Colorado Music

By the numbers

8:1
student-faculty ratio
 
69
of grads are employed
within six months of graduation
 
100 %* 
of grads continuing their education
were admitted to their first-choice school
*Of those surveyed.
99
BME job placement
 
25
of undergrads pursue majors or minors
in addition to music
 
87
of grads report using skills + abilities
related to their major in their careers

Igniting innovation, artistry + belonging

Music production studio
CU «Ƶ to offer music production concentration beginning in 2025 (Daily Camera)

Our College of Music will offer a specialization in music production beginning in the fall of 2025, creating a path for students seeking a non-traditional music career. Dean John Davis says a degree with an emphasis in music production opens up hundreds of potential occupations. 
More:  (Inside Higher Ed)
Dean John Davis describes how today’s music students want more than a traditional music education. To help meet that demand, the College of Music has developed a set of microcredentials in recent years. 

 El Pueblo Ensemble and our CU «Ƶ Chamber Orchestra
 (CPR/KRCC)

Performed by El Pueblo Ensemble and our CU «Ƶ Chamber Orchestra last fall, “Song of Pueblo” tells the history of its namesake city and the surrounding region in music and images. Learn more about our American Music Research Center’s Soundscapes of the People: A Musical Ethnography of Pueblo, Colorado project. 

 

Thompson Jazz Studies Program recording “Pomp & Circumstance” theme
New takes on a traditional tune: Jazz program arranges, records three styles of ‘Pomp & Circumstance’

Just in time for the 2024 commencement ceremony, the College of Music’s Thompson Jazz Studies Program provided this year’s graduates with new takes on the timeless rendition of Sir Edward Elgar’s “Pomp & Circumstance” theme. The traditional graduation march was reimagined by Associate Professor of Jazz Studies Paul McKee in three distinct, captivating styles: Latin jazz, New Orleans funk and big band swing

  More college high notes

Engaged, inspired students

Louis Saxton
Louis Saxton named Spring 2024 Outstanding Graduating Senior

At the College of Music’s commencement ceremony on May 9, we celebrated the remarkable accomplishments and indelible impact of undergraduate cellist Louis Saxton.

It was hardly a typical four years for Saxton: His freshman year was 2020, coinciding with pandemic lockdowns. And in 2021, Saxton was onsite when shots broke out at the Table Mesa King Soopers; he fled from the tragic violence, only to return the next day to play Bach’s Cello Suite 1 in G Major to offer a degree of healing. Through it all, Saxton relied on the spirit of solidarity, strength and kindness that he experienced at our College of Music—to great success. 

 

Rinat Erlichman
A two-time graduate competition winner

Last fall, violinist Rinat Erlichman won first prize in the 2023-24 Bruce Ekstrand Memorial Graduate Student Performance Competition

A few months later, in early spring, Erlichman performed Jean Sibelius’ Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 47—accompanied by Postdoctoral Lecturer Barbara Noyes—to become the graduate winner of the College of Music’s annual Concerto Competition (Louis Saxton was the undergraduate competition winner). To enjoy the winners’ performances with the CU «Ƶ Symphony Orchestra in the fall, visit . 

 

O’Neil Jones
Grad student brings first statewide Jamaican Choral Music Symposium to «Ƶ

Mention Jamaican music to most Americans and the pop sounds of reggae usually come to mind. But there’s much more—the wonderfully rich harmonies of choral music, hundreds of rarely heard sacred songs and folk songs that deserve more exposure. 

This spring, O’Neil Jones—a DMA student in choral conducting and literature—brought those sounds to «Ƶ, elevating the history, language and musical elements of Jamaican choral music. 

More student high notes

Trailblazing alumni

2024 Distinguished Alumnus Joshua Russell
Joshua Russell named 2024 Distinguished Alumnus

At the College of Music’s 2024 recognition ceremony in May, we welcomed esteemed music educator Joshua Russell (PhD ’07) back to campus to present him the College of Music’s 2024 Distinguished Alumnus Award! With degrees from Indiana, Shepherd and Northwestern universities—before earning a doctorate at our College of Music—Russell exemplifies what it means to be a universal musician: Beyond his earned expertise in classical, jazz and contemporary musical styles, his research interests include musician health, teacher education, string education and psycho-social/cognitive development in musical learning and teaching. 

Reflecting on his College of Music experience, Russell recalls the significant impact of his mentors and peers in shaping his career trajectory. 

