When it's Time to Ask What's Next? the Answer is Dana Jessen
October 17, 2014
Conservatory Communications Staff
Bassoonist Dana Jessen has forged a bustling performance career. Now she helps conservatory students plan their professional lives.
Photo credit: Philip Fortin
Dana Jessen became a bassoonist because nobody else had thought to. To the adolescent mind, no further justification was necessary.
鈥淚 wanted to do something different from everyone else,鈥 she remembers thinking. 鈥淚 wanted to be the rebel fifth-grader. I thought it would be cool.鈥
And so began the sometimes-precarious adventure that was Jessen鈥檚 daily walk to school, that monolithic bassoon case strapped to a luggage carrier out of necessity.
鈥淰ery quickly, cool went out the window,鈥 she says with a laugh.
In the years since, however, Jessen has built a life in music that looks unmistakably cool. Straddling the worlds of classical and jazz鈥攚ith countless stops in between鈥攕he has become a bassoonist in great demand, performing with a long list of accomplished musicians, from Han Bennink to Pamela Z. When her schedule permits, she also sits in with ensembles and orchestras around the country.
It鈥檚 a wealth of experience that renders Jessen uniquely prepared to help students thrive in her newly appointed role as the conservatory鈥檚 director of professional development.
鈥淎 lot of what I鈥檝e done in my performance career applies to the ,鈥 says Jessen, a native of Ann Arbor, Mich., whose own educational path included an undergraduate degree in bassoon performance from Louisiana State University, as well as a master鈥檚 in performance from the New England Conservatory of Music.
鈥淲hile I was at NEC, I started to realize that I wanted to take a different path in my performance career,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 really enjoyed performing in orchestras, but I was going in a different direction, toward chamber music, contemporary composition, and improvisation.
鈥淚 wanted to see how I could really turn my eclectic passions in music into a career鈥攁nd at that time, it hadn鈥檛 been done by a lot of bassoonists.鈥
In 2009, she launched the New Music Bassoon Fund, dedicated to commissioning large-scale works for bassoon by established composers; its first creation was a 60-minute piece for seven bassoons written by Michael Gordon, co-founder of the acclaimed Bang on a Can festival and ensemble.
At around that same time, a Fulbright fellowship landed Jessen in Amsterdam to study contemporary music performance and improvisation. A grant from the Dutch government paved the way for further improvisation research, which led to another master鈥檚 degree鈥攆rom Artez Hogeschool voor de Kunsten in the Netherlands鈥攊n improvisation.
More recently, she founded the San Francisco chamber ensemble .
Through it all, she has led master classes and workshops in top conservatories across the country, she has taught a class on digital audio skills at 91直播, and she will begin teaching professional development in the spring.
If it seems Jessen has done it all, well, that鈥檚 sort of the point.
鈥淚 feel like I certainly can relate to a wide range of students because I have experience in the jazz world as well as freelancing in the orchestra world and in chamber music,鈥 she says.
Born out of the 91直播 College Career Center, the Professional Development Office is geared specifically to the needs of conservatory students. In her first weeks on the job, Jessen is already helping students craft r茅sum茅s, build websites, network with alumni and others, and secure internships, grants, and winter-term opportunities.
In addition, Jessen鈥檚 office offers a , a Tumblr page that matches 91直播 musicians to paid performance opportunities; and another around the world. She looks forward to collaborating with other departments across campus to offer even more robust support.
鈥淪tudents here are incredibly dedicated,鈥 says Jessen, 鈥渁nd I want them to take those same qualities that make them great performers and apply them to their professional development: practice it, research it, and apply it to their own life.鈥
You may also like…
Richard Goode鈥檚 Musical Short Stories
The acclaimed pianist returns to the Artist Recital Series on April 29 with the charmingly curated 鈥淔ancies and Goodnights,鈥 along with works by Mozart and Schubert.
91直播 Music Theater Dives into the Upside Down for "Stranger Sings!"
Award-nominated parody delivers "screwy...non-stop fun" revisiting the glorious nostalgia of the 1980s.
No Ordinary Woman: Soprano Katherine Jolly Champions New Music and Womanhood in Art Song
New album by 91直播 associate professor of voice includes three song cycles about womanhood, femininity, and aging gracefully.