The newly-formed Study Group in Skills and Resources for Early Musics proposes a roundtable discussion centered on the following questions: What are the skills and resources needed to study early musics in the twenty-first century? What currently exists and what is missing? The discussion will feature five brief co-presentations by faculty and students addressing the following issues: how the Inclusive Early Music database might be decentered to teach and think "early music" in ways that are truly inclusive; methods through which early music scholars approach the interpretive gaps and problems of decipherment in the study of polyglot documents and multicultural sites of production; tools and tactics to make notation pedagogy more accessible; methods and resources for practicing and teaching solmization and historical improvisation; and a hands-on approach to the history and technology of instrument making, linking material science, construction, the science of acoustics and the physics of sound to evidentiary materials gathered from historical and iconographical sources. By balancing faculty and student perspectives, we aim to stimulate an inclusive dialogue about a wide range of skills and resources as well as future initiatives for the Study Group.
Organizers: Luisa Nardini (Associate Professor, The University of Texas, Austin) and Catherine Saucier (Associate Professor, Arizona State University)
Presenters and Topics:
Erika Honisch (Associate Professor, Stony Brook University), Giovanni Zanovello (Associate Professor, Indiana University), and Deanna Pellerano (MA student, Indiana University)-"Mapping Inclusive Early Music / Mapping Inclusive Early Music"
Kate van Orden (Professor, Harvard University) and Felipe Ledesma-Nuñez (PhD student, Harvard University)- "Working with Polyglot Sources"
Áine Palmer (PhD student, Yale University) and Andrea Klassen (PhD student, UT Austin)- "Notation and Summer Boot Campus"
Julie E. Cumming (Professor, McGill University), and Linda Pearse (PhD student, McGill; Associate Professor, Mt. Allison University)- "Historical Pedagogy and Improvisation in the Renaissance"
Susan Forscher Weiss (Professor, Peabody Conservatory/Johns Hopkins University), Steph Zimmerman (DMA student, Peabody Conservatory), and Nonoka Mizukami (DMA student, Peabody Conservatory)- "Inspiring A New Generation of Luthiers: A New Organology within the Curriculum of an American Conservatory"
The newly-formed Study Group in Skills and Resources for Early Musics proposes a roundtable discussion centered on the following questions: What are the skills and resources needed to study early musics in the twenty-first century? What currently exists and what is missing? The discussion will feature five brief co-presentations by faculty and students addressing the following issues: how the Inclusive Early Music database might be decentered to teach and think "early music" in ways that are truly inclusive; methods through which early music scholars approach the interpretive gaps and problems of decipherment in the study of polyglot documents and multicultural sites of production; tools and tactics to make notation pedagogy more accessible; methods and resources for practicing and teaching solmization and historical improvisation; and a hands-on approach to the history and technology of instrument making, linking material science, construction, the science of acoustics and the physics of sound to evidentiary materials gathered from historical and iconographical sources. By balancing faculty and student perspectives, we aim to stimulate an inclusive dialogue about a wide range of skills and resources as well as future initiatives for the Study Group.
Organizers: Luisa Nardini (Associate Professor, The University of Texas, Austin) and Catherine Saucier (Associate Professor, Arizona State University)
Zoom Meeting Room 1
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