Perspectives on Performance
Friday, February 11 (1006 Humanities Building)
10:00 Coffee and Registration
10:45 Opening Remarks
Professor Judith Lochhead, Chair, Department of Music
Bethany Cencer, Symposium Chair
Professor Judith Lochhead, Chair, Department of Music
Bethany Cencer, Symposium Chair
11:00-1:00 Changing Receptions, Changing Histories
Jon Fessenden, chair
Jon Fessenden, chair
Jonathan Waxman (New York University)
“Performing Ives: The Premiere and Reception of Ives’s Second Symphony”
Isadora Miranda (Western Illinois University)
“Child’s Play: Performance and Reception History of Hans Krása’s Brundibár”
Ryan Weber (University of Connecticut)
“Beethoven as Christian Socialist? Tracing Transatlantic Identities”
Michael Richardson (Stony Brook University)
“Rereading the Past: Towards an Historically Informed Performance Practice of Notre Dame Polyphony”
1:00 Lunch break
2:00-3:30 Feminist Theory and Popular Music
Sarah Feltham, chair
Sarah Feltham, chair
Joelle Meniktos-Nolting (University of Michigan)
“Last Night I Heard the Screaming: ‘Kinesthetic Empathy’ and Tracy Chapman’s Behind the Wall”
Zerrin Martin (Westminster Choir College)
“‘Don’t Tell Me What to Do’: The Supremes and the Ronettes: Issues of Feminine Archetypes, Race, Sexuality, and Girl Groups
Amanda Cannata (Stanford University)
“‘Look at Me…’: Sarah Vaughan’s Musical Performance of Gender in the 1950s
3:45-5:45 Aesthetics and Mediation
Nicholas Tochka, chair
Nicholas Tochka, chair
Michael D’Errico (Tufts University)
“‘Keepin’ it Real’: ‘Liveness’ and the Externalization of the Digital Interface in Instrumental Hip-Hop Production” (Lecture-Recital)
Robert D. Pearson (Brandeis University)
“‘Severe Diet?’ Tovey’s Renaissance
Lynda Paul (Yale University)
“Immediately Mediated: Musical ‘Liveness’ in Cirque du Soleil”
5:45 Dinner break
7:00 Pre-Concert Talk (Recital Hall, Staller Center for the Arts)
Professor Mauro Calcagno (Stony Brook University)
8:00 Handel, Acis and Galatea (Recital Hall, Staller Center for the Arts)
Stony Brook Opera Workshop and Baroque Players, directed by Professor David Lawton and Professor Arthur Haas
Reception immediately following concert (2nd Floor Lobby, Music Wing, Staller Center)
Saturday, February 12 (Recital Hall, Staller Center for the Arts)
8:30 Coffee
9:00-11:00 Fashioning the Baroque
Kelly Savage, chair
Kelly Savage, chair
Elizabeth Weinfeld (CUNY-Graduate Center)
“Performance, or Self-Promotion? Giorgione, Watteau, and the Politics of Music Making”
Andy Greenwood (University of Chicago)
“Performance of Contagion: Conceiving Sympathy as a Musical Idea in the Scottish Enlightenment”
Christopher Wilke (Eastman School of Music)
“Fortunate Love: Timbre, Texture and Tessitura in Sylvius Leopold Weiss’s Parodies of Gallot’s L’Amant Malheureux” (Lecture-Recital)
11:15-12:45 Performing Politics/Politicizing Performance
Kassandra Hartford, chair
Kassandra Hartford, chair
Eduardo López-Dabdoub (CUNY-Graduate Center)
“‘Oh Lord, Don’t Let Them Shoot Us:’ Charles Mingus and the Performance of Race and Politics during the Civil Rights Movement
David McCarthy (CUNY-Graduate Center)
“Performing Affective Imaginaries in Copá Ruinas, Honduras”
John Gabriel (Harvard University)
“Exodus and Homecoming: Rudolf Kolisch’s 1953 and 1955 Amerika Haus Tours”
12:45 Lunch break
2:00-3:15 Keynote Address
Professor Mauro Calcagno, chair
Professor Ellen Rosand (Yale University)
"Poppea's Progress"
Professor Ellen Rosand (Yale University)
"Poppea's Progress"
3:30-6:00 Modernist Techné
Katherine Kaiser, chair
Giacomo Fiore (University of California-Santa Cruz)
“Reflections, Resonance, Reminiscence: The Just Intonation Resophonic Guitar and Lou Harrison’s Scenes from Nek Chand” (Lecture-Recital)
Ian Power (Harvard University)
“Performance and Invention of Difficulty in the Work of Anthony Braxton”
Jocelyn Ho (Stony Brook University)
“Debussy and Late-Romantic Performing Practices: An Investigation of Debussy’s Piano Rolls of 1913”
Carmel Raz (Yale University)
“Putting the Cart(er) Before the Horse: Performing and Perceiving Metric Modulations”