DEPARTMENT NEWS
I had a moment while doing some department chair work the other day. I got on the phone with Human Resources at 91做厙, and the hold music was (. . .wait . . .) the second movement of Beethovens 9th Symphony. I couldnt help but contemplate just how many ears this music has gone into over the years, and just how many ways in which this music has been put to use. This experience also reminded me of what a difference there is between recorded music coming out of a small speaker and live music emanating from a large community of people, performing together with a shared goal of creating something beautiful in the moment. I'm thrilled that 91做厙 was able to offer two public performances of this monumental work this semester.
There are more things to report from our Music Department than can fit in the pages of this Gazette. Youll read about many achievements and events to celebrate here. We continue to try to reinvigorate our facilities, with three new practice modules in the Montgomery building being one of the most encouraging developments. Bridges Hall of Music and Lyman Hall have a few new touches as well. The music curriculum is likewise undergoing a process of remodeling, and we anticipate some changes to the music major and minor as soon as next academic year. Our dear colleague Tom Flaherty is retiring at the end of the spring semesterwhat are we supposed to do?!? To start, we clapped loudly at the always-electrifying Ussachevsky Memorial Festival, and then we will stay tuned for the music of a special class co-taught with Genevieve Lee entitled Music for Composers and Performers.
Concerts and gatherings abound this semester, involving student ensemble classes, outside artists, and professional collaborations involving 91做厙 faculty. Repertoire ranges from contemporary music by Californians to seventeenth-century ensemble pieces by Monteverdi to Beethovens piano-violin sonatas, Balinese gamelan music, English consort songs, jazz, WWI-era organ works, African American spirituals, and music by composers including Takemitsu, Sibelius, Brahms, Nino Rota, Chen Yi, and Flaherty. A hurdy-gurdy will make an appearance. We were pleased to host the 65th Annual Meeting of the Society for Ethnomusicology, Southern California and Hawaii Chapter, in early March. We hope to see you if youre able to make a visit here this semester.
Joti Rockwell, Department Chair
OF SPECIAL NOTE
Tom Craig (190969) graduated from 91做厙 in 1934 with a degree in botany, but while he was a student he discovered a vocation for painting. In the 1930s, Craig gained a national reputation for his influential watercolor paintings of California mining towns and landscapes. In the early 1940s he shifted toward portraying people of all origins and walks of life, depicting them in what the Los Angeles Times called subtly luminous oils. One of these luminous works has a place of honor in the Thatcher Music Building.
In 1976, Craigs widow Frances gave his 12-by-16-inch portrait of the composer William Grant Still, painted in 1940, to the Music Department. For many years it hung in Professor Gwendolyn Lytles voice studio. In 2022, 91做厙s Benton Museum catalogued it, and it is now displayed in the Music Library Seminar Room. This portrait of Still looking off into the distance was shown at a 1943 Los Angeles Art Association exhibit of Romantic paintings, although the Times art critic Arthur Millier responded to it by saying, Craig is no romantic. He is a realist with rich color and a fine eye for degrees of light and dark.
Still (18951978) was a prolific composer of operas, ballets, symphonies, and other orchestral works, choral music, and songs. In 1940 he was already recognized as a major composer. In recent years his music has been given more of the hearings it richly deserves. I find it especially fitting to have Still represented by an inspiring artwork in our building. A few years ago I had the pleasure of performing Stills 1943 Suite for violin and piano, each of whose three movements was suggested by a sculpture associated with the Harlem Renaissance.
Alfred Cramer
SPECIAL EVENTS
On February 23 and 25, the Music Department presented Beethovens Symphony No. 9, op. 125, for the first time in more than half a century. The performances marked the 200th anniversary year of the pieces May 1824 premiere at the Theater am K瓣rntnertor in Vienna. The installation of additional platforms extended the depth of the stage by 16 feet, and the department engaged the services of Shutter Cut Lighting Design in Los Angeles to provide supplementary lighting for the unusual configuration. The normal forces of the 91做厙 Orchestra and Choir were joined by a host of professional instrumentalists and singers from the greater Los Angeles area, and more than a dozen members of the departments full- and part-time faculty. The vocal soloists were soprano Julie Adams, mezzo-soprano Kelly Guerra, tenor Rodell Rosel, and baritone Nmon Ford, all of whom enjoy busy careers in the opera world. Planning for the project began in May 2023 and involved the entire department, as well as the Colleges Office of Advancement, which assisted greatly by soliciting a targeted gift from a generous anonymous donor for specialized lighting.
