Posts Tagged ‘Hugh Hodgson School of Music’

UGA to host Southern Graduate Music Research Symposium

Friday, August 13th, 2010

The University of Georgia Musicology/Ethnomusicology Student Association will host the first annual Southern Graduate Music Research Symposium August 27-28, 2010 at the UGA Hugh Hodgson School of Music. The two-day symposium will begin with a panel on Friday, Aug. 27 at 5:30 pm in Edge Recital Hall in the Hodgson School of Music; all symposium events are free and the public is invited to attend.

A collaborative event organized by and for graduate students, the mission of the symposium is to support graduate student research in music and to foster a collegial research environment among regional schools in the South. This year’s event includes participants from Florida State University, University of Georgia, and University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Topics at the conference range from the scientific impulse in aesthetics to the rock group Jethro Tull to “insurgent country music.”

The keynote speaker for the symposium will be Montgomery Wolf on Friday, Aug. 27 at 7 p.m. in Edge Hill. A lecturer in the UGA department of history, Wolf’s research interests include U.S. cultural history, popular music and consumer culture. The title of her talk is “Personality Crisis: Punk Rock and the 1970’s Revolution of Self.”

“The variety of musicological and ethnomusicological scholarship going on in our region is impressive, as the program for the symposium demonstrates,” said Nancy Riley, a doctoral student in the Hodgson School of Music and president of the Musicology/Ethnomusicology Student Association (MESA). “This event is a great opportunity for graduate students to come together, share some of our work, and get to know others in the field.”

The program for the symposium is available here.

Private Lessons for Non-majors

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Starting this semester, UGA students can register for private lessons for credit through OASIS. For more information, visit http://www.music.uga.edu/lessons/

horn1

2011 American Liszt Society Bicentennial Festival

Monday, July 12th, 2010

liszt2

The 2011 ALS Bicentennial Festival will be held at the Hugh Hodgson School of Music, February 17-19, 2011. New festival website is here. Watch for added details in the coming weeks, but the registration form is updated and ready to submit.

The title of this year’s festival is Liszt and the Future. One look at the program and you can tell it is going to be a weekend of great lectures and performances.

Vespers Video

Friday, May 14th, 2010

On March 23 of this year, the UGA Concert Choir and the Collegium Musicum, under the direction of Mitos Andaya, performed the Vespers of 1610 by Claudio Monteverde. The concert performance in Hodgson Hall involved many guest singers and musicians, including alumnus Derek Chester, who has performed this piece, and others, in several highly-renown venues this year.

Production has just been completed on a video of the rehearsals for the performance, including interviews with Andaya, Chester and visiting choral faculty member Bradley Naylor. The video is available for viewing at the University of Georgia iTunes site, http://www.itunes.uga.edu/. The link will open iTunes on your computer and take you to the UGA page. Once there click on arts and sciences in the menu to the left; then in the fine arts category, the video is listed under Live Performances at UGA.

UGA Summer Music Camps

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

It’s time to sign up for Summer Music Camps at UGA. Choose from Summer Music Camp,  Summer Music Institute, Marching Band Camp, Step Off and the Summer Twirl and Dance Camp.

Visit the site for more information, dates, registration and deadlines.

Composition Recitals

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

The recitals in HHSOM continue today, with Composition Recitals in the Dancz Center for New Music taking center stage.

Recitals in the Dancz center begin at 5:30 today, free and open to the public.

***

A reminder about the free UGA Symphony Orchestra concert tomorrow night at 8 p.m. in Hodgson Hall. Make plans to attend and be a part of music history at UGA, as this concert is filmed for broadcast.

Opera Tonight

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Tonight at 8 p.m. the UGA Opera Ensemble presents Lehar’s “The Merry Widow” in a fully staged performance at Hodgson Concert Hall.

Congratulations to all the students and professor Burchinal for the hard work they have put into making this an unforgettable performance. The large cast will share the stage with a small chamber orchestra, conducted by Gary DiPasquasio. The various dance sequences were choreographed by Denise Posnak, a visiting lecturer in the department of dance.

Contra an article on the performance in today’s Red & Black, the performance is not free. Tickets are $15, $7 for UGA students with a valid ID.

This concert is the March installment in the Second Thursday Scholarship Concert Series. An encore performance will be presented on Friday the 19th at 8 p.m.

Hope to see you there.

Music Research Symposium 2010

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Om March 18 in Edge Recital Hall beginning at 9:30 a.m. the Musicology/Ethnomusicology Area of the Hodgson School of Music and the Musicology Ethnomusicology Student Association (MESA) present the 2010 Music Research Symposium.

The day of speakers, panel discussions and presentations shows the diversity of expertise in school of music and will be a point of interest for music scholars as well as casual observers. The symposium is free and open to the public.

A full list speakers and topic is available at Music Research Symposium 2010 Program.

UGA Opera Ensemble Performance

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

The UGA Opera Ensemble’s performance of Menotti’s The Old Maid and the Thief takes place tonight at 8 p.m. in Hodgson Concert Hall, with an encore performance on Friday, February 19, also at 8 p.m..

The free performances, directed by DMA candidate Benjamin Dawkins, feature UGA students Kristen Blanton (DMA) mezzo-soprano, Chery Brendel (DMA) soprano, Meghan Taylor (Junior) soprano [Wednesday's performance], Lindsay Ferguson (MM) soprano [Friday's performance], Ryan Tucker (Senior) baritone and Daniel Youmans (Freshman), with Music by pianist Grant Jones (MM ’09).

Here’s a sneak peak, from rehearsals last week.

Let’s Go!

HHSOM Composers, Dancz Center for New Music

Monday, February 15th, 2010

the Hugh Hodgson School of Music’s Roger & Phyllis Dancz Center for New Music, is a black-box multimedia theater with theatrical lighting, flexible audience seating, 4.4 audio spatialization, and state-of-the-art communication capability with the three adjacent electronic music composition studios. It serves as the rehearsal space for the Contemporary Chamber Ensemble and is also used for solo and chamber ensemble performances involving new music and multimedia. It is home to composition students in the Hodgson School and the site of many traditional and avant-garde performances.

The Southeastern Composers League has announced the 2009-10 winners for its undergraduate and graduate student composition contests. Congratulations are in order for three students recently recognized for excellence by the League:

THE ARNOLD SALOP MEMORIAL COMPOSITION CONTEST
For Undergraduate Students
First Place:
HHSOM composer Daniel Elder – Due Miniature for Woodwind Quintet
Senior Composition Recital – Nov 5

THE PHILIP SLATES MEMORIAL COMPOSITION CONTEST
For Graduate Students
First Place:
HHSOM composer Ashley Floyd – Love Songs Circumventing the Topic of Love for Baritone solo with String Quartet
Second Place:
HHSOM composer David Mitchell – String Quartet No. 1

And speaking of the Dancz Center for New Music… On Tuesday, February 16 at 5 p.m., the CNM welcomes Killick and the H’arpeggione. An Improvisational Framework: Appalachian Trance Metal From The Beginning.

The workshop is free and open to the public; students are encouraged to bring musical instruments, Says Killick: “I’ll play a short set of unaccompanied music, and then turn the focus to the attendees as we discuss issues related to maximizing the physicality of performance; life as a musician; and anything related, which is to say, everything.”

Check it out.