Promoting Community Connection: Contemporary Classical Composers Respond to the Political Environment, a lecture-recital by Dr. Christine Letcher (Updated)

University of Maine at Augusta, Farber Forum in Jewett Hall
Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024 at 7 p.m.

C Letcher
Dr. Christine Letcher, assistant professor of music at UMA

The lecture-recital “Promoting Community Connection” is free and open to the public on the UMA campus, at the Farber Forum Auditorium, Jewett Hall, 46 University Drive, Augusta. Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024, at 7 p.m, and will be livestreamed on the UMA YouTube Channel. This lecture-recital will be repeated on Oct. 29, at 7 p.m., at Minsky Hall, University of Maine, in Orono.

Through a unique blend of lecture and piano performance, Dr. Christine Letcher, assistant professor of music at the University of Maine at Augusta (UMA), will explore how the political climate affects the work of classical composers. The event will take place on Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024, at 7 p.m. on the UMA campus at the Farber Forum Auditorium in Jewett Hall.

While popular musicians like Taylor Swift and Beyoncé have used their music as political statements, how do classical composers view their role in society as responders to the social and political environment? Letcher interviewed American classical composers to explore their perspectives on how the social, cultural, and political environments influence the music they compose. She then compared these findings to those of the New Deal and early Cold War eras.

In this lecture-recital, Letcher will discuss the social and political influences on select composers from both the 1930s and the early 2000s, and will demonstrate how these influences showed up in the music as she performs solo piano works by Ruth Crawford-Seeger, Aaron Copland, Florence Price, Martin Bresnick, Reena Esmail, Jerome Kitzke, and more. Special guests for two of the pieces are Dr. Anita Jerosch, trombone, and Eliza Meyer, cello.