Music Faculty
Full-Time Faculty
- Dr. Mark Kano, Director of Performing Arts & Vocal Music Area Coordinator
- Dr. S. Timothy Glasscock, Choral Studies & Conducting Coordinator
- Dr. Louie Hehmam, Keyboard Area Coordinator
- Dr. Stacy Simpson, Director of Bands & Brass, Strings, Woodwinds Area Coordinator
Brass
- Dr. Stacy Simpson, trumpet
- Dr. Chris Schmidt, euphonium and tuba
- Dr. Stasi Fafalios, trombone
- Dr. Tyler Taylor, horn
- Dr. Lynn Steeves, horn
Choral
Jazz
Keyboard
Musicology
Music Technology
Music Theory
- Dr. Louie Hehman, theory
- Dr. S. Timothy Glasscock, choral writing and arranging
- Dr. Lynn Steeves, aural skills
- Dr. Tyler Taylor, composition
Percussion
Strings
- Jane Halliday, violin
- Danny Kiely, jazz bass
- Jonathan Mueller, viola
- Allison Olsen, cello
- Karl Olsen, bass
- Chris Roseland, classical guitar
- Craig Wagner, jazz guitar
Vocal Music
- Dr. Mark Kano, tenor
- Christina Booker, voice
- Aaron Eaves, baritone
- Gabriella Galletti, soprano
- Sarah Tonini, soprano
Woodwinds
Distinguished Faculty
- Stephen Black (In memoriam)
- Dr. Alexander T. Simpson, Jr.
- Sonny Stephens (In memoriam)
- Meme Tunnell, emeritus
Dr. Samantha Ryan Barnsfather
Dr. Samantha Ryan Barnsfather taught at the University of Florida and Santa Fe College
(Gainesville, FL) before joining the music faculty at Bellarmine University as an
Adjunct Professor of Music. She received her B.A. in Voice and History at Campbellsville
University in Campbellsville, KY, her M.M. in Music Education at Belmont University
(Nashville, TN) and a Ph.D. in Musicology (external cognates in Vocal Performance
and European History) from the University of Florida in Gainesville, FL.
Her research interests include 19th and 20th century British and Polish vocal music, music and national identity, music and gender, queer musicology, and the works of Frederick Delius and Ronald Stevenson. Dr. Barnsfather has made presentations at the Southern Chapter College Music Society Conference (Student Paper Award Recipient), National Conference of the College Music Society, American Musicological Society Southeast and Pacific Northwest Chapter Meetings, Nineteenth Century Studies Association Conference and the Society for American Music. She is the past-President of AMS’s South-Central chapter, and she has previously served as this organization as Vice-President and Program Committee Chair. She has published two essays in Salem Press’s publication Musicians and Composers of the 20th Century and has an entry on Ronald Stevenson in Grove Music Online.
Dr. Stephen M. Black
Stephen Black has performed extensively on both coasts as an organist, pianist, conductor
and singer. For fourteen years he made East Harlem his home, and conducted over fifty
choral concerts in the boroughs of New York City. As artistic director of Central
City Chorus in NYC Dr. Black presented both classical masterworks with orchestra and
NYC premieres of new works. He also served as a resident conductor of the women's
chamber choir AMUSE, the Greater New Haven Community Chorus, and Yale University Battell
Chapel Choir. He has frequently guest conducted ensembles such as the West Village
Chorale, Harlemstage, and the Empire City Men's Chorus.
Dr. Black is also active as a concert organist and professional singer. In 1999 he was one of six finalists in the American Guild of Organists Young Artist Competition, and is a winner of the Charles Ives Prize in organ performance from Yale University. Among his recital credits are performances on the great organs of Washington National Cathedral; St. Patrick's Cathedral, St. Thomas Church Fifth Avenue and Trinity Church Wall Street in New York City, and St. John's Cathedral in Los Angeles. As a professional singer specializing in contemporary music, Dr. Black has sung in world premieres of new works in Carnegie Hall and Avery Fisher Hall. He has performed and recorded new music with the New York Virtuoso Singers, the Gregg Smith Singers, the Society for Universal Sacred Music and the Vedantic Arts Ensemble. He has sung in vocal ensembles in concert performances by Barry Manilow and Sarah Brightman in Los Angeles.
Dr. Black holds graduate degrees in organ and choral conducting from Yale University and the University of Southern California. He is the Director of Music Ministry at St. James Catholic Church in Elizabethtown, KY.
Christina Booker
Christina Booker is a music educator and performer based in Louisville, KY. She holds
two master’s degrees: one in Kodaly music education and the other in vocal music performance.
With more than 10 years of teaching experience, Christina enjoys working with students
of all ages and backgrounds in both group and individual settings. She began her teaching
career in Muscle Shoals, Alabama before moving to Louisville and currently serves
as Music Director and voice faculty for Redline Performing Arts/Redline Institute
of Performing Arts, Classic Melodies Performance Institute, and is adjunct faculty
at Bellarmine University in Louisville, KY. She has also served as a guest teaching
artist with Kentucky Opera and has been featured on several other masterclasses, theatre
camps, and teaching workshops. As a performer, she made her international debut as
a soprano soloist for performances of Vivaldi’s Gloria in D and J.S. Bach’s Magnificat in D in Costa Rica and has been the soprano soloist in Mozart’s Requiem in D Minor and other masses and oratorios. Christina is also a choral scholar and cantor at
Cathedral of the Assumption in Louisville, KY. Other professional credits include
Junie B. Jones the Musical (Music Director/swing) with Derby Dinner Playhouse and Once On This Island (Storyteller/Mama Euralie understudy) with Actor’s Theatre of Louisville.
Anastasi Fafalios
Originally from Monessen, Pennsylvania, Dr. Anastasi Fafalios earned a Bachelor of
Science in Music Education from Slippery Rock University, a Masters in Music Performance
from the University of Louisville, and a Doctor of Musical Arts in Bass Trombone Performance
from the University of Cincinnati, College-Conservatory of Music (CCM). His teachers
include Peter Norton, Charles Vernon, George Flynn, Murray Crewe, Patrick Myers, Dr.
