Itās the onset of another academic year, and the state of music at CU Ā鶹¹ŁĶų is strong.
In a speech last week before students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends, Dean Robert Shay called attention to recent faculty, student and alumni accomplishments and addressed the status and next steps of the collegeās 10-year strategic plan.
Led by students like Brooke Murray, faculty like Carter Pann and alumni like Wei Wu, Shay said the College of Music is poised to be a leader among music institutions in higher education.
āOur faculty members remain active as performers, composers, pedagogues and scholars,ā Shay said. āOur students uphold a commitment to musical and academic excellence, finding success after graduation as performing musicians, educators, researchers, entrepreneurs and, in some cases, by applying the skills and knowledge attained through music study to other fields.ā
After reviving Henry Purcell trivia, the icebreaker that kicked off last yearās State of the College address, Shay introduced new faculty member Benjamin Teitelbaum to the audience. Teitelbaum has taught a handful of classes at the college over the past several years in his capacity as director of Nordic studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and now joins the musicology department as an assistant professor of ethnomusicology.
Teitelbaum, whose research has taken him to the Scandinavian countries of Europe to explore the role of music in the rise of radical nationalism in that region, told the audience of mostly first-year students about the power of music to shape political movements.
āMusic and its impact are all around us,ā said Teitelbaum. āAs an ethnomusicologist, my focus is on the study of music as culture.ā
In addition to teaching, Teitelbaum is also the new coordinator of non-major studies at the college.
The dean closed the convocation with an update on the strategic plan, dubbed the āCollege of Music Advantage.ā The plan, he said, is already in motion, as is evident by recent visits by opera titans Jake Heggie and Gene Scheer and members of the Cleveland Orchestra.
āThese kinds of experiencesācomplementing the outstanding training our faculty provides on a week-to-week basisāinspire our students and give them new insights.ā
Shay left those in attendance with a call for excellence ahead of the collegeās 2020 centennial and with words by a familiar modern composerāone whoās known for pushing musical boundaries.
āAs we depart today, I ask you to join me in reflecting on our possibilities and dreaming big. As the composer John Cage once said, āI canāt understand why people are frightened of new ideas. Iām frightened of the old ones.āā
Dean Shay will share more about the āCollege of Music Advantageā before the first of the year on Friday, Sept. 23.