Thank you for being a friend to SVMF
We are so grateful to our donors Ron Griffin, Judy Contino, Jim Rice and Jeanette Marquess for their generosity and support of SVMF. Their help will brighten our events and assist us in achieving our goals by educating and providing opportunities to our young students and all enthusiasts at our upcoming events. Thank you!!
SVMF continues to meet our mission of developing young minds through music.Your support and contributions will help us produce high quality and entertaining accordion workshops, concerts, orchestras, and educational programs. Appreciate your support.
Please donate now!!
THANK YOU!
Stas Venglevski Music Foundation is a Texas 501c3 non-profit public charity corporation (EIN: 92-3882379). Your donation is tax deductible. Your kind donation help supporting our activities especially youth music programs. Thank you for your support!!!
Dick and Judy Contino Scholars
Dick Contino was born on January 17, 1930 in Fresno, CA. He attended St. Alphonso's School and Church where he served as an alter boy. His time at Fresno High School was punctuated by his popularity and he subsequently attended Fresno State College.
Fame came to Dick in winning the National Grand Prize (1948) of the Horace Heidt Show which began his extensive musical career. His 48 appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show were unprecedented. At the height of his career, 180,000 accordions were shipped from Italy to the US. After his service in Korea, Dick continued his professional music career at the Mocambo nightclub in West Hollywood, CA (1952), where celebrities filled the audience. In the 1950s, Dick met the beautiful Leigh Snowden, an actress for Universal Studios. They were married in 1956, and had a wonderful marriage and family. Their love endured until her death in 1982. Dick was again lucky in love when he married Judy Campbell later in life.
Dick continued his musical career throughout the USA. Dick enjoyed entertaining an audience, from showrooms in Las Vegas, NV, to many Italian events. He entertained on the “Dick Contino” stage for 35 years at Festa Italiana in Milwaukee, WI. He also was a popular and regular performer for the Cotati Accordion Festival in CA.
Sadly on April 19, 2017 the world lost one of the most famous accordionists of all times. In Dick’s memory, the Dick and Judy Contino Scholars program, a part of the Youth Fellowship Fund initiative for IAMP, supports talented youth and their accordion pursuits.
This is a very nice accordion!! I'm very greateful to Ron Griffin & Beverley Fess for donating accordion. It is accelerating my accordion learning.
Dylan Heuer
Dear Friend and Family
We invite you to join us for a celebration of life reunion in honor of Ali Haghshenas. We will gather to share our memories, stories, and gratitude for the life of our beloved friend and family member.
Instead of flowers, we respectfully ask you to consider making a donation to the Stas Venglevski Music Foundation, for the “Ali Scholarship”. This scholarship will help young accordionists who want to follow their passion and talent for this instrument., by providing financial aid and guidance. This scholarship will also encourage the appreciation and preservation of the accordion as a unique and versatile musical instrument. The very same one Ali was so passionate about.
Rubab & Varan Haghshenas
We are deeply saddened by the loss of Ali Haghshenas, a brilliant Qarmon player and a faithful friend of the Houston Accordion Orchestra Retreat. He had a great passion for accordion music, and he delighted us with his guest performances in our 2019 and 2022 retreats. In 2022, he played the solo part in “Overture from Koroglu Opera” with the orchestra, a piece that showcased his amazing skill and cultural background.
Ali was born in Tabriz, in Southern Azerbaijan. He discovered his love for music when he was 24 years old, and learned how to play the Qarmon, a type of accordion, by himself. He moved to the US in 2000 with his family, and made Houston his home. He once said, “Playing Qarmon is my passion and I feel like I’m breathing through my Qarmon’s bellow.” He was a member of the Fort Bend Accordion Club and a solo artist who charmed audiences throughout the Houston area.
Ali’s wife, Rubab Haghshenas, has kindly offered to create a memorial scholarship in his name, to support aspiring accordionists in our community. Please write a note "Ali".