Thomas Edward Morgan: 2019 Distinguished Alumnus
Lauded by the Daily Camera as âa many-splendored musician who can shape a line to realize to the fullest extent the intentions of the composer,â Thomas Edward Morgan (MM â87)âfounding artistic director and conductor of the âis this yearâs recipient of the Distinguished Alumni Award, to be conferred by the College of Music at its spring commencement ceremony on May 9.
Under Morganâs leadership, Ars Nova (Latin for ânew artâ) is widely recognized as one of the regionâs premier ensembles. Specializing in a cappella music of the Renaissance and the 20th and 21st centuries, Ars Novaânow in its 33rd yearâcomprises selectively auditioned choral musicians from the Boulder-Denver metro area. To date, the group has presented more than 400 performances of 100-plus distinct concert programs.
âI came from a really strong choral music program at Macalester College in Minnesota,â says Morgan, reflecting on how his undergraduate degree ultimately pointed him toward continuing his studies at the CU Boulder College of Music. âAlongside a challenging academic liberal arts degree, I studied choral and orchestral conducting with Dale Warland.â
Indeed, Morgan stepped in as assistant conductor for the renowned choral composer and conductor, and also sang under his direction. From there, he decided a graduate degree in composition would round out who he was becoming as a musician. At the same time, he forged a bond with Professor Emeritus of Music Giora Bernstein, conductor, classical violinist, and founder and artistic director of the Colorado Music Festival.
âThe opportunity to gain different perspectives from working with both orchestral and choral musicians really helped me in my career,â says Morgan. âIn the first year of my masterâs, I studied with Richard Toensing. In my second year, I studied with Charles Eakin. And my masterâs thesis was with Luis Gonzalez. Iâm very much indebted to each of them.â
Morgan also studied with American conductor Joshua Rifkin and German conductor Helmut Rilling, and heâs taken master classes with Swedish conductors Eric Ericson and Herbert Blomstedtâall of great renown in their own right. âWorking with these scholars at CU and beyond the university was really formative for me,â he says. âI wouldnât have had any of that if I hadnât been in the masterâs program at the College of Music. The opportunities and connections I made further positioned where I was headed in my career.
âCU gave me an incredible foundation.â
Morganâs more recent accomplishments include a residency with the Lucas Artists Residency Program at Montalvo Arts Center in Saratoga, as well as a collaboration with New York visual artist Lesley Dill in the production of âI Heard a Voiceââan extended work for a cappella chorus premiered by Ars Nova. Additionally, Morganâs composition âPsalm 88â for orchestra and chorus received the prestigious BMI Award, and his choral work âFour Poems of e. e. cummingsâ was presented on the opening program of the eighth Internacional Musica Nueva festival in Mexico City. Several of his works have also been performed internationally by the Peiyang Chorus of Tianjin, China.
Acknowledged as a leading interpreter of new music in Colorado, Morganâs leadership of Ars Nova has elevated its reach and reputation nationally, including being selected as a semifinalist for The American Prize in choral performance (2010). The ensemble has been heard in radio broadcasts throughout the world, including such National Public Radio programs as Performance Today, The First Art, Music from the Hearts of Space, and locally on Colorado Spotlight and Colorado Matters. All told, Ars Nova has released 10 independent recordings, and performed on seven internationally released recordings with Boulder composer and instrumentalist Bill Douglas.
âFrom the beginning, our focus has been on really early music and discoveries still to be made in the vast repertoire of Renaissance music, along with contemporary, more unusual music,â Morgan says. âWe bring to the forefront the outer ends of the spectrum of repertoire, often requiring many different parts.
âWe do a lot of 16-part music. Across the country, the artistic level required to do that is fairly rare, as is the ability to commit to it.â
Moreover, Morgan is committed to building community, including collaborative performances withâamong othersâFrequent Flyers Aerial Dance and the Fiske Planetarium, plus a world premiere of Peter-Anthony Togniâs âWarrior Songsâ with legendary jazz percussionist Jerry Granelli, the U.S. premiere of Arvo PĂ€rtâs âSalve Reginaâ with Sphere Ensemble and a rendition of Giya Kancheliâs âAmao Omiâ with the Colorado Saxophone Quartet. Further collaborative feats for Ars Nova include Morten Lauridsenâs âLux Aeternaâ with the Boulder Philharmonic Orchestra, the Colorado premiere of Carol Barnettâs âThe World Beloved: A Bluegrass Mass with Jake Schepps and Expedition,â Osvaldo Golijovâs âOceanaâ cantata with Pro Musica Colorado, and a critically acclaimed performance of Terry Rileyâs âSun Ringsâ with the eminent Kronos Quartet at the Colorado Music Festival.
âWe have a very stable organization right now,â concludes Morgan. âWeâve hired a new executive director, and weâre developing an endowment that will allow Ars Nova to survive me and to remain stable for many years to come.
âGood things are happening. Iâm looking forward to being artistic director emeritus someday and seeing how someone else will build on what weâve done.â
In addition to his dedication to the Ars Nova Singers, Morgan serves as music director of St. Johnâs Episcopal Church in Boulder, a position heâs held more than three decades.
Daniel and Boyce Sher: Distinguished Service Award recipients
The college will also recognized two familiar members of the College of Music family with the annual Distinguished Service Award at commencement. Dean Emeritus Daniel Sher and his wife Boyce will return to the Grusin stage for the honor.
Sher, who was dean of the college from 1993 until 2013, says he and his wife did not expect the award. âBoyce and I felt profoundly honoredâtaken aback, reallyâwhen Dean Shay told us about receiving the Service Award,â Sher explains. âWe are gratified to be a part of a college that has continued on a steady trajectory to greater levels of excellence.â
Dean Sher earned degrees in piano performance and pedagogy from Oberlin, Juilliard and Columbia University Teachers College before becoming an award-winning teacher and later dean of the Louisiana State University School of Music. During his time at CU Boulder, the College of Music establishedâamong other noteworthy initiativesâthe Entrepreneurship Center for Music, degrees in jazz studies and collaborative piano, and the Pendulum New Music and CU NOW programs.
Boyce studied piano performance at Eastman School of Music and was a Fulbright Scholar in Rome before enrolling in the Doctor of Music Education program at Columbia Teachers Collegeâwhere she met Daniel Sher. The two have performed as a piano duo throughout the country, including at Alice Tully Hall in New York. The two have performed as a piano duo throughout the country, including at Alice Tully Hall in New York. Boyce juggled raising the coupleâs two sons with performing and teaching for many years. She and her sister established an endowed scholarship for a graduate voice student at the College of Music in honor of their mother. Boyce has been an active partner throughout their marriage, hosting and organizing many events and trips for faculty, staff and friends of the college.
âWe are so very proud of this faculty, supported by a wonderful staff, who work collaboratively and cooperatively together,â Dean Sher says. âThis collegiality has become a signature value of the college that, maybe more than any other, has contributed to its success.
âWe have also been privileged to engage with an ever growing âfamilyâ of volunteers who have a deep personal investment in all that we do,â Sher says of the extended group of supporters who have become dear friends to his wife and him.
The Shers remain actively involved in the collegeâs activities. Receiving this award, Dean Sher adds, is especially gratifying after nearly three decades of time spent in the college community. âWe have seen the positive impact that the College of Music has had on generations of students and the community.â
College of Music commencement is Thursday, May 9, at 3:30 p.m. in Grusin Music Hall.