Events 2018 - 2019
Public Talk by Michael Beckerman
Was Dvorak's American Dream...a Nightmare?
Friday, April 26, 2019
4:00-5:00 pm |AuditoriumonŷڱƵ Boulder campus
Free and open to the public
Was Dvorak's "New World" visit a dream, which brought enlightenment and freshness to American music, or just another example of confusion, colonizing and exploitation? How did different types of thinkers with different agendas and perspectives answer this question at the time, and how do they today? We invite you to join us and explore the answers to these questions with Dr. Beckerman.
is Carroll and Milton Petrie Chair and Collegiate Professor of Music at New York University. He has written articles on such subjects as film scoring, music of the Roma (Gypsies), Mozart, Brahms, exiled composers, and music in the camps, as well as many studies and several books on Czech topics, includingDvořák and His World(Princeton University Press, 1993),Janáček as Theorist(Pendragon Press, 1994),New Worlds of Dvořák(W.W. Norton, 2003),Janáček and His World (Princeton, 2004), andMartinů’s Mysterious Accident (Pendragon, 2007). Dr. Beckermanhas been a frequent contributor toThe New York Timesand was a regular guest onLive From Lincoln Centerand other radio and television programs in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Dr. Beckerman lectures nationally and internationally and has organized many concerts and symposia. He was awarded the Janáček Medal by the Czech Ministry of Culture, is a recipient of the Dvořák Medal, and is also a Laureate of the Czech Music Council; he has twice received the Deems Taylor Award. He was chair of the New York University Department of Music (2004–13), served as distinguished professor at Lancaster University (2011–15), and last year received an honorary doctorate from Palacký University in the Czech Republic.
This public talk is in conjunction ɾٳ"" program on Saturday,April 27 at 7:30 pm in Macky Auditorium, which features theNew World Symphonyand PeterBoyer'sEllis Island.Dr. Beckerman will give the 6:30 pm pre-concert lecture."Dream of America" tickets are sold.
Beckerman's talk will be in the new CASE Building which sits above the Euclid Parking Garage at 1725 Euclid Avenue, just west of the Imig Music Building.
Leyla McCalla
An Evening of Caribbean and Cajun Folk Jazz
Friday, April 19, 2019
6pm |onŷڱƵ Boulder campus
Free and open to the public
Presented by The Cultural Events Board and Graduate Musicology Society. Reception to follow at 7:15 in. For more information contact Zane Cupec at zane.cupec@colorado.edu.
The Daughter of Dawn
Featuring the(dir. by Rodney Sauer)
Monday, March 18, 2019
7:30PM |, ŷڱƵ Boulder Campus
Hosted by the American Music Research Center and the.
told the story of a Comanche chief's daughter torn between two lovers, one wealthy but cowardly, the other poor but honest and loyal. A contest of bravery involving a dangerous jump off of a cliff reveals the true nature of each man. The cowardly lover disgraced by his failing defects to the rival Kiowa tribe and joins in a failed attack on the Comanche village. When the Comanches successfully repel the attack the Chief gladly sends his daughter off with her true love and the young lovers, paddling together in a canoe, sail into the proverbial sunset.
This event is FREE and open to the public!
Public Talk with Kendra Leonard
Phantoms of the Archives: Music for the Early Cinematic Supernatural and Other Tales
Monday, March 18, 2019
2:00 pm | Music Theater in theonŷڱƵ Boulder campus


"Persevering Legacy"
1:00 pm Training & Workshop;3:00pm Musical Selections
Howard B. Walts Music Library,, ŷڱƵ Boulder Campus

The free performance, open to all members of the ŷڱƵ and Boulder communities, will feature College of Music faculty and students performing selections from the AMRC’s Helen Walker-Hill Collection, a unique collection of rare and seldom performed musical compositions by female African American composers. The workshop component, led by members of the Museum of Boulder’s existing Inclusipedia Project, will give volunteers the necessary skills for creating and editing Wikipedia pages to add women and people of color from Boulder’s past and present to the website.
