William Robin

Musicologist and assistant professor at . Occasional writer for  and .

As an active public musicologist, William is a regular contributor to The New York Times , where he most recently published an article on classical music and Black Lives Matter. He has also written for The New YorkerNewMusicBox, and Bandcamp. In 2014, he received an ASCAP Deems Taylor/Virgil Thomson Award for the NewMusicBox article “Shape Notes, Billings, and American Modernisms.” He curated Q2 Music'Symphomania in spring 2015, a twenty-four hour marathon radio broadcast of orchestral music composed in the twenty-first century. William regularly writes liner notes for the independent record label Irritable Hedgehog, including acclaimed releases of piano music by Paul Epstein, William Duckworth, and Jürg Frey. In 2014–15, William served as the North Carolina Symphony's inaugural scholar-in-residence, contributing program notes and preconcert lectures for the orchestra's performances, and helped curate the symphony's upcoming presentation at Washington Performing Arts and Kennedy Center's SHIFT Festival in spring 2017. He co-founded the Experimental Music Study Group, which presents discussions and performances in the Chapel Hill area. William maintains an active Twitter presence as @seatedovation

William Robin appears in the following:

Dispatches From the Bang on a Can Summer Festival 2018: Part 2

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

New Sounds
"Play Like a Girl," "Flutes of a Feather," an all-Eve Beglarian recital, and Brooks Frederickson: A roundup of July 24, via the Bang on a Can Summer Festival's Media Workshop. 
Read More

Comment

The Star-Spangled Banner: A Radical History

Friday, September 29, 2017

Far from being sacrosanct, the national anthem has long served as a tool for protesters. Musicologist William Robin leads us through some of the most notable iterations.

Symphomania Redux: 24 Hours with the 21st-Century Orchestra

Monday, April 18, 2016

Join Q2 Music on Sunday, April 24 for our second annual Symphomania, a 24-hour marathon stream of music that offers a vision of orchestral repertoire composed in or after the year 2000.

Comments [2]

Conductors and Critics on Contemporary Orchestral Music

Monday, March 23, 2015

When preparing to webcast 24 hours of orchestral music written in the 21st century, it is advisable to seek out expert opinions. Hear from conductors and critics on today's orchestra. 

Comments [2]

Symphomania: 24 Hours with the 21st-Century Orchestra

Monday, March 02, 2015

Join us all day today, March 28, for an encore presentation of Symphomania, a 24-hour marathon stream that offers a vision of orchestral music composed in or after the year 2000. 

Comments [4]