MIT TRIBUTE CONCERT ATTESTS TO GUNTHER SCHULLER''S VERSATILITY

By Matthew Guerrieri

CAMBRIDGE — MIT’s celebration of Gunther Schuller on Sunday night, culminating a day and month of area concerts commemorating the composer, conductor, performer, educator, and advocate who died in June, came complete with relics. A tabletop shrine in the Kresge Auditorium lobby displayed Schuller’s tools and talismans: scores, recordings, awards, a flamboyant sport coat. Onstage was a golden idol: Schuller’s own French horn. The concert itself, however, organized by MIT conductor (and Schuller student) Frederick Harris, eulogized Schuller in more provocatively indirect ways.

READ MORE

Ken Urban Wins 2024 Blue Ink Award

As part of the award, Urban receives a $3,000 cash prize, a staged reading directed by Artistic Affiliate Dexter Bullard at American Blues Theater, and the opportunity to further develop his script with our artists.

Composing for 37 Years at MIT

In the intimate but acoustically reassuring Killian Hall, with the cooperation of Collage New Music, the Institute’s Music Department hosted an evening of Peter Child’s recent works.

MTA Associate Professor Emily Richmond Pollock Named 2024 MacVicar Fellow

Role models both in and out of the classroom, Berggren, Campbell, Pollock, and Vaikuntanathan join an elite academy of scholars from across the Institute who are committed to curricular innovation; exceptional teaching; collaboration with colleagues; and supporting students through mentorship, leadership, and advising.

Play It Again, Spirio

A piano that captures the data of live performance offers the MIT community new possibilities for studying and experimenting with music