BEGIN:VCALENDAR
PRODID:BedeWork V3.5
VERSION:2.0
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/New_York
X-LIC-LOCATION:America/New_York
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20070311T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=3;BYDAY=2SU
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20071104T020000
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=11;BYDAY=1SU
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-045602
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:18831118T120358
RDATE:18831118T120358
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:19180331T020000
RDATE:19180331T020000
RDATE:19190330T020000
RDATE:19200328T020000
RDATE:19210424T020000
RDATE:19220430T020000
RDATE:19230429T020000
RDATE:19240427T020000
RDATE:19250426T020000
RDATE:19260425T020000
RDATE:19270424T020000
RDATE:19280429T020000
RDATE:19290428T020000
RDATE:19300427T020000
RDATE:19310426T020000
RDATE:19320424T020000
RDATE:19330430T020000
RDATE:19340429T020000
RDATE:19350428T020000
RDATE:19360426T020000
RDATE:19370425T020000
RDATE:19380424T020000
RDATE:19390430T020000
RDATE:19400428T020000
RDATE:19410427T020000
RDATE:19460428T020000
RDATE:19470427T020000
RDATE:19480425T020000
RDATE:19490424T020000
RDATE:19500430T020000
RDATE:19510429T020000
RDATE:19520427T020000
RDATE:19530426T020000
RDATE:19540425T020000
RDATE:19550424T020000
RDATE:19560429T020000
RDATE:19570428T020000
RDATE:19580427T020000
RDATE:19590426T020000
RDATE:19600424T020000
RDATE:19610430T020000
RDATE:19620429T020000
RDATE:19630428T020000
RDATE:19640426T020000
RDATE:19650425T020000
RDATE:19660424T020000
RDATE:19670430T020000
RDATE:19680428T020000
RDATE:19690427T020000
RDATE:19700426T020000
RDATE:19710425T020000
RDATE:19720430T020000
RDATE:19730429T020000
RDATE:19740106T020000
RDATE:19750223T020000
RDATE:19760425T020000
RDATE:19770424T020000
RDATE:19780430T020000
RDATE:19790429T020000
RDATE:19800427T020000
RDATE:19810426T020000
RDATE:19820425T020000
RDATE:19830424T020000
RDATE:19840429T020000
RDATE:19850428T020000
RDATE:19860427T020000
RDATE:19870405T020000
RDATE:19880403T020000
RDATE:19890402T020000
RDATE:19900401T020000
RDATE:19910407T020000
RDATE:19920405T020000
RDATE:19930404T020000
RDATE:19940403T020000
RDATE:19950402T020000
RDATE:19960407T020000
RDATE:19970406T020000
RDATE:19980405T020000
RDATE:19990404T020000
RDATE:20000402T020000
RDATE:20010401T020000
RDATE:20020407T020000
RDATE:20030406T020000
RDATE:20040404T020000
RDATE:20050403T020000
RDATE:20060402T020000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:19181027T020000
RDATE:19181027T020000
RDATE:19191026T020000
RDATE:19201031T020000
RDATE:19210925T020000
RDATE:19220924T020000
RDATE:19230930T020000
RDATE:19240928T020000
RDATE:19250927T020000
RDATE:19260926T020000
RDATE:19270925T020000
RDATE:19280930T020000
RDATE:19290929T020000
RDATE:19300928T020000
RDATE:19310927T020000
RDATE:19320925T020000
RDATE:19330924T020000
RDATE:19340930T020000
RDATE:19350929T020000
RDATE:19360927T020000
RDATE:19370926T020000
RDATE:19380925T020000
RDATE:19390924T020000
RDATE:19400929T020000
RDATE:19410928T020000
RDATE:19450930T020000
RDATE:19460929T020000
RDATE:19470928T020000
RDATE:19480926T020000
RDATE:19490925T020000
RDATE:19500924T020000
RDATE:19510930T020000
RDATE:19520928T020000
RDATE:19530927T020000
RDATE:19540926T020000
RDATE:19551030T020000
RDATE:19561028T020000
RDATE:19571027T020000
RDATE:19581026T020000
RDATE:19591025T020000
RDATE:19601030T020000
RDATE:19611029T020000
RDATE:19621028T020000
RDATE:19631027T020000
RDATE:19641025T020000
RDATE:19651031T020000
RDATE:19661030T020000
RDATE:19671029T020000
RDATE:19681027T020000
RDATE:19691026T020000
RDATE:19701025T020000
RDATE:19711031T020000
RDATE:19721029T020000
