UMF Sound Forum features student and faculty creative work, Nov 30–Dec 3

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FARMINGTON – As a finale to the UMF Sound Forum, students and faculty will present their creative work—continuing to demonstrate how sound and all of its forms have no boundaries. These events are free and open to the public and will run from Nov. 30–Dec. 3.

Kristen Case
Kristen Case

Featured among these events are “Keeping Time: The Lyric and the Inner Ear,” by Kristen Case, associate professor of English and “The Japanese Bush Warbler as Narrator in Japanese Film and Culture,” by Sarah Maline, associate professor of art.

Sound Forum events include:

Monday, Nov. 30
2:30 p.m.
“Keeping Time: The Lyric and the Inner Ear ,” presentation by Kristen Case, associate professor of English (C23 Roberts Learning Center)

Tuesday, Dec. 1
6:30–9:30 p.m.
“The Japanese Bush Warbler as Narrator in Japanese Film and Culture,” presentation by Sarah Maline, associate professor of art (226 Merrill Hall)

The Western as Genre, Sergio Leone, Ennio Morricone, and the Sound of the Western student presentation (226 Merrill Hall)

UMF Improv Ensemble Performance (Nordica Auditorium)

Wednesday, Dec. 2
9 a.m.
Contemporary Music: Connections to the Past, student presentation (Merrill 226)

2 p.m.
Musicianship through Songwriting, student presentation (Merrill 226)

Thursday, Dec. 3
2 p.m.
“How to start a streaming radio station of shows ranging from music and stories to interviews and experimental segments,” student presentation (Merrill 226)

Read more information on the UMF Sound Forum Co-Lab events here.

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