Duke University Musical Instrument Collections

Duke University Musical Instrument Collections The Duke University Musical Instrument Collections (DUMIC) are founded on the flagship collection, the G. Norman and Ruth G.

Eddy Collection of Musical Instruments, which arrived here in Durham in 2000. The Eddy Collection has inspired further generous gifts and the acquisition of the Frans and Willemina de Hen-Bijl Collection of Musical Instruments, which arrived at Duke in 2003. While the Eddy Collection consists primarily of instruments and paintings of instruments from America and Europe, Duke’s de Hen Collection in

cludes over 200 musical instruments from all over the world. The de Hen Collection together with the Eddy Collection, the Robert Miller, the Charles Warner, and other individual gifts make up the DUMIC.

02/08/2023
07/16/2021

Enjoy about 25 online performances by Duke’s talented student and employee musicians through the Duke Music Department's “Best of Biddle” virtual concert series.

Performances from the past academic year include R. Larry Todd, pictured below, the Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of Music, playing Beethoven; Duke Opera Theater’s “A Night of Italian Opera” and Robert Parkins, Duke University organist, performing on Duke University Chapel's Aeolian organ.

Find the performances, along with news of upcoming shows during the fall semester, here: https://sites.duke.edu/bestofbiddle/.

02/26/2021

J. Samuel Hammond, who for more than five decades ended the academic day filling West Campus with music from the Duke Chapel carillon, died Thursday. To honor Hammond, the carillon recital Thursday was dedicated to him and will feature selections of some of his favorite pieces. (You can watch the li...

Interested in the Collegium Musicum, Duke's ensemble for early music? Get your questions answered at our online informat...
08/11/2020

Interested in the Collegium Musicum, Duke's ensemble for early music? Get your questions answered at our online information session tomorrow, Aug. 12, from 5-5:30 pm. Register at

Info session for Duke's early music ensemble

07/23/2020

Published in 1950 after his death, the German composer Richard Strauss's composition Vier letzte Lieder (Four Last Songs) is scored for soprano and orchestra. By 2017, University Organist Dr. Robert Parkins had transcribed for organ the fourth of the four pieces—"Im Abendrot" ("In the Twilight"). ...

On February 18, 2020, the Rare Music Series (sponsored by Duke University Musical Instrument Collections) presented memb...
03/09/2020

On February 18, 2020, the Rare Music Series (sponsored by Duke University Musical Instrument Collections) presented members of the early music chamber group Sonnambula in a concert titled "La Paix du Parnasse: French and Italian masterworks of the Baroque" in the Rubenstein Arts Center at Duke. Italian and French musical fashions wrestled for dominance in Europe throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Sonnambula violinist Jude Ziliak and gambist Amy Domingues, joined by guest harpsichordist Gabriel Benton, presented a rich sampling of each nation's most characteristic offerings, from the fiery and idiosyncratic works of the little-known Nicola Matteis to the sublime pathos of Couperin's chamber music for Louis XIV. Praised as "remarkable" and "superb" by the New Yorker, Sonnambula is a historically-informed ensemble that brings to light unknown music for various combinations of early instruments with the lush sound of the viol at the core. Sonnambula held the position of Ensemble in Residence at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2018-2019, where they designed a site-specific series at The Cloisters Museum; the group is the first historically-informed ensemble to hold this position, typically given to a string quartet.

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02/20/2020

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Students: Want to be paid to work with historical instruments this summer? There’s still time to apply for Story+!

Story+ Student Application Portal is now open. Applications are now being accepted on a rolling basis until all teams are filled. https://fhi.duke.edu/story-application-2020

Story+ is a paid humanities research program which runs May 13 - June 26, 2020. One of the projects you can apply for is Curating and Integrating New Visual and Sonic Experiences in the Duke University Musical Instrument Collections!

02/20/2020

Students: Want to be paid to work with historical instruments this summer? There’s still time to apply for Story+!

Story+ Student Application Portal is now open. Applications are now being accepted on a rolling basis until all teams are filled. https://fhi.duke.edu/story-application-2020

Story+ is a paid humanities research program which runs May 13 - June 26, 2020. One of the projects you can apply for is Curating and Integrating New Visual and Sonic Experiences in the Duke University Musical Instrument Collections!

Address

105 Mary Duke Biddle Music Building , Box 90665
Durham, NC
27708

Opening Hours

1pm - 4pm

Telephone

+19196603300

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The Duke University Musical Instrument Collections (DUMIC) are founded on the flagship collection, the G. Norman and Ruth G. Eddy Collection of Musical Instruments, which arrived here in Durham in 2000. The Eddy Collection has inspired further generous gifts and the acquisition of the Frans and Willemina de Hen-Bijl Collection of Musical Instruments, which arrived at Duke in 2003. While the Eddy Collection consists primarily of instruments and paintings of instruments from America and Europe, Duke’s de Hen Collection includes over 200 musical instruments from all over the world. The de Hen Collection together with the Eddy Collection, the Robert Miller, the Charles Warner, and other individual gifts make up the DUMIC. We are not actively seeking donations at this time, but please contact our curator, Dr. Roseen Giles, with any questions.