Category Archives: faculty news

Prof. Spohr Awarded Research Fellowship in Germany

Prof. Arne Spohr, professor of music history at BGSU, was awarded a six-month research fellowship by the Herzog August Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel, Germany. Dr. Spohr will use this fellowship for his new research project on music, ceremonial and space at European courts during the Renaissance and Baroque.

The HAB is one of the world’s foremost research libraries for early modern studies, with most impressive holdings of unique printed and manuscript sources from the Middle Ages until the 18th century. Like the Newberry Library in Chicago, the HAB is a gathering place for international scholars, including many American historians, art historians, literary historians, theologians, and musicologists. Working at this institution offers many fruitful opportunities for interdisciplinary dialogue and exchange within the scholarly community. Beyond offering tremendous research opportunities, the HAB organizes seminars and colloquia on early modern topics, as well as concerts with music ranging from the Middle Ages to the present.

The Herzog August Bibliothek offers a highly competitive fellowship program for post-doctoral researchers in order to promote research in the areas of medieval and early modern cultural history. The international program is open to all historically oriented disciplines. Current fellows are both junior and senior scholars from all over the world, including the USA (from Stanford University, University of Wisconsin, Bucknell University and Carthage College), Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Russia and the United Kingdom.

www.hab.de

http://www.hab.de/forschung/stipendien/2012.htm

 

Profs. Sampen and Shrude guests for Kent State’s John Cage Celebration

On December 1, 2012, Distinguished Research Professors Marilyn Shrude and John Sampen visited Kent, Ohio as special guests for Kent State University’s  “John Cage Celebration.”   Shrude and Sampen’s lecture presentation was entitled “In Celebration: John Cage and the Saxophone” and was followed immediately by a performance of Cage’s composition FOUR 5 as directed by BGSU alumni Dr. Jeff Heisler.

 

This Kent State lecture was a repeat performance of Shrude/Sampen’s presentation at the World Saxophone Congress in Scotland last summer.  Included in their talk were specific details and film footage from Cage’s residence at BGSU in 1986 as well as television interviews with Dr. Shrude and a discussion of Cage’s subsequent commission for Sampen and the BGSU saxophone class.  FOUR 5 was one of John Cage’s last compositions before he died in 1992.

 

In addition to the featured lecture, Dr. Shrude also presented a guest masterclass for the Kent State composition department.

 

Memorial concert planned to honor Lockard-Zimmerman

A memorial/scholarship concert to celebrate the legacy of the late Dr. Barbara Lockard-Zimmerman will be presented at 2 p.m. Dec. 8 in the Donnell Theatre in the Wolfe Center for the Arts.

Lockard-Zimmerman, who passed away in September, was a member of the voice faculty at the College of Musical Arts for 37 years. Former students, faculty and friends will revisit her career highlights and her life.

The program will include music representative of the various stages of Lockard-Zimmerman’s life, from her USO tour and performance at the Brussels World Fair, to New York City – from Broadway to opera and theater – to her engagement with the Bowling Green community after her arrival at BGSU.

The concert is free and open to the public.

Lillios’s “Backroads” featured on Australian concert and workshop

Elainie Lillios’s (Associate Professor of Composition) electroacoustic work “Backroads” will be the featured composition at a November 27 and 28 sound diffusion workshop and concert sponsored by the Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory (SIAL) Sound Studios at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Melbourne, Australia. Organized for invited guests, the workshop and performance will showcase RMIT’s newly built Design Hub, and will serve as the pilot event for a new collaborative electroacoustic concert series.

Prof. Broman’s new book has been released

Per F. Broman’s monograph on composer Sven-David Sandström (b. 1942) was published in Sweden by Atlantis förlag. It outlines his entire career, from his early chamber compositions from high school to his most recent career as a composer of large-scales oratories and composition professor at Indiana University, Bloomington. During the week of the release of the book, Broman spent time in Stockholm, lecturing on Sandström and gave an interview on Swedish Broadcasting Corporation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Professor Rosenkranz in residence at the University of California, San Diego

Assistant Professor of Piano, Thomas Rosenkranz, recently completed a residency at the University of California at San Diego from Nov. 12th- 16th, together with his colleagues from the annual soundSCAPE Festival in Italy, which included Tony Arnold, voice Aiyun Huang, percussion,  and Lisa Cella, flute. The residency included a performance of new works written for them and a recording of works by UCSD graduate students. In addition, the group was also a featured ensemble at the College Music Society conference, and Professor Rosenkranz presented a masterclass on the music of Franz Liszt at the Opus 119 School in Irvine, California.