Meet the Band
Corinne Letourneau
Corinne Letourneau is a singer, multi-instrumentalist, teacher, and music director who has been part of the Charleston music scene since 2009. Originally from Hendersonville, NC, she has been teaching and performing professionally for more than 30 years, with a career spanning theater, touring, recording, and music education.
She began performing at Flat Rock Playhouse, later touring nationally as a dancer with Hoctor's Dance Caravan and studying choral music at North Carolina Governor's School. Corinne earned her BFA in Musical Theatre from Florida State University, where her performance work led to principal roles in productions including Guys and Dolls, A Chorus Line, Children of Eden, Brigadoon, and The Sound of Music.
After college, she performed at Walt Disney World with Voices of Liberty, then toured out of New York City with hip-hop group Raination, sharing stages with artists including The Black Eyed Peas, Kanye West, The Roots, and Jimmy Cliff. She also performed at noted venues including The Bitter End and CBGB.
In Nashville, Corinne earned a degree in Audio Engineering from SAE, worked as a recording and mixing engineer, and recorded her original album “All My Days”, which is available on all major music platforms.
Today, she performs roughly 150 shows each year throughout Charleston, the surrounding Lowcountry, and Asheville as both a solo artist and lead singer, guitarist, and keyboard player for High 5. She also serves as music director at Palmetto Presbyterian Church and teaches voice, guitar, and piano privately and at Wando High School, working with students of all ages across genres from classical to contemporary.
Jason Eary
Jason Eary first picked up guitar in college, learning chords, songs, and gradually developing what became a lasting passion for music. A proud West Virginia native and West Virginia University graduate, he still carries his roots with him wherever he goes—Let’s Go Mountaineers.
After college, Jason moved to Charleston in 2006 for a software engineering job, but music was always part of the plan. Determined to join a band, he began taking both guitar and voice more seriously, studying his craft while looking for the right musical fit. That search led him to Glenn, and together with a few coworkers they formed Category 6.
Not content to leave music on the side, Jason eventually took a leap and pursued it full time. During that season, he played gigs regularly, worked in a guitar shop, and took on production roles for larger shows, while also performing with projects including The Remedy, Lilly B, and City Station.
It was at the guitar shop that he met Corinne, who had come in looking for an instrument for one of her students. A shared love of music led to an immediate connection, laying the groundwork for what would eventually become High 5.
Today, Jason continues to grow as a musician, bringing the same curiosity and drive to every performance. A lifelong student of music, he is currently expanding into keys and diving deeper into music theory—always looking for new ways to strengthen both his own musicianship and the band’s sound.
Glenn Miller
Born in the small town of Abilene, Texas, Glenn Miller immersed himself in music early on—banging on anything he could find and teaching himself on his mom’s piano and organ around the house. Music was always part of the family: his mom was a professional pianist and organist, his dad sang in choirs, and his brother could seemingly play just about anything.
Things got serious after his family moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1986. In 5th grade, Glenn joined the school band on alto saxophone and quickly rose through the ranks, earning 1st chair and holding it throughout high school. He expanded into marching band and jazz band as well, where he became the featured bari sax soloist. Around that same time, he and his best friend Tedlee-T started his first band, Yuba Gold—a rap group built on sick beats, killer synth sounds, and enough energy to land gigs at parties and variety shows throughout high school and college.
After moving to Charleston, South Carolina, in 2002, Glenn became a familiar face in the local music scene. Before joining High 5, he played in several successful cover and original bands, including Henry’s Attic, Category 6, The Remedy, County Line Strangers, Loners Society, Corinne and The Resolution, and City Station. Over the years, he’s worn just about every hat possible—drummer, bassist, guitarist, alto and bari sax player, backup vocalist, and lead singer.
Glenn’s passion for music runs deep. His taste spans everything from alternative and grunge rock to hip-hop, heavy metal, industrial, electronic, drum and bass, pop, oldies, and classical.
One thing is certain: Glenn will be listening to, creating, exploring, and playing music for the rest of his life.