RDATE:19731028T020000
RDATE:19741027T020000
RDATE:19751026T020000
RDATE:19761031T020000
RDATE:19771030T020000
RDATE:19781029T020000
RDATE:19791028T020000
RDATE:19801026T020000
RDATE:19811025T020000
RDATE:19821031T020000
RDATE:19831030T020000
RDATE:19841028T020000
RDATE:19851027T020000
RDATE:19861026T020000
RDATE:19871025T020000
RDATE:19881030T020000
RDATE:19891029T020000
RDATE:19901028T020000
RDATE:19911027T020000
RDATE:19921025T020000
RDATE:19931031T020000
RDATE:19941030T020000
RDATE:19951029T020000
RDATE:19961027T020000
RDATE:19971026T020000
RDATE:19981025T020000
RDATE:19991031T020000
RDATE:20001029T020000
RDATE:20011028T020000
RDATE:20021027T020000
RDATE:20031026T020000
RDATE:20041031T020000
RDATE:20051030T020000
RDATE:20061029T020000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:19200101T000000
RDATE:19200101T000000
RDATE:19420101T000000
RDATE:19460101T000000
RDATE:19670101T000000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EWT
DTSTART:19420209T020000
RDATE:19420209T020000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EPT
DTSTART:19450814T190000
RDATE:19450814T190000
END:DAYLIGHT
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20221215T163032Z
DESCRIPTION:This talk is free and open to the public. \n\nAbstract: While 
 anthropology and cultural studies has long been interested in the role of
  dreams within capitalism\, this scholarship has grappled with a tension 
 between framing dreams as a form of escapist fantasy or as a site of utop
 ian potential. Building on recent South Asian scholarship on dreaming as 
 a social practice\, this talk examines Bollywood songs as crucial mediums
  of what I call dreamwork\, the musical and discursive labor of articulat
 ing\, imagining\, and striving for desired selves and futures. Drawing on
  ethnographic fieldwork\, interviews\, and media analysis\, I trace the e
 fficacy of Bollywood songs in catalyzing dreamwork by focusing on their a
 ffectively laden sound\, the embodied vocal production that they require\
 , and the shared social and political histories they invoke for listeners
 . Across a range of sites\, I ask: How does song practice generate experi
 ences of and attachment to futures? Ultimately\, this talk contends that 
 we must explore music's role in enabling situations of precarity and expl
 oitation while taking seriously the musically-mediated dreams that make l
 ives worth living. \n\nAnaar Desai-Stephens is an Assistant Professor of 
 Ethnomusicology at the Eastman School of Music\, University of Rochester\
 , where she also holds an affiliate appointment in the Susan B. Anthony I
 nstitute for Women's and Gender Studies. She received her Ph.D. in Ethnom
 usicology from Cornell University in 2017\, where she received the annual
  Donald J. Grout award for best dissertation in music. Her work focuses o
 n popular music\, media economies\, and embodied subjectivity in South As
 ia and has been supported by sources including the American Musicological
  Society's Howard Mayer Brown Fellowship and the American Association for
  University Women's Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship. Anaar is currently
  working on her first monograph\, "Voicing Aspiration: Bollywood Songs an
 d the Dreamwork of Contemporary India\," which explores the role of popul
 ar music as a medium for aspirational self-making in neoliberalizing Indi
 a. She is also the co-editor of "Musical Feelings and Affective Politics\
 ," a special double issue of Culture Theory Critique\, and recently publi
 shed an article on YouTube\, infrastructure and aesthetics in India. Trai
 ned as a violinist\, Anaar continues to be an active performer across a r
 ange of styles.
