Skip to main content

User login

Prof. Kimberly Mack - "Living Colour, Race, and Rock and Roll" Wed Nov 8, 4PM

Event Start: 
Wednesday, November 8, 2023 - 4:00pm
Location: 
701C Dodge Hall (The Center for Ethnomusicology)

The Center for Ethnomusicology is delighted to announce a colloquium talk featuring Prof. Kimberly Mack (English, University of Illinois) entitled:

“We pushed the boundaries by rocking through the boundaries”: Living Colour, Race, and Rock and Roll

Date: Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2023
Time: 4PM-6PM 
Location: 701C Dodge Hall, Columbia U Morningside Campus @ 116th St.
Free and open to the public.

Please email aaf19@columbia.edu for more information or to arrange required accommodations. 


Prof. Kimberly Mack, Univ. of Illinois


Abstract: The iconic Black rock band Living Colour’s Time’s Up, released in 1990, was recorded in the aftermath of the spectacular critical and commercial success of their debut record Vivid.


Given the segregated nature of the record industry during the 1980s, with artists tethered to strict, race-based musical categories, and the resistance Black rockers sometimes faced from both White rock audiences and skeptics in the Black community, Living Colour’s success was entirely unexpected. After succeeding beyond what anyone predicted and evolving away from the need to conform to the sonic expectations of critics and fans, or chasing commercial success, their next release in 1990 reflected significant creative growth. Time’s Up is a musical and lyrical triumph, incorporating distinct forms and styles of music and featuring inspired collaborations with artists as distinct as Little Richard, Queen Latifah, Maceo Parker, and Mick Jagger.


In this presentation focused on her recent 33 1/3 series book, Time’s Up, Kimberly Mack uses autobiographical narrative to explore her experience growing up in Brooklyn, New York in a family both musical and violent, and the ways in which that upbringing impacted her coming of age and musical listening. She will also have a larger conversation about race, musical genre, and cultural gatekeeping, while exploring the importance of Time’s Up, sonically, lyrically, and politically.

Speaker Bio:  
Kimberly Mack holds a Ph.D. in English from UCLA, and she is Associate Professor of English at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Her book, Living Colour’s Time’s Up, part of Bloomsbury’s 33 1/3 book series, was published in May 2023. She is also the author of Fictional Blues: Narrative Self-Invention from Bessie Smith to Jack White (University of Massachusetts Press, 2020), which won the 2021 College English Association of Ohio’s Nancy Dasher Award. Kimberly is writing another book, tentatively titled The Untold History of American Rock Criticism (under contract with Bloomsbury Academic), about the BIPoC and White women writers who helped develop American rock criticism and journalism during the 1960s and 1970s. For this project, she is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities Public Scholar Fellowship, a senior scholar research grant from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, and the Charles Hamm Fellowship from the Society for American Music. Kimberly is a memoirist and music writer, and her scholarly and public-facing articles have appeared in African American Review, Popular Music and Society, Journal of Popular Music StudiesAMP: American Music PerspectivesLongreads, No Depression, and elsewhere.

Columbia Ethnomusicology Welcomes Prof. Ruth S. Opara!

Ruth S. Opara The Ethnomusicology community at Columbia is delighted to welcome our new colleague, Prof Ruth S. Opara,  to the faculty! Prof. Opara holds the PhD in Ethnomusicology from the University of Colorado at Boulder (2017), and has previously taught at Skidmore College, Syracuse University, and at Columbia as a postdoctoral fellow.  

Prof. Opara’s research centers on African and African diasporic music and knowledge production. Specifically, music and decolonial discourse, women in music, music and gender, and African music and transnational encounters. As a practitioner, a teacher, and a scholar, who has lived and taught on the African continent and the diaspora, Ruth successfully straddles both world’s musical cultures. With the Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship and other awards, Ruth continues to research and work on her current book project, Music, Motherhood, and Transnationalism: A West African Perspective. The book focuses on a group of married women musicians to explore how they utilize music to navigate motherhood on the African continent and in the diaspora. Ruth has published peer-reviewed journal articles and has presented at many academic conferences around the world.

Welcome Prof. Opara! 

Prof. Rumya S. Putcha (U Georgia) -- "The Dancer's Voice" (Wed Sept 27 at 4PM)

Event Start: 
Wednesday, September 27, 2023 - 4:00pm
Location: 
701C Dodge Hall (The Center for Ethnomusicology)
The Center for Ethnomusicology warmly invites you to attend a talk by:
Prof. Rumya S. Putcha (University of Georgia)

Title:  The Dancer's Voice: Performance and Womanhood in Transnational India

Date:
Wednesday September 27, 2023
Time: 4-6PM 
Location: 701C Dodge Hall (Center for Ethnomusicology), Morningside Campus of Columbia University, Broadway at 116th St. 
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, RECEPTION TO FOLLOW

For information or to arrange disability accommodations, please contact aaf19@columbia.edu

