I don’t know how to respond … ‘Thanks for knowing somebody who likes the show?’” Strangest thing: “I’ve had people say we belong to them now, as if Studio C is a commodity.”įan talk: “Most of the time people say they know somebody who likes the show, but they rarely say they personally like it. She was a ballet major, so that was rough. Then my wife got hit by a car driven by a kid on heroin. Tough losses: “I lost my job the week I graduated. In fact, everyone asks, ‘But what are you going to do for money?’ Studio C is a big win.” I sound like a diva, but I’m not.”īig wins: “When you study the arts, you don’t often get to work in the field.
But I do wash it, shampoo it and condition it. “I don’t want to accidentally screw it up. “I can’t even draw a straight line,” he says. Now he lets the Studio C hair professionals manicure his manliness. (His stache is even on his first BYU Student ID card.) Then he shaved clean to serve an LDS mission and has only shaved once since 2008 - it was October 2009 and he did it for a short film. Jeremy’s signature move is his mustache, which he first grew at age 17. “My commitment to the run got lost in editing.”īut his commitment to facial hair gets lost on nobody. “I ran back and forth from the sidelines to check on Matt (Scott) about 25 times, but you only see me run out there half-way one time,” he says. Perhaps his biggest sports highlight to date is playing the “trainer” for Scott Sterling. “I’m not the Michael Jordan of this team,” Jeremy says.īut he has played a little bit of basketball, including a season-ending breakage of his glasses on a BYU court. Jeremy compares his role on Studio C to that of former NBA forward Detlef Schrempf. Least favorite school subject: Statistics After he left Studio C, he created the sketch comedy group JK! Studios with the ten original cast members, with which he reached the semifinals in the comedy competition Bring the Funny. He was the protagonist of the Just Jeremy and Gary and Carl Show sketches. As a teaching assistant, he received a Master of Music Performance from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he performed with the Illinois Symphony Orchestra, Sinfonia da Camera, Prairie Ensemble, and Estilo Chicago.Jeremy Warner was one of the ten regular cast members from season 1 until season 9, first being featured as a featured cast member until season 4.
Jeremy holds a Bachelor of Music Performance from Luther College in Decorah, IA, where he was a two-time concerto competition winner. Most recently he has formed a new music duo, Six Impossible Things, commissioning and encouraging young composers by introducing these works to the general public. He can be heard with AUR on America’s Millennium Tribute to Adolphe Sax, Volume III performing John Howell Morrison’s Light Possessing Darkness. He maintains a private studio in Northern Virginia and is adjunct professor of saxophone at Shepherd University and Northern Virginia Community College.Ī proponent of new music, Jeremy has premiered solo and saxophone quartet works at numerous conferences of the World Saxophone Congress, North American Saxophone Alliance, International Saxophone Symposium and the American Composers Forum. In addition, he has presented saxophone clinics at numerous universities including The Universities of North Carolina, Missouri, Illinois and Indiana and North Dakota State University. As a freelance saxophonist, Jeremy performs with The United States Air Force Saxophone Quartet, Reed5, Fairfax Symphony Orchestra, Prince William Symphony Orchestra, Serapis Ensemble, DC Syndicate and Great Noise Ensemble.Ĭommitted to teaching, he regularly presents clinics and recitals throughout Northern Virginia, Maryland, and Washington D.C. He has been a member of the USAF Band since 1998 where he has been a featured concert soloist on national tours as well as performed with diverse artists such as: Tony Bennett, Wynonna Judd, and Kool & the Gang. Koch is an active saxophonist, chamber musician and teacher based in the Washington D.