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Feel the music

- September 24, 2008

MacKay Lecture Series

Thursday, Sept. 25
Susan McClary, professor of musicology, University of California, presents “Sex, Death and Mary Magdalene at the Foot of the Cross”

Thursday, Oct. 9
Robert Walser, professor of musicology, University of California, presents “The New Musicology: Virtuosity and Aesthetics in the Age of ProTools”

Thursday, Oct. 30
Beverley Diamond, professor of ethnomusicology, Memorial University presents "Race/Gender Matters: Music’s Role in Articulating Indigenous Perspectives”

All lectures take place in the Ondaatje auditorium in the McCain Arts and Social Sciences building, and start at 7:30 p.m.

In his 2004 single Musicology, Prince crooned about having “a PhD in advanced body movin’.” The Purple One should have read his academic calendar a bit closer: though musicology is an actual scholarly discipline, its scope extends far beyond the dance floor.

“Musicology is all about the academic study of music – looking at our social history and examining how music connects to it, is shaped by it, and influences it,” explains Steven Baur of ±«Óătv’s Department of Music. Together with his colleague Jacqueline Warwick, he’s co-organizing this year’s edition of the MacKay Lecture Series, hosted by the Faculty of Arts. This year’s theme is “Music, Culture and Society” and consists of lectures from three of the world’s most prominent music scholars.

The first takes place this Thursday evening and features Susan McClary, professor of musicology at the University of California. A specialist in the cultural criticism of music, she’s world renowned for her work examining cultural reconstructions of gender, sexuality and the body in music ranging from early 17th-century opera to the songs of Madonna. Her lecture will be titled “Sex, Death and Mary Magdalene at the Foot of the Cross.”

“For a long time, the study of music has been hampered by the idea of music as art that transcends context, that’s timeless,” explains Dr. Baur. “McClary was among a handful of people who broke away from that, and asked questions like ‘What does it mean when women are always killed at the end of operas?’ She exposed the gender-, race-, and class-based ideologies underlying much of the Western art music canon and led the way in ‘effing the ineffable,’ as she puts it, exploring how music relates to broader social and political issues.”

The MacKay Lectures continue next month with two more speakers. Robert Walser, also from the University of California, comes to ±«Óătv on October 9 to explore how our understanding of music is changing when the music studio is rivaled by the laptop. The lectures conclude on October 30 with Beverly Diamond, Canada Research Chair in Traditional Music at Memorial University. She will explore the role that music plays in indigenous cultures, in particular with regards to race and gender.

The MacKay Lectures are funded by a donation given by Gladys MacKay in appreciation of the education her husband, the Reverend Malcolm Ross MacKay, received at ±«Óătv in the 1920s.

LINK: , Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences