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UK School of Music
Musicology Faculty | Graduate Study | Undergraduate Study

Musicology and Ethnomusicology at UK

The Division of Musicology an Ethnomusicology of the U.K. School of Music offers a superior education in musicology with its diverse faculty of scholars, its dual emphasis on traditional research and creative explorations in the field, its focus on collaborations between scholarship and performance, and its access to the extensive collections housed in the Lucille Little Fine Arts Library and the John Jacob Niles Center for American Music.

Musicology Faculty

The Musicology and Ethnomusicology Division is presently made up of six full-time faculty and one part-time instructor, whose specialties range from the Medieval period to contemporary music, from chant and opera to fiddle tunes, folk songs, and Korean drumming, employing a wide variety of methodological approaches. The expertise of several faculty members reinforces the School of Music’s designated strengths in Opera/Vocal Music and American Music.

Prof. Ben Arnold, Director of the School of Music and a 19th-Century scholar who centers his work in the music of Liszt. He edited the Liszt Companion (Greenwood Press, 2002), has also published widely on music and war, most notably Music and War: A Research and Information Guide (Garland, 1993).

Prof. Lance Brunner, a Medievalist with an expertise in sequence, has edited several volumes of Early Medieval Chants from Nonantola (A-R Editions, 1996-99); he also brings together a range of interests in contemporary music, meditation, and music and healing, as reflected in his seminar, Music and Social Transformation.

Prof. Jonathan Glixon, Renaissance and Baroque specialist, has recently published Inventing the Business of Opera: The Impresario and His World in Mid-Seventeenth-Century Venice (Oxford University Press, 2005), in collaboration with part-time instructor and Early Baroque scholar Beth Glixon. Jonathan Glixon’s publications have also centered on Venetian laude and the musical practices of nunneries and confraternities, including his book, Honoring God and the City: Music and the Venetian Confraternities, 1260-1807 (Oxford University Press, 2003). Beth Glixon has published widely on women musicians in seventeenth-century Venice.

Prof. Diana Hallman, a specialist in 19th-Century French opera, particularly the central repertoire of French grand opera and the composer Fromental Halévy, has published a contextual study of the opera La Juive, entitled Opera, Liberalism, and Antisemitism in Nineteenth-Century France: The Politics of Halévy’s La Juive (Cambridge University Press, 2002), as well as articles and chapters on French opera. Her interests in American music have centered in American concert life, and she is continuing work on a biography of the Austrian-American pianist Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler.

Prof. Donna Lee Kwon, an ethnomusicologist with a specialty in the music of Korea, also works in East Asian and Asian American popular and creative musics, issues of music and embodiment, gender and the body, space and place, musical scenes and the workings of cultural politics.

Prof. Ronald A. Pen, Director of the John Jacob Niles Center for American Music and former Vice-President of the Society for American Music, has particular expertise in Appalachian traditional music and popular musics. He is nearing publication of the first biography of the composer, folk arranger, and collector John Jacob Niles, and has published an edition of Kentucky Harmony.

Dr. Beth Glixon, part-time instructor, is a specialist in music of the seventeenth century, with particular emphasis on opera in Venice.

Graduate Study in Musicology and Ethnomusicology

The School of Music offers two degrees in Musicology/Ethnomusicology:

See the complete graduate program of study in Musicolog and Ethnomusicology as well as the list of courses offered.

The musicology graduate program has a diverse student body, with a wide variety of backgrounds and interests (click here to find out more about our current students). As can be seen from the topics our alumni have selected for Ph.D. dissertations and M.A. theses, the program welcomes research into any area of music.

Through the generosity of Rey and Katherine Longyear, the Division sponsors an annual series of distinguished guest lectures.

The University of Kentucky supports a comprehensive music collection through the Lucille Little Fine Arts Library, and provides numerous opportunities for original research in its special collections, most notably those of the John Jacob Niles Center for American Music.

The Division of Musicology and Ethnomusicology offers several types of financial support for graduate students. Click here for further information.

See information on application to the M.A. and Ph.D. programs.

For further information on our programs, please contact Prof. Diana Hallman, Coordinator of the Division of Musicology and Ethnomusicology.