DTSTAMP:20230303T163422Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230324T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20230303T163422Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Anaar Desai-Stephens (Eastman): “Bollywood Songs and the Dreamwork
  of Aspirational India”
UID:CAL-8a0183a7-83184018-0185-169f8bcc-000071d8demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu/musicology-lectures
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_Artsand
 Sciences_CulturalAnthropology,":Cultural Anthropology
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Anaar Desai-Stephens headshot against a black ba
 ckground
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Desai_Stephens_web_20230303043422PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Desai_Stephens_web_20230303043422PM-
 thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b31c518-011b-409d2df7-00000085:Thompson\,
  Elizabeth
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20221215T170624Z
DESCRIPTION:This talk is free and open to the public. \n\nEmily Zazulia is
  Associate Professor in the Department of Music at UC-Berkeley. Her resea
 rch focuses on Medieval and Renaissance music-in particular\, the interse
 ction of musical style\, complex notation\, and intellectual history. Her
  first book\, "Where Sight Meets Sound: The Poetics of Late-Medieval Musi
 c Writing" (Oxford\, 2021)\, is a wide-ranging study of notational aesthe
 tics in polyphonic music\, ca. 1340-1510. For fifteenth-century composers
 \, musical notation assumed a significance that would not be matched unti
 l the 20th century. In telling this story\, she accounts for changes in t
 hinking about music theory that made possible later modes of composition 
 so invested in music's written form. By reconsidering the role of notatio
 n\, she engages with questions of performance\, transmission\, ontology\,
  and a late-medieval aesthetics that includes sight as well as sound. \n\
 nSome of her current projects include the nature and meaning of difficult
 y in fifteenth-century music\, repertories that cross the boundaries of t
 he "sacred" and "secular"\, "courtly" and "popular"\, and in particular t
 he ways they unsettle those categories. Her past publications publication
 s have focused on the role of obscenity in 15th-century song\, the L'homm
 e armé tradition\, the history of music theory\, and Du Fay's Nuper rosar
 um flores.\n\nIn addition to teaching in the music department\, Zazulia s
 erves on the advisory board of Berkeley's program in Medieval Studies and
  is affiliated with the program in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies. 
 Before joining the faculty at UC Berkeley in 2016\, she taught at the Uni
 versity of Pittsburgh\, the University of Pennsylvania\, and Haverford Co
 llege.
DTSTAMP:20221215T170624Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230331T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20221215T170624Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Emily Zazulia (UC Berkeley): “The Fifteenth-Century Song-Mass: Pro
 s and Cons”
UID:CAL-8a0183a7-83184018-0185-16c061b3-00000ce1demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu/musicology-lectures
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_MedievalandRenaissanceStudies,":Medieval and Renaissance Studie
 s
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:-0.3333333333333144
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Headshot of Emily Zazulia
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Emily_Zazulia_web_20221215050624PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Emily_Zazulia_web_20221215050624PM-t
 humb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20231220T165320Z
DESCRIPTION:This presentation explores the relationships and networks that
  created new archives of sound recordings and other documentary records r
 elated to Indigenous cultures in the middle of the twentieth century. Ada
 pting Antoinette Burton's notion of "archive stories" for a critical proj
 ect of Indigenous recuperation\, I argue that examining the relationships
  around archives is just as important as the records they contain. The pr
 esentation will draw on several case studies emerging from inter-American
  networks\, with special attention to Mexican recording projects under th
 e auspices of the Inter-American Indian Institute. \n\nAmanda Minks is As
 sociate Professor of Anthropology and Ethnomusicology at the University o
 f Oklahoma. Her research has focused on the social and aesthetic practice
 s of communication across cultures. Dr. Minks conducted long-term ethnogr
 aphic and sociolinguistic research for her first book\, "Voices of Play: 
 Miskitu Children's Speech and Song on the Atlantic Coast of Nicaragua" (U
 niversity of Arizona Press\, 2013). Studying vocal play revealed how Indi
 genous children used creative forms\, multilingualism\, and media to stak
 e claims of belonging in a multiethnic community on the fringes of the na
 tion-state. Dr. Minks' second book is entitled "Indigenous Audibilities: 
 Music\, Heritage\, and Collections in the Americas" (Oxford University Pr
 ess\, December 2023). This historical work reconstructs the social relati
 ons and institutions that led to collections of Indigenous music and folk
 lore in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Dr. Minks is also en
 gaged in a collaborative\, public-facing digital project\, the Indigenous
  Media Portal\, which will help make Indigenous collections at OU more ac
 cessible to heritage communities and others.
