experience
of the instrument and the world of music is open to him.
“Dr. Suzuki taught us how to behave humanistically
with children; how to respect them; how to draw out their innate
ability. He showed us how to talk to kids at their own level so
that we can instruct them without being patronizing. Perhaps most
important, he persuade us that for student and teacher alike being
happy with your music is synonymous with being successful.”
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