Inclusipedia Training & Workshop | 1:00pm
- Learn to create and edit Wikipedia pages
- Refreshments to be provided
Musical Selections | 3:00pm
- Hear live performances of music by female African American composers by College of Music students
Susan Thomas:
"Pop Music Video and the Cuban Nation"
ŷڱƵ on the Weekend Lecture Series
Saturday, February 23, 2019
1:00 -3:00pm |Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building, ŷڱƵ Boulder Campus
Since the late 1990s, Cuba has undergone a series of transitions that have impacted the nation’s economic, cultural and political identity. These include major changes to the country’s emigration, repatriation and citizenship laws; a loosening of laws governing privately held businesses and telecommunications; and the lessening of tensions between Cuba and the United States that culminated in President Barack Obama’s visit in 2015. As a result, Cubans have had to reimagine themselves, their nation and their relationship to the outside world. These changes have been negotiated at all levels of Cuban culture, including popular music.
In this talk, Thomas will show music videos produced between 2000 and 2017 and explore how different musical artists and video directors have used the genre to explore Cuba’s changing identity. Many of these videos explicitly refer to one another, either via their music, choreography, setting or specific imagery. We’ll explore how these video texts can be viewed as multiple layers of an ongoing discussion about what it means to be a Cuban citizen in the 21st century.
This event is FREE and open to the public!Limited to the first 200 people.
Distiguished Music Lecture
ɾٳJoseph Conyers
Wednesday, February 6, 2019
4:00PM | Old Main Chapel, ŷڱƵ Boulder campus
Joseph Conyers presents the College of Music's second annual. Conyers will share insights related to self-discovery, self-empowerment and self-confidence within the realm of music, diversity and inclusion.
Joseph Conyers was appointed assistant principal bassist of The Philadelphia Orchestra in 2010. A recipient of numerous awards and honors, he received The Philadelphia Orchestra's 2018 C. Hartman Kuhn award and was named one of Musical America’s 30 Top Professionals of 2018. In 2019, he was awarded a Medal of Excellence from the Sphinx Organization. A life-long advocate for music education, Conyers is executive director of Project 440, an organization that engages, educates and inspires young musicians, providing them with the career and life skills they need to develop into tomorrow's civic-minded, entrepreneurial leaders.
Public Talk with Josh Kun
The Art of the Crossfade: Music, Archives, and California
Thursday, January 24, 2019
6:30PM |, Room 270, ŷڱƵ Boulder campus
The American Music Research Center and theare proud to present a public talk with Professor.
Josh is a cultural historian, curator, journalist, and MacArthur Fellow. He is the Director of the Annenberg School of Communication and a Professor of Communication and Journalism, and Chair in Cross-Cultural Communication at the University of Southern California.
He uses the DJ method of crossfading to explore and animate historic sheet music, vinyl LPs, and restaurant menus as tools in addressing contemporary issues of gentrification, urban redevelopment, and racial inequality, among others.
He asks the question, how do artifacts from the California past help us to imagine new California futures?
Please join us for an evening of engaging discussion. This event is FREE and open to the public!
to read Josh’s full bio and list of publications.
Concert with Daniel Kahn & the Painted Bird
Thursday, November 8, 2018
7:00 PM |Old Main Theater, ŷڱƵ Boulder Campus
This event is free and open to the public.
is a German-based klezmerband founded by Kahn in 2005. Described as “an absolute mustfor lovers of unusual, intelligent, challenging, exciting folk music and a blast at every instant,” the band will perform a free concert featuring songs in Yiddish this November 2018 on the ŷڱƵ Boulder campus, as part of the Program inJewish StudiesCommunity Talks Series,Yiddishkvell: An Appreciation of All Things Yiddish.
