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(Biographical Sketch)
Peter J. LaRue was raised on a farm in south central Ohio
and received his undergraduate education at the Capital University
Conservatory of Music (1979). His master's (1980) and doctoral (1986)
degrees are from the University of Illinois, where he specialized in the
study of instrumental music education, bands and the trombone. His
teachers and mentors have included Paul Young, Richard Suddendorf, Robert
Gray, Charles Leonhard and E. Wayne Pressley.
Dr. LaRue serves as Director of the Tiger Bands and
Coordinator of Music Education at Georgetown College. Starting in 1994 and
continuing through 2009, LaRue also served as Director of Summer Programs
and Camps [SP&C] at Georgetown College overseeing the growth, development
and daily management of this extensive unit. Starting in 2010, he became
the Executive Director for SP&C. Prior to his move to Kentucky in
1993, he served for seven years as Director of Bands at Mars Hill College
in western North Carolina. Previous to this appointment, he was Director
of Music for the Bloom Carroll local school district in central Ohio,
where he directed the award winning “Marching Bulldog” band for four
years. In the past, he has also served as low brass specialist with the
Cavalier and Blue Knight Drum and Bugle Corps.
In addition to his duties at Georgetown College, since
1994 LaRue has served as the Music Director and Conductor of the Central
Kentucky Concert Band in Lexington, Kentucky. He has adjudicated marching
and concert band festivals in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Virginia, Colorado, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri and
Nevada, and serves as clinician/conductor throughout the southeast.
In 2005, LaRue received the prestigious Cawthorne
Excellence in Teaching Award – the highest honor Georgetown College may
bestow upon a faculty member. Previously he had been promoted to the rank
of Full Professor [2003], received the Rollie Graves Technology Award
[2000] and was honored with the John Walker Manning Distinguished Mentor
and Teacher Award [1998].
From 2002-2004, LaRue served on the Board of Directors for
KMEA [Kentucky Music Educators Association] and chaired the Public
Relations and Advocacy Committee. In the past he has also served as both
“Coordinator” of the Kentucky Intercollegiate Band [1997-1999] and
“Co-Coordinator” [2001, 2003 & 2007] that performs each year at the KMEA
In-Service Conference in Louisville. In 1998, LaRue was also made an
honorary “Kentucky Colonel” by Governor Paul Patton. LaRue is an active
author, being frequently published in state and regional periodicals and
was honored in 2001 as he was selected to be a contributing author to the
MENC text “Spotlight on Teaching Band”. Additionally, he has played
trombone with several regional orchestras across the south, and from
1987-95 was a member of the Appalachian Brass Quintet with whom he
performed regularly at the Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina.
LaRue continues to be an active performer on his beloved trombone across
the Commonwealth and is currently a member of the Kentucky Ballet Theater
Orchestra and the Bluegrass Brass Trio.
LaRue served
as the Faculty Advisor [High Pi] for the Georgetown College chapter of
Lambda Chi Alpha for seven years and was named the Outstanding Fraternity
Advisor in 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2003. He currently serves as
the Academic Advisor for the Brotherhood. International study/performance
trips have taken him abroad twice, where he has performed in both Europe
and the former Soviet Union.
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