ABSTRACT:  In The Dancer’s Voice Rumya Sree Putcha theorizes how the Indian classical dancer performs the complex dynamics of transnational Indian womanhood. Putcha argues that the public persona of the Indian dancer has come to represent India in the global imagination—a representation that supports caste hierarchies and Hindu ethnonationalism, as well as white supremacist model minority narratives. Generations of Indian women have been encouraged to embody the archetype of the dancer, popularized through film cultures from the 1930s to the present. Through analyses of films, immigration and marriage laws, histories of caste and race, advertising campaigns, and her own family’s heirlooms, photographs, and memories, Putcha reveals how women’s citizenship is based on separating their voices from their bodies. In listening closely to and for the dancer’s voice, she offers a new way to understand the intersections of body, voice, performance, caste, race, gender, and nation.

BIO: Rumya S. Putcha is an associate professor in the Institute for Women's Studies as well as in the Hugh Hodgson School of Music at the University of Georgia. Her research interests center on colonial and anti-colonial thought, particularly around constructs of citizenship, race, gender, sexuality, the body, and the law. Her first book, The Dancer’s Voice: Performance and Womanhood in Transnational India (Duke University Press, 2023), develops a transnational feminist approach to Indian performance cultures. Her second book project, Namaste Nation: Orientalism and Yoga in the 21st Century extends her work on transnational performance cultures to critical analyses of capitalist fitness industries.

Mario Cancel-Bigay Appointed as Clinical Assistant Professor at NYU's School of Liberal Studies


Dr. Mario Cancel-Bigay
We are delighted to congratulate our 2021 PhD alumnus, Dr. 
Mario Cancel-Bigay who will be taking up a tenure track position as a Clinical Assistant Professor in Global Musicology at NYU’s Liberal Studies School. 

Since finishing the PhD, Dr. Cancel-Bigay has spent two years as a Postdoctoral Fellow at Columbia University, first as a recipient of the Early Career Fellowship in the Music Department and then as a Core Lecturer of Contemporary Civilization, 

Dr. Cancel-Bigay's PhD dissertation in ethnomusicology at Columbia is entitled "Sounds that Fall Through the Cracks, and Other Silences and Acts of Love: Decoloniality and Anti-Colonialism in Puerto Rican Nueva Canción and Chanson Québécoise." It was advised by Prof. Kevin Fellezs. It may be accessed via Columbia's Academic Commons (for free!) at this link.

Congratulations Mario!

Georgina Born: The Dynamics of Pluralism in Contemporary Digital Art Music -- Monday April 24, 4PM

Event Start: 
Monday, April 24, 2023 - 4:00pm
Location: 
620 Dodge Hall, Columbia U Morningside Campus, 116th and Broadway, NYC
The Center for Ethnomusicology and the Fritz Reiner Center are pleased to announce a seminar with Prof.  Georgina Born (University College, London) on Monday, April 24, at 4PM in 620 Dodge Hall, on the Columbia Morningside Campus (Broadway at 116th St.). 

[please note the room number has changed since this was initially announced!] 

This event is open to the public but space is limited.  Please RSVP to aaf19@columbia.edu if you plan to attend. 

Attendees are asked to read a book chapter by Prof. Born in advance,  entitled  "The  Dynamics  of Pluralism in Contemporary Digital Art Music," which is Chapter 8 from Prof. Born's new edited volumeMusic and Digital Media: A Planetary Anthropology (2023, University College of London Press). The entire book is online and open source at this linkhttps://www.uclpress.co.uk/products/187643
 
Abstract: "The Dynamics of Pluralism in Contemporary Digital Art Music"
How to capture the transformation, from without and within, of a dominant art music genre? Academic electroacoustic music, and specifically acousmatic music, the modernist lineage that came to prominence from the 1970s in universities in the UK, Canada and Europe, has been both hegemonic and waning for around twenty years. In this presentation, based on a chapter from the open zxaccess book Music and Digital Media: A Planetary Anthropology (2022), I explore this state of affairs through an ethnography of British university trainings in digital art music and related x, trainings I gather under the term 'music technology degrees'. The aim is to probe the burgeoning pluralism of digital art music in the UK as this presses on contemporary music writ large. My fieldwork focused on three leading British centres: the Sonic Arts Research Centre (SARC) at Queen’s University, Belfast, the Music, Technology and Innovation Research Centre (MTIRC) at De Montfort University, Leicester, and the Music and Music Technology groups at the University of Huddersfield. It also involved contacts with music departments at the universities of York, Edinburgh, East London and East Anglia, and the sound art research centre at London’s University of the Arts. I observed teaching and events, attended gigs and conferences, and made relationships with teaching staff, masters and PhD students. By analysing the music technology degrees the chapter narrates a heterogeneous field in motion, buffeted by larger historical processes. A core premise is that educational change of this kind is both a barometer and a catalyst of wider musical, cultural, social and political changes. The net effect is the blossoming of an extraordinary but patterned diversity of idioms in digital art music, analysed in the final part of the chapter. This leads to a final discussion of how we should conceptualise pluralism in music today.
 
