Music and the Moving Image III

Music and the Moving Image III
Conference at NYU, May 30 – June 1, 2008
Call for papers

The third annual conference, Music and the Moving Image, encourages submissions from scholars and practitioners that explore the relationship between music and the entire universe of moving images (film, television, computer, video games, and interactive performance) through paper presentations, roundtables, and plenary sessions. This year live performance/screenings will be a featured part of the evening program. Streaming video versions of every presentation will be available only at NYU from May 30 – June 3, 2008.
Accepted papers will be considered for inclusion in the new peer-reviewed online journal Music and the Moving Image: http://www.press.uillinois.edu/journals/mmisub.html

The Program Committee includes Macquarie Univ. faculty Rebecca Coyle (Reel Tracks: Australian Feature Film Music and Cultural Identities); NYU artist faculty Ira Newborn (The Naked Gun); NYU faculty Robert Rowe (Machine Musicianship); Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison faculty Jeff Smith (The Sounds of Commerce: Marketing Popular Film Music); and coeditors of Music and the Moving Image, Gillian B. Anderson (Haexan; Pandora’s Box; Music for Silent Film 1892-1929: A Guide); and NYU faculty, Ron Sadoff (The Moon and the Son).

For more detailed information about last year’s conference, go to: http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/music/scoring/conference

The conference will run in conjunction with the NYU/ASCAP Film Scoring Workshop in Memory of Buddy Baker (May 16-23, 2008) and the NYU Song Writing Workshop [ May 27-30 ]: http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/music/scoring/ascap

Abstracts or synopses of papers (250 words) should be submitted to Dr. Ron Sadoff, chair of the program committee, by no later than Jan. 14, 2008. E-Mail Ron Sadoff for more information.

Ron Sadoff
New York University
35 West 4th St
Rm 777H
New York, NY, 10012

Conference fee (May 30 – June 1): $135.00, Students: $65.00, Housing Available.

IASPM-Canada Annual Conference: Popular Music & Popular Culture: Intersections & Histories

IASPM-Canada Annual Conference
Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario
May 9-11, 2008

Popular Music & Popular Culture: Intersections & Histories

The conference title has a deliberately wide remit to encourage numerous and diverse interpretations of relationships between popular music and popular culture. Proposals are encouraged in, but not limited to, the following categories:

Collectors and collecting
Film and popular music
Gaming and popular music
Genre histories
Histories of popular music studies
The Internet and popular music
Intertextuality
Musicals
Music videos
Nation and popular music
Popular music and/in fiction
Popular music and identity
Popular music and/on television
Popular music archives
Popular music biography
Popular music canon(s)
Popular music pedagogy
Popular music’s star system
Sound recording
Technology and popular music
Technological histories
What makes popular music “popular”?
Writing popular music’s history

Deadline for Proposals: Friday, January 25, 2008. Please send a 250-word proposal and a brief biographical note (preferably in PDF) to one (or both) of the program co-chairs:

Nick Baxter-Moore

Scott Henderson

The program committee plans to notify all prospective presenters by February 25.


Appel de communicationsColloque Annuel De IASPM-Canada
Brock University, Ste.Catharines, Ontario
9-11 mai 2008

Musique Populaire & Culture Populaire: Intersections & Histoires

Notre thème de colloque est volontairement large afin d’encourager les nombreuses et diverses interprétations des relations entre la musique populaire et la culture populaire. Les propositions de communication dans les catégories suivantes sont encouragées, mais elles peuvent en déborder:

Collecteurs et collections
Film et musique populaire
Jeux vidéos et musique populaire
Histoires de genres musicaux
Histoires de l’étude de la musique populaire
Internet et musique populaire
Intertextualité
Comédies musicales
Vidéoclips
Nation et musique populaire
Musique populaire et/dans la fiction
Musique populaire et identité
Musique populaire et/à la télévision
Archives de musique populaire
Biographie de musique populaire
Canon(s) de musique populaire
Pédagogie en musique populaire
Célébrités et musique populaire
Enregistrement sonore
Technologie et musique populaire
Histoire de technologies
Qu’est-ce qui rend la musique populaire «populaire»?
Écrire l’histoire de la musique populaire

La date limite pour soumettre vos propositions est le vendredi 25 janvier 2008. Veuillez envoyer une proposition de 250 mots et une brève note biographique (préférablement dans le format PDF) à un (ou aux deux) co-officier(s) de la programmation:

Nick Baxter-Moore

Scott Henderson

Le comité de programmation entend avertir les futurs/res conférenciers/ières le 25 février 2008.