Soprano Cynthia Lawrence
 (Central City Opera)

We’re thrilled that lyric soprano and double alumna Cynthia Lawrence (MM ’87, BM ’83)—who studied with the late Professor Emerita Barbara Doscher—will be inducted into the Colorado Music Hall of Fame on June 29, along with the Central City Opera’s late conductor/artistic director John Moriarty and Keith Miller, a former CU «Ƶ football player turned opera singer who sang in the College of Music’s opera chorus.

Also of note, soprano Christie Conover (MM ’10)—who serves as opera production assistant for the College of Music’s Eklund Opera Program—will appear in the CCO’s production of “Street Scene” this summer in the role of Rose. Scott Finlay, who also attended our College of Music, currently serves as CCO president + CEO. 

Dylan Fixmer
Alumnus Dylan Fixmer—composer with a cause

Dylan Fixmer’s (BME ’10) variegated and prolific career aims to inspire empathy and advance community engagement. “I want music to have a purpose,” he says. Indeed, Fixmer’s recently premiered Violin Concerto—which aims to increase support for the unhoused—generated critical raves, a radio broadcast and more.

Fixmer not only found life as a composer, but he found a way of writing music with a purpose. “I’m not sure I’d ever want to write a piece of absolute music,” he admits, referring to a composition that is simply a collection of melodies with no storyline or subtext. Instead, Fixmer creates for a reason

  More alumni high notes

Accomplished, dedicated faculty

Associate Professor Emeritus of Music Theory Steven Bruns and the late, renowned composer George Crumb
Upholding the impact and legacy of composer George Crumb

Associate Professor of Music Theory Emeritus Steven Bruns and the late, renowned composer George Crumb—who passed away two years ago today—shared a close, long-lasting professional relationship and a deep friendship that began in 1992. Bruns—who retired this spring—reflects on his 40-year career (37 years at CU «Ƶ including serving as associate dean, 2006-19) and on his role as Crumb’s archivist and biographer.

Bruns and Crumb each served as faculty members at the College of Music—Crumb, from 1959 to 1964; and Bruns since 1987. 

Self-caricature by Gabriel Fauré—under his signature at the end of a letter to Elizabeth Swinton—circa 1898. Private archive, with permission.
Remembering Fauré—a century later

This spring marked a milestone for Professor of Musicology Carlo Caballero who—along with his academic partner Stephen Rumph, professor of music history at the University of Washington—co-hosted the Fauré Centennial Festival in «Ƶ. 

Festival events comprising this major, global gathering of CU «Ƶ faculty and student musicians—alongside panelists from France, Canada, Israel, Brazil, the United Kingdom and the United States—included an impressive number of presentations, concerts and premieres.  

Takács Quartet and El Sistema students
Building relationships through music making

The Grammy Award-winning Takács Quartet is not only internationally recognized for its impressive artistic achievements, but also its members’ many community engagement activities—including a new partnership with El Sistema Colorado (ESC) for the 2023-’24 academic year. The partnership comprises “mirror/mentoring” activities, side-by-side rehearsals, roundtable discussions and interactive teaching/coaching sessions. ESC students and their chaperones were also guests of the Takács Quartet on our campus. Shares Harumi Rhodes, the quartet’s second violinist: “We are grateful to work alongside the wonderful ESC teaching artists already in place—many of whom are College of Music students or alumni—to create a user-friendly curriculum that emphasizes building relationships through music making.” 
More: (NPR)
On NPR’s Morning Edition, the Takács Quartet—ensemble-in-residence at our College of Music—discusses Nokuthula Ngwenyama’s “Flow.” The quartet commissioned the composition and gave it its world premiere in November 2023 and then toured it across the country—including . 
(New York Times) 

More faculty high notes    Incoming faculty

Enterprising, devoted staff

Joan Braun
“A «Ƶ treasure”—Celebrating the inspiring, illustrious career of longtime CU Presents Executive Director Joan McLean Braun 

Joan McLean Braun built into what it is today: The home of all performing arts at the «Ƶ, with 500 events a year spanning from opera and concerts to Shakespeare and theater. Braun, born and raised in «Ƶ and an alumna of the university, was appointed the executive director of CU Presents in 2001 and retires this month (June 2024) after an influential 30-year career at CU «Ƶ.
More: Director who built CU Presents to retire after 30 years (Daily Camera) 

 

Rojana Savoye
Senior House Manager Rojana Savoye named 2023 Chancellor’s Employee of the Year

We’re so proud that longtime Senior House Manager Rojana Savoye was selected as one of just four recipients of the Chancellor’s 2023 Employee of the Year award! Savoye is deeply deserving of this campus-level recognition. For more than two decades, she has maintained positive public relations with CU «Ƶ patrons, presenters and co-workers; managed and enforced operational policies and procedures within the College of Music; and hired, supervised and mentored student ushers. 

