“You need some help!” is what a new parent said to me when she saw all of the activities available in the Suzuki program I was running in Elgin, IL. It just seemed to evolve, and before I knew it, there were over sixty violin students and ten cello students. It took three part-time violin teachers and a cello teacher to accommodate the growing program. There was a great deal of organization every time we had a performance, an outside clinician or an all-school play-in style concert at the end of the school year. I was doing everything from making performing outfits to renting halls for recitals and concerts with help from a few volunteers. The “you-need-some-help!” exclamation was a welcome suggestion that I hadn’t realized was necessary for my studio to run smoothly.
Lamar Blum
A Suzuki violin teacher for almost 30 years, Lamar Blum was introduced to Suzuki Method in 1963. Since that time, she has established a Suzuki studio in Elgin, Illinois for violin, viola, cello, bass and flute hiring highly qualified teachers in each area. As director and teacher, Lamar organizes and administrates the activities of the Elgin program along with teaching her own students. Maintaining an organized program and communicating with parents are high priorities. In the broader Suzuki community, Lamar is presently serving a three-year term on the board of directors for Suzuki Association of the Americas. She has also served the SAA as a committee chair & co-chair for the National Conference, has been a speaker for the Leadership Conference and has contributed several articles to the American Suzuki Journal, the summer Minijournal and Suzuki World magazines. She has been an institute teacher at several institutes across the country (both summer & weekend) and is in the fourth year of directing the Montana Suzuki Strings Institute. In the Elgin community, Lamar helped found an arts organization and acted as treasurer for four years. She has also been active in Women in Management serving as various committee chairs. She was recognized by this group for her entrepreneurship in 1992. As a member of the Elgin Symphony Orchestra for three decades, Lamar served on the players’ council for ten years of those years. She was involved in contract negotiations on two occasions. She was the first person to recognize the need for children’s concerts in Elgin helping to organize the initial programs. Upon retiring, she was honored by the ESO League as a Musical Treasure of Elgin. Lamar and husband, John, have raised two daughters involved in Suzuki education. The philosophy has given them a guideline for parenting and setting priorities in life.
10 Articles
Thoughts from Outgoing Board Members
September 2009 · ASJ 37.4, page 16
Remembering Yuko Honda
August 2007 · ASJ 35.4, page 78
The Ins and Outs of Progress
June 2006 · ASJ 34.5, page 4
The Season of Patience
November 2003 · ASJ 32.1, page 54
Elgin Students Reading Together
June 2002 · ASJ 30.5, page 5
Happiness Is…
August 2001 · ASJ 29.4, page 26
Consumer Education
May 1999 · ASJ 27.3, page 54
The Orchid and the Honor
May 1992 · ASJ 20.3, page 32
Suzuki’s Spirit Continues
November 1991 · ASJ 28.1, page 27