Seeking a full-time faculty member at Ramapo College

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At Ramapo College in northern New Jersey we are seeking a new full-time faculty member with a specialty in music business with possibly some experience in music production as well. We’ve had a music business program for a number of years, but this represents a commitment from the college supporting growth in this area. We are about 30 miles from New York City and have been able to place many students in internships there.

We are looking for a person with experience in the industry and in music itself, as well as a very clear and sophisticated understanding of the many changes, realignments, and opportunities within the industry particularly brought on by digital media. We are seeking good candidates—ideally with some teaching experience—who can help students to understand where we are in music now, and who will mentor them in developing their skills and creative potential for the world as it is, and as it is becoming.

Ramapo College is a progressive, multi-cultural institution with a lively and creative faculty and a music program long engaged with contemporary and global popular music, digital media, music production, and innovative performance.

Please pass this information on to anyone who might be interested in and qualified fornthis position, as well as other individuals or places where potential candidates might be found. The official job description and instructions for application can be found at www.ramapojobs.com

De-Canonizing Music History

Advance Conference Note and Call For Papers

“De-Canonizing Music History”

International Symposium for
Histories of Popular Music, Jazz, and Folk Music
November 29–December 1, 2007

Sibelius Academy
Helsinki, Finland

Sibelius Academy proudly presents a call for papers for an international symposium dedicated to popular music, jazz, and folk music. Three departments of the Sibelius Academy will sponsor the event conjointly: the departments of Music Education, Jazz, and Folk Music.

The purpose of the symposium is to acknowledge and discuss the various ways in which traditional music history is challenged by emergent critical and cultural views, de-canonizing our conventional understandings of the musical past.

Within this extensive focus, the submissions may concern a wealth of subjects and methods. Thematic areas may include, but also reach beyond:

• Style/Genre history
• Philosophy/Theory of history
• Biography
• Jazz studies
• Historical study of musical instruments
• History of music technology
• Media history
• Music education
• Feminist and gender studies
• Interaction between Art, Folk and Popular Music
• Non-Western perspectives on music history

Keynote speakers:

Professor Roberta Lamb (Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada)
Professor Derek Scott (University of Leeds, UK)
Professor Lewis Porter (Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, USA)

Deadline for submission abstracts: August 31, 2007.  Abstracts no longer than 250 words, email to laura.pohjola@siba.fi

Admission: Free of charge

Contact: Laura Pohjola, Department of Music Education, Sibelius Academy,
P.O. Box 86, FIN-00251 Helsinki, Finland

Popular Music in Canada

Call for contributions for an Edited Collection on Popular Music in Canada
Edited by Charity Marsh and Holly Everett

Working Title: Spanning the Distance: Reflections On Popular Music in Canada

The editors invite proposals for a volume of essays that take up one or more of the following five themes:

Popular Music Studies in Canada: Where Are We Now?
Space, Place, and Performance in Canada
Sounding Canadian: Representation, Identity, and Difference in Canada’s Music Scenes
Media, Technology, and the Industry: The Question of Local/Global Relations in Canada
Regionalism and Popular Music Scenes in Canada

With this collection of works the editors aim to encourage dialogue concerning the place of popular music and popular music studies within Canada’s cultural landscape and the academy. Inspired by the 2006 meeting of the Canadian chapter of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM) in Regina, Saskatchewan, we also hope to offer a range of perspectives that are both discipline-specific and interdisciplinary. Contributions drawn from the full spectrum of popular music(s) are encouraged.Deadline for Submissions:

            Deadline for Proposals: May 15, 2007
            Deadline for Completed Articles: August 15, 2007
            Review Process: August to November 2007
            Deadline for Final Edits: January 15, 2007

Please send proposals of 300 to 500 words to charity.marsh@uregina.ca and hjeverett@mun.ca by May 15, 2007. Upon acceptance, completed essays should be approximately 10,000 words and will be due by August 15, 2007.  If you have any questions please email:
Dr. Charity Marsh at charity.marsh@uregina.ca or Dr. Holly Everett at hjeverett@mun.ca

