Archive for the ‘Residency’ Category

Pulitzer-Prize winning composer Steven Stucky in Residency at HHSOM Oct. 12-18

Friday, October 8th, 2010

Stucky_Steven_Hoebermann721-250

Steven Stucky, awarded the 2005 Pulitzer Prize in Music for his Second Concerto for Orchestra, will be in residence at the Hodgson School of Music Oct. 12-18

Mr. Stucky has taught at Cornell University since 1980, where he serves as Given Foundation Professor of Composition. He has also been associated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic for more than 20 years, and is currently Consulting Composer for New Music.

His residency will include several performances and presentations that will be open to the public, including a presentation about his oratorio “August 4, 1964,” which focuses on two iconic events in American history that took place on that date: the announcement of the Gulf of Tonkin attack and the discovery of the bodies of three slain civil rights workers in Mississippi. This presentation will be at 2:30 pm on Wednesday Oct. 13 in Edge Hall.

Other events of the residency include:

  • Wed, 10/13, 8:00 PM, Hodgson Hall, University Wind Ensemble Concert – the program includes Dr. Stucky’s “Funeral Music for Queen Mary”
  • Fri, 10/15, 11:15 AM, Dancz Center for New Music, Dr. Stucky will speak with UGA students about his music
  • Mon, 10/18, 8:00 PM, Ramsey Hall, Contemporary Chamber Ensemble and Concert Choir – The CCE and Concert Choir present all-Stucky program to conclude the residency.

For more information, contact Dr. Adrian Childs, 706/542-2765, apchilds@uga.edu

Flutes are Wild

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Not really. But we do have three flute recitals today in Edge Recital Hall at 3:30 p.m., as HHSOM students Allison Carroll, Lindsay Welch and Caitlyn Delinsky perform today.

Then at 5 p.m. in Edge Hall (3rd floor, HHSOM), catch the senior voice recital by Ryan Tucker. You’ll remember that Ryan was terrific as Bob in Menotti’s opera “The Old Maid and the Thief” back in February. Hodgson School singers and musicians consistently perform at a very high level and these recitals are great opportunity to enjoy their talents.

Recitals in the Hodgson School are free and the public is invited to attend.

Zagreb Saxophone Quartet

Friday, November 13th, 2009

The Zagreb Saxophone Quartet spent the week of Oct. 26-30 in residency at the University of Georgia as Willson Center Visiting Artists. The residency culminated in a performance on Saturday, Oct. 31, that began the 32nd season of the Franklin College Chamber Music Series.

Founded by graduates of the Zagreb Academy of Music in Zagreb, Crotia, the Zagreb Saxophone Quartet has been performing with its current members since 1989. The quartet, Dragan Sremec, Goran Mercep, Sasa Nestorovic and Matjaz Drevensek, has performed the world over with symphony orchestras and Big Band jazz ensembles alike, under the baton of distinguished conductors as well as alongside some the world’s most renowned soloists. Their repertoire includes pieces originally written for the saxophone quartet, as well as transcriptions and arrangements of pieces by various composers of different periods from the baroque to the 20th century.

“The members of this quartet have extraordinary abilities both as chamber musicians and in their interactions with students,” said Kenneth Fischer, professor of saxophone in the music school and longtime colleague of the quartet members. “It’s important for our students to be able to work with these individuals over several days and get to know them as performers, as teachers and as musicians.”

The Zagreb quartet members spent the week at UGA working with individual students in the music school, coaching quartets and teaching master classes. The residency also included mini-concerts and open rehearsals for the Saturday performance.

Zagrebsax4

“These are wonderful musicians, artists who will teach our students and inspire our audiences,” said Dale Monson, director of the school. “We are grateful for the Willson Center grant that will allow for their extended stay on campus.”

Founded in 1987 and named in 2005 for its benefactors, the Jane and Harry Willson Center for the Humanities and Arts promotes scholarly inquiry and creative activity by supporting faculty research grants, lectures, symposia, publications visiting scholars and artists, collaborative instruction, and public conferences, exhibitions and performances. The Center is a unit of the Office of the Vice president for Research.

The Franklin College Chamber Music Series was established in 1978 by former dean William Jackson “Jack” Payne and continues to be presented without charge thanks to individual contributions from music lovers and patrons of the cultural life of both the university and the community.

McCay Resident: Robert Duke

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

DukeOctober 12 – 15, 2009

Renowned scholar and researcher Robert Duke will be in residence at the Hugh Hodgson School of Music from October 12th-15th, 2009. Dr. Duke will be presenting a variety of engaging talks and lectures covering a range of topics related to both music teaching and learning, and general principles of teaching and learning. All sessions are free of charge and open to the public. This residency is made possible by the Charles McCay Fund.
Highlights of Dr. Duke’s visit include talks on the observation of teaching and learning entitled Watching Students Learn (or Not) and What the Heck Are You Looking At? An afternoon lecture will center on the topic of Dr. Duke’s latest book, Intelligent Music Teaching.  A session titled The Practice of Practice will investigate how musicians can practice more effectively, and My Brain’s Busy Even Though I’m Not will examine the cognitive neuroscience of skill learning.
At 8 PM on Monday October 12th, Dr. Duke will present an evening lecture entitled Why Our Students Don’t Learn What We Think We Teach. This talk will explore how the brain is re-organized during learning activities, and why formal education often fails to make substantive and lasting changes in how we think and behave. Dr. Duke will present ideas for designing learning experiences that will achieve changes in cognition, affect, and behavior, all of which are components of expertise in every discipline.
Robert Duke is the Marlene and Morton Meyerson Centennial Professor in Music and Human Learning and Director of the Center for Music Learning at the University of Texas in Austin. He is the founder of the National Forum on Research in Motor Learning and Music. A former studio musician and public-school music teacher, Dr. Duke is widely published in professional journals and a frequent presenter on human learning throughout North America.
Any student or teacher of music will benefit from Dr. Duke’s entertaining, informative, and thought-provoking sessions. For a complete schedule of events, please visit www.music.uga.edu. For more information, please e-mail pjutras@uga.edu.