Brett Shuster, and Timothy Anderson.
Dr. Fafalios taught for thirteen years in the Jefferson County Public School District located in Louisville, Kentucky. During this time, he taught elementary general music for seven years, high school band for five years, and beginning band in grades four and five for eleven years. Dr. Fafalios has also taught at CCM and the University of Louisville Preparatory Department and Community Music Program. As a private trombone instructor, Dr. Fafalios has worked with many schools in the Louisville area.
An in-demand performer, Dr. Fafalios has worked with numerous ensembles including the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Opera, Louisville Orchestra, Louisville Pops, Louisville Ballet, Orchestra Kentucky, West Virginia Symphony Orchestra, Dayton Philharmonic, Battle Creek Symphony, Louisville Masters Chorale, Louisville Chamber Winds, and the Brass Band of Louisville. He has performed in orchestra pits for Broadway-based shows and with the Glenn Miller Orchestra, Blue Wisp Big Band, Cincinnati Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, and the Don Krekel Jazz Orchestra.
In his spare time, Dr. Fafalios likes to fish, study history, and cook. He enjoys being at home together with his fiancée, Alice, and their standard poodle, Apostolaki.
Gabriella Galletti
Gabriella Galletti is a soprano and voice educator devoted to fostering healthy technique,
expressive artistry, and authentic musical storytelling. She earned her Master of
Music in Vocal Performance from the University of Louisville and her Bachelor of Music
in Vocal Performance from the University of Memphis.
Gabriella made her professional debut with Kentucky Opera in Rigoletto and has since appeared in productions including The Magic Flute and Enemies, A Love Story. Her career has also taken her abroad to Germany and Austria, and she has shared the stage in concert with Broadway star Kristin Chenoweth. Further shaping her artistry, she has participated in masterclasses with composers Jake Heggie and Ben Moore.
Alongside her performance work, Gabriella is a teaching artist with Kentucky Opera, where she leads the Bravo Time program. This interactive initiative brings opera into classrooms across the region through storytelling, performance, and creative engagement, helping young audiences connect with the art form.
In her private studio, Gabriella creates a supportive and inclusive environment where singers develop strong technical foundations while discovering their individual voices. Many of her students have earned scholarships to leading music programs, continuing to thrive as both performers and musicians.
David George
David George is a native of Louisville, Kentucky and received his Degree in Piano
Performance from the University of Louisville where he studied with Lee Luvisi. He
is a member of the piano faculty at Bellarmine University, and is staff accompanist
for the Vocal Department at the University of Louisville. David has served as keyboardist
and musical director of children’s musical theatre, church pianist and organist, and
as accompanist for the Governor’s School for the Arts, All-County Choir, and the Louisville
Suzuki String Institute. He has worked with Bryn Terfel (Ryder Cup Closing Ceremony),
Jake Heggie (Composers Workshop Program), and most recently for Irish Tenor Anthony
Kearns. He also appears on CD recordings of new music by past and present composition
faculty at the University of Louisville. David performs regularly with many area musicians
in both public and private venues. As a recitalist, chamber musician and accompanist,
he has performed in a multitude of settings both in the U.S. and abroad, and is often
found on the concert stage in student or faculty recitals.
Dr. S. Timothy Glasscock
Dr. S. Timothy Glasscock, Choral Director and Department Chair for the Bellarmine
Music Department, has spent nearly three decades teaching and performing in the Louisville
Metro area. He holds the bachelors and masters degrees from U of L and a Doctorate
in conducting from University of Kentucky, and spent 12 years as Director of Vocal
Studies at Youth Performing Arts School, Kentucky's only full-time high school for
the performing arts. Dr. Glasscock is an active clinician and master class presenter,
leading European concert tours and conducting major works with orchestra over a wide
spectrum of musical literature. He has sung and conducted in 17 countries, and now
serves as Artistic Director of The Louisville Vocal Project, a professional chamber
choir specializing in renaissance and newly composed choral works. Glasscock's research
centers on Johannes Brahms's Ein deutsches Requiem, baroque-era burial music, and the intersection of music, aging, and end-of-life
issues.
Jane Halliday
Violinist, Jane Halliday, is a versatile musician with extensive performance experience
in a variety of musical genres. She studied violin with Paul Kling, Philipp Naegele,
Peter McHugh, and Timothy Baker, and has performed with orchestras and ensembles throughout
Kentucky. She has a B.A. in English from Smith College, and a B.M. in music performance
and an M.A. in Humanities & Civic Leadership, both from the University of Louisville.
Jane has a rich background providing support to artists such as Stevie Wonder, Josh Groban, Smokey Robinson and Rachel Grimes, played many shows for the Broadway series at the Kentucky Center for the Arts, and currently serves as Artist-in-Residence at Christ Church Cathedral in Louisville KY. She also has an avid interest in “early music” which she has pursued over the years as a vocalist, a baroque violinist and as a viola da gambist, through study and performance with various early music ensembles.
Besides her work as a classical musician, Jane is a superb jazz violinist specializing in “gypsy jazz” which honors the music of Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grapelli. She is an original member of Swing ‘39, an ensemble devoted to this unique genre of swing jazz. In 2016 she and singer-songwriter, Marion Halliday, formed a band called Trickster Sister with bassist Donna Bostock. They just celebrated the release of their first EP of original music, “Walking in the Tall Grass” at World Cafe Live in Philadelphia in November 2017.
Look for more info about Jane and her music on YouTube, Facebook, Swing39.com and Trickstersister.com.