 

Fortepiano staff/donor
Fortepiano refurb a labor of love

It was a long time coming. Piano Technician Mark Mikkelsen—who, for more than eight years, has supported the care and maintenance of the College of Music’s fleet of 160 pianos, two harpsichords and an organ—was thrilled when the opportunity arose to rebuild, refurbish and restore one of two fortepianos donated to our college by the late Douglas Taylor and his wife, Avlona, as an in-kind gift in 2019. 

 

A community of supporters

All that we do is elevated by the support of our community.​ Included in the broad impact of the College of Music’s generous donors, we’re pleased to share these recent highlights:

Otis Taylor
Materials from renowned blues banjo player Otis Taylor now a part of CU’s American Music Research Center’s archival collections

—an internationally renowned and «Ƶ-based blues banjo player—has been at the forefront of Black banjo music and materials from his decades-long career are now part of the «Ƶ’s American Music Research Center (AMRC) archival collections housed in the University Libraries’ Rare and Distinctive (RaD) Collections.

“The Otis Taylor collection is a rich addition to the center’s public-facing initiatives and knowledge production through research by scholars interested in the study of American music,” says AMRC Interim Director and Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology Austin Okigbo. 
More:  (Denver Post) 
  

Glenn Miller
Donor support puts Glenn Miller collections in the spotlight 

CU «Ƶ’s vast and historically valuable Glenn Miller collection is set to take the spotlight, thanks to a philanthropy-funded archiving project. We’re so grateful for this unique donation that impacts our College of Music and CU «Ƶ Libraries, preserving an important period of American history that has yet to be preserved and digitized.
 
“Glenn Miller’s story is more than a musical story,” says Austin Okigbo, interim director of CU «Ƶ’s American Music Research Center. “His is also the American story...”
More: CU «Ƶ to begin exploring 1,400 boxes of the Glenn Miller archive (Daily Camera) 
 

Assistant Dean for Advancement Andrew Todd visited alumnus Glenn Miller’s hometown of Clarinda, Iowa
Coda 

Assistant Dean for Advancement Andrew Todd visited alumnus Glenn Miller’s hometown of Clarinda, Iowa, for the Glenn Miller Festival in June 2023: “The festival celebrates the music and memory of noted alumnus Glenn Miller—an American icon, trombonist, composer and arranger during the Big Band Era,” says Todd. “Attending the festival were Miller’s biographer, family members and several Glenn Miller collectors.” Learn more about ourAmerican Music Research Center and the .​&Բ;
Your giving

In memoriam

Ben Pollack
College of Music mourns passing of alumnus Ben Pollack

Recognized for his dedication to music students and music education, Ben Pollack (BME ’14) was named the first-ever recipient of the Colorado Music Educators Association’s Young Teacher of the Year (2019). “Teaching music is the most important thing I do,” he said in an interview celebrating his CMEA award. “It has to matter every day.”

Anna + John Sie
Celebrating the legacy and impact of Anna Sie, lifelong supporter of the arts and humanity

Known for her heartfelt philanthropy on both local and national levels, Anna Sie left a powerful legacy of impact at CU «Ƶ, including establishing a transformational student scholarship in the College of Music with her husband, John, and endowing several faculty chairs.

