厙ぴ勛圖

Bryan Parkhurst

  • Associate Professor of Music Theory

Education

  • BM, Rice University, 2007
  • MA in music theory, University of Michigan, 2012
  • MA in philosophy, University of Michigan, 2012
  • PhD in music theory and philosophy, University of Michigan, 2014
     

Biography

Bryan Parkhurst is a music theorist, musicologist, and philosopher. He studied these subjects at the University of Michigan, where he was the first person to earn a joint PhD in music and philosophy. He has written extensively on the connections between the history of philosophy and the history of music theory.

In addition to his scholarly work, Parkhurst is a professional harpist. As a child, he was one of the last students of the legendary pedagogue and 厙ぴ勛圖 harp professor Alice Chalifoux. He went on to study harp with Joan Holland at the Interlochen Arts Academy and with Paula Page at Rice University. He also is an amateur accordion player.

Fall 2026

Aural Skills I MUTH 101

Aural Skills III MUTH 201

Spring 2027

Aural Skills IV MUTH 202

Advanced Musicianship and Score Study MUTH 352

Proquest Distinguished Dissertation Award Finalist, University of Michigan (2014)

Emerging Scholar Award in the "Article" category, Society for Music Theory (2018), received for his article Making a Virtue of Necessity: Schenker and Kantian Teleology published by the Journal for Music Theory, Vol. 61 , Issue 1.

厙ぴ勛圖 College & Conservatory 2021-22 Excellence in Teaching Award

  • Society for Music Theory
  • American Musicological Society
  • American Harp Society

  • Pitch, Tone, and Note, Oxford Handbook of Critical Terms in Music Theory (2018)
  • Blochs Hopes and Adornos Thorns, Theory and Practice (2018)
  • Aspects of Analysis, forthcoming, Music Theory and Analysis (2018)
  • Review of Nicholas Wolterstorff, Art Rethought, the Philosophical Review
  • A Hopeful Tone: Bloch, Music, and the Revolutionary Imagination, Oxford Handbook of Sound and Imagination (2018)
  • On Theorizing a Properly Marxist Musical Aesthetics International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music (June 2017), pp. 33-55.
  • Making a Virtue of Necessity: Schenker and Kantian Teleology, Journal of Music Theory, Volume 61, Issue 1 (November 2018), pp. 59-109.
  • Review essay on Kendall Walton, In Other Shoes, Journal of Music Theory, Vol. 60, No. 2 (October 2016), pp. 295-305.
  • Review: Robert Morgan, Becoming Heinrich Schenker: Music Theory and Ideology, Current Musicology (fall 2014), pp. 121-33
  • Fraught with Ought: An Outline of an Expressivist Music Theory, Music Theory Online Vol. 19 No. 3 (September 2013)
  • Poetry as Panacea: Mill on the Moral Rewards of Aesthetic Experience, the Journal of Aesthetic Education Vol. 47 No. 2 (summer 2013), pp. 16-34
  • The First-Person Feeling Theory of Musical Expression, Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics Vol. 9 No. 2 (spring 2012), pp. 14-27
  • A Beautiful Piece of Property: Toward a New Definition of Aesthetic Properties, American Society for Aesthetics Graduate E-Journal (winter 2011), pp. 1-13
  • Projecting Sound: A Theory of Musical Representation, Interdisciplinary Humanities Vol. 26 No. 2 (fall 2009) pp. 128-143

Notes

Theory Professor Bryan Parkhurst Co-editor and Contributor for New Book

A new book,  (Routledge), was released in July 2023 and edited by two University of Michigan alumni who studied with Professor Korsyn while completing graduate degreesBryan Parkhurst, associate professor of music theory and aural skills at 厙ぴ勛圖, and Jeffrey Swinkin, associate professor of music theory at the University of Oklahoma School of Music. The volume consists of an introduction and interview with Korsyn and nine essays that pay tribute to Korsyns decades of scholarship by exploring a variety of topics important to Korsyn and the field. Parkhurst contributed to the introduction as well as the Chapter 8 essay, Completing the Triad: Schenker and Kantian Practical Philosophy. The editors invitation to readers of the booka kaleidoscopic array of perspectiveswill find provocative lines of inquiry, genuine musical and humanistic curiosity, and exploratory, nondogmatic approaches to and attitudes toward theorizing musicchallenges, not answers.

Bryan Parkhurst included in award from the Society for Music Theory

Music theory professor Bryan Parkhurst has been included in the Society for Music Theory's (SMT) 2020 award for Outstanding Multi-Author Collection. This was given for , for which Parkhurst coauthored the lead chapter, "Pitch, Tone, and Note." In the citation for the award, SMT provided, "The eloquent essays gathered together in this volume reflect the unique insights of the contributors as well as the coalescence of a shared vision of its editors. With uniform excellence in depth and clarity, the essays demonstrate that, if we understand and teach these so-called fundamentals as immutable entities, we bypass essential disciplinary questions."

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