J. Bryan Heath
J. Bryan Heath, a native of Slaughters, KY, is the Bass Trombonist of the Louisville
Orchestra. He has previously held positions with the Owensboro Symphony, the Illinois
Symphony, and Orchestra Kentucky of Bowling Green. He completed his Doctorate in Trombone
Performance at Indiana University. Bryan’s principal teachers include Raymond L. Conklin,
M. Dee Stewart, and Arnold Jacobs. An active teacher, he served as Adjunct Trombone
Faculty at Indiana State University from 2006-2009, and has been a guest lecturer
for the Indiana University CAP program. As a freelance artist Bryan has performed
with the Chicago, Nashville, Alabama, New Mexico, Pittsburgh, and Cincinnati Symphonies.
Having grown up on a horse farm in rural Kentucky, Bryan enjoys reaching back to his
roots by serving as the lead singer, guitarist, and yodeler in the traditional Cowboy
Band Suede Saddle.
Dr. Louie Hehman
Assistant Professor Louie Hehman serves as coordinator of Piano and Music Theory,
as well as director of the Preparatory Music Program at Bellarmine University. Dr.
Hehman is an active performer, educator, clinician, and researcher, and has performed
or presented at the Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) Conference, the National
Conference on Keyboard Pedagogy (NCKP), the MTNA Collegiate Symposium, and the Indiana,
Kentucky, and South Carolina Music Teachers Association state conferences. An active
adjudicator, and award-winning teacher, he served as the 2019 Chair of the Young Jury
for the Arthur Frasier International Piano Competition and is a two-time recipient
of the Steinway and Sons Top Teacher Award.
In 2018, Louie spent a summer studying in Vienna, Austria under acclaimed Schubert interpreter Hafez Babashahi, and in the same year participated in the South Carolina premier of Leonard Bernstein's MASS. Important teachers have included Charles Fugo, Kate Boyd, and Meme Tunnell; pedagogy mentors have included Sara Ernst, Scott Price, and current MTNA president Karen Thickstun. Louie earned his DMA (Doctor of Musical Arts) degree at the University of South Carolina and also holds an MM degree in piano pedagogy from Butler University and BA degrees in Music and History from Bellarmine University. In 2021, Louie was awarded a gold medal in the Grand Metropolitan International Music Competition and was consequently a featured artist for the International Goldberg Variations Charity Project. During the summer, Dr. Hehman teaches for the highly prestigious summer music camp at Interlochen Center for the Arts.
Todd Hildreth
Todd Hildreth is instructor of jazz piano at Bellarmine University where he also teaches
courses in Jazz, Pop, and Rock History. Todd's musical interest began with the accordion
at 10, and moved to Jerry Lee Lewis, Frank Zappa and Queen at 12. He enrolled at Bellarmine
University in 1985 with the intention of becoming an English teacher, but discovered
Oscar Peterson, Chick Corea and Keith Jarrett by the end of his first semester and
has never looked back. He has founded or been in collaboration with groups such as
The Java Men, King Kong, Liberation Prophecy, Squeeze-bot, Vgroove, The Louisville
Improvisors, and the Todd Hildreth trio. He teaches at the annual Jamey Aebersold
Summer Jazz Workshops, leads the music program at Ascension Lutheran Church and is
the musical director for The WHAS Crusade for Children's annual telethon. He has performed
or recorded with Don Braden, Stephanie Courtney (Flo from the Progressive commercials),
Aretha Franklin, Norah Jones, Dave Liebman, Rufus Reid, Joan Rivers, Bobby Shew, Dave
Stryker, and many others.
Margaret Foote Jamner
Margaret Foote Jamner is adjunct music faculty at Bellarmine University where she
teaches applied flute. Her teaching spans three decades, including The Westport School
of Music (Connecticut), East-West International Music Academy (Germany), Music Academy
of St. Francis in the Field (Louisville), Indiana University Southeast, and flute
coach for Western Middle School in Portland (Louisville).
Margaret holds a Bachelor of Music degree in flute and a Master of Arts degree in music history from the University of Louisville. For twelve years she performed as assistant principal and second flutist in The Louisville Orchestra. Her teachers have included Francis Fuge, Robert Dick, Michael Parloff, and Keith Underwood. Margaret has performed chamber music as guest artist with the Kentucky Center Chamber Players, as faculty of the East West International Music Festival in Altenburg, Germany, and as a founding member of Concorde: The Chamber Music Society of Westport, in Connecticut. Currently she is a member of the chamber ensemble les six.
Dr. Mark Kano

Dr. Mark Kano is Assistant Professor of Music, Vocal Music Area Coordinator, and Director of Chapel Music at Bellarmine University in Louisville, KY where he teaches Applied Voice, Vocal Pedagogy, Diction for Singers, Vocal Literature, Opera History, and directs the Men’s Choir and Lyric Theatre Workshop. He received a Bachelor of Music degree in Vocal Performance from Middle Tennessee State University and both the Master of Music and Doctor of Musical Arts degrees in Vocal Performance from the University of Kentucky. Kano’s research is on Francesco Paolo Tosti songs and their pedagogical benefits for the undergraduate lyric tenor voice.
Mark has performed regionally with opera companies and orchestras, such as Kentucky Opera, OperaLex, Cincinnati Opera, Nashville Opera, Kentucky Symphony Orchestra, Evansville Philharmonic Orchestra, Louisville Orchestra, and Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra, as well as others nationally. He is a member of the American Spiritual Ensemble, as well as the National Chorale, and is a frequent recitalist. Mark served as tenor section leader and soloist for 3 years with the Lexington Singers and has also performed with as a member and soloist with the Louisville Vocal Project and Bellarmine University Oratorio Society. Kano has garnered performances in some of our nation’s leading concert venues, such as the Kennedy Center for the Arts, David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center, and Carnegie Hall.
Mark made his international debut singing the role of Eisenstein in Die Fledermaus in Rome, Italy. Other roles in his repertoire include Tamino in Die Zauberflöte, Ferrando in Così fan tutte, Alfred in Die Fledermaus, Nanki Poo in The Mikado, Kaspar in Amahl & the Night Visitors, and the Witch in Hansel & Gretel. Additionally, he has performed many comprimario roles, including Gastone in La Traviata, Monostatos in Die Zauberflöte, the Emperor in Turandot, Borsa in Rigoletto, Ruiz in Il Trovatore, Remendado in Carmen, as well as roles in Porgy & Bess, La Bohème, and Samson et Dalila. Kano has been the tenor soloist in Mozart’s Requiem, Saint-Saëns’ Christmas Oratorio, Handel’s Messiah, Dubois’ The Seven Last Words of Christ, Beethoven’s Choral Fantasy, as well as other masses and oratorios.