Hearing Cultures (Review: Marina Peterson)

Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening and Modernity
Veit Erlmann, ed
Oxford: Berg, 2004

The reader of Hearing Cultures: Essays on Sound, Listening and Modernity is met first with the image of an ear that graces the cover of the book.  This is not any ear.  Rather, it is an ear cast in white porcelain.  It is an ear without a body.  Where a head would be, there is, instead, a flat, oblong background of porcelain.  The white ear foremost evokes European classicism qua modernism.  Singular, abstracted, and decontextualized, the ear represents some of the dominant tropes of modernism.  The ear both points to “the modern” and reproduces “modernism.”  It is available to unpack as referencing modernity at the same time as it is itself a modern ear.  Sound, it suggests, contains both the peril and promise of modernity. 

The title develops the content of modernism.  That the emphasis is on “hearing” – or sound consumption rather than production – we know already from the ear.  “Cultures” in the plural raises the spectre of difference.  But what is the subject that hears?  And what does it hear?  The abstract ear implies a universalist difference, cultures as serial entities, or cultures as the Other/s of the modern ear.  Is this modern ear locatable as part of a European modernism that imbues and accompanies projects that range from imperialism to anthropology, colonialism to globalization?  Or are cultures hearing, such that listening marks cultural difference?

Erlmann’s introduction (chapter 1, “But What of the Ethnographic Ear? Anthropology, Sound, and the Senses”) provides answers to some of these questions, answers that are drawn on and problematized through the rest of the chapters.  Erlmann opens the Introduction with a question posed in Writing Culture, “’But what of the ethnographic ear?’” (1).  The quote serves as a prompt to call for a greater inclusion of non-visual sensory experience in ethnographic writing.  To this end, “’Hearing culture’ suggests that it is possible to conceptualize new ways of knowing a culture and of gaining deepened understanding of how the members of a society know each other” (3).  “Hearing culture,” as an explanation of the title Hearing Cultures, defines culture as entity; rather than “culture” coming into being through sound, “cultures” hear differently.  The cultures whose modes of hearing are investigated are ones that are (or were) undergoing modernization, addressing the question of “how listening has come to play a role in the way people in modernizing societies around the globe deal with themselves as subjects in embodied, sensory, and especially auditory ways” (5). 

The problem of difference haunts this collection, as the terms of a European modern are deployed to analyze a range of times and cultures.  Following the thrust of modern projects such as colonialism, anthropology, and psycho-analysis, sound allows for a discussion of an Other in relation to cultural difference, the repressed, and the senses.  Modernity has produced difference through both violence and nostalgia, legitimating ideological or physical force in the service of modernization and looking within the modern self or to an Other outside for an alternative to the rationalizing tenets of modernism.  The chapters, in addressing the Other body or culture, create a generative analytic tension as they either reproduce the categories of modernity or use the material as a means of critiquing modernist tenets. 

For Smith (chapter 2, “Listening to the Wild Blue Yonder”), difference is located in the past and the body.  “For the early modern men and women, hearing was a whole-body experience” (37).  Literature provides evidence of the aurality of reading practices and the sonic environment of the time.  This mode of investigation recuperates sound for the subject and the scholar, as it “recognizes the embodiedness of historical subjects and attends to the materiality of the evidence they have left behind at the same time it acknowledges the embodiedness of the investigator in the face of that evidence” (41).  Ultimately for Smith, sound is uniquely phenomenological, with the capability of giving new life to the modern body.

Gouk (chapter 5, “Raising Spirits and Restoring Souls: Early Modern Medical Explanations for Music’s Effects”) discusses the philosophic relationship between sound and the body in early modern medicine.  Medical treatises posited ways in which music could heal by physically affecting a person’s nervous and spiritual system.  Such practices reveal an ideology of music that asserted a direct correlation between music and the body; historicizing this relationship helps deromanticize it.

Connor (chapter 8, “Edison’s Teeth: Touching Hearing”) discusses the physicality of sound (where it is produced in and by the body), to explore a mimetic relationship between sound and touch (154).  The tongue touches the inside of the mouth and teeth can “hear” vibrations.  Engaging the embodied production of sound head on enables Connor to raise charges against some of the projections that are made onto sound; sound, Connor writes, is not so much an effect or marker of difference but “brings difference into the world” (162) as  “sound can come about only as a result of some more or less violent disturbance: the collision of objects with each other (we never hear the sound of one thing alone…)” (161). 

