CU on the Weekend music series continues with a modernist bent
![Daphne Leong at piano](/music/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/daphne_pic.jpg?itok=Rwhm23Q9)
Daphne Leong hosts the first CU on the Weekend of the year on Saturday, Sept. 30.
The College of Musics yearly collaboration with the CU Office for Outreach and Engagements series continues this fall, and this time the college opens the season.
Since 2015, the Theory department has hosted Musical Conversations, a discussion of the why and how of music that started with Take Me Out to the Ballgame and continued last year with George Crumb and an exploration of his musical depiction of grief. On Saturday, Sept. 30, Associate Professor of Theory Daphne Leong brings yet another approach to the eye-opening and popular series.
My talk will focus on modernism and the way it challenged the arts, especially music, says Leong. Ill be interacting with the audience and asking them what theyre hearing, drawing out their insights.
The talk, aptly titled will provide the audience with examples of modernist musicworks by Bart籀k, Schoenberg, Webern and othersand delve into how the aesthetic changed pitch organization, types of sound and the shaping of musical time.
Leong says though the musical styles that grew out of modernismsuch as serialist, minimalist and texturalcan seem like a different language entirely from the music most people are used to, were often more adept at gleaning meaning from such pieces than we may think.
People can often dismiss their reactions to music like this because they think they dont know anything about it. But really, there is a lot that they know intuitively, and its exciting to explore these intuitions.
![sheet music](/music/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/daphne_music.jpg?itok=XQFP0tAr)
We want to keep the second piece a mystery, so that the audience can discover it along with us that day.
The Musical Conversations series has proven popular with the Boulder community. The first two presentations were standing room only. Leong suspects the reason for its popularity is simple: People like learning about subjects that are brand new to them. Music is such a natural part of peoples lives. If you can experience it in a richer way, then thats rewarding.
Thats why shes focusing her talk on more contemporaryand sometimes unfamiliarmusic.
Were living in the 21st century. Music from the 18th century is wonderful, but there are new adventures to explore now. Opening our ears to music of the 20th and 21st centuries can bring unexpected discoveries to our hearing of older music.
What do you hear? Listening to modernist music is Saturday, Sept. 30, at 1 p.m. in the Chamber Hall. Seating is limited to the first 115 people. Doors open at 12:30 p.m.; advance registration is not required. For more information, visit the.