MTSU
READING

Music colloquium draws another top scholar to MTSU...

Music colloquium draws another top scholar to MTSU for public lecture

The MTSU School of Music is sponsoring a Music Colloquium that will bring another top scholar to campus for a free public presentation on Thursday, April 20.

Dr. Helena Simonett

Dr. Helena Simonett

Dr. Helena Simonett, senior research associate at Switzerland’s Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, will speak at 2:40 p.m. April 20 in Room 101 of the Saunders Building.

A searchable campus parking map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap. Off-campus visitors attending the lectures should obtain a special one-day permit for each at www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.

School of Music new logo webSimonett’s April 20 presentation, “Yoreme Cocoon Leg Rattles: An Eco-organological Study of a Unique ‘Sound Maker,’” stems from her research among the indigenous peoples of northwestern Mexico.

She received her doctorate in ethnomusicology from the University of California, Los Angeles, and has conducted extensive research on Mexican popular music and its transnational diffusion, as well as exploring the role of indigenous ceremonial music and dance in northwestern Mexico.

Simonett’s publications include “Banda: Mexican Musical Life Across Borders” and “En Sinaloa Nací: Historia de la Música de Banda,” and she edited “The Accordion in the Americas: Klezmer, Polka, Tango, Zydeco, and More!” and co-edited “A Latin American Music Reader: Views from the South.” She also produced the children’s book “Ca’anáriam — Hombre Que No Hizo Fuego” with Bernardo Esquer López in both Yoreme and Spanish with an English translation.

Dr. Joy Calico

Dr. Joy Calico

Dr. Joy H. Calico, the Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Musicology at Vanderbilt University and the first speaker in the 2017 MTSU colloquium, discussed her research on “Noise and Arnold Schoenberg’s 1913 Scandal Concert” March 28.

The Austrian-American composer, known for creating new musical composition methods involving atonality, conducted a concert in the Great Hall of Vienna’s Musikverein that was broken up by a melee and led to legal proceedings.

The MTSU Music Colloquium is a public series that presents scholarship on music and music-related issues concerning the world’s many music traditions. More details are available at www.mtsu.edu/music/colloquium2017.php.

For information on MTSU School of Music events and musical performances, please visit www.mtsumusic.com or call 615-898-2493.

— Gina E. Fann (gina.fann@mtsu.edu)


COMMENTS ARE OFF THIS POST