For Bull (chapter 9, “Thinking About Sound, Proximity, and Distance in Western Experience: The Case of Odysseus’s Walkman”), the person on the street with headphones in her ears uses her body to colonize the world around her.  A combination of Odysseus’ measure of controlling his relationship to the sound of the sirens and Fitzcarraldo’s blasting of opera into the Amazon, “Walkman users habitually aestheticize their daily experience through sound in order to transcend their geographical space and manage their sense of presence in the world” (189).  Thus Bull inscribes modernity on the Walkman user, positing that sound is instrumental for a modernist mode of being in the world.  Bull’s Walkman user points to the other Other of modernity, the Other outside the modern self: the explorer’s encounter, the colonial subject, or the anthropologist’s field site.

Carter (chapter 3, “Ambiguous Traces, Mishearing, and Auditory Space”) argues that an investigation of listening rather than hearing enables the recognition of possible gaps in sonic legibility across difference.  Such gaps might include misunderstandings between groups of people where difference is organized around spoken language as well as the transformation of an original sound through recording.  Focusing on listening, Carter argues, allows for the possibility of transformation as we dwell in the muddle of modernity.

The Runa, a Quechua-speaking group, are an ethnographic Other, who, Nuckolls (chapter 5, “Language and Nature in Sound Alignment”) argues, have a closer relationship to the environment through sound than we do.  Nuckolls’ discussion of their sound world allows for an understanding of a different ideology of sound in relation to culture, in which ideophones reflect “a complex of cultural constructions that link sound to sentiments of shared animacy with the nonhuman life-world” (82).  While such an investigation yields new ways of thinking about ways to analyze and explore sound, the approach is necessarily posited on a premodern/modern split that also reproduces these terms.  With the assertion that “the use of ideophones is diminishing as “traditional subsistence-based culture becomes increasingly dependent on market-economy activities” (82), sound becomes an additional marker in the geographic and temporal divide between the modern self and the ethnographic subject.

Kahn’s discussion (chapter 6, “Ether Ore: Mining Vibrations in American Modernist Music”) of the French-American composer and esoteric philosopher Dane Rudhyar describes how a Euro-American modernist musical tradition was used to incorporate sounds and musical ideologies from the “East.”  Rudhyar drew on Tantric cosmogony to develop a musical ideology and composition form that argued for an idea that all harmony emanates from a single vibration.  His Single Tone theory, however, ultimately supported a compositional form that was rooted in European art music traditions.  With a modernist project of appropriation as his case, Kahn is able to reflect on the nature of modernism without reproducing its categories in his analysis.  As the Single Tone theory suggests, modernism has the “the capacity to generate difference from…unity” (117).

Hirschkind’s (chapter 7, “Hearing Modernity: Egypt, Islam, and the Pious Ear”) modern is the Egyptian state, which utilized recorded sermons as part of its twentieth-century modernizing project.  Cassette sermons emerged as modes of contesting the state (144); a medium not controlled by the government, cassettes also reflect an alternate philosophy of listening found in writings of mystics.  Rather than the message coming from the recording with the ability to transform the listener, cassettes mark a return to an idea that “the rhetorical act is accomplished by the hearer and not the speaker” (134).  Sound, therefore, is mutable, able to be put to different uses with differing ideological foundations.

While Egypt had an internal modernizing project, the imperialist projects at the center of European modernism depended on and helped construct an uneven world of the West and the rest.  Thompson’s work (chapter 10, “Wiring the World: Acoustical Engineers and the Empire of Sound in the Motion Picture Industry, 1927-1930”) on American sound film engineers reveals a moment of cultural imperialism that bridged colonialism and globalization.  Installing sound technology around the world for talkie movies was construed in imperialist terms, reflected most blatantly in the language of an AT&T (the ERPI) newsletter that proclaimed, “’Africa Falls Under ERPI’s Advance’” (202).  Modernity itself was the aspiration, as, “American engineers (as well as filmmakers) saw the worldwide expansion of sound film as a broadcast enterprise – one in which American technologies, commodities, and culture would disseminate throughout the world, standardize it, and thereby make it modern” (192).  This project aspired for the creation of a modern ear, abstracted and universalized.  An ear represented by the image on the cover of the book. 