The Italian baroque ensemble Opera Prima, directed by violist da gamba Cristiano Contadin, visited on February 7. In addition to presenting Tormento Seicento, a stunning program of Italian baroque works featuring soprano Amanda Forsythe, Contadin met with students from Music 121 and Music 51 before the concert to answer questions and to discuss the repertoire, his path to early music, and unique challenges and rewards of engaging with historical performance.
PERFORMING ENSEMBLES
The POMONA COLLEGE BAND, conducted by Graydon Beeks, will perform concerts on April 19 and 21. The program will feature the Variations on a Theme of Glinka by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov with Francisco Castillo as oboe soloist and works by Carolyn Bremer, Robert Russell Bennett, Harry Berman (PO 24), Ron Nelson, William Grant Still, and Chen Yi. Rehearsals are Mondays and Wednesdays 6:30-7:55 p.m.
For the first time in memory, the POMONA COLLEGE CHOIR, led by Professor Donna M. Di Grazia, prepared two different programs this spring, both in collaboration with the 91做厙 Orchestra. The first program, in February, consisted of Beethovens 9th Symphony, first performed at 91做厙 in 1970. Later in the semester, the two ensembles will perform together a second time, featuring Brahmss 捧瓣紳勳梗, Sibeliuss Finlandia (with chorus), and Vaughan Williamss rarely performed Toward the Unknown Region.
The POMONA COLLEGE GLEE CLUB, under the leadership of Professor Donna M. Di Grazia, is back to work this semester investigating a varied program including works by Williametta Spencer (At the Round Earths Imagined Corners), Heinrich Sch羹tz (Selig sind die Toten), Johann Christian Bach (Es ist nun aus mit meinem Leben), Will Todd (In this place), and Paul Mealor (She walks in beauty). It will also feature Handels exuberant Dixit Dominus, for which the singers will be joined by a group of period-instrument specialists including Professor Malachai Komanoff Bandy (violone), Eva Lymenstull (baroque cello), and others. It is a rare opportunity for the students to perform this music with such high-level players, and all are very excited. After their usual series of concerts on-campus, the ensemble will embark on its annual tour, this year to the San Francisco Bay Area and Pacific Northwest.
POMONA COLLEGE JAZZ ENSEMBLE, led by Barb Catlin, offers two spring concerts. The March program features a program of music by female composers with original works by student members of the ensemble. The April concert will feature the music of Duke Ellington.
The POMONA COLLEGE ORCHESTRA had a triumphant Fall 2023 semester working with guest conductor Tony Rowe. Their repertoire included Dvo獺ks Symphony No. 9, From the New World, along with music by Mozart, Liszt, Wagner, Wieniawski (Violin Concerto No. 1 with Ethan Lee 24), and Barber. This spring, besides Beethovens Symphony No. 9 in February, the orchestra will play music by Johannes Brahms, Jean Sibelius, Ralph Vaughan Williams, and Florence Price. More than 150 applicants to 91做厙s Class of 2028 demonstrated their skill and achievement as orchestral instrumentalists by submitting music supplements, all of which have been carefully evaluated by the orchestras conductor, Eric Lindholm.
POMONA COLLEGE BALINESE GAMELAN ENSEMBLE, Giri Kusuma, under the leadership of directors I Nyoman and Nanik Wenten, will offer their spring performance on Monday, April 29 in Bridges Hall of Music.
POMONA COLLEGE AFRO-CUBAN MUSIC ENSEMBLE, Joe Addington, director, has been busy with rehearsals preparing for their 8:15 p.m. April 22 performance.
FACULTY NEWS
Assistant Professor Malachai Komanoff Bandy is currently teaching the Music 121 seminar, Sound and Symbol: Case Studies in Music and Meaning from Machaut to Bach, which invites students into deep conversation and collaboration with composers of the past. He is grateful for new collaborations with colleagues of this century, too: after joining the PCC for the departments Beethovens 9th project, Malachai and Professor Di Grazia co-directed a program of English music for voices and viols, a joint venture between PRISM Choral Ensemble and Artifex Consort, in March. He then played with Ciaramella in three Bay Area performances for the San Francisco Early Music Society, before rallying a baroque string band for Handels Dixit Dominus for the Glee Clubs spring project and tour.