A dedicated voice teacher, Dr. Kano’s students have been winners in various vocal competitions, participated in summer music festivals in the states and abroad, and have gone on to pursue music studies at University of Michigan Musical Theatre Program, Indiana University, Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music, The Julliard School and many others. Mark was selected to participate in the prestigious NATS Intern Program at the University of Colorado-Boulder in 2018 and served as the NATS Kentucky District Governor (2017-2019). Dr. Kano is an active masterclass clinician and adjudicator and has served as Visiting Instructor of Voice at the University of Kentucky, as well as on the voice faculties of Centre College, Transylvania University, Kentucky Center Governor’s School for the Arts, and Operafestival di Roma. He serves as Director of Music at St. Marks United Church of Christ in New Albany, IN and Mid-South Region Governor for National Association of Teachers of Singing (2019-2021).
Danny Kiely
Danny Kiely, instructor of jazz bass and director of several jazz combos, is a graduate
of Bellarmine University and holds a BA in Music and Fine Art. He played in the Dominic
Spera Big Band while pursuing further coursework at Indiana University.
An accomplished performer in a wide range of styles on both upright and electric bass, Danny has performed nationally coast-to-coast and internationally in France, Italy, Austria, Germany, Spain, Switzerland, Portugal, Canada and Japan. He has played with a wide array of artists including Ira Sullivan, Josh Ritter, BonnIe Prince Billy, and Kandace Sprigs.
Danny also has extensive experience in music production and recording. As a recording engineer, mixer and/or producer for both independent and major label artists and film, Danny has recorded projects for Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Prince Phillip Mitchel, Tyrone Cotton and many others.
Danny is a lover of all music and is particularly drawn to jazz. His teaching experience spans over three decades. And he is currently an adjunct professor teaching jazz bass at Bellarmine University.
Danny lives in Old Louisville with his wife, Catherine, and their two dogs and two cats.
Chris Kincaid

Chris Kincaid is a musician, audio engineer, and educator spending his free time building synthesizers and audio equipment.
He completed his M.M. in Music Composition at the University of Louisville writing works for opera, orchestra, and chamber ensembles. As an audio engineer Chris specializes in on-location recording of classical music. He is the recording engineer for the Louisville Orchestra and has recorded many other ensembles including the Louisville Winds, the Louisville Chamber Choir, as well as countless high school orchestras, bands, and choirs.
He lectures at Bellarmine University and the Purdue School of Engineering and Technology on topics including digital audio and recording techniques. Chris has designed innovative curriculum in applied music technology, as the laptop/midi controller combo becomes as mainstream as traditional instruments. He has presented his findings at both the International Computer Music Conference and the National Association of Schools of Music (NASM) Annual Meeting. He serves as the program director of Audio Builders Workshop (ABW), a workgroup of the Audio Engineering Society (AES) which promotes DIY audio electronics education. As an active member of AES Chris has chaired the ABW technical program for several national AES conventions. Chris has presented his work related to music technology at conferences including AES, Percussive Arts Society International Convention, and American Music Therapy Association Conference.
Chris enjoys writing and performing music with modular synthesizers and continues writing concert music, most recently a string quartet inspired by the weaving traditions of Appalachia. His music can be found on Spotify, Bandcamp, and through his own website at ChrisKincaid.com.
William Lamkin
William Lamkin is a musician, so/ware/game developer, audio engineer, and educator
with a passion for all things media art. His works range from internationally performed
compositions, experimental tabletop roleplaying games, to vocal synthesis so/ware
and everything in between.
William graduated from the University of Louisville with a Bachelor of Music in Music Composition and from Carnegie Mellon University with a Master of Science in Music & Technology. His thesis, “Argot: A Phonological Sample Instrument – Vocal Characteristics as Inspiration for Emergent Sound Design”, documented the development of Argot, his opensource vocal synthesizer that uses phonological principles to allow a user to dynamically generate concatenative syllables in a live music setting.
In his art, William focuses on engaging with the interactive space held between artist and audience and the possibilities of the digital medium within it. His percussion trio composition Framing, which won the TorQ Percussion Seminar Composition Competition in Canada, breaks down the barriers between performer and composition by crafting a theatrical narrative around the performers preparing a vibraphone during live performance. His role-playing game Here For You creates a framework for interpretive narrative gameplay in private text chat channels. The game has been translated into Japanese and maintains an international community.
William is an active part of the Louisville music community, songwriting in all genres and performing in rock bands and electronic music groups, as well as being a freelance music producer and audio engineer.
He is currently an Adjunct Professor at Bellarmine University, teaching courses in Music Technology, and a Part-Time Lecturer at University of Louisville, teaching courses in Composition and New Media.
Jonathan Mueller
Violist Jonathan Mueller has been a member of the Louisville Orchestra since 2006
and has served as Adjunct Instructor of Viola and Violin at Bellarmine University
since 2009. Mr. Mueller finished his Master of Music in Viola Performance at Rice
University’s Shepherd School in May of 2006 under the instruction of former Cleveland
Quartet Violist, James Dunham. While at the Shepherd School, Mr. Mueller performed
in master classes for the Tokyo, American and Mendelssohn Quartets. During his years
at Rice, Mr. Mueller obtained orchestral experience with the Austin Symphony and the
Symphony of Southeast Texas in Beaumont. He received the Bachelor of Music degree
from Indiana University where he studied with former LA Philharmonic Principal Violist,
Alan DeVeritch. While in Indiana, Mr. Mueller was a member of the Evansville Philharmonic
for two seasons. In 2002, Mr. Mueller attended the National Repertory Orchestra in
Breckenridge, Colorado where he had the opportunity to perform Bach’s 6th Brandenburg
Concerto. In 2003 and 2004 Mr. Mueller attended the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival
in Germany, where he had the pleasure of playing under the batons of Neville Mariner,
Christoph Eschenbach, Heinrich Schiff and Kurt Masur. Originally from Columbus, Ohio,
Mr. Mueller now lives in the Highlands with his wife Krista and their son Everett.
