Doctoral student featured in Concert Orchestra peformance
Composer Jay Hurst’s piece “Still Lives” for orchestra did not begin as an orchestral composition.
141 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Composer Jay Hurst’s piece “Still Lives” for orchestra did not begin as an orchestral composition.
Jazz will meet classical music at the Jacob School of Music’s faculty and guest recital “From Bach to Baker.”
Patrick McCreless, a professor of music at Yale University, will present a guest lecture honoring the life of Robert Samels on Friday as part of the Five Friends Master Class Series.
There was no conductor on the stage of Auer Hall as the Chamber Orchestra began its performance.
Inside the Musical Arts Center, the orchestra for “The Barber of Seville” performed a lively overture. As the curtains opened on stage, they revealed a band of musicians gathered on a street in Seville, Spain, outside a house.
Audiences received a closer look at the culture and context behind the musicians of the upcoming Lotus World Music and Arts Festival during IU folklore and ethnomusicology associate professor Daniel Reed’s presentation of the Lotus Lineup Lowdown.
Students can get a glimpse of what it takes to work in the Los Angeles music industry at Break Away to Hollywood on Saturday, Sept. 12.
Arnaldo Cohen, a professor of music in Jacobs School of Music, did not originally intend to become a professional musician. In fact, he abandoned an engineering degree to pursue music.
By Brooke McAfee
The Musicology Colloquium Series, a series in the musicology department of the Jacobs School of Music, begins with Ayana Smith’s lecture “Specularity, or, What a Comet, the Telescope, and Mirrors Have to Do with Seventeenth-Century Italian Opera. ”
Project Jumpstart, a program focused on entrepreneurship and career development for Jacobs School of Music students, is kicking off at 5 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 3, in Merrill 011.
Students from Sookmyung Women’s University, a national private university located in Seoul, South Korea, will perform at a guest chamber music recital at 8 p.m. Friday in Auer Hall.
The fall semester of the Jacobs School of Music’s String Academy, a yearlong program for students from ages 5 to 18 to study violin and cello, started Monday as students began private lessons.
Science, nature and music will mix Saturday during the children’s concert at the WonderLab Museum of Science, Health and Technology.
The rich tones of the brass instruments, the trills and rapid notes of the woodwinds and the thundering sounds of percussion filled the Musical Arts Center Friday night.
Clouds of color formed in the air as students simultaneously tossed up powders of purple, green, pink and yellow within the densely packed Collins courtyard.
The models stood still and chatted in the crowded room as the designers made last-minute adjustments to their dresses, standing near a rack lined with clothes ranging from bright yellow to neutral tones of black and white.
The Chinese Calligraphy Club introduced the Chinese culture to a crowded room of people at Friday’s Huazhao Festival. The event, which was held at the Mathers Museum, was an exhibition of an ancient Chinese flower festival that celebrates the spring.
The Chinese Calligraphy Club is welcoming spring at Friday’s Huazhao Festival. The traditional Chinese festival will be held from 3:30 to 6 p.m. at the Mathers Museum. The event is free and open to the public.
In Sofra Café, customers sip tea and coffee as they finish their breakfast. The counter is lined with breads and pastries like baklava.