New Accordion Scholarship at UVic School of Music
September 1st 2021
Rita Davidson Barnea, Editor Accordion USA News



Music Professor Adam Jonathan Con (picture left) shares, “The new accordion scholarship at the School of Music helps create a program unique in North America for both undergrad/grad students—like Nikolay Ovchinnikov (picture above), our 1st accordion performance major!”
The following article appeared in the University of Victoria School of Music publication, “On the Pulse” which offers updates about School of Music events and the lastest news and announcements from the faculty, students, and alumni of the University of Victoria. The article was written by John Threlfall on Aug 25, 2021:
New Accordion Scholarship Offers Keys to the Future
Visit any music academy in Eastern Europe, Russia or China and you’ll find numerous programs created specifically to study the accordion. Not so in North America, where it still doesn’t get the respect it deserves as a symphonic instrument.
At UVic, however, that perception is changing thanks to the Brian Money & Nancy Dyer Accordion Scholarship in Music, which supports outstanding graduate and undergraduate students.
New accordion program:
Our new School of Music program is unique in North America (University of Toronto also offers accordion studies, but only at the doctoral and Masters levels), and was “purposely designed” to be flexible, says Music professor Adam Con—an accordionist himself who shares, “We’re preparing students to enter the market to be performers and ambassadors of the accordion with a wide variety of styles under their belt—even jazz, which you can’t do anywhere else.”
Part of that preparation will come from internationally acclaimed accordion performer and teacher Jelena Milojević (picture right), as well as from our Phillip T. Young Recital Hall. “We had 30 professionals from all over the world come here for a festival and they thought our acoustics were the best they’d ever heard for accordions,” says Con.
Gift makes program a reality:
Donor Brian Money started playing accordion at seven and continued studying throughout his career as a telecommunications engineer—including with Milojević herself. Russian graduate student Nikolay Ovchinnikov became our first accordion performance student in 2020, with three more starting in fall 2021 and still more confirmed for 2022.
“This instrument has a lot of ability to open up a diversity of music styles and experiences we’re otherwise blind to,” says Con. “There are a lot of students from Eastern Europe who want to come to North America.”