A Detroit area native,Daniel Kahnattended the University of Michigan where he studied acting, directing, playwriting and poetry. After finishing his studies he lived, played music, recorded, acted, directed plays and composed theater music in New Orleans, Detroit, New York and Ann Arbor. He has received awards for his playwriting, poetry, acting, and composing.
The AMRC is a co-sponsor
Mr. Sweeney's Legacy Lecture
Viva Cuba
Boulder Concert Chorale with BoulderChildren's Chorale Bel Canto Choir
Saturday, October 27, 7:30 p.m. and
Sunday, October 28, 2018, 4:00 p.m.
Boulder Church
One of the most popular genres of music across the globe, Cuban music is a synthesis of the traditions of the people who settled Cuba from African slaves to European immigrants. The Boulder Chorale will perform with vocalist, Suzanne Morales; pianist, Jeff Jenkins; and a band of Cuban music experts to offer a sample of the different styles developed in Cuba including salsa, mambo, and son. The concert will also feature new arrangements commissioned by the Chorale and an appearance by Bel Canto, the Boulder Children’s Chorale advanced choir.
Please join us 30 minutes prior to the beginning of the performance for a discussion featuringDr. Susan Thomas, Director of theAmerican Music Research Center.
Diverse Musicians' Alliance
George Rochberg Centennial Celebration
Chamber Music Masterclass
With Andrew Jennings (University of Michigan)
Ajax Quartet: Beethoven Op 132
Pearl Winds: Marquez Danza del Meliodia
Friday, Oct 12, 6:30PM - 8:30PM
Grusin Hall
Panel Discussion:Remembering George Rochberg (1918–2005)
Associate Dean Steven Bruns will moderate a panel discussion involving three musicians with especially close ties to George Rochberg and his music. Guest artist Andrew Jennings, Professor of Violin at the University of Michigan, and ŷڱƵ Boulder faculty members Christina Jennings, flute, and Margaret McDonald, piano, will discuss Rochberg’s compositions and his significant influence on American music.
Monday, October 15,2PM
Chamber Hall
George Rochberg, one of the unique American minds of the last century, composed in an astonishing diversity of voices. Always personal, his compositional style was at first firmly rooted in the atonal and serial movement. Eventually, it shifted toward neo-baroque and highly romantic. University of Michigan violinist Andrew Jennings, a leading expert on Rochberg's music, joins a group of ŷڱƵ Boulder faculty and friends for a concert celebrating the Rochberg centennial.
Featuring Andrew Jennings and Charles Wetherbee, violin; Matthew Dane and Erika Eckert, viola; Christina Jennings, flute; David Korevaar and Margaret McDonald, pianoProgram: George Rochberg: Sonata for Viola and Piano, Caprice Variations, and Piano Quintet
Tuesday, October 16,7:30PM
Grusin Hall
ŷڱƵ Bernstein at 100
This year marks the worldwide celebration of the 100th birthday of Leonard Bernstein, composer, conductor, educator, musician, cultural ambassador, and humanitarian.
We invite everyone to experienceBernstein at 100, a festivalcomprising20 events on the ŷڱƵ Boulder campus over the course of the Fall 2018 semester. Highlights include a Public Talkwith special guests Jamie Bernstein, former New York Philharmonic concertmaster Glenn Dicterow, and Bernstein scholar Carol Oja; our own recreation of a Young People’s Concert; and Eklund Opera Program’s production of “West Side Story.”
New AMRC Director,Susan Thomaswill be moderating theon Monday, September 24 from 4-6 p.m in Grusin Hall.Please join the ŷڱƵ Boulder College of Music and the AMRC as our ensembles, students, faculty, and guests embark on a journey through Bernstein’s lifework throughout the Fall 2018 semester.
for details onallthe festival events.
