College of Music hosts drumming legend + clinician Chad Wackerman
Barnettās past life in rock is paying off. āI was in a metal band when I saw Chad back in ā88 in Pittsburgh when he was drumming with [Frank] Zappaāit was life-changing,ā he recalls. āHeās a phenomenal musician.
āWe met up recently and he reached out about coming here. On March 19, heāll talk with my songwriters and that night heāll do a thatās open to the public. On March 20, heāll work with student composers on improvising.ā
While the residency lasts only two days, the experience can resonate much longer for young students, Barnett suggestsājust as Wackermanās drumming with Zappa influenced him. That thought brings him to the College of Musicās universal musician mission.
āA musician these days needs as many skills as possible,ā explains Barnett, himself an artist-composer-songwriter-educator. āAs an artist, you can grow throughout your entire life. And what weāre accomplishing here at the College of Music can be an example to inspire students. If they branch out while theyāre here, they will be ahead of the game when they graduate.
āItās about more than getting good grades. Itās about making your inner self larger. College is just the beginning of your life in learning.ā
Barnettās experience in the music business still fires his imaginationāand is key to the College of Musicās. He also calls up his vast experience and connections in the world of rock ānā roll to bring his students up close to musicians from the outside world.
Barnettās impressive rĆ©sumĆ© further includes songwriting and drumming work for 30 years with numerous rock, heavy metal and classical fusion bands with such exotic names as Tainted Saint, Phantom Crew, Terminal Degree and Throttle.
Barnettās compositions include chamber works, concertos for piano and violin, pieces for wind ensemble, solo works and songsāmusic that has been performed by various orchestras and ensembles around the world. Closer to home, heās collaborated with College of Music colleagues Erika Eckert, David Korevaar, David Requiro, Michael Thornton and particularly the late Charles Wetherbee.
All that said, one of his first loves is teaching and his commitment to one-on-one mentoring. āI enjoy creating a welcoming environment for all my students,ā he says. āI teach the history of rock music. I also teach a songwriting class for non-music majors. I believe that music belongs to everybody.ā