On March 23rd and 24th, UNM Music Professors Kristina Jacobsen (Ethnomusicology; former President, Society for Ethnomusicology, Southwest Chapter) and David Bashwiner (Music Theory; outgoing President, Rocky Mountain Society for Music Theory) traveled with Musicology and Music Theory graduate students Regan Homeyer, Renata Yazzie and Matthew Stanley to present their original research at the regional Rocky Mountain Scholars’ Conference in Tucson, Arizona, hosted by the University of Arizona’s Department of Music. The very successful student papers given were:
Matthew Stanley (Music Theory), “Toward Metric Stability: The Interplay of Hemiola, Syncopation, and Meter in Brahms’ Violin Sonata No. 1 in G Major, Op. 78”
Regan Homeyer (Musicology), “Sounding the Nile: Hamza El Din as ‘Ethnographic Ear’”
Renata Yazzie (Musicology/Piano Performance), “Indigenizing Art Music: An Analysis of Connor Chee’s Navajo Vocables for Piano
UNM Music’s Dr. Kristin Ditlow celebrates the release of her CD Passages
UNM Music’s Dr. Kristin Ditlow celebrates the release of her CD Passages, 18 pieces of music which trace a journey "Kristin has a new recording out which I highly recommend. Her solo recording on the Affetto label is titled, “Passages — solo piano works inspired by...
Dr. Ana Alonso-Minutti to lecture at the University of Vienna
Dr. Ana Alonso-Minutti to lecture at the University of Vienna UNM’s Dr. Ana Alonso-Minutti, Associate Professor of Musicology & Ethnomusicology, will travel to Vienna this week to lecture on Noise and Extractivism at the US-Mexico Border. Of the lecture, Dr. Minutti...
UNMSO to perform Stravinsky’s ‘Rite of Spring’
UUNMSO to perform Stravinsky's 'Rite of Spring' Free concert held May 4 at Cleveland High School in Rio Rancho Spring is here and what better way to usher it in than to hear composer Igor Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, also known as Le Sacre du printemps. The University...