RecreateYour Roots
January 22-25and February 5-7, 2018
Boulder, ŷڱƵ
Coming in early 2018 and sponsored by theAmerican Music Research Center,Recreate Your Rootsbrings together musicians representing a diverse cross-section of American roots music traditions—think banjos, fiddles, drums—in an ear-opening way for contemporary listeners. Like a summer camp in the woods brought to the city, the celebration will include concerts, TED-style talks, creative incubation, and community gatherings that welcome folks of all ages from greater Boulder.
The visiting musicians—,, and—all work in collaboration with the past, both honoring and exploring the provenance and social underpinnings of the songs they play. These are songs that come with stories of black cowboys, slyly political Caribbean dancers, and the kind of woman who wouldn’t leave her house without her fiddle and her rifle. With great generosity of spirit, these musicians share their creative processes up close in a way that is fascinating to any art lover or art maker.
Curator Jayme Stone ofsays, “We treat old field recordings not as time capsules, but as heirloom seeds passed down from a bygone generation.” Planting these sturdy seeds in modern soil, this versatile gathering of musicians has cultivated vibrant Sea Island spirituals, Creole calypsos, and stomp-down Appalachian dance tunes for contemporary listeners on their album.
Similarly,learn old traditional songs from master elders (especially women) and archives, then weave in new musical ideas and add elements of performance, including dance and moving panoramas or “crankies”. They also take inspiration from other musicians dwelling in storytelling and landscape places—like Laurie Anderson and Nick Cave—and put an avant-garde spin on traditional bluegrass and progressive folk.
Meanwhile,, a founding member of the Grammy Award winning Carolina Chocolate Drops, slam poet, and multi-instrumentalist, brings his own modern take on ragtime, Piedmont blues, spirituals, southern traditional music, string band music, fife and drum music, andjug-band music, with both showmanship and humor.
A diverse Latin Americanprogram will also be presented by, flamenco guitarist extraordinaire, composer, and published ethnomusicologist, in conjunction with University of ŷڱƵ professorBrenda Romero, singer/violinist and expert on U.S. borderlands--NewMexican,Native American, and Mexican--styles.
Ultimately, this celebration embodies the values we associate with folk music. To use music and storytelling to share, between performer and audience, our common experiences and humanity; to lift our spirits and lower our stresses; to practice kindness among neighbors, hospitality to strangers, and to feed our yearning for social justice. It’s also about the common good in a way that is inter-generational, inclusive, feminist, and diverse.
It’s music for the people by the people;Recreate Your Roots.To reserve a visit to your class, please contact the AMRC at 303-735-3645 oreric.a.hansen@colorado.edu.All events are free and open to the public!
Monday, January 22, 2018
2:00 pm- Jayme Stone's FolklifeColloquium
Think Sea Island spirituals,Creole calyps ·, and stomp-down Appalachian dance tune .
Imig MusicBuilding, Room C-199, ŷڱƵ Campus
7:30 pm- Jayme Stone's Folklife
Learn about the group's "collaboratory" process.
First Congregational Church,1128 Pine Street, Boulder
Wednesday, January 24, 2018
7:30 pm- Student Concert
Student composers create music forhorns, strings, and voices.
Imig Music Building, Grusin Hall. ŷڱƵ Campus
Thursday, January 25, 2018
7:30 pm- Jayme Stone's FolklifeEvening Concert
Imig Music Building, Grusin Hall, ŷڱƵ Campus
Monday, February 5, 2018
2:00 pm- Dom Flemons/ Anna & ElizabethColloquium
The American Songster in conversation with innovative multi instrumentalists and Appalachian story-tellers.
Imig Music Building, Room C-199,ŷڱƵ Campus
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
7:30 pm- Steve Mullins/ Brenda Romero Latin Music Workshop
The Center for Musical Arts,200 E. Baseline Road, Lafayette, CO
Wednesday, February 7, 2018
7:30 pm- Dom Flemons / Anna & Elizabeth Evening Concert
Imig Music Building, Grusin Hall, ŷڱƵ Campus