Marilyn Nije
Marilyn Nije graduated from Indiana University with a Bachelor of Music Education,
a Master´s degree from Manhattan School of Music and a performance certificate from
the Sweelinck Conservatory in Amsterdam, Holland where she studied with George Pieterson
from the Concertgebouw Orchestra. She was Assistant principal Eb clarinet in the Mexico
City Philharmonic for almost 20 years. Since 2009, she has lived in Louisville playing
extra clarinet-Eb with the Louisville, Indianapolis, Evansville, Owensboro and Lafayette
Symphony Orchestras.She is a founding member of Sinfonietta Ventus, a woodwind octet
based in Mexico City and since 1990 has played clarinet and Eb with the Orquesta Sinfonica
de Mineria.
Marilyn has recorded under the direction of Carlos Miguel Prieto, Jorge Mester, Eduardo Mata and Guido Maria Guida. She is adjunct professor of clarinet at Bellarmine University and has also taught clarinet at the University of Louisville and Campbellsville Universities.With Sinfonietta Ventus and the Mexico City Philharmonic she has toured extensively in Mexico, Europe, China, Colombia and the United States.
Allison Braid Olsen
Allison Braid Olsen, cello, received a Bachelor of Music degree in Violoncello Performance
from Rice University, a Master of Music degree from the University of Akron, and participated
in the Professional Studies Program at the Cleveland Institute of Music. Her teachers
have included Stephen Geber (former Principal Cellist of the Cleveland Orchestra),
Desmond Hoebig (former Principal Cellist of the Cleveland Orchestra), and Shirley
Trepel (former Principal Cellist of the Houston Symphony).
Ms. Olsen is currently a member of the Louisville Orchestra. Her previous positions include Principal Cellist of the Akron Symphony Orchestra, Principal Cellist of the Owensboro Symphony, and the Marini String Quartet. She has participated in numerous music festivals in this country and around the world: the Lancaster Festival, Spoleto USA, Jerusalem International Symphony Orchestra, the National Repertory Orchestra, the National Orchestral Institute, Kent/Blossom Music Festival, North Carolina School for the Arts European Tour, Grand Teton Music Festival College Seminar, and the Lakeside Summer Symphony.
In addition to Bellarmine University, Ms. Olsen teaches at Indiana University Southeast. Her previous teaching positions include the University of Akron Musical Arts Program, Cleveland Public Schools, and the Educator's Music Studio in Cleveland.
Karl Olsen
Karl Olsen received his Bachelor of Music Education degree from the University of
Wisconsin – Stevens Point, studying with David Dunn, and his Master of Music degree
from Indiana University, studying with Bruce Bransby. Mr. Olsen also counts as invaluable
his study with pedagogues Gary Karr and Stuart Sankey, as well as with Stanley Ritchie’s
Baroque Orchestra.
The Louisville Orchestra first brought Mr. Olsen to Kentucky in 2001, direct from working with the illustrious New World Symphony Orchestra, a fellowship intensive orchestra under the baton of Michael Tilson-Thomas, Music Director of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. As a member of the Louisville Orchestra bass section, Mr. Olsen began performing and teaching throughout the area, and started with Bellarmine University in 2015.
Mr. Olsen also serves as Principal Bassist of Orchestra Kentucky Bowling Green, and has performed with the Cincinnati Symphony, Charleston Symphony and New Mexico Philharmonic Orchestras, with the Sarasota Opera Orchestra, and as Assistant Principal Bass for both the Evansville Philharmonic and Owensboro Symphony Orchestras.
Terry O'Mahoney
Terry O'Mahoney is Adjunct Professor of Music at Bellarmine University, where he teaches
Jazz Drums, Applied Percussion, Rock Drums, Percussion Ensemble, and Jazz Combo. He
is an active performer in the Louisville area with various jazz and classical ensembles,
including the Louisville Orchestra. He was formerly a Professor of Music at St. Francis
Xavier University in Antigonish (Nova Scotia, Canada), where he taught classical and
jazz drumming, World Music, and directed the Latin Jazz, Percussion Ensemble, and
small jazz ensembles. He is active as a performer, adjudicator, and clinician throughout
the US and Canada. He holds a B.M.Ed. from the University of Louisville and a Masters
in Jazz Performance from the University of Miami (FL). He also studied privately with
jazz drumming legend Jeff Hamilton (Los Angeles, CA). He has performed on drumset
with numerous jazz artists (Mike Stern, Randy Brecker, Phil Woods, Curtis Fuller,
Jimmy Heath, Lew Soloff, and others) in addition to his frequent symphonic performances
with Symphony Nova Scotia (Halifax, NS) on percussion and drum set. He has three books
in print - Motivic Drumset Soloing, Jazz Drumming Transitions, and 100 Essential Drumset Lessons - for the Hal Leonard Corporation. His articles have appeared in Modern Drummer and Percussive Notes magazines and his compositions have been published by Per-Mus Publications. He plays
Vic Firth drumsticks and Crescent Cymbals exclusively.
Dr. Stephen Penn
Dr. Stephen Penn works in the voice area at Bellarmine University as a pianist and
vocal coach. He recently served as a Guest Artist with Centre College 2015-2017. Prior
to returning to Kentucky, he was Music Director of Outreach with Opera Tampa and Music
Director with The University of Tampa Opera Workshop. Previously, Dr. Penn was a Lecturer
in Opera with the UK School of Music. Recent engagements include pianist and vocal
coach for St. Petersburg Opera, Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Theater of St. Louis, Central
City Opera, Kentucky Opera, the Kentucky Opera Young Artist Program, and the Orlando
Opera Company. Mr. Penn taught for seven summers as Music Director of the Music Theatre
Discipline at the Kentucky Governor's School for the Arts.
