Faculty high notes
Faculty, do you have news to share? View our faculty high notes and submit your updates here: https://buff.link/music-faculty-updates

New faculty appointments
Renee Gilliland will be joining the College of Music faculty in the fall as an Instructor of Music Education.

Related:
They Were Ahead of the Curve on Diversity in Classical Music (New York Times)
The Sphinx Organization, led by Afa Dworkin and including the College of Music’s own Assistant Professor of Violin Alex Gonzalez, is celebrating 25 years of pressing the field for more diversity in repertory and rosters. We were thrilled to welcome the Sphinx Organization to the college this fall!

The annual Boulder Faculty Assembly Excellence Awards this week recognized outstanding work and a concerted effort to make advances in the academy, including the area of Excellence in Research, Scholarly and Creative Work—congratulations to our Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology Benjamin Teitelbaum for his honor in this category.





We’re proud of alumnus and Jazz Studies Lecturer Hugh Ragin—trumpeter, flugelhornist, composer and scholar—for being extensively featured in a recent issue of the ITG Journal.

The latest recording by jazz duo Dave Askren, guitar, and Jeff Benedict, saxophone, gives a thrilling sax-guitar-vibes frontline. The album, titled Denver Sessions, features CU Boulder lecturer and drummer Paul Romaine along with vibraphonist Ted Piltzecker and bassist Patrick McDevitt.

Congratulations to Professor of Percussion + Jazz Douglas Walter whose musical ideas are included in Greg Giannascoli’s book—Opinions on the marimba: interviews with some of the leading marimba artist-teachers from the 20th century.

James Brody, director of our Musicians’ Wellness Program, and Matt Tomatz, the college’s embedded therapist from CU Boulder’s Counseling and Psychiatric Services (CAPS) traveled to Oslo, Norway, last fall representing CU Boulder and the College of Music at the Musicians’ and Performing Artists’ Health and Performance conference at the Norwegian Academy of Music. They presented talk titled ‘The Anatomy of Expression: An Integrative Approach to Improving Performer Wellness and Success.’’

Professor of Music Education James Austin, Professor of Double Bass Paul Erhard, Associate Professor of Trombone William Stanley, and Professor of Piano and former Dean Daniel Sher have dedicated their careers to inspiring up-and-coming musicians and educators. We reflect on their contributions, achievements and legacy with gratitude.
Note: We’re saddened to share that our dear friend and colleague, James (Jim) Austin, is fighting chronic kidney disease and is awaiting a kidney transplant. To explore what’s involved in becoming a living kidney donor—specifically in the name of James Austin, DOB 6-17-59—contact UCHealth: 720-848-0855 or Mayo Clinic: 480-342-1010.
Coda

We love to see our College of Music family uplift and engage our community in diverse ways, across generations! Bob Spillman—College of Music professor emeritus, and retired chair of our piano faculty and music director of our opera program—is an active composer and songwriter, offering regular recitals, spontaneous afternoon concerts and piano nights with Broadway show tunes to Carillon residents. Among many accolades, Spillman received the CU Boulder Alumni Association's Robert L. Stearns Award in 2004 in recognition of his service and career.

Heaven and Earth: A Song of Creation features the world premiere of a unique collaborative setting of the Creation Psalm (103 LXX) by six acclaimed Orthodox choral composers: Tikey Zes, Richard Toensing, Kurt Sander, Alexander Khalil, Matthew Arndt and John Michael Boyer. The Saint John of Damascus Society commissioned “Heaven and Earth” for Cappella Romana in 2013 in honor of the 2012 Higgs boson discovery. Toensing’s movements—“May the Glory of the Lord Endure to the Ages” and “Alleluia … Glory to You”—were written in 2014, prior to his death that year. Toensing joined the College of Music faculty in 1973 and taught composition, music analysis and theory until his retirement in 2005.
Browse many more faculty highlights on Instagram and follow us on Facebook to keep current with ongoing faculty news.