DTSTAMP:20231220T165320Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240202T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20231220T165320Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Amanda Minks: "Indigenous Audibilities: Re-thinking Records and Re
 cordings through Inter-American Archive Stories"
UID:CAL-8a018ccf-8b87f80e-018c-88256305-000012ffdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_JHFC_Ce
 nterforLatinAmericanandCaribbeanStudies,/principals/users/agrp_ArtsandSci
 ences_CulturalAnthropology,/principals/users/agrp_Native American Studies
  Initiative (NASI),":Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CLA
 CS)\,Cultural Anthropology\,Native American Studies Initiative (NASI)
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=duke-music@duke.edu:Duke
  Music
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:-0.3333333333333144
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Headshot of Amanda Minks
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Amanda Minks for online calendar_202312200
 45320PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Amanda Minks for online calendar_202
 31220045320PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20231220T224345Z
DESCRIPTION:Free and open to the public. \n\nBrigid Cohen is Associate Pro
 fessor at New York University. She is a historical musicologist who speci
 alizes in the historiography of musics and musicians in migration. Her re
 search and teaching examine the mass dislocation of peoples over the last
  two centuries\, addressing conditions of empire\, globalization\, genoci
 de\, exile\, and minoritized citizenship. This intellectual program stems
  from her conviction that music assumes special value under the pressure 
 of conditions of uprooting. Music serves as a mode of self-fashioning\, s
 ecures new (and old) community bonds\, and brings individuals together in
  listening\, speech\, and action. It also interacts in variegated ways wi
 th the silences that emerge from troubled sites of memory. \n\nCohen has 
 published extensively on the politics of 20th-century avant-gardes\, arch
 ive theory\, histories of cosmopolitanism\, postcolonial studies\, 20th-c
 entury German-Jewish diasporic thought\, and intersections of music\, lit
 erature\, and the visual arts. Her most recent book\, Musical Migration a
 nd Imperial New York: Early Cold War Scenes (University of Chicago Press\
 , 2022)\, explores questions of displacement and citizenship through a st
 udy of New York concert avant-gardes\, jazz\, electronic music\, and perf
 ormance art in the 1950s and 1960s. This book trains its focus on the cul
 tural-political dilemmas navigated by uprooted creators in New York as a 
 capital of empire during the Cold War. The book addresses well-known but 
 little understood figures (e.g.\, Charles Mingus\, Yoko Ono\, George Maci
 unas)\, alongside less well-known composers (e. g.\, Halim El-Dabh\, Mich
 iko Toyama\, Vladimir Ussachevsky). Cohen's emphasis on displacement bega
 n with her first book\, Stefan Wolpe and the Avant-Garde Diaspora (Cambri
 dge University Press\, 2012). This book is both a study of the German-Jew
 ish émigré composer Stefan Wolpe (1902-1972) and a history of modernism t
 hat focuses on experiences of migration and cross-cultural encounter- fro
 m the Bauhaus to Black Mountain College. The monograph won the Lewis Lock
 wood Prize of the American Musicological Society for best monograph of th
 e year by a scholar at an early career stage.
DTSTAMP:20231220T224345Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240223T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20231220T224345Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Brigid Cohen: "The Musical Vocation of Yoko Ono"
UID:CAL-8a018ccf-8b87f80e-018c-8966346d-00001df4demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=duke-music@duke.edu:Duke
  Music
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:-0.3333333333333144
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Headshot of Brigid Cohen standing in front of a 
 door
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Brigid Cohen 2021 for online calendar_2023
 1220104345PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Brigid Cohen 2021 for online calenda
 r_20231220104345PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20231220T231337Z
DESCRIPTION:Free and open to the public. \n\nThe cliché "music saved my li
 fe" seems readymade for critique and dismissal\, but this presentation ta
 kes it seriously as a commentary on perilousness and insecurity. After al
 l\, if someone pins their hopes on music to provide a livable future\, th
 eir prospects must be very bad and their faith in music very strong. At a
 n afterschool program in New Orleans\, Black students discuss their music
 al pursuits as a kind of wager: perhaps playing in band can mitigate the 
 hazards of poverty\, violence\, policing\, incarceration\, and "apartheid
  schools" that reinforce racial hierarchies. Because the stakes of the wa
 ger are very high\, a matter of life and death\, this micro-level study o
 f musical activity (rehearsals\, performances\, etc.) becomes an entry po
 int for evaluating macro-level structures of inequality. Music is not pre
 sented as the primary "object" of study within secondary social\, cultura
 l\, or political settings ("contexts")\, but as a symptom that can assist
  in diagnosing the causes of social ills ("conditions"). \n\nMatt Sakakee
 ny is Associate Professor of Music/Ethnomusicology at Tulane University. 
