| InstrumentalChristopher  ParkeningBio By 
                	The 700 Club
CBN.com 
		   WORLD CLASS EXCELLENCE
 Christopher  Parkening has attained some of the highest honors in the world of music.  He is celebrated as one of the world's  preeminent virtuosos of the classical guitar, recognized as heir to the legacy  of his mentor, the great Spanish guitarist Andrés Segovia. The Washington Post cites him as, “the leading guitar virtuoso of our day, combining  profound musical insight with complete technical mastery of his  instrument.”  He  has performed around the world, including such prestigious places as Carnegie  Hall and the White House.  Though he has attained much, Christopher is not  looking back.  He looks forward to what  he can do to impact the lives of future musicians and leaders.   Excellence is what he has accomplished, what  he pursues and seeks, and is a quality he seeks to instill in his  students.  Success and excellence are  often two competing ideals.  Success  seeks status, power, prestige, wealth, and privilege.  Excellence is internal-seeking satisfaction  in having done your best.  Success is  external- how you have done in comparison to others.  Excellence is how you have done in relation  to your own potential.  “For me,” he  says, “success seeks to please men, but excellence seeks to please God.”  Success grants its rewards to a few, but is  the dream of the multitudes.  Excellence  is available to all, but is accepted only by a few.  Success engenders a fantasy and a compulsive  groping for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.  Excellence brings us down to a reality with a  deep gratitude for the promise of joy when we do our best.  Excellence cultivates principles, character,  and integrity.  Success may be cheap, and  you can take shortcuts to get there.  You  will pay the full price for excellence; it is never discounted.  Excellence will always cost you everything,  but it is the most lasting and rewarding ideal.  LIFE  CHANGEAt a solo concert at the Kennedy  Center in 1994, Christopher reflected on the fact that this event took place  through an act of God.  At the very  height of his career, in 1977 Christopher chucked it all for a fly-fishing  paradise.  But paradise turned out to be  less than he bargained for.  “The shock  of finding that having everything you ever dreamed of is a hollow experience is  indescribable,” he says.  Within a year  of getting all these things, “I felt completely empty inside.  I had it all, but something was  missing.”  Christopher always planned to  make it big and then walk away.  His  father was a real-estate broker who retired at 46 and built a house in Idaho  overlooking a magnificent trout river.   “He’d always told me if I was going to play the guitar, I should ‘play  it beautiful,’” Christopher says.  “But  he also always told me to make a lot of money and retire at an early age to  enjoy the good life.”  Fishing and the  guitar are Christopher’s two passions.
 About a year after attaining these lifelong  dreams, Christopher realized he was missing something – and that was a deep  relationship with God.  Raised in a Christian home,  Christopher had a profound renewal of his faith in 1978 after attending a  service at John MacArthur’s Grace Community Church.  “I was just tired when I quit,” he says of  his stunning decision to give up the guitar.   Christopher decided to rededicate his life to  God.  He also decided he wanted to return  to music, but this time for God.  He is a  Professor of Music at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California, where he  chairs the guitar department and “helps students pursue the highest for the  glory of God.”		   JOURNEY  TO SUCCESSChristopher started playing the  guitar at the age of 11, inspired by his cousin Jack Marshall, who was  staff guitarist at MGM Studios.  Jack  recommended that Christopher learn classical guitar to learn technique and to  listen to the music of Andres Segovia.  Christopher  would get up at 5:00 am and practice an hour and a half before school and again  in the afternoon.  By the time  Christopher was 15, he was invited to attend Segovia's first United States  master class held at the University of California at Berkeley – the youngest of  nine chosen for the class.  Segovia  encouraged Christopher to work very hard and it was Christopher's good fortune  to continue private study with Segovia later.   At 18 he signed a recording contract with Columbia.  By his twenties Christopher was playing 90  concert dates a year - and turning down 200 others.  He’d become an international superstar, the  finest classical guitarist yet produced in this country and in the eyes of  many, heir apparent to Segovia.
 Christopher was nominated for a  Grammy in 1987, the year he made a recording with renowned soprano Kathleen  Battle.  It was also the year he won the  prestigious Islamorado International Gold Cup Tarpon Tournament in the Florida  Keys.  JUBILANT  SYKESJubilant has been lauded in the Wall  Street Journal s one of “the next major stars.”   He’s won kudos from the world’s finest symphonies, orchestras, and opera  companies including Kurt Masur and the New York Philharmonic, the Chicago  Symphony, the Met, the Cleveland Orchestra, the LA Philharmonic, etc.  He has appeared at premiere concert halls, on  stages across the nation, and at festivals across America including the Grant  Park Music Festival and Tanglewood.  He  and Christopher have been in high demand across the country for the 2006-2007  season, both in concert and performance.   Jubilant lives in California with his wife and three young sons.    For more info:  www.jubilantsykes.com.
   
 
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