Undergraduate Study

The Division of Musicology and Ethnomusicology offers a full range of undergraduate courses for majors and non-majors.

The U.K. School of Music does not offer an undergraduate degree in musicology or music history. Undergraduate students who plan to study musicology at the graduate level might wish to consider the B.A. degree in music, since it offers the most opportunity for advanced study, but those with other undergraduate music degrees can also pursue graduate study in the field.

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RECENT STUDENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Marshal Pinto has been invited to partipate in a Seminar on primary musical sources in Brazil at the Museu da Inconfidência de Ouro Preto in Minas Gerais, Brazil, in early December. He will present a paper on collections of musical manuscripts in the Brazilian state of Goiás."

César Leal participated in the International Electroacoustic music festival "En tiempo Real: Nuevos Espacios Sonoros," held in Bogotá, Colombia in the Spring of 2009. He presented a paper entitled "Únicamente la Verdad!: Independencia e interdependencia de los medios de expression cultural y musical en el género operático," conducted performances, and coached singers and instrumentalists.

Erin Walker presented a paper at the International Association for the Study of Popular Music-US conference in San Diego and the IASPM-Canada in Halifax (entitled "Bulgaria, Bartok and Belgian Rock: Musical Syncretism in Univers Zero's Ceux du Dehors"). She also travelled to Croatia for the CMS International Conference, where she presented a lecture-recital entitled "Theatrics in the Music of Slovene Composer Vinko Globokar," and she will be presenting a paper on Taiwanese pop music at the CMS National Conference in Portland, Oregon in October.

Yawen Ludden will read her paper "Music, Culture, and the Cultural Revolution: From Beijing Opera to Model Opera." at the Annual Meeting of the American Musicological Society this November in Philadelphia. She received a Travel Grant from the A.M.S. to help support her trip. Earlier this summer, she delivered a guest lecture at Shanghai Normal University, entitled "Reading Between the Lines: The Opera Nixon in China and its Libretto, Music and Stage Setting."

Kevin Kehrberg published "Researching Southern Gospel Music in Kentucky and Tennessee" in The Bulletin of the Society for American Music 35, no. 2 (Spring 2009). He also presented two papers: "Sacred Popular Song in America: A Case Study of Albert E. Brumley’s ‘I'll Fly Away,’" at the International Association for the Study of Popular Music 15th Biennial Conference, July 13-17 at the University of Liverpool, England, and "‘I’ll Fly Away’: The Peculiar History of a Country Gospel Standard," at the 26th Annual International Country Music Conference, May 21-23 in Nashville, TN. Kevin received a Dissertation Year Fellowship from the University of Kentucky Graduate School to work on his study of Albert Brumley.

Nikos Pappas, 2007-08 winner of the Alvin H. Johnson AMS 50 Dissertation Year Fellowship from the American Musicological Society, and then of a 2008-2009 Mellon Dissertation Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies, has now been awarded the Rey M. Longyear Dissertation Fellowship, to complete his dissertation entitled “Patterns in the Sacred Musical Culture of the American South and West (1760-1860)”. In  July 2009, Nikos read his paper “Old Time Fiddling in the Upland South” at the Annual Gathering of  American Mensa in Pittsburgh, Pa.  He also has several forthcoming publications: a review of Hymnology in the Service of the Church: Essays in Honor of Harry Eskew, edited by Paul R. Powell (Fenton) in American Music, 2010; an article on "New Harmony" in The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, 2nd ed., Oxford Univeristy Press, 2010; and a paper entitled “Public Music Making, Concert Life, and Composition in Kentucky during the Early Nationalist Period” in the Conference Proceedings for the Bale Boone Symposium (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2010).  Works that Nikos edited have been performed by members of the Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra as part of a Lincoln Bicentennial Project entitled “The Antebellum Kentucky Social Dance Orchestra: A Selection of Kentucky Compositions from the Lincoln Era (1830-1855),” and he also served as a consultant for the 35th Season of Early Music New York, directed by Frederick Renz. Nikos was featured in the Winter 2009 issue of Odyssey, the University of Kentucky’s research magazine.

(Archive)