Whose ear is the modern ear?  And what of the ethnographic ear?  The focus of the collection, ultimately, is not of what the ethnographer hears as sound, but of an ethnographic ear for what is heard by the subject.  For most of the authors, their subject is historical, with listening practices, abilities, and experiences found in texts.  This approach yields a wealth of methodological insight into how sound can be unearthed and recuperated from existing documents.  How we might hear today ­– with an ethnographic ear that can experience sound and hear the sonic world of others – now stands as a challenge, one that can continue to provide insight into the ways in which sound is a mode of being in the world.

Starnet

A new popular music research project in Finland

The Starnet. Changing Discourses of Popular Music Stardom. This research project deals with the relationship between the star phenomenon and popular music. The main questions of the project are: How is popular music stardom constructed at specific historical moments? What kind of meanings popular music stars incorporate? Stardom is characterised by different media-oriented public actions which form a web-like texture. The project calls this discursion the starnet. In order to understand traditions and changes in this discursion, as well as the triumph of stardom in the latter part of twentieth-century, the project produces three studies. Docent Kari Kallioniemi examines the democratization of eccentricism in British stardom and popular music. MA Kimi Kärki focuses on Anglo-American stage designing and the multifaceted relationship between “stadium rock stardom” and technology. Dr Janne Mäkelä explores how Finland’s quest for international popular music stardom in the late tw
entieth-century was connected to globalisation processes and national identity.

The project has funding from the Academy of Finland from August 2005 to December 2007. http://users.utu.fi/kierka/populus.html

IASPM-US 2008 Conference: Global Pop, Space and Place

IASPM-US 2008 Conference:
Global Pop, Space and Place

University of Iowa
April 25-28, 2008
Iowa City, IA

For many, popular music would, by definition, transcend any particular space, propelled by the technologies of mass media. Connecting every wired corner of the globe, today’s digital media technologies — from mp3s and p2ps to Myspace and YouTube — would appear to amplify popular music’s inherently translocal character. At the same time, popular music remains deeply entwined with significations of place, of home and away, town and country, here and there, black and white; and it remains shaped by real spaces and the changes that affect them. Popular genres and styles are nurtured and inflected in social spaces, and they enrich one’s sense of place as they shape one’s imagination of others. How is popular music shaped by, or how does it shape, social uses of space? Does popular music look and sound fundamentally different in an increasingly interconnected world? What happens to the notion of the popular in a peer-to-peer age? How does greater access to more music from farther away change our senses of our cities, regions, countries, selves, others? The conference program committee of the 2008 meeting of IASPM-US invites proposals for papers, panels, or roundtables relating to these questions and, of course, welcomes proposals on any aspect of popular music.

Possible paper topics might address questions such as the following:

    * How do new uses of space inflect popular musics’ sounds, uses, and meanings?
    * How does popular music inform regionalism and geographical identity?
    * Are ‘translocal’ and ‘global’ popular music coterminous, or crucially distinct?
    * What is the relationship between popular music and urban space?
    * How does popular music draw the lines of community?
    * How do we conduct research in a MySpacey, YouTubey world?
    * What is popular music without the music industry?
    * In what ways does popular music animate politics, ideology, or propaganda?
    * How does popular music give voice and strength to its collective listeners?
    * How does popular music mediate social tragedy?

Proposals will be read blind by the program committee, which consists of Connie Atkinson (University of New Orleans), Rebekah Farrugia (Western Michigan), Jonathon Grasse (California State University, Dominguez Hills), Kwame Harrison (Virginia Tech), Adam Krims (University of Nottingham), and Wayne Marshall (Brandeis University).
Proposals will only be accepted via the online submission form at http://www.iaspm-us.net/conferences. Abstracts for individual papers and roundtables should be no longer than 300 words, and proposals for panels should include an abstract of no more than 300 words for the panel as a whole, as well as abstracts of no more than 300 words for each paper proposed for the panel. The program committee reserves the right to accept a panel but reject an individual paper on that panel.

For questions about the conference, contact Wayne Marshall, Program Committee Chair, at 2008conference@iaspm-us.net.

Submission deadline: 11:59 PST November 1, 2007.

