Public Event



            
Music and Politics: A Lyndon B. Johnson Oratorio on Race and Vietnam
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
4:00 pm
Knight Auditorium, Spurlock Museum
600 South Gregory Street
Urbana (View Map)

Steven Stucky
Given Foundation Professor of Composition, Department of Music, Cornell University

In 2008 the Dallas Symphony premiered "August 4, 1964," an oratorio by composer Steven Stucky in honor of President Lyndon B. Johnson. The work follows events of that day in the LBJ White House, a pivotal day that both shaped the civil rights movement in American and led to the tragic escalation of the war in Vietnam.  During the morning hours of August 4, 1964, the president received word that American ships in the Gulf of Tonkin were under attack.  That evening he learned that the bodies of civil right’s workers James Chaney, Any Goodman and Michael Schwerner, missing for three months had been found.

Steven Stucky, recipient of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize in Music, plays excerpts from this oratorio and discusses the role of politics in today's classical music.

See related video “World Premier of Steve Stucky's Aug 4, 1964” at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtSQ4PJTnrI.

Hosted by: School of Music  

In conjunction with: Department of History, Department of Political Science, Spurlock Museum, Unit One/Allen Hall



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