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Doctoral Colloquium (Music) | Sarah Waltz

Wednesday, November 19, 2025 16:30to18:00
Elizabeth Wirth Music Building A-832, 527 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 1E3, CA
Price: 
Free Admission

Doctoral Colloquium:听笔谤辞蹿.Sarah Waltz (Musicology, University of the Pacific)

Title: "What Caroline Herschel鈥檚 Music Notebook Reveals"
Caroline Herschel (1750鈥1848), sometimes accounted the first professional woman astronomer, was brought to Bath in 1772 by her brother William (1732鈥1822) to learn to sing and perform in oratorios; both Herschels left professional music-making behind after William discovered the planet Uranus in 1781. Historians of science have often followed Caroline鈥檚 late autobiographies unquestioningly with respect to her musical development. Biographies, paradoxically, use her own modest language to downplay her training while also using her regret over leaving music to impute a lost musical 鈥渃areer鈥 to her that would be impossible even for women of much greater ability. Caroline鈥檚 unexamined music notebook c.1773 (housed at Yale University鈥檚 Beinecke Library) holds significant possibility for reinterpreting this story. It demonstrates William鈥檚 vocal and keyboard pedagogy, positively refuting assertions that she was 鈥渘ot taught鈥 the keyboard. It includes tips for accompanying, tuning her instrument, and, unusually, conducting. Moreover, it contains not just favored musical souvenirs but includes鈥擨 suggest鈥攈er own compositions, set as exercises by her brother.

Biography:
Sarah Clemmens Waltz is professor of music history at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California, currently residing in Windsor, ON. A scholar of German and British musical circles of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, she holds undergraduate degrees in physics and music history from Oberlin and the Ph.D. from Yale. Apart from research on the Herschels, she has recent publications on Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Ossianic text-settings, and topical analysis (including a just-published article on E-flat Minor with听Journal of the Royal Musical Association).

The Doctoral Colloquium is open to all.

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