 His work relates music and sound to structures of inequality\, especially
  anti-Black racism in New Orleans. In his book\, "Roll With It: Brass Ban
 ds in the Streets of New Orleans\," Sakakeeny follows brass band musician
 s as they march off the streets and into nightclubs\, festival grounds\, 
 and recording studios. Most recently\, he received a grant from the Spenc
 er Foundation for his next book on marching band education in the New Orl
 eans school system. \n\nSakakeeny's research brings an ethnomusicological
  perspective to sound studies. Along with David Novak\, he edited the ref
 erence work "Keywords in Sound\," a collection of twenty entries on sound
  written by leading scholars in the field of sound studies.\n\nCo-sponsor
 ed by the Department of Cultural Anthropology.
DTSTAMP:20231220T231337Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240301T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20231220T231337Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Matt Sakakeeny: “’Music Saves Lives’: Implausible Wager/Social Fac
 t”
UID:CAL-8a018ccf-8b87f80e-018c-89818b72-00001ef9demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-CS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DESCRIPTION="/principals/users/agrp_Artsand
 Sciences_CulturalAnthropology,":Cultural Anthropology
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=duke-music@duke.edu:Duke
  Music
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:-0.3333333333333144
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Headshot of Matt Sakakeeny in front of a wall of
  guitars
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Sakakeeny2_2022 for online calendar_202312
 20111337PM.png
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Sakakeeny2_2022 for online calendar_
 20231220111337PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Arts
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Masterclass
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20231221T144922Z
DESCRIPTION:Masterclasses are free and open to the public. \n\nHailed "Que
 en of the flute" by New York Magazine\, flutist Carol Wincenc was first p
 rize winner of the (sole) Naumburg Solo Flute Competition\, as well as th
 e recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Flute Ass
 ociation\, the National Society of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Lifeti
 me Achievement in Music\, and Distinguished Alumni Award from the Brevard
  Festival and Music Center and Manhattan School of Music. During the 2019
 -22 seasons she celebrated a half century as an international\, concertiz
 ing artist at The Morgan Library and Museum\, Merkin Concert Hall and the
  Staller Center for the Arts. \n\nFor her 50th Golden Anniversary Legacy 
 Series she commissioned five new works by Jake Heggie\, Pierre Jalbert\, 
 Robert Sirota\, Larry Alan Smith and Sato Matsui. As part of this grand c
 elebration is the release of the all-Yuko Uebayashi album on Azica Record
 s with the Escher String Quartet. Recently as part of the Naumburg Looks 
 Back Series she performed at Carnegie's Weill Hall with her collaborator/
 pianist Bryan Wagorn of the Metropolitan Opera. During this season she al
 so did the world premieres of Gabriela Lena Frank's Five Andean Improvisa
 tions and Valerie Coleman's Amazonia. \n\nShe has appeared as soloist wit
 h such ensembles as the Chicago\, San Francisco\, Pittsburgh\, Detroit\, 
 and London symphonies\, the BBC\, Warsaw\, and Buffalo Philharmonics\, as
  well as the Los Angeles\, Stuttgart\, and Saint Paul Chamber Orchestras.
