Students and Faculty Continue 25 Years of Koch Friday Night Concert
- JACK LAROVERE ADAMS'28 & LUCIA KINDER'28
- Mar 29
- 3 min read

When he was 15 years old, former Deer!eld Art Teacher David Dickinson planned to become a professional musician. Instead, he and his wife, former French Teacher Claudia Lyons, ended up founding the Koch Friday Concert at the beginning of an almost four-decades-long career at the Academy. Inspired by talk shows like David Letterman’s, Mr. Dickinson and Ms. Lyons brought in Josh Binswanger ’80, who worked in comedy at the time, to MC the event. #e concert began as a once-a-year event but soon expanded into a twice-yearly tradition. Now, it’s held every term. A"er introducing the concert in 2004 and taking a brief sabbatical, Ms. Lyons and Mr. Dickinson came back to resume KFC three years later. “I had no clue there would be such a groundswell of interest from students,” Mr. Dickinson said, adding, “I guess it got out there that everyone is supportive, and you don’t have to be professional … everyone was applauding [the] people who just gave it a try.” As Spanish Teacher and KFC organizer Cheri Karbon described, the couple truly dedicated themselves to the Deer!eld community. “#ey married but never had kids, deciding the students of Deer!eld would be their kids,” she said. In addition to founding KFC, Ms. Lyons and Mr. Dickinson began the DeNunzio Disco. Mr. Dickinson remembered that students would come into his apartment in Mather to practice their performances for him before the concert. At the time, KFC would start at 7:30 p.m. and o"en last until nearly midnight, and the class deans would extend curfew hours. When the concert !rst started, the majority of performers were part of the Academy’s music program. “We would get singers and musicians … [but] little by little—this is the best thing about it—it started opening up. And little by little, the novices started showing up,” Mr. Dickinson said. In 2010, he and Ms. Lyons chose a small group of the top KFC performers to perform at a New York City dinner for Deer!eld trustees and donors. Today, KFC enters its 25th year. Ms. Karbon, who came to the Academy in 1999, said the concert has stayed quite true to the original vision of Ms. Lyons and Mr. Dickinson. She and student co-hosts Will Wichern ’27 and Reagan Warren ’27 have experienced !rsthand the challenge the event demands; Warren joked that each concert takes “!ve tons of manpower and three hours of coordination each week.” #e organization of this year’s concerts began last spring, as Ms. Karbon and the student hosts slotted the three concerts for 2025-2026 into the calendar. Yet despite the hours of planning poured into the event, the concert is always a little bit di$erent. #e team has learned to predict last-minute act changes, tech malfunctions, and other unpredictable disasters. “#ere’s just so much that can go wrong—and so much that will,” Warren admitted. #e organizers, and especially the student MCs up on stage have know how to handle all sorts of issues—Ms. Karbon described the process as “knowing something’s going to not go as planned, counting on that. And then we have such a kind audience.” Now, the spirit behind the concert never fades, she said, and for her, this is one of the most special aspects. “Even if a group gets up and doesn’t do very well, the community is still going to support them,” she said. As Mr. Dickinson put it, KFC “never would have happened without students being willing to get up there and try,

