Heather Cornelius looked very serious as she sat with her harp, hands poised to pluck the first notes of Debussy's "Sacred and Profane Dances."
The 15-year-old from Paynesville, Minn., was about to make her first professional recording in the Maud Moon Weyerhaeuser Studio at Minnesota Public Radio, where top classical talent from Midori to Ravi Shankar had played before her.
"I'm adding reverb and ambience to your sound," said technical director Craig Thorson, manning the massive soundboard in a control room equipped with enough electronic consoles and impressive-looking doodads to run a NASA mission. "I'm getting a really nice resonance."
He sure was. Listening to her own performance afterward, Heather's face remained teen-stoic, but her foot began tapping softly. She was pleased.
Minnesota Varsity is not exactly "American Idol," but it offers a regional version of temporary fame for high-schoolers studying classical music and musical theater in Minnesota. It works like this: Any student from anywhere in the state could submit a homemade recording between November and January. Fifteen semifinalists were chosen by MPR staff members from more than 100 submissions, and their recorded performances are being broadcast on KSJN 99.5 FM throughout March. All submitted recordings are also online at www.classicalmpr.org/varsity, where the public can vote among the semifinalists through March 18.
Judges from the local classical scene will narrow the field to four finalists, with a fifth chosen by public vote, also online. The five will play an April 29 concert at St. Paul's Fitzgerald Theater, where attendees will vote on which one gets to play an encore.
In its second year, the program "gives students a taste of what it's like to play in a professional environment," said Daniel Gilliam, program director of Classical MPR. "Their eyes just bulge when they hear themselves."
Cornelius seconded that. "It was cool to listen to how good it sounded," she said. She now takes lessons from Minnesota Orchestra principal harpist Kathy Kienzle and says she may major in harp performance in college.