 
Prof. Georgina Born Bio:
Georgina Born is Professor of Anthropology and Music at University College London. Previously she held Professorships at the Universities of Oxford (2010-21) and Cambridge (2006-10). Earlier she had a professional life as a musician in experimental rock, jazz and free improvisation. Her work combines ethnographic and theoretical writings on interdisciplinarity, music, sound, and digital/media. Her books include Rationalizing Culture: IRCAM, Boulez, and the Institutionalization of the Musical Avant-Garde (1995), Western Music and Its Others (ed. with D. Hesmondhalgh, 2000), Uncertain Vision (2004), Music, Sound and Space (ed., 2013), Interdisciplinarity (ed. with A. Barry, 2013),Improvisation and Social Aesthetics (ed. with E. Lewis and W. Straw, 2017), and Music and Digital Media: A Planetary Anthropology (ed., 2022). She directed the ERC-funded research program ‘Music, Digitization, Mediation’ (2010-15) and in 2021 was awarded an ERC grant for ‘Music and Artificial Intelligence: Building Critical Interdisciplinary Studies’. She has held visiting professorships at UC Berkeley, UC Irvine and Aarhus, Oslo, McGill and Princeton Universities.

Book Proposal Workshop for Grad Students with Robin James (Palgrave/MacMillan)

Event Start: 
Friday, February 17, 2023 - 3:00pm
Location: 
622 Dodge Hall
BOOK PROPOSAL WORKSHOP: ROBIN JAMES (PALGRAVE MACMILLAN)
Friday, February 17, 2023 - 3:00pm
622 Dodge Hall 
(Open to all graduate students and faculty in Music)

Robin James is an author and former academic, currently working as Editor of Philosophy, Literary Theory, and Music & Sound Studies at Palgrave Macmillan. She will conduct a workshop for junior scholars (graduate students, post-docs, Core Lecturers, and others) interested in turning their ideas into a successful book proposal. She will also discuss the details of the publication process, and how to pitch a project to an editor.

This event is sponsored by the Center for Ethnomusicology and is open to all members of the Music Department.

BIO:
Robin James is Editor for Philosophy, Literary Theory, and Music & Sound Studies. She acquires monographs, edited collections, handbooks, Palgrave Pivots, open access titles, textbooks, and videos in a range of subfields across those disciplines. Her list focuses on social and political philosophy, continental philosophy (both contemporary continental and the history of continental philosophy), critical theory, pop culture, African-American and Africana philosophy, American philosophy (including but not limited to pragmatism), Latinx and Latin American philosophy, literary theory, and on music studies (musicology, music theory, ethnomusicology, popular music studies), sound studies, and interpersonal communication. As a former academic, author of four scholarly books, and co-editor of The Journal of Popular Music Studies, Robin is uniquely equipped to serve her authors because she’s been in their shoes.

Colloquium: Alex E. Chavez (U Notre Dame):"“El Disco es Cultura: Sonic Artifacts, Racial Geographies, and Latinx Chicago”

Event Start: 
Thursday, November 17, 2022 - 5:00pm
Location: 
701C Dodge Hall, Columbia U Morningside Campus, 116th and Broadway, NYC
The Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University is delighted to announce a colloquium talk by Alex E. Chavez, the Nancy O’Neill Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, and the author of Sounds of Crossing:  Music, Migration, and the Aural Poetics of Huapango Arribeño (Duke UP, 2017).

Prof. Chavez's talk will be held on Thursday, November 17, 2022, at 5PM EST, in room 701C Dodge Hall on the Columbia University Morningside Campus. Prof. Chavez's talk is entitled: 

“El Disco es Cultura: Sonic Artifacts, Racial Geographies, and Latinx Chicago”

When: Thursday November 17, 2022, at 5PM EST.
Where: 701C Dodge Hall (Center for Ethnomusicology), Columbia U. Morningside Campus, Broadway at 116th St. (Map Link)

For assistance, information, or special accommodations, contact aaf19@columbia.edu

Please be vaccinated and prepared to wear a mask. 

Speaker Biography:

Artist-scholar-producer, Alex E. Chávez is the Nancy O'Neill Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame. His research explores articulations of Latinx sounds and aurality in relation to race, place-making, expressive culture, and the intimacies that bind lives across physical and cultural borders. He is the author of the multi-award-winning book Sounds of Crossing: Music, Migration, and the Aural Poetics of Huapango Arribeño (Duke University Press, 2017)—recipient of the Alan Merriam Prize from the Society for Ethnomusicology (2018). And in 2016 he produced the Smithsonian Folkways album Serrano de Corázon (Highlander at Heart).

He has consistently crossed the boundary between performer and ethnographer in the realms of both academic research and publicly-engaged work as an artist and producer. Chávez has recorded and toured with his own music projects, composed documentary scores, served as creative consultant for feature films and stage performances, and collaborated with Grammy Award-winning and Grammy Award-nominated artists.
 