While pursuing doctoral studies in Collaborative Piano at New England Conservatory as a student of Grammy Award-winning artist Margo Garrett, Stephen worked closely with noted vocal coaches Pierre Vallet, Warren Jones, Martin Isepp, and John Moriarty. Former positions include Music Director of Opera Workshop at New England Conservatory; coaching, diction and repertoire at The Hartt School; North Carolina School for the Arts; the University of Connecticut at Storrs, and The Boston Conservatory. Dr. Penn also trained at The American Institute of Musical Studies in Graz, Austria, on a Gramma Fisher Fellowship for coaching studies. BM, University of Kentucky; MM, Western Michigan University; DMA, New England Conservatory of Music.
Chris Roseland
Chris Roseland holds a Bachelor of the Arts from Bellarmine University from 2011.
He has an undergraduate degree in Music Performance with an emphasis in Jazz Guitar.
While obtaining his undergraduate degree Chris studied with Jeff Sherman and Craig
Wagner for his jazz education while simultaneously studying Classical Guitar with
Stephen Mattingly and David Walker. He has been invited by organizations such as the
Louisville Guitar Society, University of Kentucky Guitar Society and Bellarmine University
Music Department as a featured soloist. During the 2013 Guitar Foundation of America
Festival, Chris, along with the University of Louisville Guitar Ensemble, premiered
Gerald Garcia “Blue Nose Ballads” before an evening concert of Aniello Desiderio.
In 2014, Chris graduated from the University of Louisville with a Masters in Classical
Guitar. Chris has been lucky enough to experience master classes with a great deal
of brilliant artists such as Marcin Dylla, Dale Kavanagh, Denis Azabagic, and Oscar
Ghiglia.
Chris Schmidt, D.M.E.

Chris Schmidt, D.M.E., is an Eastman Performing Artist and Instructor of Tuba and Euphonium at Western Kentucky University and Indiana University Southeast. He is also on staff as a low brass specialist with the Louisville Youth Wind Symphony, and his teaching and research interests include brass pedagogy, embouchure development, applied studio instruction, and wind ensemble conducting performance.
Dr. Schmidt earned the Doctor of Music Education degree from Liberty University, where his research examined pedagogical approaches to brass embouchure development and applied studio practices. He holds a Master of Music in Performance with an emphasis in Wind Ensemble Conducting from the University of Louisville, where he studied conducting with Dr. Fred Speck and tuba with John Jones. While at Louisville, he appeared as a guest tuba soloist with the University Concert Band, performing James Curnow's Fantasia for Tuba and Band under the direction of Dr. Greg Byrne. He also holds the Bachelor of Music Education and the Master of Arts in Secondary Education from Morehead State University, where he served as principal tuba in the MSU Symphony Band and studied with Dr. Earle Louder, Dr. Stacy Baker, and Dr. Richard Miles.
Dr. Schmidt’s ensembles have been invited to perform at regional, national, and international conferences, including the Indiana University Southeast Tuba-Euphonium Ensemble's performances at the International Euphonium-Tuba Festival from 2023 to 2025 and at the ITEA Midwest Regional Tuba-Euphonium Conference in 2024. Additional ensemble appearances include the Youth Performing Arts School Tuba-Euphonium Ensemble at the 2022 ITEA Midwest Regional Conference and the Oldham County High School Tuba-Euphonium Ensemble at the 2013 and 2021 Kentucky Music Educators Association Conferences.
His students have earned placements in the Kentucky and Indiana All-State Bands and national honor ensembles, including the John Philip Sousa National High School Honor Band. As a performer, Dr. Schmidt has presented solo recitals at the International Euphonium-Tuba Festival from 2023 to 2025 and has appeared regularly as a guest soloist with wind ensembles and brass bands throughout the Louisville, Kentucky, metropolitan area.
Dr. Schmidt is the owner of CP Schmidt Music, LLC, based in Louisville, Kentucky, where he maintains an applied private studio of approximately sixty students and provides marching band drill design and music arrangements for high school and collegiate ensembles. He frequently serves as an adjudicator for marching band competitions, concert band festivals, and solo and ensemble events. His performance affiliations include the WKU and IUS Brass quintets, Chamber Winds Louisville Concert Band, the Derby City Brass Band, and the Indiana University Southeast Band and Orchestra.
Dr. Alexander T. Simpson Jr.
Alexander T. Simpson Jr., Associate Professor, directs the Bellarmine Handbell ensemble,
teaches Music Literature and teaches courses in the IDC and Veritas Programs. Dr.
Simpson received his undergraduate degree from Dartmouth College, his M.M. from Converse
College, and his Ph.D. from the University of Kentucky. Simpson has accompanied for
the Kentucky Opera, the Charleston Opera Company, the Spartanburg Opera, the Converse
College Opera Workshop, and the University of Louisville Opera Theatre.
Dr. Simpson has taught on the Music Faculty of the Kentucky Governor’s School for the Arts for 26 years, serving as Choral Director and Vocal Division Chairperson. He is the founder and Artistic Director of the Black Classical Artists of Louisville, an ensemble specializing in compositions by African-American composers. This group has performed throughout the Kentuckiana region as well as at the Piccolo Spoleto Festival in Charleston South Carolina, boasting members who have who have performed with the Louisville Orchestra, the Cincinnati Orchestra, the Indianapolis Symphony, the San Francisco Opera, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Metropolitan Opera.
Both a founding member and president of the Kentuckiana Branch of the National Association of Negro Musicians, Dr. Simpson serves as advisor for the Bellarmine Black Student Union (BSU) and coordinates the annual ‘Traditional Negro Spiritual’ Voice Competition as well as many other Black History Month commemorations.