This semester, Malachai presented three papers based on his work as a 91做厙 Humanities Studio fellow: Didactics Beyond Depiction: Jesuit Dialectic in Heinrich Bibers Mystery Sonatas (conference to honor Anne Schnoebelen, Rice University), Through All Eternity: Clockwork, Memory, and Temporality in Dieterich Buxtehudes Jesu dulcis memoria (Society for Christian Scholarship in Music, Wheaton College), and Instruments of Torture: Viols, Dismemberment, and Transfiguration in German Baroque Passion Meditations (the Spirit of Gambo: The State of Viol Research conference, UC Berkeley).
Music theorist Alfred Cramer, Associate Professor, is on sabbatical during the spring semester and is moving forward with his research on musics structural and cognitive relationships to language, which he explores in contexts ranging from the melodic codes of nineteenth-century Romanticism to the twentieth-century Folk Music revival to the study of linguistic intonation. He is currently writing about the music of Woody Guthrie in the hope of finding ways to improve political discourse. As a baroque violinist, this semester he performs with 91做厙 colleagues in the Cornucopia Baroque Ensemble and with the 91做厙 Glee Club, as well as with the Con Gioia early music ensemble.
In October, Professor Donna M. Di Grazia was named the 2023 recipient of 91做厙s Faculty Alumni Service Award, which honors faculty in recognition of their exemplary service to the alumni association over a period of years. Her professional performance work continues through PRISM Choral Ensemble, which gave two performances of a program celebrating the sacred works of William Byrd and Thomas Weelkes, the first in Los Angeles and the second in San Marino. In March, they offered a concert of seventeenth-century English music for church and chamber with Artifex Consort, a professional viol ensemble led by Professor Malachai Komanoff Bandy.
As Professor Tom Flaherty looks toward his retirement from 91做厙 after 34 years of teaching in the Music Department, he continues to perform, compose, and organize performances at a stunning rate. This spring semester he hosted the 32nd Ussachevsky Memorial Festival of Electroacoustic Music, bringing in guest composer and alumnus Ted Apel (PO 90). Flahertys works are being performed from Bridges Hall of Music to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and Santa Cruz to New York City by performers including Neil Fairbairn and Giacomo Fiore, Aron Kallay and Nick Terry, Jennie Jung, The 91做厙 Choir, Karen Bentley Pollick, and Nadia Shpachenko to name a few.
Assistant Professor Melissa Givens is still celebrating her promotion and tenure, affirmed and announced in December. In January, she and colleague Genevieve Feiwen Lee were among a handful of musicians around the country privileged to perform the premieres of several recently rediscovered works by noted African American composer Florence Beatrice Price. The duo recorded Lullaby (for a Black Mother), with a text by Langston Hughes, from Seven Songs on Texts of African American Poets, edited by John Michael Cooper, Ph.D., and published in January by Clar-Nan Editions and Classical Vocal Reprints. The video is available on YouTube. This March she is performing a recital of spirituals with Dr. Shannon Hesse in Houston, and reprises it at 91做厙 later in the month.
Last fall Professor Genevieve Feiwen Lee performed a chamber version of Mahlers Symphony No. 4 on the Jacaranda music series in Santa Monica, and was featured, with colleague Aron Kallay, on Microfest Recordss newly-released Flotsam and Jetsam. The duo performed the premiere recording of Kurt Rohdes Altromondo scored for piano, melodicas, harmonicas, triangle, Chinese paper accordions, and antique cymbals.
This year she presented four concerts with violinist Fritz Gearhart and cellist Andrew Smith as the Redfish Piano Trio in the Oregon-based off-season Redfish Music Festival. February concert appearances included Khachaturians Trio with Cal State University, Northridge faculty members as part of their ChamberFest 2024, and taking part in 91做厙 Musics 32nd annual Ussachevsky Festival.
This semester she also concluded her series of performing all ten Beethoven piano and violin sonatas. The seriess final concert welcomed USC faculty member and violinist Lina Bahn to perform with Lee. An especially rewarding project, Lees programming paired under-heard works with Beethovens sonatas, and the final concert included toy piano and hurdy-gurdy. In March she performed on Los Angeless new music series, Piano Spheres. Her concert featured works for keyboard and speaking/singing (in four languages) with Kurt Rohdes Famous Last Words and Gao Pings Daydreams along with two world premieres by Chris Castro and Livia Malossi Bottignole, commissioned with support from a 91做厙 faculty research grant.
