Abstracts

A Portrait of Musical Cubism: Ferruccio Busoni and the Sonatina Seconda

Erinn E. Knyt (University of Massachusetts Amherst)

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Heinrich’s America(s): Anthony Philip Heinrich’s Dawning of Music in Kentucky and the Early American Musical Landscape

Virginia Jansen (Boston University)

In the preface of his first collection, The Dawning of Music in Kentucky, or The Pleasures of Harmony in the Solitudes of Nature, published in 1820, Anthony Philip Heinrichwrote that “the many and severe animadversions, so long and repeatedly cast on the talent forMusic in this Country, has been one of the chief motives of the Author, in the exercise of hisabilities; and should he be able, by this effort, to create but one single Star in the West, no onewould ever be more proud than himself, to be called an American Musician.” With thisstatement, Heinrich asserted himself as a “Star,” but explicitly “in the West” and connected hispersonal strivings for fame and success to a larger quest for an American art music. Hecontended that he had “been thrown…far from the emporiums of musical science, into theisolated wilds of nature, where he invoked his Muse, tutored only by Alma Mater.” This claimworked against his support of American art music, as he denied any influences beyond that ofMother Earth, but it did feed into his personal brand as a pioneer of American music. Despite hisimplications otherwise, Heinrich’s Dawning bears a multitude of American influences, both from ideas of American culture and history and from the nascent musical landscape. By examining the titles, forms, instrumentations, musical quotations, and lyrics of pieces in Dawning, both the influenced and innovative elements of the collection can be unearthed. This study of Dawning illustrates a specific and pivotal moment in early American art music but also examines Heinrich’s manipulations of that moment for his personal narrative.

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Performing the Sacred Feminine: Suor Cecilia Macca’s Settings of the Salve Regina and the Stabat Mater in Nineteenth Century Noto, Sicily

Jeana Melilli (University of Florida)

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What happened to Mère Marie?

Zac Stewart (Yale University)

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The “Sense” of Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto, op. 64

Robert Whitehouse Eshbach (University of New Hampshire)

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Presenter Bios

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Virginia Jansen is pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in Music at Boston University, with a concentration in Historical Musicology, and a minor in African American Studies. In her work, she aims to explore the influence of vernacular music on the formation of an American classical music. She has taken particular interest in the music of Florence Price and completed a large-scale research project on her chamber music. Her other areas of interest include the music of Anthony Philip Heinrich, the study of musical borrowing, and music and identity. At Boston University, she has earned the Clare Hodgson Meeker Fellowship, the Arts Research Award from the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Project, the Alice M. Brennan Humanities Award, and the Provost’s Scholar Award. She hopes to pursue a graduate degree in Historical Musicology and continue her research in American music.

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Jeana Melilli is a PhD candidate in Musicology at the University of Florida. Her dissertation, “Re-examining the Dismissed: Cecilia Macca and Nineteenth-Century Sicilian Sacred Music,” uncovers the work of the composer and nun Cecilia Macca, whose compositions continued the eighteenth-century Neapolitan musical traditions brought to the town of Noto, Sicily by her teacher, Paolo Altieri. Other research areas include the late trio and accompanied sonatas of Southern Italy, performance practice and gender studies. Jeana is also Principal Flute of the Savannah Philharmonic and Piccolo/Third Flute of the Greenville Symphony. She is a founding member of the historical ensembles Savannah Baroque and the Vista Ensemble, and she started the Baroque ensemble Lux Solaris at the University of Florida.

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