Later this month, the IU Department of Music Theory welcomes Eric Drott to deliver two talks as part of the Five Friends Master Class Series in Music Theory. Drott is Professor of Theory at the University of Texas-Austin Butler School of Music.
Drott’s research focuses on contemporary music cultures, streaming platforms, music and protest, genre theory, and the political economy of music. He is the author of Music and the Elusive Revolution (University of California Press, 2011) and is completing a second book on music streaming, Streaming Music, Streaming Capital. He is co-editing the Oxford Handbook of Protest Music with IU Jacobs Professor of Theory Noriko Manabe. He has received a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship and the Dent Medal from the Royal Musical Association.
Tuesday, September 24
5:00 pm, Ford-Crawford Hall
Music Theory Five Friends Guest Lecture
Eric Drott (University of Texas-Austin), “Music Streaming, Music Data, and the Work of Social Reproduction”
Wednesday. September 25
4:00 pm, SM267 (Library)
Music Theory Colloquium Series Guest Lecture
Eric Drott (University of Texas-Austin), “Music and Asset Aesthetics”
Five Friends Master Class Series – Honoring Robert Samels
The Five Friends Master Class Series honoring the lives of five talented Jacobs School of Music students—Chris Carducci, Garth Eppley, Georgina Joshi, Zachary Novak, and Robert Samels—was established in 2012 with a gift of $1 million from the Georgina Joshi Foundation, Inc. This annual series of lectures, master classes, and residencies by a number of the world’s leading musicians and teachers focuses on areas of interest most relevant to the lives of the five friends—voice performance, choral conducting, early music, music theory, composition, and opera. The Georgina Joshi Foundation was established in 2007 as the vision of Georgina Joshi’s mother, Louise Addicott-Joshi, to provide educational and career development opportunities for young musicians and to encourage and support public performance of music. The gift to the school establishes a permanent way for the world to learn about each of the five friends, their musical talents and passions, and to encourage the development of similar talents and passions in current and future music students. The establishment of this endowment by the families is administered by the IU Foundation.
Bass-baritone and composer Robert Samels was born on June 2, 1981, and died in a plane crash on April 20, 2006. He was a doctoral student in choral conducting at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music and had studied voice with Giorgio Tozzi and Costanza Cuccaro. He began his vocal studies with Alfred Anderson at the University of Akron and Andreas Poulimenos at Bowling Green State University. Samels had recently appeared as Mr. Gibbs in the world premiere of Our Town by Ned Rorem, as Marco in the collegiate premiere of William Bolcom’s A View from the Bridge, and as Joseph and Herod in the collegiate premiere of El Nino by John Adams. In September 2005, he conducted the premiere of his own opera, Pilatvs. As a member of the Wolf Trap Opera Company for 2006, he would have added three roles that summer, including Bartolo in Le Nozze di Figaro, Friar Laurence in Roméo et Juliette, and Pluto in Telemann’s Orpheus. Other opera credits included the title roles of Don Pasquale and Il Turco in Italia, as well as Leporello in Don Giovanni, Falstaff in The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Bottom in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. In the summer of 2004, he performed Creon in the New York premiere of John Eaton’s Antigone. Samels also frequently performed in the oratorio repertoire. In the spring of 2005, he was selected as a semi-finalist in the annual competition of the Oratorio Society of New York. He was an announcer with public radio station WFIU, as well as the host and producer of its Cantabile program. A soloist with Aguavá New Music Studio, he had recently performed a concert at the Library of Congress. Samels was an associate instructor in the Jacobs School’s Music Theory Department, where was loved and admired by his students.
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