News
- Colorado State University Pueblo has launched the new Aztl谩n Center which will be housed in the university Library, a center dedicated to the study of Chicanx, Latinx and Indigenous Peoples and Environments of the Southwest.
- On Wednesday, March 17 at 6 pm online, Hip-Hop artists聽Sacramento Knoxx, The Reminders, Linqua Franqa, and Rennie Harris, along with moderator Michael Jeffries (Wellesley University) will present,聽鈥淪ounding Politics,鈥 A Roundtable.
- Salsa music lost its founder last week鈥攆lutist, composer, band leader, and producer Johnny Pacheco passed away at 85 years old. Read the article by Kristie Soares, Assistant Professor of Women & Gender Studies at CU Boulder.
- A themed聽Issue on聽SOUND, ACTIVISM, AND SOCIAL JUSTICE for Americas: A Hemispheric Music Journal invites article submissions
- Pianists Louise and L茅na Kollmeier performed and discussed Jean Berger鈥檚 鈥淐aribbean Cruise,鈥 on Belgian radio @RadioBelgique this week. The section starts at minute 54 and ends at 1 hour 33 seconds. The AMRC is home to the Jean Berger Collection.
- Professor of Women & Gender Studies,聽Kristie Soares, will inaugurate the聽American Music Research Center鈥檚聽new Counterpoints Lecture with her talk,聽"Dancing With Death: Celia Cruz鈥檚 Az煤car and Queer of Color Survival"聽on Monday, November 2 at 5:30 pm MST.
- The American Music Research Center聽and the Department of Musicology聽will host Rutgers University musicology professor,聽Eduardo Herrera, on Monday, Oct 26 at 1 pm (MST) for his presentation, 鈥淎mericanism as Musical Strategy: From Pan Americanism to Latin Americanism.鈥澛
- Houston-based musicologist Matthew J. Jones and CU Director of Vocal Pedagogy John Seesholtz will present, 鈥淢usic and HIV/AIDS 鈥 A Look at Then and Now,鈥 online on Monday, October 12 at 5:30 pm MST.
- Recent College of Music Clarinet Performance and Music Education graduate, Anoushka Divekar, debuted聽Take Two Knees, a virtual concert she and collaborators created from works by Black Female composers.
- Otis Taylor plays, "Ten Million Slaves" in the Columbia Cemetery near his home in Boulder, Colorado for the Songs for Change project.