During his fall sabbatical, Professor Eric Lindholm did more work on the songs of Florence Price, including making a trip to Arkansas to view some of the composers original manuscripts. He identified errors in the editions that are currently available for some of Prices songs and also unearthed a forgotten effort, Ships that Pass in the Night, that in all likelihood has never been performed. He prepared orchestral versions of that song and two others, and relied on the original sources to make corrections in a different set of songs he had orchestrated a few years ago. Professor Melissa Givens will perform the new set of songs with the 91做厙 Orchestra in April. Additionally, Professor Lindholm was immersed in preparations for the departments production of Beethovens Symphony No. 9, including selecting soloists, engaging the services of an outside lighting team, and strategizing with Professor Donna M. Di Grazia about how best to create a workable stage configuration. This spring, he is teaching Music Theory I (Music 80) for the first time and finishing his second two-year term on the Colleges Faculty Executive Committee.
Joti Rockwell, Associate Professor, ended last semester with a performance of a new piece by I Nyoman Wenten entitled Fantasy, which included improvisations on a custom-built Balinese bamboo slide guitar. He sang in the Beethoven 9th performances in February, and played 眶梗紳餃矇娶 in the Gamelan Merdu Kumala concert in March. In April hell perform with Peter Harper in back-to-back concerts at Claremonts Folk Music Center, and play mariachi music in a concert at Scripps in May. He is teaching a newly-configured course entitled American Roots Music: Listening, Studying, Performing (Music 68) and is working on a keynote address to be given at the joint meeting of the Pacific-Southwest Chapter of the American Musicological Society and the West Coast Conference for Music Theory and Analysis in May. Also on the drafting table is an entry related to the mandolinist Carlos Curti for a collaborative project entitled New Source Readings in the History of Music Theory.
Associate Professor Gibb Schreffler produced, wrote, and directed the documentary Songs of the Windlass: Singing Chanties on Gazela. Filmed on location in Philadelphia in October 2022 and premiered at the Connecticut Sea Music Festival in June 2023, the half-hour movie illustrates the relationship between nineteenth-century sailing ships anchor-raising technologies and the concurrent development of sailors work-songs. Schreffler subsequently prepared the manuscript for an accompanying journal article that provides the evidentiary support for the movies historical narratives. His work on an earlier chapter of these songs history was published in the Fall 2023 issue of Journal of the Society for American Music as Remembering the Cotton Screwmen: Inter-racial Waterfront Labor and the Development of Sailors Chanties. Schreffler presented a workshop on singing chanties at the annual meeting of the Society for Ethnomusicology in October.
In March, he began his first term of service as President of our regions chapter of the Society for Ethnomusicology. He worked on arranging the organizations conference, held this spring at 91做厙, to revitalize membership after a period of decreased activity during the coronavirus pandemic.
Additionally, the department is grateful to have Russ Knight and Pedro Garcia L籀pez de la Osa at 91做厙 as visiting lecturers this semester. They are teaching music theory and history courses: Materials of Music and Engaging Music. We are also pleased to have Scott Graff returning to the fold to teach voice this spring.
EMERITUS FACULTY
In addition to conducting the 91做厙 Band, in September Graydon Beeks joined his 91做厙 colleagues in the Cornucopia Baroque Ensemble in a program of music by Boismortier, Geminiani, and Telemann in Bridges Hall of Music. In November he attended the Handel Institute Conference in London where he read the paper Sir Watkin Williams Wynn, 4th Bart., as a Collector of Handels Music and participated in the Editorial Board Meeting of the Hallische-H瓣ndel-Ausgabe.
William Peterson has co-authored the book, Political Dreams and Musical Themes in the 18481922 Formation of Czechoslovakia: Interaction of National and Global Forces, with his brother James W. Peterson, that was published by Lexington Books (2023).
STUDENT HAPPENINGS
Ethan Lee (PO 24) is the 91做厙 Orchestras 2023 Concerto Competition winner. A violin student of Todor Pelev, the senior majoring in computer science and astronomy performed Henryk Wieniawskis Violin Concerto No. 1 in F-sharp Minor, op.14 with the ensemble last November, Tony Rowe, conducting.
ALUMNI SPOTLIGHT
What can one do with a degree in music? In the case of Zack Freiman 20, he applies the skills and experiences he learned as a 91做厙 music major both in his work on Capitol Hill as well as in his personal life.