In 2020, he was named one of ten Mellon Emerging Faculty Leaders by the Institute for Citizens and Scholars (formerly the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation) and was awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities Long-Term Fellowship at the Newberry Library in Chicago. He currently serves as a Governor on the Chicago Chapter Board of the Recording Academy. 

His most recent publication is the article “Gender, Ethno-nationalism, and the Anti-Mexicanist Trope” —published in the 2021 winter issue of the Journal of American Folklore. And he also curated the liner notes for the 8th studio album “Puentes Sonorous” by the Grammy Award-winning group Quetzal (2021). He is co-editor of the forthcoming edited volume Ethnographic Refusals, Unruly Latinidades (SAR Press), which grows out of an Advanced Seminar he co-chaired at the School for Advanced Research in 2019.

Colloquium: Nili Belkind "Cultural Intimacy across the Palestinian/Arab-Jewish/Israeli Binary" Thursday Nov 3 at 4PM

Event Start: 
Thursday, November 3, 2022 - 4:00pm - 6:00pm
Location: 
701C Dodge Hall, Columbia Univ Morningside Campus, Broadway @116th
The Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University is pleased to announce a public colloquium talk featuring Dr. Nili Belkind (Hebrew University of Jerusalem/Tel Aviv University), a PhD alumna of our program and the the author of Music in Conflict: Palestine, Israel and the Politics of Aesthetic Production (Routledge 2021). 
Dr. Belkind will speak on: 

Cultural Intimacy across the Palestinian/Arab-Jewish/Israeli binary: Jowan Safadi’s Music Video “To Be an Arab” 

Thursday Nov 3, 2022 4PM
701C Dodge Hall (The Center for Ethnomusicology) 
Columbia Univ Morningside Campus 
Broadway at 116th St 
Reception to follow 
 FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC.
(Please be vaccinated and prepared to wear a mask.)
Contact aaf19@columbia.edu for more information or specific accommodations 

Abstract: The century-plus old conflict between the Zionist movement and the Palestinian national movement has greatly contributed to the propping of collective imaginations in which “Arab” and “Jew” have been framed as polar-opposites. This polarity has sustained national narratives and ideologies, attendant historiographies, and international interventions seeking to bring an end to the conflict in Palestine-Israel—all of which are based on the axiom of separation between Palestinian/Arab and Israeli/Jew. 

Popular culture—especially music—offers us numerous examples from which to critique this myth of insularity, to analyze the violence and racism embedded in the sociopolitical structures that serve to uphold it, and to construct new frameworks for interventions in a protracted ethnonational conflict. Through a focus on Jowan Safadi’s “To Be an Arab” as a prominent case study, Dr. Belkind will unpack how cultural intimacy and ethnonational violence are intertwined in Palestine-Israel; delineate how local heterogeneities (classed, ethnicized, gendered) and complex regional affiliations complicate what is commonly read in terms of an Arab/Palestinian-Jewish/Israeli binary, and underscore the creative, emotive, interventive and subversive potentials that expressive culture and performance bring to this context. 

Speaker Bio: Nili Belkind holds a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology from Columbia University. She is currently a research associate at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Musicology Department and an adjunct instructor at Tel Aviv University. Nili is the author of Music in Conflict: Palestine, Israel and the Politics of Aesthetic Production (Routledge 2021), which won the International Council of Traditional Music (ICTM) 2022 Best Book Prize. Her current research projects include a focus on African migrant-musicians in the US in the 1960s-1970s (with Dr. Ofer Gazit) and an ethnohistorical project (with Prof. Edwin Seroussi) focused on the archive of Azuri Effendi/Ezra Aharon—an Iraqi-Jewish musician who headed the Iraqi delegation to the First Congress of Arab Music (1932) held in Cairo and had moved to Palestine in 1934. This archive offers numerous lines of inquiry Nili has published extensively on a variety of topics, including music and international diplomacy, social movements, diasporic imaginaries, urban regeneration, and more in Ethnomusicology Journal, Current Musicology, Middle Eastern Journal of Culture and Communication, Arts and International Affairs and elsewhere.

Media Artist Sacramento Knoxx (Anishinaabe/Xicano) Tues Oct 25 at 5PM

Event Start: 
Tuesday, October 25, 2022 - 5:00pm
Location: 
701C DODGE HALL (Center for Ethnomusicology), Columbia U Morningside Campus @116th St

The Center for Ethnomusicology is delighted to announce a “meet the artist” event and jam session with leading Indigenous media artist/producer/rapper Sacramento Knoxx, to be held in 701C Dodge Hall on the Columbia Morningside Campus (The Center for Ethnomusicology) on TUESDAY OCT 25 from 5-7PM.  This event is open to all, but space is limited so come early.  Please be fully vaccinated and be prepared to wear a mask.

