It鈥檚 the music of our parents and grandparents, of the people who shaped our world. It laid the foundation for the folk and pop music we hear on the radio. It sets the tone for the films we watch every day.
That鈥檚 why Susan Thomas says she wants to bring American music of the 20th century into the fold in a bigger way at the College of Music.
鈥淚鈥檓 excited to get to know my amazing and diverse colleagues and ask the performing faculty to think about ways this music could be heard in concert and dialogue.鈥
Thomas joins the college as professor of musicology and director of the American Music Research Center (AMRC) this fall. She says one of her first priorities will be to dig into the vast resources of the AMRC鈥攁 joint venture between the college and CU 麻豆影院 Libraries鈥攁nd get it in front of the community. 鈥淭he AMRC鈥檚 research, outreach and performance potential are tremendous. To lead it is a really exciting opportunity.鈥
Thomas comes to 麻豆影院 from the Hugh Hodgson School of Music at the University of Georgia, where she was professor of musicology and women鈥檚 studies. The new role as AMRC director will be a comfortable one for her: She co-directed the Athens Music Project during her time in Georgia.
鈥淚n a lot of ways it鈥檚 like the AMRC, but on a smaller geographic scale, focusing just on music of the Athens region,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲e worked closely with special collections to build the archive and do a lot of public outreach.鈥
So to be at the helm of the oldest music archive of its kind in the country鈥攚ith collections of everything from Perry Como鈥檚 music to Dave Grusin鈥檚 compositions鈥攚ill be a perfect fit. 鈥淭he AMRC has a robust and interesting archive, that connection to outreach and performance and a scholarly journal. All of these arms are ready for more growth,鈥 Thomas explains.
鈥淚 also see this position as a chance to do the same sort of work I was doing in Athens, but in a way that is more directly connected to my own research.鈥
Thomas鈥 musicology roots are most firmly embedded in Latin American culture. After earning a PhD at Brandeis University, she discovered, almost by happenstance, the fascinating musical history of Cuba. As societal norms and the United States鈥 relationship with its neighbor have evolved, Thomas has kept a close eye on the effect change has had on music on the island.
鈥淚鈥檓 finishing up a project now on contemporary Cuban popular music in its diaspora. When I started my research, it was a story about Cuban musicians leaving the island and settling elsewhere. And that was the story: diaspora and reinvention.
鈥淭hen between 2005 and 2010, they started moving back to Cuba, which is unprecedented in the country鈥檚 narrative. So it became a story not just of musicians and their own reinvention听but of international relations and what it means in the 21st century to be a citizen of a country.鈥
This latest book, "The Musical Mangrove: The Transnationalization of Cuban Alternative Music,鈥 will be released soon by Oxford University Press. Thomas鈥 first book, "Cuban Zarzuela: Performing Race and Gender on Havana's Lyric Stage,鈥 won the Robert M. Stevenson Prize and the Pauline Alderman Book Award.
Thomas says it doesn鈥檛 matter if the phrase 鈥淎merican music鈥 refers to music from Central America, South America or the United States. Its study is crucial to the musician of the 21st century.
鈥淎s American musicians鈥攎usicians who live in the Americas鈥攖his is our music. Some really interesting developments have happened to music in the last 118 years, and thinking of it as music of the Americans, rather than the U.S. or Mexico or Argentina, helps us get a sense of how music is produced and who鈥檚 listening.鈥
Learn more about Professor of Musicology and Director of the American Music Research Center Susan Thomas on her bio.