Westmont News
The 14th annual Guild Scholarship Competition Highland Violinist Takes Top Guild Prize
By
Scott Craig
Violinist Nathan Schafer of Highland won the Westmont Music Department’s 14th annual Guild Scholarship Competition and was awarded the $15,000 annual Guild Scholarship on March 7 in Deane Chapel.
This year’s incredibly talented group of musicians also included Isaac Wu, a violinist from Glendale; Ava Siebelink, a cellist from Corona; Josiah Mitchell, a baritone from Santa Barbara; Monet Pelluer, a Seattle-based soprano; and Hannah Schweiger, a violinist from Newport Beach.
Following the recital with the six guild finalists, past Guild Scholarship winner Aaron Wu '27 and past Guild Finalist Leah Nieman ’27 performed while the adjudicators deliberated. The panel of judges included music professors Steve Butler, Daniel Gee, Han Soo Kim, Ruth Lin and Zig Reichwald.
“The Music Guild awards have helped numerous highly talented students attend Westmont, and they’ve helped enhance the musical culture of our community,” says Run Lin, chair of the music department. “There was great camaraderie and spirit among all the student musicians. The ethos of the evening focuses on celebrating the gifts that God has granted these young adults and witnessing how they’ll honor these gifts.”
Schafer, who was joined by Westmont collaborative pianist Chika Nobumori, performed the first movements of both Henryk Wieniawski's Concerto No. 2 in D minor, and Johann Sebastian Bach's Sonata No. 1 in G minor.
Schafer, who began studying violin at the age of five, studies with Sam Fischer at the Colburn Community School of Performing Arts. Nathan has been a member of the Claremont Young Musicians Orchestra since 2022 and performs with the Colburn School’s Ed and Mari Edelman Chamber Music Institute Honors Program as 2nd violinist of the Aslan Quartet coached by violinist Moni Simeonov. He was a member of the Concertmaster Studio at the Brevard Music Center Summer Institute and Festival last summer where he performed as an orchestra concertmaster and first violinist in a string sextet.