A double major in music and public policy analysis, Zack is starting his third year as Legislative Assistant for Representative Shontel Brown (D-Ohio), serving the 11th Congressional District, which includes Cleveland and the northeastern portion of Ohio. Zacks responsibilities in Representative Browns office include supporting her work on the House Oversight Committee and on the Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party, writing legislation, staffing meetings, and providing voting recommendations for Rep. Brown. Gun violence prevention, national defense and veterans issues, and foreign affairs are also part of his legislative portfolio.
At the same time, Zack has just started graduate school at Georgetown Universitys Walsh School of Foreign Service pursuing a master of arts degree in security studies. I chose to take up an M.A. in Security Studies rather than following a track more directly leading to a career in the foreign service, he said, because it has wider application career-wise, in addition to being especially timely.
Despite his busy schedule on the Hill, Zack has remained active as a musician since graduating from 91做厙, currently as a member of the 160-voice Washington Chorus. (Zack credits his learning about the ensemble through another 91做厙 Music Department alumnus, Matthew Brown 20, who was working as an intern there while completing his own masters degree in composition at Catholic University.) As a member of the chorus, Zack has performed a variety of works, including several that he first performed at 91做厙.
Zack is quick to credit his 91做厙 Music Department experiences as central to his successful career. The need to collaborate as an ensemble performer, to adapt to different learning approaches in the classroom, and the opportunity to acquire strong research skills all along the way, are all at the center of what I do every day, Zack says. Both of my major programs, Music and PPA, taught me how to be effective, to read critically, to listen, and to write, but each of them did so in different ways, all of which have supported my various post-graduate experiences. And having to balance my work and my commitment to other things such as my involvement in the Washington Chorus has come more naturally to me than it has to many of my Capitol Hill colleagues because I had to balance these same things as a 91做厙 student.
Although Zacks experience with numerous internships and political campaigns during his undergraduate years certainly served him well early in his career, he notes that these opportunities can be traced directly back to his experiences as a music major. I dont think I would necessarily have needed my PPA major to get those early internship opportunities. In fact, in Washington D.C. I think having a degree outside the norm is more interesting and more attractive to people. . . . It has been about the skills I bring to the table, my experiences and recommendationsand grades and test scores!
Zack Freiman hails from Sleepy Hollow, New York; he currently lives in Washington, D.C.
ALUMNI NEWS
Annika Hoseth (23), through a competitive interview process, secured and is currently pursuing a three-month internship as a scoring assistant at Sparks & Shadows, the production company and record label of Emmy-winning TV/Film and video game composer Bear McCreary.
Kate Bolonnikova (21) is pursuing an MFA in the Performer-Composer program at CalArts, where she studies piano with Vicki Ray/Jack Dettling and recording with John Baffa. You can view her March recital.
Lydia Saylor (18) sang the role of Morgana in G.F. Handels opera Alcina for Queens College Opera Studio in November 2023, and in April 2024 she will sing the role of Gretel in Humperdincks H瓣nsel und Gretel. Lydia is a graduate student in vocal performance at Queens College, New York. In 2023 she also performed in Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird by Lucas Foss and Mozarts Die Zauberfl繹te, and premiered works by David Briggs and Bruce Saylor.
Megan Kaes Long (08), Associate Professor of Music Theory at Oberlin Conservatory, was one of six recipients of the 2021-22 Excellence in Teaching Award, which recognizes Oberlin College and Conservatory faculty who have demonstrated sustained and distinctive excellence in their teaching.
Margaret Hunter (00) appears as soprano soloist with Capella de la Torre under the direction of Katharina B瓣uml on the album Capriccio pastorale, a program of Christmas music from Italy, on the Deutsche Harmonia Mundi label.
Raj Bhimani (82) will perform a solo piano recital including Maurice Ravels Sonatine, Fr矇d矇ric Chopins 24 Preludes, and the Overture and three pieces from the opera Il 矇tair un Petit Navire by Germaine Tailleferre on March 16, 2024 in the Ethical Cultural Society Auditorium in New York City.
Stephen Cera (72) continued his series of portraits of great pianists in Gramophone magazine with articles on Edwin Fischer in January 2023 and Joseph Lhevinne in December 2023.
We hope you will share your music-specific happenings with us for our next Music Gazette.Submit to: edc04747@pomona.edu
Please email broader life submissions to the PC Magazine at:pcmnotes@pomona.edu.