Dr. Stacy Simpson
Stacy Simpson is Instructor of Trumpet at Bellarmine University. She has been lead
trumpet at Derby Dinner Playhouse for twelve years and performs regularly with the
Louisville Orchestra. Stacy is a former member of the St. Louis Symphony and has performed
with many of the top orchestras in the country. She has won numerous awards and competitions,
including first place at the International Trumpet Guild Mock Orchestra Audition,
the prestigious Fischoff Chamber Music Competition with the Canterbury Brass, the
University of Louisville Solo Competition (twice), the Cincinnati-College Conservatory
of Music Solo Competition, and has been a featured artist on WGUC of Cincinnati, Ohio.
Stacy loves sharing her passion for music-making by maintaining a full trumpet studio
in her home. She has held teaching positions at Campbellsville College, Central State
University, and Sinclair Community College as well at Indiana University and University
of Kentucky. Stacy received her BM from University of Louisville, MM from Indiana
University, and is currently working on her DMA at the University of Kentucky.
Dr. Lynn Steeves
Lynn Steeves received her Doctorate of Musical Arts degree in horn performance from
Stony Brook University where she studied with Ann Ellsworth and Bill Purvis. She earned
her Bachelors degree in horn performance from the University of Kentucky, studying
with David Elliott, and her Masters degree in horn performance from Florida State
University where she studied with Michelle Stebleton and served as the horn studio's
teaching assistant. In addition to teaching theory at Bellarmine, Dr. Steeves currently
teaches horn sectionals at several area schools and maintains a private horn and piano
studio. Dr. Steeves has performed around the country with such groups as the Tallahassee
Symphony Orchestra, Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra, the Long Island Concert Pops,
and is currently first horn in the Louisville Winds.
Sonny Stephens (In Memoriam)

In Fall of 2021, the Bellarmine Music Department lost our beloved bass instructor
Sonny Stephens. Sonny Stephens was a native of Louisville, KY, and held a BME from
the University of Louisville where his primary instrument was flute. While at UofL,
Sonny also began playing jazz bass with fellow students and trumpeters Pat Harbison
and Dave Rogers. Sonny became one of Louisville’s most in-demand bassists, playing
regularly with saxophonist Ron Jones and as a member of Walker & Kays, where he not only played bass but sang. Sonny studied with Rufus Reid and sited
Paul Chambers, Jimmy Garrison, and George Mraz as major influences. Sonny was a greatly
versatile musician who performed R&B, rock, and pop music in Japan and across the
nation.
In addition to a busy performance schedule, Sonny was a truly beloved member of our
department, where he taught bass and coached small jazz ensembles for many years.
His impact upon our students, faculty and alumni is immeasurable and he will be dearly
missed.
Tyler Taylor
Tyler Taylor (1992) is a composer-performer and teaching artist from Louisville, KY.
His work explores creating abstract musical analogies for social-political happenings
both present and past.
Taylor’s recent honors include the Cleveland Orchestra Daniel R. Lewis Composer Fellowship (2025–28), the San Francisco Symphony Michael Morgan Prize (2024), the Copland House Residency Award (2023), an I-Park Foundation Residency (2023), and the Louisville Orchestra Creator Corps Residency (2022–23).
As a music educator, he was recently appointed as part-time instructor of Composition, Music Theory, and Horn at Bellarmine University. He teaches Composition and Horn at the Louisville Academy of Music, and has established and taught young composer programs with several organizations including the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra and the Louisville Orchestra.
He has been commissioned by the Cleveland Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony, Davis Hale, Adam Sadberry, Jon P. Cherry, the Louisville Orchestra, Washington and Lee State University, the Chicago Composers Orchestra, the Indiana University New Music Ensemble, the National Orchestral Institute, and more. His work has also been recognized by awards including the New Music USA Creator Fund (2024), the BMI Student Composer Award (2019) and the Howard Hanson Ensemble Prize (2017, 2016).
Tyler holds degrees from Indiana University (Doctor of Music with minors in Music Theory & Horn Performance), the Eastman School of Music (Master of Music), and the University of Louisville (Bachelor of Music).
Sarah Tonini
Sarah Tonini, soprano, is a passionate performer and educator dedicated to exploring
the full potential of the human voice. Guided by the philosophy that “your heart already
knows you’re a singer—the rest is just practice,” she has inspired students for more
than 15 years. Since returning to Louisville in 2013, Sarah has performed with Kentucky
Opera, CenterStage, Redline Performing Arts, and Mind’s Eye Theatre. A devoted recitalist,
she has appeared in concerts benefiting organizations such as the American Red Cross
and Hope House in Nashville, and she champions women artists as a founding member
of Nevertheless Arts Ensemble, a nonprofit supporting creative voices.
Sarah earned her Master of Music from the University of Tennessee and her Bachelor of Music from the University of South Florida. She currently serves on the voice faculty at Bellarmine University and maintains a thriving private teaching practice at Smart Singer Studio.
Meme Tunnell (Distinguished Professor Emerita)

Meme Tunnell is a former Assistant Professor of Music at Bellarmine University in Louisville, Kentucky, where she taught piano and served as Staff Accompanist for thirty years, and also founded the Preparatory Music Program. She has performed as adjunct keyboardist with the Louisville Orchestra since 1988, and formerly was principal keyboardist for the Meridian Symphony, Gulf Coast Symphony, and Champaign-Urbana Symphony Orchestras, and the Sinfonia da Camera of Illinois. Ms. Tunnell’s recording credits include the Coronet label CDs Melancholia and Lumen, and the Centaur Records Passages, The Morning Trumpet, and Nevolution with trumpeter Michael Tunnell; Mixed Doubles with Michael Tunnell and tubist Fritz Kaenzig, on the Coronet label; Chamber Music, featuring saxophonist Joseph Lulloff, on the Veriatza label; and the 2009 TNT Productions CD Look Within with trumpeter Patrick Henry Hughes. She is a former member of the piano faculties at the University of Southern Mississippi and S.U.N.Y.-Potsdam College. Since her retirement from regular teaching in 2021, Ms. Tunnell continues to be an active presence in the music department, presenting guest lectures, masterclasses, and participating in the Oratorio Society.