Sacramento Knoxx (Christopher Yepez) is an Ojibwe/Anishinaabe and Xicano media artist, emcee, music producer, and community cultural worker. A prominent interdisciplinary artist from Southwest Detroit, Knoxx brings audiences a blend of visual art and performance that inspires, educates, motivates, and engages youth and elders alike in communities of color. His work is a creative expression of identity, love, and healing that challenges and confronts social ills. He is a founding member of the Aadizookaan, a dynamic collective of creatives who, guided by ancestral indigenous-based knowledge systems, tell uplifting cultural stories through multidisciplinary art and music.

This is his fifth visit to Columbia as a guest artist, and every other visit has left a deep impression on many here. Don’t miss this if you can make it!  Knoxx will bring along some synthesizer gear and perform, but has also expressed a desire to jam with our guests, so be prepared!

Learn more about Knoxx at his website: 

Soundcloud: 

Spotify: 

YouTube:

Prof Tyler Bickford - "Adult Taste and the Business Models of Independent U.S. Children’s Musicians in the 2000s” Wed Sept 28 a

Event Start: 
Wednesday, September 28, 2022 - 4:00pm
Location: 
701C DODGE HALL (Center for Ethnomusicology), Columbia U Morningside Campus @116th St
The Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University announces a colloquium talk by our own PhD alumnus, Prof. Tyler Bickford (English, Univ. of Pittsburgh) on Wednesday, September 28, 2022, at 4PM.

The talk will be held in 701C Dodge Hall (Columbia U Morningside Campus, 116th and Broadway). 

Free and open to the public, *all* are welcome.  Vaccinated/boosted only, masks expected to be worn. Reception to follow. 


Title: 
"Adult Taste and the Business Models of Independent U.S. Children’s Musicians in the 2000s”


Speaker bio:
Tyler Bickford is professor of children’s literature and childhood studies in the Department of English at the University of Pittsburgh. Trained as an ethnomusicologist, his research focuses on children’s media, especially popular music and digital technology, using ethnographic and cultural studies methods. He is the author of Tween Pop: Children’s Music and Public Culture (Duke University Press, 2020) and Schooling New Media: Music, Language, and Technology in Children’s Culture (Oxford University Press, 2017). His writing has appeared in Popular MusicWSQ: Women’s Studies QuarterlyEthnomusicologyJournal of Folklore ResearchJournal of Consumer CultureCurrent MusicologyJournal of the Society for American Music, and several edited volumes. He is the recipient of an ACLS Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies for Tween Pop, which was also a 2022 Children’s Literature Association Recommended Book. Schooling New Media received honorable mention for the Iona and Peter Opie Prize from the American Folklore Society.





Prof. Kimberly Mack - “Big Mama Thornton, Cynthia Dagnal-Myron, and the Power of Black Women’s Narratives” WED OCT 26 AT 4PM

Event Start: 
Wednesday, October 26, 2022 - 4:00pm
Location: 
701C DODGE HALL (Center for Ethnomusicology), Columbia U Morningside Campus @116th St

The Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University is pleased to announce a colloquium talk:
 

Prof. Kimberly Mack (Dept of English Language and Literature, Univ. of Toledo) 
“Big Mama Thornton, Cynthia Dagnal-Myron, and the Power of Black Women’s Narratives 
Date: Wednesday Oct. 26, 2022
Time: 4:00-6:00PM (reception to follow)
Location: 701C Dodge Hall (The Center for Ethnomusicology), Columbia Univ. Morningside Campus, Broadway @ 116th St. 

Free and Open to the Public, Attendance Limited, Attendees should be vaccinated and prepared to wear a mask during the talk.
Please contact aaf19@columbia.edu for further information or to arrange special accommodations.

Focusing on her monograph Fictional Blues: Narrative Self-Invention from Bessie Smith to Jack White (University of Massachusetts Press, 2020), winner of the 2021 College English Association of Ohio’s Nancy Dasher Award, and her in-progress book tentatively titled The Untold History of American Rock Criticism (under contract with Bloomsbury), Kimberly Mack will explore how Black women’s narratives—literary and musical, autobiographical and biographical—serve as vehicles to assert power and agency. Using examples culled from popular music and music journalism, Dr. Mack will demonstrate how Black women’s strategic use of storytelling has the power to correct historically inaccurate or incomplete records about musical artists and their works, music writers and their contributions, and the construction of the genres in which musicians and music writers navigate. 



Speaker Bio: 
Kimberly Mack holds a Ph.D. in English from UCLA, and she is Associate Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Toledo. She is the author of Fictional Blues: Narrative Self-Invention from Bessie Smith to Jack White (University of Massachusetts Press, 2020), which won the 2021 College English Association of Ohio’s Nancy Dasher Award. Kimberly is writing a new book, tentatively titled The Untold History of American Rock Criticism (under contract with Bloomsbury Academic), about the BIPoC and White women writers who helped develop American rock criticism and journalism during the 1960s and 1970s. For this project, she is the recipient of a senior scholar research grant from the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) and the Charles Hamm Fellowship from the Society for American Music. Another book, Living Colour’s Time’s Up, part of Bloomsbury’s 33 1/3 book series, will be published in May 2023. Kimberly’s scholarly and public-facing articles have appeared, or are forthcoming, in African American Review, Popular Music and Society, Journal of Popular Music Studies, AMP: American Music Perspectives, Longreads, No Depression, and elsewhere.

