The Musicology/Music History Cluster of the Mellon Central New York Humanities Corridor -a
large-scale partnership with Syracuse University, Cornell University and the University of
Rochester, sponsored by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-is presenting a series of regional events titled "Music and Spectacle: Music As
Text/Text As Music." The series runs March 2-5 and features open rehearsals and performances of new music by Sequitur, an award-winning contemporary ensemble from New York City.
Rochester's Eastman School of Music, 26 Gibbs St., will host two of the events: a concert on Monday, March 2, at noon in Kilbourn Hall, featuring works by Andrew Waggoner (pictured), Donald Crockett and Harold Meltzer, and open rehearsals/colloquia on Tuesday, March 3, from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. in room 120 and from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in Annex 707. SU will present more music by Crockett and student composers on Wednesday, March 4, at 8 p.m. in Setnor Auditorium. The Redhouse, 201 South West St., Syracuse, will conclude the series on Thursday, March 5, at 8 p.m. with a repeat of the March 2 program. All events are free and open to the public.
The series title is a nod to Aristotle, who wrote in "Poetics" that good storytelling consists of
music and spectacle, in addition to plot, character, thought and diction. "Each piece that
we'll present contains all six of these elements, in one form or another," says Waggoner, who
is the event organizer and chair of the composition and theory department in the
Setnor
School of Music in SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts. "Instrumental works based
on text push the question of what music means, if anything. Works with narration create a
kind of half-light, where speaking becomes musical. Art songs explore the ever-changing
terrain of singing, itself."
"Music and Spectacle" is both cross-disciplinary and cross-institutional, in that the series
draws on the academic and creative strengths of SU, Cornell and Rochester. Since last fall,
student-composers at all three institutions have been setting texts by well-known poets and
by their peers in creative writing, under the careful guidance of faculty members in
composition and English. The result, says Waggoner, has been a kind of pluralistic music
culture. "The series serves scholars by providing opportunities to address questions arising
from the changing nature in music drama. Students, in turn, are exposed to a wide range of
musico-dramatic genres," he says, adding that delayed radio broadcasts and on-demand
Web streaming of events will likely drive listenership into the hundreds of thousands.
In addition to several notable premieres, the presence of Sequitur is bound to draw
audiences. The 20-piece ensemble, co-founded by Meltzer and pianist Sara Laimon in 1996,
is renowned for its adventurous, "smartly integrated programs" (The New Yorker). The
award-winning group is at home in virtually any musical setting in New York City, from
Merkin Concert Hall and Theatre 80 St. Mark's to Joe's Pub and the Knitting Factory.
Sequitur frequently makes headlines by mixing concert programs with multimedia and
theater, as demonstrated by recent performances of music by George Crumb, David Del
Tredici, Luciano Berio and Judith Weir.
"We're thrilled to be partnering with Sequitur and with world-class composers from
Eastman and Cornell," says Gregg Lambert, co-director of the Mellon Humanities Corridor, as well
as Dean's Professor of the Humanities and founding director of the Humanities Center at
SU. "This series speaks to the importance of the public humanities, in general, and to the
breadth and depth of Scholarship in Action at Syracuse University."
The Mellon Central New York Humanities Corridor is an interdisciplinary collaboration of three regional Association of American Universities (AAU) universities with vigorous humanistic scholarly traditions: Syracuse University, Cornell University, and University of Rochester. The Mellon CNY Corridor initiative is generously supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation through a four-year $1 million dollar award designed to raise the public engagement with and visibility of the humanities in the Central New York region and to enhance the productivity and connectivity of its key scholars, students, and community members.
The Humanities Center at Syracuse University promotes a broad, collaborative, and interdisciplinary notion of the humanities that comprises traditional disciplines and new interdisciplinary inquiry. In promoting scholarly excellence and the visibility of the humanities at SU, in CNY, nationally, and internationally, the Humanities Center supports three models of inquiry: traditional disciplinary research, transdisciplinary research, and publically-engaged "scholarship in action" with communities to create capacity and solve increasingly complex human problems. The Humanities Center is, thus, an academic-community bridge for links and interactions across communities locally, regionally, nationally, and internationally. We develop collaborative research initiatives, conduct community partnerships, create open events and programs, share and disseminate knowledge, and generate new ideas and practices. Most important, the SU Humanities Center anchors a meta-community dialogue about the public possibilities of humanistic inquiry, especially when coupled with innovative thinking and real human problems.