Sound Expertise - podcast cover

Sound Expertise

Will Robinsoundexpertise.org
Conversations with scholars about music, hosted by musicologist Will Robin and produced by D. Edward Davis
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

R. Murray Schafer's Legacy with Phantom Power

Check out this episode of the great podcast Phantom Power , on the life and work of composer R. Murray Schafer. You can check out more info on the episode here , and its second part here . We'll have another bonus episode up before the end of the year, and Season 3 will happen at some point in 2022! More over at soundexpertise.org ! Questions? Thoughts? Share them with Will on Twitter @seatedovation...

Dec 07, 202136 min0

Our Pandemic Year

Eighteen music scholars describe their experiences of the pandemic. "On the Banks of the Wabash" was arranged and performed by D. Edward Davis. More over at soundexpertise.org ! Questions? Thoughts? Share them with Will on Twitter @seatedovation

Jul 13, 202158 min

The Musicologist as Contrarian with Richard Taruskin

For our Season 2 finale, a wide-ranging conversation with the eminent musicologist Richard Taruskin. We talk about his trajectory, from playing early music and studying Russian opera to writing the Oxford History of Western Music and penning polemics in the New York Times; his deep-set belief that musicologists should be skeptics and contrarians; what he hopes for the future of music scholarship; and why he believes it's necessary to make people angry. Richard Taruskin is professor emeritus at t...

Jun 22, 202159 minSeason 2Ep. 14

Cold War Money and New Music with Eduardo Herrera and Michael Uy

How did Cold War money shape the musical avant-garde? What were the roles of experts, elites, and the Rockefeller Foundation in shaping the cultural politics of new music––in the era of serial tyranny and Milton Babbitt's "Who Cares If You Listen?" An interview with musicologists Michael Uy and Eduardo Herrera about their research on funding new music in the Sputnik moment, in both the U.S. and Latin America. Michael Uy is Allston Burr Resident Dean and Assistant Dean of Harvard College, Dunster...

Jun 15, 20211 hr 1 minSeason 2Ep. 13

Ethnography and Queer Intimacies on the Dance Floor with Luis Manuel Garcia-Mispireta

How does one come to study a topic that is on the margins of an academic discipline? What does it mean to do ethnographic fieldwork amidst the intimacies of the dance floor––and what are the challenges of doing so in queer spaces? A wide-ranging conversation with ethnomusicologist Luis-Manuel Garcia, on his scholarly journey from early music to rave culture to gay fetish parties in Berlin. Luis Manuel Garcia-Mispireta is Lecturer in Ethnomusicology and Popular Music Studies at the University of ...

Jun 08, 202151 minSeason 2Ep. 12

Cracking Algorithmic Recommendation with Nick Seaver

Algorithms run our lives these days, from Netflix binges to predictive policing. And that includes algorithmic recommenders––like Spotify's Discover Weekly and Pandora––that shape how we consume music. How does algorithmic music recommendation work and, perhaps more importantly, who makes it work? After all, algorithms are made and tweaked by people, who work at tech companies and have their own ideas and values. An interview with anthropologist Nick Seaver, who has conducted years of ethnograph...

Jun 01, 202147 minSeason 2Ep. 11

Britten's Operas and British Identity with Imani Mosley

When a modern opera debuts, normally the stakes aren't very high. But when it's composed by Benjamin Britten and premieres in England after World War II, that's a different story. Britten's high-profile operas––whose performances were attended by Queen Elizabeth II––were seen as a reflection of British postwar identity. An interview with musicologist Imani Danielle Mosley on how a series of strange operas by queer, modernist composer became a referendum on what it meant to be British––and why th...

May 25, 202152 minSeason 2Ep. 10

Finding Music in Renaissance Manuscripts with Laurie Stras

Since pretty much the beginnings of our field, musicologists have gone digging for lost music, bringing old pieces back into the world after centuries of neglect. But it's not just about finding some new scores: it's also about building an understanding of the culture that created and preserved them. When we find music in Renaissance manuscripts, what meaning can, and should, we make from it? An interview with musicologist Laurie Stras about what she has uncovered in the archives––including a ma...

May 18, 202144 minSeason 2Ep. 9

Handel and the Slave Trade with David Hunter

In 2013, the music librarian David Hunter found the name George Frideric Handel in a printed list of investors in one of Britain's official slave trading companies. Since then, Dr. Hunter has researched Handel and his patrons' investments in the slave trade, as well as the broader relationship between slavery and the history of classical music. What does it mean that profits from the brutality and horror of the Middle Passage benefitted the career of the composer who wrote the "Messiah"? And wha...