Craig Wagner
Craig Wagner graduated from Bellarmine University in 1993 with a BA degree in Music
and is recognized as one of the most versatile young guitarists on the jazz scene
today. Craig currently teaches at Bellarmine University and the University of Louisville,
Steilberg String Instruments, Kentucky Country Day School and for the Jamey Aebersold
Summer Jazz Workshops. As a faculty member at the University of Louisville, Craig
has been a performer/clinician in Poland and Brazil and has performed with many jazz
luminaries including Lee Konitz, Dave Samuels, and Bill Watrous. He has also performed
Rhapsody in Blue arranged for two guitars and orchestra with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra conducted
by Erich Kunzel, and the Windsor Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by John Morris.
Craig is featured on numerous recordings, including the Mel Bay DVD Masters of Fingerstyle Guitar Volume 2. He has several new fingerstyle guitar arrangements of jazz standards in Fingerstyle Jazz in conjunction with Warner Bros and Mel Bay. In 1998 he released an instructional/performance
video called The Art of Solo Fingerstyle Jazz Guitar for Stefan Grossman's Guitar Workshop video series. A quick Google search yields
a vast array of Craig’s musical activities. He lives in Louisville, Kentucky with
his wife and three sons.
Tony Watson
Tony Watson, part-time instructor of flute at Bellarmine University, is an active performer and
teacher. In 2023-25 he was selected to play with the National Flute Association’s
Professional Flute Choir. Locally, he has performed in pit orchestras for many theatre
companies, and on stage with the Louisville Orchestra. He has also performed with companies as diverse as the Kentucky Opera, the Louisville Master Chorale, Actors Theatre and Squallis Puppeteers.
Dr. Watson maintains a full studio and coaches flute sections for many of the area’s strongest bands, including the Youth Performing Arts School, Louisville Male High School, and Floyd Central High School. He holds degrees from the University of Georgia, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and Valdosta State University.
Dr. Daniel Worley
A native of Louisville Kentucky, Daniel has a D.M.A. in Music Composition from the
University of Michigan and a B.M. in Theory/Composition (Guitar emphasis) from the
University of Louisville. He’s received commissions from the Albany Symphony, Tulsa
Philharmonic, SEAMUS/ASCAP, and saxophonist Timothy McAllister among others. His dissertation,
Freak Show, was the first concept album accepted as a dissertation by a major composition
program. In the last 15 or so years Daniel has: built and run two recording studios;
produced, recorded and/or mastered more albums than he can remember, including records
from his roots-rock band CityGoat, the experimental improvisation ensemble, the Trace
Trio, and most recently Midnight Sun, Morning Moon with vocalist Jennifer Diamond
and saxophonist Dave Clark, and High Crimes with The Afrophysicists; taught composition,
electronic music, orchestration, counterpoint, guitar, music production, and the History
of Rock and Roll, at UofM, UofL, Centre College, and Bellarmine University. He is
currently performing as often as possible as a guitarist and/or singer-songwriter,
both with jam-band 4th Street Station, and as part of the Diamond/Worley/Clark trio,
and is now the newest guitarist in the Louisville-based Afrobeat band The Afrophysicists.
Andy Oberhausen
Andy Oberhausen, Adjunct Instructor of Saxophone, is a Louisville native who recently
returned home after more than 20 years. He received his BM in Saxophone Performance
from Vanderbilt University, a MM in Jazz Studies from College-Conservatory of Music
at University of Cincinnati (CCM), and his Teacher’s Certification in Music Education
from DePaul University. Andy is an active performer, educator, composer, and clinician
and has lead and joined several groups including his most recent project of original
music, Ida Lupino, Andy Oberhausen’s Breadwinners, Alysheba, and numerous others.
Andy is currently on staff at Louisville Male High School as a sectional coach and
saxophone instructor, and has held positions as the jazz band director and saxophone
instructor at Buffalo Grove High School in Buffalo Grove, IL, and the general music,
band, and orchestra teacher at Edgewood Middle School in Highland Park, IL. In addition,
he has been a saxophone instructor at numerous other schools throughout the years
and currently maintains a thriving online and home lesson studio as well. Andy had
been active in numerous music scenes before returning to Louisville, including the
last 14 years in the vibrant Chicago jazz and improvised music scene as well as scenes
in Nashville, TN, Cincinnati, OH, Raleigh, NC, and Aspen, CO. He lives in the Highlands
neighborhood with his wife Stephanie and twin sons Dash and Fisher.
Aaron Eaves
Baritone and Kentucky native Aaron Eaves is a professional singer and teacher of singing.
He is currently finishing a Doctorate in Musical Arts at the University of Kentucky
and recently was a hired choral fellow with the Spoleto Festival where he was a part
of the production of Barber's Vanessa. In the fall of 2023 he will join the voice
faculty at Bellarmine University as an adjunct professor of voice. He has performed
many opera roles and recently sang the role of Papageno in The Magic Flute and Schaunard
in La Boheme with the University of Kentucky Opera Theatre. He has performed other
major roles such as the Count in Le Nozze di Figaro at the Estates Theatre in Prague
and Marcello in La Bohème in Croatia. He received a Master of Music in Vocal Performance
and Pedagogy from Westminster Choir College in 2018 before attending the University
of Kentucky. He also performed in many productions with the Westminster Opera Theatre
while at Westminster Choir College including Dr. Falke in Die Fledermaus and Le Marquis
de la Force in Dialogues des Carmélites. He has performed in major concerts including
the bass soloist in Messiah with the Garden State Philharmonic Orchestra and the title
role of Elijah with the Westminster Symphonic Choir. He has also competed in many
competitions and was a 2020 Alltech Vocal Scholarship Contest finalist and encouragement
award winner. He was also a semifinalist at the Orpheus National Vocal Competition
and a district competitor for the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 Metropolitan Opera
Laffont competition.