2008 EMP Pop Conference

Call for Papers: 2008 Pop Conference at Experience Music Project

Hi! Please forward this call to writers and musicians not part of IASPM: as
a gathering dedicated to bringing together people from the widest possible
range of backgrounds, we rely on your help. Email me if there are any
questions. Many thanks, Eric

Shake, Rattle: Music, Conflict, and Change

April 10-13, 2008,  Seattle, Washington

How does music resist, negate, struggle? Can pop music intensify
vital confrontations, as well as ameliorating and concealing them? What
happens when people are angry and silly love songs aren’t enough? The
migrations and global flows of peoples and cultures; the imbalanced
struggles between groups, classes, and nations: what has music’s role been
in these ongoing dramas? We invite presentations on any era, sound, or
geographic region. Topics might include:
–In conjunction with the new EMP exhibit, American Sabor:
Latinos in U.S. Popular Music, how Latino musics have shaped the American
soundscape and challenge black and white rock-pop paradigms, or more
broadly, the unsettling effects of immigration, internal migration,
displacement, assimilation, and colonization. 
–How music enters politics: social movements and activist
responses to crises such as New Orleans; entertainment’s connection to
ideology and propaganda; music within “cultural policy” and as part of the
public sphere; debates over copyright, corporate power, and cultural
democracy; performing dissent
–Social and musical fragmentation: segregation and
constructions of whiteness, divisions of class and gender, versus musical
categorization and niche marketing, from big genres to smaller forms such as
“freak folk”
–“Revolution” as a recurrent theme in popular music, a social
or technological reality it confronts, or an association with particular
genres and decades of music.
–Clashes between communal, local, identity — tradition,
faith, nativism — and  cosmopolitan, global, modernization
–Music in times of war, economic crisis, adolescence, and other
intense stress
–Agents of change: tipping points, latent historical shifts,
carnivalesque subversions, and accidents or failures of consequence
–The sound of combative pop: what sets it apart?

Send proposals to Eric Weisbard at EricW@empsfm.org by December 17, 2007;
please keep them to 250 words and a 50 word bio. Full panel proposals,
bilingual submissions, and unusual approaches are welcome. For questions,
contact the organizer or program committee members: Joshua Clover (UC
Davis), Kandia Crazy Horse (editor, Rip it Up: The Black Experience in Rock
‘n’ Roll ), Simon Frith (University of Edinburgh) Holly George-Warren
(author, Public Cowboy No. 1: The Life and Times of Gene Autry), Michelle
Habell-Pallan (University of Washington), Michele Myers (KEXP), Ann Powers
(LA Times), Joe Schloss (NYU), RJ Smith (Los Angeles magazine), Ned Sublette
(author, Cuba and its Music), and Sam Vance (EMP).

The Pop Conference at EMP, now in its seventh year, joins academics,
critics, writers of all kinds, and performers in a rare common discussion.
Our second collection, Listen Again: A Momentary History of Pop Music, will
be published by Duke University Press in November: email Laura Sell
(Lsell@dukeupress.edu) for a review copy. The conference is sponsored by the
Seattle Partnership for American Popular Music (Experience Music Project,
the University of Washington School of Music, and KEXP 90.3 FM), through a
grant from the Allen Foundation for Music. For more, go to
http://www.empsfm.org/education/index.asp?categoryID=26

Position at University of Virginia

The University of Virginia’s McIntire Department of Music invites applications for a
tenure-track Assistant Professor of Critical and Comparative Studies in Music, from
scholars with a disciplinary background in musicology or other relevant field. Specialty
will include 19th-, 20th-, or 21st-century music. The successful applicant will join a
department committed to studying music from a range of historical, critical, and
performance-based perspectives, and to crossing boundaries between musicology,
ethnomusicology, music theory, performance studies, and related disciplines.
Responsibilities include undergraduate and graduate teaching. The appointment begins on
August 25, 2008. Completed Ph.D. or ABD required. Teaching experience preferred.

To apply, 1) submit letter of application, curriculum vitae, and brief writing sample
(maximum 20 pages) at jobs.virginia.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=52619, and 2)
arrange to have three letters of recommendation sent to Stacey Trader, Musicology Search
Committee, McIntire Department of Music, P.O. Box 400176, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA, 22904-4176. Review of applications by the committee will begin on
October 4, 2007; however, the position will remain open to applications until filled. The
search committee expects to conduct preliminary interviews at the American Musicological
Society convention in Quebec City.