Jordan Smith, D.M.A.
Adjunct Faculty of Arts
About Dr. Smith
Dr. Jordan P. Smith is a Princeton-based saxophonist and conductor. He completed his D.M.A. at Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, where he studied with Dr. Paul Cohen. He holds an M.M. degree in Saxophone Performance from Manhattan School of Music (MSM) and a B.M. in Music Education from The College of New Jersey (TCNJ)
Dr. Smith has concertized extensively throughout the United States and internationally in Germany, Austria, the Czech Republic, and Greece as a soloist, chamber, and orchestral musician, and has recently performed with the New World Symphony, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, and more under such conductors such as Michael Tilson Thomas and Robert Spano. Recent performance venues have included Haydn Hall in Eisenstadt, Austria, Carnegie Hall’s Stern Auditorium, Lincoln Center’s Bruno Walter Auditorium, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Knight Concert Hall at the Adrienne Arsht Center in Miami, and many more. As a chamber musician in New York City, Jordan has premiered over 30 works by composers from around the world. He is also a member of the Manhattan Saxophone Quartet (MSQ) and the Nottingham Trio (violin, saxophone, piano).
More
“My teaching philosophy is first and foremost dedicated to the idea that the joy of music resides in everyone. A music teacher’s job, whether at the elementary or collegiate level, is to help unlock this joy through the freeing of students from the constraints of technique, their instrument, and their fear of failure. Indeed, the goal of musical instruction is to eventually set the student free from the academic, allowing them to experience music in a deeply personal way, and then to share this personal experience with others. This sharing of musical joy, wonder, and discovery is what has helped to keep classical music alive and well after hundreds of years.”
“My teaching philosophy is first and foremost dedicated to the idea that the joy of music resides in everyone. A music teacher’s job, whether at the elementary or collegiate level, is to help unlock this joy through the freeing of students from the constraints of technique, their instrument, and their fear of failure. Indeed, the goal of musical instruction is to eventually set the student free from the academic, allowing them to experience music in a deeply personal way, and then to share this personal experience with others. This sharing of musical joy, wonder, and discovery is what has helped to keep classical music alive and well after hundreds of years.”
COURSES TAUGHT
Career & Accomplishments
Degrees
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•Rutgers University, D.M.A.
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•Manhattan School of Music, M.M.
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•The College of New Jersey, B.M.
Accomplishments
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•Premiered over 30 works for the Saxophone
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•Can be heard on Blue Griffin, Navona, and Carrier Records
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•Recorded Music for the independent film, "FACE" by Masa Gibson
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•Has performed in Greece, Germany, Czech. Republic, Austria, and throughout U.S.
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•Published in several major journals including the Saxophone Symposium, TEMPO, and the Saxophone Journal.