  She has performed in countless festivals such as Mostly Mozart\, Aldebur
 gh\, Budapest\, Frankfurt\, Santa Fe\, Spoleto\, Music at Menlo\, Aspen\,
  Yale/Norfolk\, Sarasota\, Banff\, and Marlboro. A Grammy nominee\, she h
 as received a Diapason d'Or Award for her recording of the Rouse Flute Co
 ncerto with\nthe Houston Symphony\, a Recording of Special Merit Award wi
 th pianist András Schiff\, and Gramophone magazine's "Pick of the Month" 
 with the Buffalo Philharmonic. She is a member of the New York Woodwind Q
 uintet and a founding member of both Les Amies with New York Philharmonic
  Principals\, harpist Nancy Allen and violist Cynthia Phelps and the Goss
 amer Trio with Nancy Allen and Claire Marie Solomon\, cellist. For over a
  half century combined\, Ms. Wincenc continues to teach on the faculties 
 of The Juilliard School and Stony Brook University. She is renowned for h
 er popular series with Lauren Keiser Music Publishers\, the Carol Wincenc
  21st Century Flute.
DTSTAMP:20231221T150419Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240408T180000
LAST-MODIFIED:20231221T150419Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Chamber Music Masterclass with Carol Wincenc\, flutist
UID:CAL-8a018ccf-8b87f80e-018c-8cda4291-00003be6demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Masterclass:/user/public-use
 r/Arts/Masterclass
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=duke-music@duke.edu:Duke
  Music
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:Music Masterclass
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:530
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353.3333333333333
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Headshot of Carol Wincenc
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Carol Wincenc chamber music for online cal
 endar_20231221024923PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Carol Wincenc chamber music for onli
 ne calendar_20231221024923PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
X-BEDEWORK-COST:Free
CREATED:20231221T153101Z
DESCRIPTION:Free and open to the public. \n\nMichael Gallope teaches Cultu
 ral Studies & Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota. His 
 research focuses on the ways music is linked to modern philosophical\, sp
 iritual\, social\, and economic practices. In his first two books\, he in
 vestigates historical responses to the disorienting impact of musical sou
 nd\, an impact that is perennially difficult to describe. In Western musi
 cal aesthetics\, the ineffability of music was traditionally associated w
 ith autonomous\, abstract\, and non-semantic conceptions of music. Gallop
 e's first book\, "Deep Refrains: Music\, Philosophy\, and the Ineffable" 
 (University of Chicago Press\, 2017) challenges these conservative associ
 ations by showing how music's ineffability spurred an array of modern Eur
 opean philosophers (principally\, Bloch\, Adorno\, Jankélévitch\, and Del
 euze) to address ethically engaged questions and problems that reside at 
 the limits of conceptual reasoning. \n\nGallope's second book\, "The Musi
 cian as Philosopher: New York's Vernacular Avant-Garde 1958-78" (Universi
 ty of Chicago Press\, Forthcoming 2024)\, turns to the philosophical thin
 king of musicians themselves. Through the prism of five case histories dr
 awn from the postwar avant-garde in New York-David Tudor\, Ornette Colema
 n\, the Velvet Underground\, Alice Coltrane\, a single chapter on Patti S
 mith and Richard Hell- the book explores the ways musicians exploited and
  amplified music's ineffable properties in light of various mystical and 
 ecstatic metaphysical beliefs. In the process\, "The Musician as Philosop
 her" contends that these musicians- all of whom are understudied\, and no
 ne of whom are traditionally taken to be composers- not only challenged t
 he rules by which music is written and practiced\, but also confounded an
 d reconfigured gendered and racialized expectations for what critics and 
 audiences took to be legitimate forms of musical sound.
DTSTAMP:20240104T194112Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240412T160000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240104T194112Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b23ba5b-011b-27d6de9e-00000018:Biddle Mu
 sic Building 101
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Michael Gallope: "Ornette Coleman's Utopian Intentionalities\, c. 
 1966"
UID:CAL-8a018ccf-8b87f80e-018c-8d00651b-00003e69demobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://music.duke.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=duke-music@duke.edu:Duke
  Music
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:529.5
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:529.5
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:353
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Headshot of Michael Gallope
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:ethomps for Music (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Music)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/Gallope for online calendar_20231221033102
 PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/Gallope for online calendar_20231221
 033102PM-thumb.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR

