Sanden, Paul
Faculty
- Phone
- (403) 332-4434
- paul.sanden@uleth.ca
About Me
Born and raised in Saskatchewan, I have also spent substantial periods of time in other wonderful parts of North America (Calgary, AB; London, ON; Ann Arbor, MI) before returning to Western Canada in 2011 to begin teaching at the University of Lethbridge. I am a proud husband and father of three, and committed both in my teaching and in my parenting to encouraging creative, critical thinking, an eagerness to learn, and the seeking of fun wherever it can be found.
Biography
Dr. Paul Sanden is Associate Professor (music history) in the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Lethbridge, a position he took up in September 2011. He taught previously in the Faculty of Music at the University of Western Ontario, where he was awarded the Ph.D. in Music for his dissertation, "Performing Liveness: Musicians, Machines, and Mediatization" (2008; supported by a Canada Graduate Scholarship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada), and at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario. He also holds a Bachelor of Music degree in performance (flute) from the University of Calgary and a Master of Music degree in performance (flute) from the University of Western Ontario. While his primary teaching area is the history of art music, Dr. Sanden has also taught several courses on theory and performance topics, and on the history and analysis of popular music.
This diversity in the classroom is reflective of Dr. Sanden's scholarship, which draws from several disciplines and musical traditions. A foundational basis in the practices of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and particularly in issues of contemporary performance, has led to a research approach that incorporates aspects of traditional Western musicology, popular music studies, performance studies, and media theory, among other disciplines. Much of his work examines the concept of live music, and the various ways that concept has been reconfigured by recent employments of electronic technologies in several musical practices. This research has been presented in a book titled Liveness in Modern Music: Musicians, Technology, and the Perception of Performance (Routledge, 2013), and most recently in a chapter on liveness in The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture (Cambridge UP, 2019). A recent SSHRC Insight Development Grant allowed him to begin work on his newest large-scale research project, which examines the role of recording and broadcast technologies in the career of Glenn Gould, with a special focus on the relationship between Gould and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Two book chapters on Gould's radio documentaries will be published from this work in the coming months, one in a book dedicated to the career and legacy of longtime CBC Radio producer John P.L. Roberts (Cambridge Scholars Press), and another in a book dedicated to Gould's The Idea of North (publisher tbd).
As his academic career has developed, Paul has also maintained a close connection to his performance roots. He has performed as principal flutist of the Lethbridge Symphony Orchestra and was a founding member of the University of Lethbridge Faculty Wind Quintet. For three years (2008-2011), he was also the conductor of the McMaster University Flute Ensemble. As a performer, as in his scholarship, he has a deep interest in music of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and has been involved in the premiere performances of several new works.
Dr. Sanden is the English-language editor of Intersections, the journal of the Canadian University Music Society.
This diversity in the classroom is reflective of Dr. Sanden's scholarship, which draws from several disciplines and musical traditions. A foundational basis in the practices of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and particularly in issues of contemporary performance, has led to a research approach that incorporates aspects of traditional Western musicology, popular music studies, performance studies, and media theory, among other disciplines. Much of his work examines the concept of live music, and the various ways that concept has been reconfigured by recent employments of electronic technologies in several musical practices. This research has been presented in a book titled Liveness in Modern Music: Musicians, Technology, and the Perception of Performance (Routledge, 2013), and most recently in a chapter on liveness in The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture (Cambridge UP, 2019). A recent SSHRC Insight Development Grant allowed him to begin work on his newest large-scale research project, which examines the role of recording and broadcast technologies in the career of Glenn Gould, with a special focus on the relationship between Gould and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Two book chapters on Gould's radio documentaries will be published from this work in the coming months, one in a book dedicated to the career and legacy of longtime CBC Radio producer John P.L. Roberts (Cambridge Scholars Press), and another in a book dedicated to Gould's The Idea of North (publisher tbd).
As his academic career has developed, Paul has also maintained a close connection to his performance roots. He has performed as principal flutist of the Lethbridge Symphony Orchestra and was a founding member of the University of Lethbridge Faculty Wind Quintet. For three years (2008-2011), he was also the conductor of the McMaster University Flute Ensemble. As a performer, as in his scholarship, he has a deep interest in music of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and has been involved in the premiere performances of several new works.
Dr. Sanden is the English-language editor of Intersections, the journal of the Canadian University Music Society.
Publications
Monograph
•tLiveness in Modern Music: Musicians, Technology, and the Perception of Performance. New York: Routledge, 2013.
Articles in Periodicals
•t"Hearing Glenn Gould's Body: Corporeal Liveness in Recorded Music." Current Musicology 88 (Fall 2009): 7-34.
•t"Virtual Liveness and Sounding Cyborgs: John Oswald's 'Vane'." Popular Music 31/1 (2012): 45-68.
Chapters in Edited Volumes (Invited)
•t"Rethinking Liveness for a Digital Age." In The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture, ed. Nicholas Cook, Monique Ingalls, and David Trippett, 178-92. Cambridge University Press (2019).
•t"Glenn Gould on the Air: Gould at the CBC." In John P.L. Roberts, the CBC and Music in Canada (Festschrift in honour of John P.L. Roberts), ed. Regina Landwehr and Friedemann Sallis. Cambridge Scholars Press [forthcoming].
•t"De-Northing North: Autobiography in Glenn Gould's Radio Documentaries." In Matter of North: Reflections on Glenn Gould's "Idea of North" (working title), ed. Anthony Cushing and Brent Wetters. Publisher TBD [in progress].
•tLiveness in Modern Music: Musicians, Technology, and the Perception of Performance. New York: Routledge, 2013.
Articles in Periodicals
•t"Hearing Glenn Gould's Body: Corporeal Liveness in Recorded Music." Current Musicology 88 (Fall 2009): 7-34.
•t"Virtual Liveness and Sounding Cyborgs: John Oswald's 'Vane'." Popular Music 31/1 (2012): 45-68.
Chapters in Edited Volumes (Invited)
•t"Rethinking Liveness for a Digital Age." In The Cambridge Companion to Music in Digital Culture, ed. Nicholas Cook, Monique Ingalls, and David Trippett, 178-92. Cambridge University Press (2019).
•t"Glenn Gould on the Air: Gould at the CBC." In John P.L. Roberts, the CBC and Music in Canada (Festschrift in honour of John P.L. Roberts), ed. Regina Landwehr and Friedemann Sallis. Cambridge Scholars Press [forthcoming].
•t"De-Northing North: Autobiography in Glenn Gould's Radio Documentaries." In Matter of North: Reflections on Glenn Gould's "Idea of North" (working title), ed. Anthony Cushing and Brent Wetters. Publisher TBD [in progress].
Research Interests
•tMusic and Liveness
•tTechnology in music; Music in digital culture
•tGlenn Gould
•t20th- & 21st-century Western popular and art music
•tIntersections between popular music and contemporary art music practices
•tContemporary performance practice in music
•tPerformance theory; Philosophy of music performance
•t19th-21st-century virtuosity
•tAnalysis of live and recorded performances
•tHistory of electroacoustic music
•tSound studies
•tPopular music recording practices
•tTechnology in music; Music in digital culture
•tGlenn Gould
•t20th- & 21st-century Western popular and art music
•tIntersections between popular music and contemporary art music practices
•tContemporary performance practice in music
•tPerformance theory; Philosophy of music performance
•t19th-21st-century virtuosity
•tAnalysis of live and recorded performances
•tHistory of electroacoustic music
•tSound studies
•tPopular music recording practices