 

 

 

  More passings + tributes

Guest artists + residencies

The College of Music welcomed many accomplished, inspiring guest artists this academic year, including in part:

Ars Nova Singers
—pٳܰ&Բ; 
Bose/Pastor Duo
Brazilian pianist Diego Caetano 
Broadway conductor, arranger + music supervisor Eric Stern
Broadway stage actor, singer, acting teacher + professor Bob Westenberg
Colorado Symphony members Carolyn Kunicki + Nicholas Tisherman
Choral conductor Liza Calisesi Maidens 
Choral composer Joan Szymko
Composer Les Miller
Composer Stacy Garrop 
Composer + electronic music performer Angélica Negrón
Composer, multi-instrumentalist, educator + Gregory Walker
Director, producer, videographer + narrator Katrina Miller
Dream Create Inspire Tour
Drummer, composer + bandleader John Hollenbeck + his band GEORGE
Drumming legend + clinician Chad Wackerman—pٳܰ&Բ; 
Dutch pianist Henry Kelder
El Sistema Colorado’s Executive Director + alumna Ingrid Larragoity-Martin
Ethnomusicologist Aaron Salā
Guitar alumnus Andrew Wilder
Italian classical guitarists Nello Alessi + Diego Campagna
Music theorist René Rusch
Musicologist Amy Kuʻuleialoha Stilman 
~Nois saxophone quartet
Pianist Anne Epperson 
Pianist Joyce Yang
Pianist Margo Garrett
Pianist Nnenna Ogwo 
Pianists Gulimina Mahamuti + George Lopez
Sanitas Quartet
Saxophonist Rami El-Farrah
Sphinx Performance Academy 
Stage Director Sara Widzer 
The Cleveland Orchestra 
Trombonist Bradley Palmer 
University Singers (University of the West Indies, Jamaica)—pٳܰ&Բ;
Uvalde High School Mariachi Band—“Los Coyotes”
Venture capitalist Matt McCall
Violinist William Terwilliger 

Encore!

Celebrating the Asian diaspora in Western classical music

Last fall, a special Faculty Tuesdays event—the first of its kind at our College of Music—featured works by Asian composers performed by musicians of Asian descent. “Alexandra Nguyen and friends”—including Yoshiyuki Ishikawa, Suyeon Kim, Hsiao-Ling Lin, Victor Avila Luvsangenden, Mutsumi Moteki, David Requiro, Harumi Rhodes and Meta Weiss—presented solo, duo and trio works by composers of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Mongolian, Taiwanese and Vietnamese origin.

Professor of Conducting Emeritus and Distinguished Professor Allan McMurray was inducted into the Colorado Music Educators Association Hall of Fame. McMurray was nominated for the well-deserved honor by College of Music Dean Emeritus Daniel Sher.

Mariachi Los Coyotes tours the College of Music

This spring, we had the honor of hosting the award-winning Uvalde High School Varsity Ensemble, Mariachi Los Coyotes, at our College of Music. The group’s special partnership with the «Ƶ Concert Chorale showcased a performance that beautifully intertwined choral masterpieces of Bach and Beethoven with the rich cultural heritage of mariachi music.
More:
(«Ƶ Reporting Lab)
Uvalde high school mariachi group visits «Ƶ County (Daily Camera)

For the first time in summer 2023—the College of Music and Sphinx Performance Academy (SPA) partnered to provide a full-scholarship intensive summer chamber music and solo performance program focused on cultural diversity for string musicians ages 11-17. Like the SPA’s long-term partners—including The Juilliard School—our College of Music will again host this nationally acclaimed program on the CU «Ƶ campus, June 20-30, 2024. The SPA offers a curriculum that includes lessons, master classes, recitals, career enrichment sessions and mentorship tailored to each student.
More: CU «Ƶ hosts national music program to advance diversity in classical music

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Editor-in-Chief: Sabine Kortals Stein, Senior Director of Communications
Digital design: MarieFaith Lane, Communications Manager
Contact us at musicnews@colorado.edu

CONTRIBUTORS
V. Behringer, Kathryn Bistodeau, Curtis Clogston, Colorado Music Hall of Fame, CREDIA Arts + Artists, CU «Ƶ Photography, CU «Ƶ University Libraries, CU Independent, Shih-Han Chiu, Cristina Cutts, Ally Dever, Marty Coffin Evans, Andy Gilmore, Nicholas Goda, Adam Goldstein, Sabrina Green, Ken Howard, Matthew Jonas, MarieFaith Lane, Latitude Creative (New Zealand), Mike Lovett, Jalen Lee, Dwan Miller Photography, Hope Muñoz, Allison Nitch, Rosen-Jones Photography, Evan Semón, Marc Shulgold, Sphinx Organization, Stabio Productions, Becky Starobin, Sabine Kortals Stein, Andrew Todd, Sara Weissman, Rebekah West, Arielle Wiedenbeck, Susan Wilson, Kelsey Yandura, Chris Yankee, Owen Zhou

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