Symposium: "Can't Be Faded: Writing New Orleans Brass Band History w/ The Stooges Brass Band" (Tues May 3 8pm EST)

Event Start: 
Tuesday, May 3, 2022 - 8:00pm
Location: 
Online via ZOOM, please REGISTER in advance with link below
Poster image for Can't Be FadedThe Center for Ethnomusicology is pleased to sponsor an online event to celebrate the publication of Can’t Be Faded: Twenty Years in the New Orleans Brass Band Game, co-authored by the Stooges Brass Band and Columbia Ethnomusicology PhD student Kyle DeCoste.

The symposium will be held at 8PM EST/7PM CST on Tuesday May 3, 2022, live on ZOOM. All are welcome!

The evening features conversations with past and present members of the Stooges Brass Band—including Walter Ramsey, Alfred Growe III, Virgil Tiller, Andrew Baham, Ellis Joseph, John Cannon IV, and Mike Jones. Join us as we discuss the past quarter-century of New Orleans’s second line community, the writing of their book, and future directions for brass band music.

Free and open to the general public.  Please REGISTER IN ADVANCE at the following link:

Symposium: “Gendering Africa: Musical Perspectives” (Friday March 4, 2022)

Event Start: 
Friday, March 4, 2022 - 10:00am - 6:00pm
Location: 
Online via ZOOM, please REGISTER in advance with link below

Gendering Africa Poster 1“Gendering Africa: Musical Perspectives” 

Friday, March 4, 2022
(all day, online, registration required)

“Gendering Africa: Musical Perspectives” is a day-long online symposium hosted by the Center for Ethnomusicology, in the Department of Music at Columbia University. It will feature presentations from African and African-descended women ethnomusicologists and performers who center sub-Saharan Africa in the ongoing conversation concerning gender and music. It is designed to locate, highlight and put in dialogue the perspectives and lived experiences of women of African descent in the discourse on gender and music in Africa. This focus resists both sub-Saharan Africa’s peripheral status within the discourse on gender and music and the neglect of gender perspectives within Africanist ethnomusicology on topics ranging from performance practices to musical instruments to music and identity. Topics covered also represent a broad geographical scope that clarify the depth and breadth of the African landscape in the conversation on music and gender. Click here for full-sized poster image.

Registration is free but required. Register in advance for Symposium at this link:

https://columbiauniversity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJYudemrrzMrHNKmmqMxgP-TA_J0yA-XEh9g

Full program below or click here to view as PDF.

__________________
Featured Speakers and Performers


Dr. Jean Ngoya KidulaDr. Jean Ngoya Kidula is Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology) at the University of Georgia in the USA.  Her research has centered on ritual and religious music of Africa and its historic and present diaspora, centering on Christianity. Her award-winning book Music in Kenyan Christianity: Logooli Religious Song exemplifies her specific focus on Eastern Africa. Ngoya Kidula also interrogates traditional canons in music studies in Africa and the US.




Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum

Onyeka Onwenu is a Nigerian singer, songwriter, actress, social activist, journalist and public administrator. She blends popular, folk, and gospel into what she calls development music. Onyeka Onwenu uses her art to address social issues of the time. Her recent book My Father’s Daughter,” has been described as “a riveting narration of Onyeka Onwenu’s enthralling journey through life. We are held captive as she takes us into her world -from the heart-warming affection of her father to living through the anguish of the Nigeria-Biafra war, from a remarkable mother’s love to family intrigues, from feminism to a career that has put her in the limelight for decades. Ma Onwenu is a graduate of Wellesley College, Wellesley Massachusetts and the New School for Social Research in New York.


Onyeka OnwenuDr. Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum is a researcher, scholar, teacher, and performer of African and Black Atlantic music styles and traditions. Currently working on Black People, Thank You!, the third in the Walking with My Ancestors’ award-winning performance sequence, she is a professor of ethnomusicology at Illinois State University at Normal, IL. Aduonum’s methods blend creative expression, scholarship, and experimental performance; her teaching of undergraduate and graduate students is organic and original, often through call and response and creative activities. She employs de-colonialist discursive frameworks to foreground experiential approaches and performative-scholarly discourse. 

Stephanie ShonekanStephanie Shonekan is Senior Associate Dean of the College of Arts & Science and Professor of Music at the University of Missouri. In 2003, she earned a PhD in Ethnomusicology and Folklore with a minor in African American Studies from Indiana University. From 2003-2011, she taught at Columbia College Chicago, and from 2011-2018, she was a faculty member at the University of Missouri in the Black Studies Department and the School of Music. From 2015-2018, she was chair of the Department of Black Studies at the University of Missouri.  From 2018-2020, she was professor and chair of the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Shonekan's dual heritage combining West Africa with the West Indies allows her to straddle the black world comfortably.  She has published articles on afrobeat, Fela Kuti, as well as American and Nigerian hip-hop.  Her publications explore the nexus where identity, history, culture and music meet. Her books include  The Life of Camilla Williams, African American Classical Singer and Opera Diva (2011), Soul, Country, and the USA: Race and Identity in American Music Culture (2015), Black Lives Matter & Music (2018), and Black Resistance in the Americas (2018).

