Smithsonian's Dr. Dwandalyn R. Reece set to speak at CU
Drawing upon objects in the National Museum of African American History and Culture’s collection, Dr. Reece aims to explore in this presentation how objects deepen our understanding of music in the United States, offering new ways to construct narratives about the social, cultural and historical meaning music holds in our daily lives. The ways we engage with music is constantly evolving and the multiple worlds that music inhabits is a culture unto itself.
“This movement to preserve, document, and interpret music’s existence is driven by a growing interest in its material culture, the tangible objects of things that are the material evidence of its creation, performance, dissemination, and reception,” Dr. Reece describes, and continues, “the musical object as artifact, anticipates interpretation and has the power to broaden our understanding of music beyond an experiential level.”
Dr. Reece's lecture is part of African American Music--At the Crossroads, a collaboration with Boulder's Trance Blues Festival and will be followed at 5:30 p.m. by Black Banjo & Beyond, a roundtable discussion with Dr. Reece, Dom Flemons "The American Songster," Johnny Baier from the National Banjo Museum, and the Trance Blues Festival's creator, Otis Taylor.