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Ethnomusicology ColloquiumSimha Arom--"The forest for the trees": The metric & rhythmic foundations of African music NOTE CHANGE TO 301 Philosophy!!2008-04-15 16:00 2008-04-15 18:00 Etc/GMT-4 Location: 301 Philosophy Hall -- NOTE NEW VENUE
NOTE : THE VENUE FOR THIS EVENT HAS BEEN MOVED TO 301 PHILOSOPHY HALL AND RSVP IS NO LONGER REQUIRED The Center for Ethonmusicology at Columbia University is excited to host Sima Arom, Director Emeritus of Research at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. We are grateful for the support of the Reiner Center for Contemporary Music for this event. All Ethnomusicology Colloquia are free and open to the public. Directions: http://www.columbia.edu/about_columbia/map/philosophy.html About Simha Arom: Professor Arom is most widely known for a prize-winning series of recordings of the musics of the Aka and other Central African groups made in the 1960s to the 1980s, which have exerted a lasting influence on musicians as diverse and prominent as Madonna, jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, and contemporary composers Gyorgy Ligeti and Steve Reich. Mr. Arom’s landmark book African Polyphony and Polyrhythm, published in French (1986) and English (1991), is an undisputed classic in the field of musical ethnography, and was awarded the prestigious ASCAP Deems Taylor Award in 1992. Arom received the Silver Medal of the C.N.R.S. in 1984 for his development of methods of analysis of traditional, unwritten polyphonic music.With his book, and in general as a researcher, thinker and writer about music, Mr. Arom’s work has influenced generations of ethnomusicologists, composers, and musicians.
We gratefully acknowledge additional support for this event from the Reiner Center for Contemporary Music Fabian Holt -- Music at American Borders: A Decentered Genre Study2007-10-29 16:00 2007-10-29 18:00 Etc/GMT-4 Location: 701C Doge Hall Fabian Holt (b. 1972) is Associate Professor of Music and Performance at the University of Roskilde in Denmark. He studied at the University of Copenhagen (Ph.D. 2002) and has taught at the Universities of Copenhagen and Chicago. His teaching repertory includes courses on jazz and American popular musics, world music, concert culture, performance theory, and ethnomusicological theory. Recent publications include the monograph Genre in Popular Music (University of Chicago Press), “Kreuzberg Activists” in Popular Music and Society (2007), and “A View From Popular Music Studies” in The New (Ethno)musicologies (in press). read more » Chie Sakakibara: Expressive Culture and Climate Change in the Arctic2007-11-12 16:00 2007-11-12 18:00 Etc/GMT-4 Location: 701C Dodge Hall__________________________ |
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