Del Couch Music Education Foundation
Del Couch Music Education Foundation | |
---|---|
Background | |
Type | Non-profit organization |
Industry | Music Education |
Founded | 2010 |
Instruction | Music production and recording |
Website | DelCouchMusicEducationFoundation.com |
The Del Couch Music Education Foundation offers children free access to music education, recording equipment and mentorship. The foundation is located inside the Manatee School for the Arts in Palmetto, Florida, where the program founder and director Del Couch conducts four levels of classroom training in music recording and production and providing performance opportunities through events and mentorships. Alumni of the program include 2014 fifth-place American Idol finalist, Sam Woolf, and singer-songwriter recording artist Matt Walden, Colton Cason, and more.
History
Del Couch began playing the trumpet in high school and formed the school’s award-winning brass band "The Mantic Brass," which was recognized by Herb Alpert of the Tijauna Brass and later was signed by Christine McGuire of the McGuire Sisters to open her nightclub shows. Couch was drafted while attending college and auditioned for the United States Air Force Band, which he was accepted into and played with for three-and-a-half years, playing for President Richard Nixon at various events and supporting the 1st Tactical Fighter Wing, Strike Command, and others at military events.
After college, Couch took a break from music to raise a family and build a real estate career. After a successful real estate career as a Real Estate Broker/owner, he rekindled his love of music and began a successful career with the band "Shaman" that performed upwards of 200 corporate events a year and performed with the " Billy Rice Band" at events around the Southeast.
In the 1990s, he decided to go back into music production and earned a master's degree in music production from the Berklee College of Music in 2006. He developed a professional music studio in his home, and began recording. A neighbor’s gardener asked if Couch could help his nephew, a young Chicano rapper, The Lazy Menace, Mario Martinez,[1] and Couch produced the boy’s CD, which eventually sold 4,000 copies and led the rapper to be signed by a recording company in Los Angeles. It was then that Couch decided to offer free production services to children.
In 2012, Manatee School for the Arts in Palmetto, Florida agreed to allow Couch to move his studio onto the school grounds and provide classes for the students who attend the school. The studio also produces professional CDs for students and show production CDs for the school.
Curriculum Offered
As part of the Manatee School for the Arts curriculum, the foundation provides four levels of recording and production classes, including two advanced levels of mixing and mastering. The foundation has partnered with St. Petersburg College to allow students to achieve an associate of arts degree in recording arts and provides internships to selected students in production, recording, and live sound mixing. The students can also earn Avid Certifications in Pro Tools. The foundation also mentors students in the performance side of music and provides free lessons for students in voice, guitar, piano, brass, and strings.
Student Opportunities
Couch’s students are often featured performers at various annual events, such as Lakewood Ranch WinterFest,[2] De Soto Heritage Festival*, The Taste of Manatee [3] and Bradenton Riverfront Regatta.[4] They often perform before headlining acts such as the Doobie Brothers and other national acts. Couch’s agreement with Manatee School for the Arts allows around-the-clock access for students to use the foundation’s studio. Singer-songwriter Matt Walden and producer 17-year-old Raven Chapman produced Walden’s iTunes-charting first single, Flipped the Script, as well as his five-song EP, Life, which charted No. 7 on iTunes’ singer-songwriter album chart.
Couch also recorded Colton Cason,[5] who later secured a job as a full-time performer at the Carolina Opry in Myrtle Beach. Couch and Cason also recorded an original song "Breathe" for the domestic violence documentary, "A Way Out" and had a song featured in a full-length movie "The Investigator" produced by Ray Romano (Everybody Loves Raymond) and his brother.
Other notable student recordings include demo tapes for American Idol top 5 Sam Woolf, Nashville singer-songwriter Eric Von,[6] musician Trevor Bystrom,[7] Tony Tyler of Come Back Alice[8] and David Smash.[9] The foundation has its own label and works with major producers in LA, New York, Boston, and Nashville.
Notable People
Mentors: Grammy-winning producer and guitarist Rick Derringer and his wife Jenda Derringer, Alabama Music Hall of Fame inductee George Wallace, Jr., Berklee College of Music instructor Dave Franz, musician Billy Rice, Super Bowl champion and singer Henry Lawrence, neuroscientist Dr. Jessica Couch, Dr. Erol Oszever, classical guitar, Robert Lischetti, vocalist, and Saul and Laura Fineman, communications and social media.
Foundation alumni: Sam Woolf, Matt Walden, David Smash, Colton Cason, Eric Von, Trevor Bystrom, Tony Tyler, Mario Martinez.
Honors & Awards
- Everyday Hero, Bay News 9[10]
- Bradenton Arts Special Achievement Award 9[11]
- Berklee College of Music Ambassador
External links
References
- ↑ "YouTube - MMartinezMusic". YouTube. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
- ↑ "2015 WinterFest Music Ignites the Crowd". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "The Taste of Manatee". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "Despite Power Outage, Music at Regatta Entertainment Stage Rocks On". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "Main Artists Page: Colton Cason". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "Eric Von". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "Trevor Bystrom". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ "Come Back Alice, Southern Gypsy Funk". Retrieved 2015-09-03.
- ↑ Post, Sarasota. "David Smash- New CD, State of Sunshine". The Sarasota Post. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
- ↑ "Everyday Hero". Retrieved 3 September 2015.
- ↑ "Bradenton Arts". Retrieved 3 September 2015.