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YAMAHA, MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION® GRANT COBDEN,
IL YOUTH'S WISH FOR YAMAHA DISKLAVIER GRAND PIANO
COLLINSVILLE, IL (March 19, 2004)On March 12, 2004, the Make-A-Wish
Foundation® of Metro St. Louissupported by the generous
assistance of Yamaha Cares, an employee-based, charitable giving
initiative of Yamaha Corporation of Americapresented Wish
Teen Sarah, of Cobden, IL, with her dream pianoa Yamaha Disklavier.
Sarah, who aspires to become a professional musician, has been
playing piano since the second grade. Her love of piano and music
is so tremendous that she literally played her old piano to pieces.
"The piano I had before had chipped keys that cut my hands
when I played," Sarah said. "It also went out of tune
often, and the keys got stuck. Even so, I've loved the piano so
much and played it every day."
Injured fingers and sticking keys will no longer be a concern.
Sarah's new piano was created for the needs of professional musicians
and boasts numerous technological features, which will compliment
and enhance the budding professional's natural abilities. The Disklavier
allows the player to record and play back performances, create multi-track
arrangements and also play audio/MIDI CDs as well as floppy diskshandy
features for Sarah to use when critiquing her own compositions or
those of the friends she has begun to teach.
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Sarah,
pictured with Yamaha's George Litterst and her new Disklavier,
plans to build her own musical studio at home and pursue a
professional music career.
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"I am going to use many of these features in my piano lessons,"
Sarah said. "I can record my students when they start taking
lessons; and, after a couple of months, I can put in the diskette
of when they were beginners, and they would be able to really see
how much they have improved. I think this will be a great way to
give them confidence that they are learning."
To help Sarah learn to navigate all the piano's features, Yamaha
Piano Division representative George Litterst made a special trip
to Cobden specifically to provide Sarah with a day-long piano tutorial.
In addition to a day of piano lessons, Yamaha Cares also provided
Sarah with an additional surprisea CD autographed by Grammy®
Award-winning musician Elton John.
Volunteer Make-A-Wish Wish Granter Dennis Dintelmann said Sarah's
wish was fulfilled with "teamwork and determination tempered
with compassion." He elaborated with, "Corporate Yamaha
provided the generous support to make this wish possible, and the
people of Yamaha, the people that worked on her wish, became totally
involved with helping Sarah. It is a true example of what the foundation
hopes for all - that everyone come together to Share the Power
of a Wish®."
Yamaha Corporation of America manufactures a complete line of musical
instruments, professional audio products, customer-driven support
products and computer-based products targeted to both the amateur
and professional markets. For more information, visit www.yamaha.com.
A wholly owned subsidiary of Yamaha Corporation Japan, it is the
largest of all global subsidiary companies with several sales and
marketing divisions-the Piano Division, the Band & Orchestral
Division, the Professional Audio & Combo Division and Commercial
Audio Divisionencompassing digital, acoustic and concert grand
pianos, professional audio products, band and orchestral instruments,
guitars, drums, portable keyboards, synthesizers and accessory products.
The Make-A-Wish Foundation grants the wishes of children with life-threatening
medical conditions to enrich the human experience with hope, strength
and joy. It is the largest wish-granting charity in the world, with
75 chapters in the United States and its territories and 27 international
affiliates on five continents. With the help of generous donors
and more than 25,000 volunteers, the Make-A-Wish Foundation has
granted more than 110,000 wishes to children around the world since
1980. The Make-A-Wish Foundation® of Metro St. Louis serves
southern Illinois and eastern Missouri and granted 199 wishes in
its 2003 Fiscal Year. To find out how you can get involved with
the Make-A-Wish Foundation, call 800-548-5058 or visit www.stlouis.wish.org.
For more information about Yamaha pianos, write Yamaha Corporation
of America, Piano Division, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90622-6600;
email infostation@yamaha.com;
visit www.yamaha.com or telephone (714) 522-9011.
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