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Supporter spotlight: Chris and Margot Brauchli

Margot and Chris Brauchli

 

Since they came to Boulder in 1958, Chris and Margot Brauchli have accumulated a lifetime鈥檚 worth of memories together, many of them revolving around music.

鈥淚 made my living as a lawyer. But music happens to be an important part of our lives.鈥

The couple鈥檚 extracurricular activities make Chris鈥檚 sentiment clear: Chris is a member of the College of Music Advisory Board and the Boulder Philharmonic Symphony Board. Margot is a 25-year member of the Colorado Symphony Chorus and can sometimes be heard singing in other local choruses.

They helped found the Boulder County Arts Alliance (originally the Boulder Assembly on the Arts and Humanities), the Colorado Music Festival and the Boulder Bach Festival. And they collaborated with other parents in the area to start the Jarrow Montessori School鈥擟olorado鈥檚 first school to follow that specialized teaching philosophy. 

Through it all, the philanthropic leaders have been loyal supporters of the College of Music for more than 40 years. They participate in the Adopt-a-Student Program and support the Bruce Ekstrand Memorial Graduate Student Performance Competition. As the new Imig Music Building goes up, they will proudly make their latest contribution, a gift to name the Berger Choral Faculty Studio in honor of their friend, composer and former faculty member Jean Berger.

What matters most

The Brauchlis鈥 love story began decades ago in Aspen, when both Chris and Margot had been students at the Aspen Music Festival and School.

鈥淚 was a singer and a music history major, and then I met this character in Aspen,鈥 Margot recalls. 鈥淐hris was a student there the summer before me. He came back to visit a violinist friend鈥攚ho happened to be my roommate.鈥 

Chris, who grew up in Oklahoma, was studying violin at the time. 鈥淚 was never a music major, but I took lessons throughout much of my life off and on until about five years ago. I鈥檝e always had great teachers, and I still play chamber music a couple of times a week,鈥 he says.

The couple married, spent two years in the Army, then moved to Boulder for law school. They immediately got involved in the music scene, with Margot joining the College of Music鈥檚 then-Festival Chorus, under former voice department chair Berton Coffin.

鈥淎t the time, the ensemble was students and community members, and Coffin passed that onto Lynn Whitten. But after Whitten retired, it was changed to an all-student group,鈥 Margot explains. 鈥淪o some of the people I had met in the Festival Chorus decided to keep singing together, and we formed a madrigal group called the St. Cecilia Singers.鈥

Chris also performed violin with an instrumental group to celebrate St. Cecilia鈥檚 Day in November each year. The St. Cecilia Singers became the choral ensemble to sing with the Boulder Bach Festival.

鈥淎long with some musicians from outside the group, [music director/conductor Don Th. Jaeger and I] formed the Boulder Bach Festival in 1982,鈥 Margot says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing that it鈥檚 still going to this day.鈥

Even by that time, the Brauchlis were no strangers to music festival administration. Along with former College of Music faculty member Giora Bernstein, the couple had founded the Colorado Music Festival in 1977.

鈥淚 was a lawyer, and Giora wanted me to help him get the festival going because I knew people,鈥 Chris says. 鈥淚 can still remember when Margot and I sat around one night with Giora and his wife, Carole, drinking wine and coming up with potential names for the festival.鈥

Worlds collide

All the while, the world continued to turn outside of music for the Brauchlis. Chris served as president of the Boulder Bar Association from 1975 through 1976 and Colorado State Bar from 1989 through 1990. He wrote a humor column for the bar鈥檚 journal that, in its later form, found its way into several national newspapers. He still writes today, publishing political commentary on digital publications and his website . 

The apple, in that sense, didn鈥檛 fall far from the tree for Chris and Margot鈥檚 children. Two of them have had successful careers as journalists: Marcus served as managing editor of The Wall Street Journal and executive editor of The Washington Post. David worked as a news photographer for the Associated Press around the world, covering, among other places, the conflicts in the Balkans and Nelson Mandela鈥檚 election in South Africa. Their oldest son, Byron, studied art photography at CU Boulder and is now a professor at the University of Veracruz in Mexico. His work was recently shown at an international photo exhibition in Barcelona, Spain, where he also conducted workshops. Not to be outdone, their daughter Stephanie, who is also a lawyer, founded as partner and now runs the Wallaroo Hat Company.

With their children grown, the Brauchlis have thrown themselves into the Boulder arts community. 鈥淚 bring in musicians to play in string quartets with me in our home,鈥 Chris says. 鈥91制片厂 15 assorted people come and play chamber music in varying combinations. Some of them are faculty at the college, others professional or amateur musicians in the area.鈥

And Chris has become something of a Faculty Tuesdays celebrity, known well for his famous 鈥渕agic envelope鈥 bit.

鈥淚 just tell people they can turn that envelope in their Faculty Tuesdays program into gold rather than trash by making a gift.鈥

Now, with this gift to name the Berger Choral Faculty Studio, the Brauchlis are bringing their involvement with the College of Music full circle.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had many close friends on the faculty over the years, and Jean Berger was one of them,鈥 Chris explains. 鈥淗e was a prominent composer and a great friend, and we used to play a lot of violin sonatas together. This gift is to honor that friendship and the College of Music鈥檚 role in the Boulder music community.鈥

Read about other generous gifts as part of the College of Music capital campaign here.