May 11, 202141 minSeason 2Ep. 8

Rebecca Black's "Friday" and Viral Music with Paula Harper

Way back in 2011, Rebecca Black's music video "Friday" went viral because it was widely considered to be one of the worst songs of all time. But what does that actually mean––for music to "go viral," and for music to be so widely criticized as "bad"? A conversation about gender, genre, and musical virality in the 2010s with musicologist Paula Clare Harper. Paula Clare Harper is a Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow at Washington University in St. Louis; this fall, she will join the faculty of the Unive...

May 04, 202147 minSeason 2Ep. 7

Freedom Singing at the March on Washington with Tammy L. Kernodle

Though often overlooked in mainstream histories, the voices of Black women were central to the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in August 1963. And those voices included some of the greatest musicians of the time: Odetta, Mahalia Jackson, Camilla Williams. These women, and the political significance of the spirituals they sang, are the subject of this week's episode: a conversation with the musicologist Tammy L. Kernodle about the wide-ranging role of music, and the fractious political c...

Apr 27, 202153 minSeason 2Ep. 6

Expert Listening and d/Deaf Culture with Jessica A. Holmes

When we think about music and deafness, it's often through the lens of Beethoven: the mythological figure who overcomes his hearing loss to compose great music. But members of the d/Deaf community often talk less about hearing loss than about deaf gain . And we can gain a lot from understanding the wide range of methods through which d/Deaf people engage with, create, and listen to music. A conversation with musicologist Jessica A. Holmes, who researches the relationship between music and disabi...

Apr 20, 202136 minSeason 2Ep. 5

Teaching Music History with Sara Haefeli and Andrew Dell'Antonio

Maybe you teach music history, and maybe you don't, but pedagogy is a part of your life: we have all been teachers, and we have all been students. This conversation, with musicologists Andrew Dell'Antonio and Sara Haefeli, is about how they have innovated in their classrooms, but it is also about teaching itself as a practice, as an art, and as a form of research. What does it mean to abandon traditional lecturing and traditional grading, and empower students to see themselves as creators of mus...

Apr 13, 20211 hr 6 minSeason 2Ep. 4

Diversifying Music Theory with Ellie Hisama

Music theory has long been a space in which white male scholars analyze music by white male composers. But many music theorists are actively trying to change that, and our guest today, Professor Ellie Hisama, is foremost among them. In this conversation, we discuss her pioneering work on women modernist composers; diversifying the music theory classroom; her recent scholarship on gender discrimination in music theory, including sexist and homophobic comments made by Milton Babbitt; and a lot mor...

Apr 06, 202156 minSeason 2Ep. 3

The Gospel Imagination with Braxton D. Shelley

What happens, musically and spiritually, when a congregation sings gospel ? How can we analyze music that moves not just the mind, but also the body and the soul? A conversation with Braxton D. Shelley, whose scholarship fuses theology and musicology to understand how musical techniques like vamps and "tuning up" lead to transcendent religious experiences. Braxton D. Shelley is Stanley A. Marks and William H. Marks Assistant Professor at the Radcliffe Institute and Assistant Professor of Music i...

Mar 30, 202142 minSeason 2Ep. 2

Making Sense of Music with Susan McClary

We're back! The first episode of Season 2 features Susan McClary: one of the most influential, and controversial, musicologists of our time. We talk about her lifelong pursuit of analyzing music in its cultural context, from madrigals to Madonna; the early rejections that set her on a path towards becoming a groundbreaking feminist scholar; the intense criticism to which her scholarship has been subjected; the infamous Beethoven 9 controversy; and much more. Susan McClary is the Fynette H. Kulas...

Mar 23, 202158 minSeason 2Ep. 1

Season 2 Trailer!

We're back next week! Season 2 of Sound Expertise begins on Tuesday, March 23. Host Will Robin will interview fellow music scholars about their research, and why it matters, in a new season of weekly episodes that'll take us into the summer. Check out our past episodes at soundexpertise.org and get ready for our season premiere next week: an interview with the amazing Susan McClary!

Mar 16, 20212 min

Bang on a Can and New Music with Will Robin

And we're back! Well, kind of. Season 2 of Sound Expertise launches on March 23, but for now here's a bonus preseason episode. Our intrepid producer, D. Edward Davis, interviews host Will Robin (University of Maryland) about his book "Industry: Bang on a Can and New Music in the Marketplace," out with Oxford University Press next week. We talk about the role of the festival Bang on a Can in shaping the broader world of new music, the institutions and politics of contemporary classical in the '80...

Feb 16, 202156 min

Jazz Manouche and Cultural Citizenship with Siv B. Lie

What does it mean to create music that is valued as a national emblem, but also be part of a community that is marginalized within that nation? What is jazz manouche, and how does this musical tradition reflect the complicated status of its Romani creators in France? A conversation with Siv B. Lie , assistant professor of ethnomusicology at the University of Maryland. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org Questions? Thoughts? Share them with Will on Twitter @seatedovation...