Marceline SaibouDr. Marceline Saibou is an Assistant Professor of music at Bowdoin College. Her research focuses on popular music in postcolonial Togo, in particular on articulations between music and state power. Her more recent work engages questions of music and disability in West Africa. She earned her doctorate in ethnomusicology from Columbia University.


Krystal KlingenbergDr. Krystal Klingenberg is a curator of music in the division of Cultural and Community Life at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. Previously she held professorial positions at Swarthmore College and the University of Hartford. She received her PhD in May 2019 from the Music Department of Harvard University, with a secondary field in African and African American Studies. Her dissertation-turned-book project is on the creation and distribution of Ugandan mainstream popular music.


Ruth OparaDr. Ruth Opara is an Assistant Professor of Music Histories and Cultures in the Department of Art and Music Histories at Syracuse University. Her research interests include African and African diasporic music traditions and the production of knowledge; women in music and the decolonial discourse; music and gender; African music and transnational encounters. 



Althea SullyColeAlthea SullyCole is an ethnomusicologist and multi-instrumentalist from New York City. She has studied her primary instrument, the kora, a 21-stringed harp from the Mandé region of West Africa, for 10 years, 3 of which were spent in Dakar, Senegal. She is currently a doctoral candidate in Ethnomusicology at Columbia University. She is also a Sylvan C. and Pam Coleman Memorial Fellow in the Musical Instrument Department at the MET, where she is conducting an interdisciplinary study of the MET’s collection of musical instruments from the Mande region of West Africa. She is particularly interested in how a detailed, comparative study of these instruments might help address questions regarding cultural belonging and identity formation both within the Mande context and the larger African diaspora.

Shirley ChikukwaShirley (Ratidzai) Chikukwa is a Zimbabwean-born ethnomusicologist and a third-year PhD student at Columbia University. Shirley’s research interests include worship practices in Zimbabwe Pentecostal churches, Zimbabwean choral music traditions, the development of Zimbabwean hymn traditions, and contemporary Christian musical repertoires in Pentecostal Zimbabwean churches. She currently serves as a Core Curriculum instructor at Columbia University, teaching Music Humanities. Shirley received her Bachelor of Arts in Music History and Theory from California State University, Fullerton.

Amarachi AttamahAmarachi Attamah is a graduate student in the Department of Museum Studies and Cultural Heritage Preservation at Syracuse University, New York State. She is a Chant Performer, Poet, Broadcaster, and a Mother-Tongue Advocate. Her core interests are indigenous language sustainability, culture curation, and intangible heritage preservation. She has performed in Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, the United Kingdom (where she recently completed a four-month performance fellowship with the British Royal National Theatre), and the USA.


Laina DawesLaina Dawes is an ethnomusicologist and the author of What Are You Doing Here? A Black Woman’s Life and Liberation in Heavy Metal (Bazillion Points, 2012). She is also a music and cultural critic whose writing can be found in print and online magazines, such as Hazlitt, Bitch, SPIN, Cuepoint, Wondering Sound, Flavorwire, Refinery29, MTV Iggy, MySpace, The Wire UK, NPR, Toronto Star and Exclaim! Canada.


Lauren BernardLauren Bernard is a PhD student in Historical Musicology at Columbia University. Her current research interests include the perception of race in timbre and sound, musical constructions of alterity and identity, and Afrofuturism.



Symposium Organizers:
Ruth Opara Ph.D. 
Althea SullyCole                   
Shirley Chikukwa    
Aaron A. Fox Ph.D.

_____________
Event Sponsors:
The Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University, The Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies at Columbia University, The Committee on Equity and Diversity of the Columbia University School of Arts and Sciences, The Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America at Columbia University, The Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University, The Institute for the Study of Sexuality and Gender at Columbia University,  The Department of Art and Music Histories in the College of Arts and Sciences  at the University of Syracuse, the Institute for African Studies at Columbia University, The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University, and the Department of Music at Columbia University. 

