Meet the Conductors

Photo of Greta Haug-Hryciw
Greta Haug-Hryciw

Greta Haug-Hryciw is the third generation of a family of San Francisco musicians. As a child, she studied piano technique and theory with Bethel Melvin, and later with San Francisco Opera Orchestra pianist Reina Schivo. Her interest in the recorder blossomed during high school and for several years she played with the San Francisco branch of the New York Recorder Workshop under the direction of Peter Erlich. She played in and co-directed the American Recorder Orchestra of the West (AROW) with Richard Geisler from 2005-2010 and has been co-director of the Barbary Coast Recorder Orchestra (BCRO) with Frances Feldon since its inception in 2011. She regularly performs with her ensembles SDQ and Ensemble Trecento, and also appears with the Peralta Consort, Gryphons Wild, and the Sacramento-based contemporary ensemble Uncorked. She teaches recorder to students of all ages, produces concerts and arranges music for small ensembles and recorder orchestra. Greta has been music director for Half Moon Bay’s (CA) Coastal Repertory Theatre, is a frequent teacher and director’s assistant at summer workshops, and a guest conductor at American Recorder Society chapters around the country. She currently serves on the ARS Board of Directors and is president of the San Francisco ARS chapter.

Miyo-Aoki-Photo
Miyo Aoki

Miyo Aoki is a dedicated recorder player and teacher, performing music ranging from medieval to modern and teaching students of all ages and levels. She has performed in the US, Germany, and Poland, with groups including Farallon Recorder Quartet, The Eurasia Consort, and Gamut Bach Ensemble, and at the Bloomington Early Music Festival and Whidbey Island Music Festival.  She has premiered works by contemporary composers Natalie Williams, Agnes Dorwarth and Adam Haws, and recently she was delighted to play as part of the Seattle Symphony and Oregon Symphony orchestras in the score to Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.  In addition to her teaching work for Early Music Seattle’s outreach programs, she teaches regularly at workshops such as the Port Townsend Early Music Workshop, SFEMS Recorder Workshop, and Hidden Valley Early Music Workshop.  Miyo holds a KAZ Diplom (Artist Diploma) from the Hochschule für Künste in Bremen, Germany, where she studied with Professor Han Tol, and degrees in both early music performance and mathematics from Indiana University, where she studied with Professor Eva Legêne.