Sep 29, 202047 minSeason 1Ep. 11

Capitalism and the Value of Music with Timothy Taylor

How can ethnomusicology help us understand the value of music in a capitalist society? When we view music as a commodity, what might it reveal about how people make meaning (and money) from art across different cultures? A conversation with Timothy Taylor, professor of ethnomusicology at UCLA's Herb Albert School of Music. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org Questions? Thoughts? Share them with Will on Twitter @seatedovation...

Sep 22, 202041 minSeason 1Ep. 10

Steve Reich and the Politics of Race with Sumanth Gopinath

In light of the recent resurfacing of racist remarks that Steve Reich made in the 1970s, what are the racial politics of the composer's canonic minimalist music? What is the history of Reich's engagement with civil rights in works like Come Out , and does the influence of African music on his compositions represent a form of cultural appropriation? A conversation with Sumanth S Gopinath , associate professor of music theory at the University of Minnesota. Show notes and more over at soundexperti...

Sep 14, 20201 hr 7 minSeason 1Ep. 9

Elocution and Taking Women Seriously with Marian Wilson Kimber

What if feminist music history isn't just about elevating composers like Amy Beach and Clara Wieck Schumann, but also about understanding how everyday women made music? What is elocution, and how did a now-obscure genre of musical readings represent a cornerstone of American women performing in the nineteenth century? A conversation with Marian Wilson Kimber , professor of music at the University of Iowa. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org Questions? Thoughts? Share them with Will on...

Sep 08, 202050 minSeason 1Ep. 8

Identity Politics and Experimental Music with George E. Lewis

What happens when classical music takes seriously the work of Black avant-garde composers? What would a creolized musical world look like? And what is the relationship between scholarship and composing? A conversation with George E. Lewis , Edwin H. Case Professor of American Music at Columbia University. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org Questions? Thoughts? Share them with Will on Twitter @seatedovation...

Sep 01, 202042 minSeason 1Ep. 7

Bringing Renaissance Song to Life with Jesse Rodin

What does it mean to bring music of the distant past back to life? What happens when scholars focus not just on reconstructing the notes and words of Renaissance song but also on trying to recapture the lived experience of singing it? A conversation with Jesse Rodin , Associate Professor of music at Stanford. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org Have a question or comment about the show? Tweet at us at @seatedovation...

Aug 25, 202039 minSeason 1Ep. 6

Operetta and Fin-de-siècle Vienna with Micaela Baranello

What can operetta tell us about everyday life in fin-de-siècle Vienna? Why has our understanding of Vienna been limited to high-art composers like Mahler and Schoenberg, and how might studying operetta change our perspective on the Austro-Hungarian Empire amidst the tumult of the early twentieth century? A conversation with Micaela K. Baranello , Assistant Professor of musicology at the University of Arkansas. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org...

Aug 18, 202039 minSeason 1Ep. 5

Richard Wagner's Controversial Legacy with Alex Ross

How should we understand the legacy of Richard Wagner, the most controversial composer in history? Why did Wagner's music and ideas once assume such a colossal influence on culture, and what does it mean that the multiplicity of that influence has been largely forgotten in light of his anti-Semitism? A conversation with Alex Ross, music critic for The New Yorker and author of the forthcoming book Wagnerism: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music. Show notes and more at soundexpertise.org...

Aug 11, 202050 minSeason 1Ep. 4

Timbre and '80s Pop with Megan Lavengood

What makes some songs, from Kenny Loggins' "Danger Zone" to Tina Turner's "What's Love Got to Do with It," sound so distinctively "1980s"? What is timbre, why does it matter, and how do music theorists study it? And did Michael Jackson write the music for Sonic the Hedgehog 3?! A conversation with Megan Lavengood, Assistant Professor and Director of Music Theory at George Mason University, about timbre and the Yamaha DX7 synthesizer. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org...

Aug 04, 202044 minSeason 1Ep. 3

Music Schools and White Supremacy with Loren Kajikawa

When music departments focus exclusively on classical music, are they also being racially exclusionary? How can the academy move beyond its history of racism and embrace other musical genres? A conversation with Loren Kajikawa, Associate Professor of Music at George Washington University’s Corcoran School of the Arts & Design. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org

Jul 28, 202040 minSeason 1Ep. 2

Harmony and Co-Existence in Prague with Erika Supria Honisch

What if harmony isn't just about sounding good, but also about living together in a fractious time? How did sacred music in early modern Prague shape how people of different faiths existed alongside each other? A conversation with Erika Supria Honisch, Assistant Professor of History/Theory at Stony Brook University. Show notes and more over at soundexpertise.org

Jul 21, 202036 minSeason 1Ep. 1

Welcome to Sound Expertise

Trailer for a new podcast of weekly conversations with musicologists, ethnomusicologists, music theorists, and music critics, hosted by Will Robin and produced by D. Edward Davis. Episode 1 goes live on Tuesday, July 21.

Jul 09, 20203 min
Hosted on Buzzsprout
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android