_____________________

SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM
(click here to download full program, with all speaker bios and presentation abstracts,  as PDF) 
All times are in Eastern Standard Time (EST) on Friday, March 4, 2022

Gendering Africa Symposium Drawings Poster

MORNING SESSION:

10:00AM -- Opening Remarks — Dr. Ruth Opara (Syracuse University)

10:30AM-- Keynote Address
Dr. Jean Ngoya Kidula (University of Georgia): 

(Re)Presenting African Women in Music: Conventions and Paradoxes 
(introduced by Althea SullyCole)

11:30AM -- Panel A: Reflexivity, Movement, and Displacement

Althea SullyCole (Metropolitan Museum of Art, Columbia University): Hearing Jinns: Intersections of Gender and Materialism in the Met’s Historical Collection of Mandé Harps

Dr. Krystal Klingenberg (Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History): Daughtering in the Field: Research Deferred in a World Disrupted by Pandemic

Dr. Stephanie Shonekan (University of Missouri): “Bridge over Troubled Water”: How Africana Women Artists Build Bridges across the Atlantic

Panel Chair: Lauren Bernard

AFTERNOON SESSION

1:00PM -- Performance 
Igbo Chant Poetry” by Amarachi Attamah 
(Syracuse University) 
(introduced by Dr. Ruth Opara)

1:30PM -- Artist Address: Onyeka Onwenu 
"Being a Woman, Singer, Activist, and Politician in Nigeria”
 
(introduced by Dr. Ruth Opara)


2:30PM-- Panel B: Social Justice and Identity

Shirley Chikukwa (Columbia University): The Contemporary, Christian Zimbabwean: Finding National Identity through Church Worship

Dr. Ruth Opara (Syracuse University): Music and the African Girl Child: Persistence and Resistance in the Igbo, Nigerian Pot Drum Music

Dr. Marceline Saibou (Bowdoin College): Neutralizing Stigma: Gender, Disability, and Power in Religious Popular Music in Togo

Panel Chair: Laina Dawes

4:00PM -- Performance 
Dr. Ama Oforiwaa Aduonum (Illinois State University): “Walking with My Ancestors: In Search for Our Great Mothers’ Gardens” 
(introduced by Shirley Chikukwa)

5:00PM -- Closing Remarks  Aaron A. Fox, Director, Center for Ethnomusicology

Book Launch! Nili Belkind's "Music in Conflict Palestine, Israel & the Politics of Aesthetic Production" (April 22, noon NYC)

Event Start: 
Thursday, April 22, 2021 - 12:00pm - 2:00pm
Location: 
Online on ZOOM: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9895566225


The Center for Ethnomusicology is proud to co-sponsor an online book launch and live performance event for "Music in Conflict: Palestine, Israel, and the Politics of Aesthetics Production," by our own PhD alumna Dr. Nili Belkind (Routledge 2021). 

Hosted by Dr. Moshe Morad with performances by Amal Murkus and members of System Ali 

The event will be live broadcast from Jaffa, Israel over ZOOM, and is free and open to the general public. Join us on Zoom on:. 

THURSDAY APRIL 22, 2021
7PM JAFFA
5PM LONDON
12 NOON NEW YORK CITY
9AM LOS ANGELES
(Live event to be held at the Jaffa Theater, a stage for Arab and Hebrew culture)

Dr. Nili Belkind, who holds the PhD in Ethnomusicology from Columbia University (2014), will be in conversation with Dr. Mosha Morad, and with artists and students worldwide, about her new book Music in Conflict (Routledge in 2021). The book examines how the Israeli-Palestinian conflict intersects with music making and cultural production.  The event will feature live musical performances from Amal Murkus (Soundcloud) and members of System Ali (website).


In cooperation with SOAS (London), The University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, and Columbia University's Center for Ethnomusicology. 

Music in Conflict Event Poster

Conference: "Music and Migration" -- March 5-6 at the Center for Ethnomusicology

Event Start: 
Thursday, March 5, 2020 - 9:00am - Friday, March 6, 2020 - 6:00pm
Location: 
701C Dodge Hall (The Center for Ethnomusicology) -- Columbia University Morningside Campus


Announcing a conference on: 

MUSIC AND MIGRATION

Co-organized by Profs. Alessandra Ciucci and Ana María Ochoa

March 5 and 6 in 701C Dodge Hall, the Center for Ethnomusicology

Keynote: Adelaida Reyes, New Jersey City University

Opening Remarks: Mae Ngai, Columbia University

FULL PROGRAM NOW AVAILABLE AT THIS LINK (PDF)

Featuring presentations by:

Nandini Banerjee-Datta, Columbia University
Alejandra Bronfman, SUNY, University at Albany
Julia Byl, University of Alberta
Alessandra Ciucci, Columbia University
Emily Hansell Clark, Columbia University
Claire Clouet, Basque Anthropological Research Institute on Music
Brigid Cohen, New York University
Denis Laborde, CNRS, EHESS
Andrés García Molina, Columbia University
Nicolas Puig, IRD, CNRS
Althea SullyCole, Columbia University

Cândida Borges - Sound Arts Performing Artist, Visiting Scholar at Columbia University - will show her work with Gabriel Mario Vélez on March 6 from 3-6pm in the Gabe M. Wiener Music & Arts Library.

With the support of:
Office of the Dean of the Humanities (EHESS - Columbia exchange)
The Center for Ethnomusicology
The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities
Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race

Upcoming Events

No upcoming events available
Premium Drupal Themes by Adaptivethemes