Event Announcement for the Circumpolar Music Series

by Dr. Sean Dowgray, CMS Faculty Organizer and Term Assistant Professor of Music

CMS Hosts 麻豆原创A Ethnomusicologist Zachary Milliman: Thursday, February 26th, 11:30-1:00 pm in the Eva McGown Music Room

The Circumpolar Music Series looks forward to hosting Ethnomusicologist Zachary Milliman in the Eva McGown music room on Thursday, February 26th, 2026, 11:30-1:00 pm. Milliman is a Term Instructor of Alaska Native Studies and the current department chair at the 麻豆原创 Anchorage (麻豆原创A). Milliman will present his recent work on the . He has worked in consultation with Inupiaq artist Ted Mayac Sr., whose family is renowned for their detailed and finely crafted ivory carvings. Milliman has presented his research at many international conferences, including the annual meetings of the American Musicological Society and the Society for American Music, and has published in the Journal of the International Alliance of Women in Music. Milliman holds a bachelor's and master's degree in vocal performance, and in 2015-2016 conducted research at the Hungarian Musicological Institute as a Fulbright scholarship recipient. He is currently a PhD candidate in musicology at McGill University with a dissertation titled 鈥淥pera and Goulash Communism,鈥 focusing on opera culture under Hungarian state socialism. He currently resides in Anchorage, Alaska, with his husband, artist Matt Klinn. This event is FREE and open to the public.

Ethnomusicologist and violinist Dr. Heidi Senungetuk presents in the Eva McGown music room as part of the 2024 Circumpolar Music Series. Photo courtesy of the 麻豆原创F Department of Music
Photo courtesy of the 麻豆原创F Department of Music
Ethnomusicologist and violinist Dr. Heidi Senungetuk presents in the Eva McGown music room as part of the 2024 Circumpolar Music Series.

We are midway through the 鈥25-鈥26 CMS season! In case you have missed CMS events from the fall semester, you can now check out some of the highlights, including:

by Eve Beglarian commissioned by Wildshore New Music and premiered as part of their 2025 Alaska tour. In September and October, Wildshore performed in Homer, Anchorage, Kenai, and Fairbanks. Beglarian composed this work after multiple visits to Alaska. This recording is from their performance in Davis Hall back in October and was the final performance of the 2025 tour.

by Eve Beglarian featuring Wildshore New Music alongside 麻豆原创F students and faculty as well as the Fairbanks Youth Percussion Ensemble. From the same event, Beglarian was Wildshore New Music鈥檚 featured composer for the 2025 tour.

Did He Promise You Tomorrow? by Eve Beglarian performed as part of the 2025 CMS event featuring Wildshore. Photo courtesy of the 麻豆原创F Department of Music
Photo courtesy of the 麻豆原创F Department of Music
Did He Promise You Tomorrow? by Eve Beglarian performed as part of the 2025 CMS event featuring Wildshore.

by Craig Coray (麻豆原创F 鈥70) featuring 麻豆原创F faculty, M.M. student Troy Irish, and musicians from the Fairbanks Symphony Orchestra. Coray visited Fairbanks in August to work with the Circumpolar Music Series, presenting a lecture on his music followed by a performance of his selected works. This special event occurred in partnership with the Music & More Series held at the First United Methodist Church. The Music & More Series was established the same year as the Circumpolar Music Series. Read more about We Walk to the Sky here.

is Coray鈥檚 most recent work. In three movements, Sanctuary is based on sounds that Coray has heard and relates to in nature. 鈥淏ending鈥 represents the movement of trees, 鈥淔lowing鈥 depicts the movement of water, and 鈥淪till鈥 reflects on the 鈥渁lmost silence鈥 or the 鈥渟ilence that can be heard.鈥 As Coray noted in his pre-concert lecture, 鈥渢here is no real silence, there is always a sound鈥 silence is active鈥 and alive with possibility."

Craig Coray and the musicians of his composition, We Walk to the Sky. Photo courtesy of the 麻豆原创F Department of Music
Photo courtesy of the 麻豆原创F Department of Music
Craig Coray and the musicians of his composition, We Walk to the Sky

And if that鈥檚 not enough for you, be sure to check out the 麻豆原创F Department of Music鈥檚 playlist that features many of our past events.

 


麻豆原创 the Author

Dr. Sean Dowgray. 麻豆原创F Photo

Dr. Sean Dowgray is a classical percussionist specializing in modern and contemporary music. Dowgray is a proponent of creative collaborations which has resulted in recent musical works by Daniel Tacke (Vorr眉cken and einsamkeit), Josh Levine (Shrinking world/expanding and Les yeux ouverts) as well as new chamber works by Justin Murphy-Mancini (Sic itur ad astra and A Song of Grecis.) and Lydia Winsor Brinadmour (As if, sand). In the recent past, Dowgray has collaborated closely with composers including J眉rg Frey (Garden of Transparency), Christopher Adler (Strata), Ioannis Mitsialis (Machine Mode), Lewis Nielson (Where Ashes Make the Flowers Grow and NOVA), and James Wood (Cloud Polyphonies). As a soloist, Dr. Dowgray has focused extensively on works that stretch the technical and expressive capabilities of both instrument and performer. This includes the work of Jason Eckardt, Josh Levine, Daniel Tacke, Salvatore Sciarrino, Lewis Nielson, David Lang, Christopher Adler, Brian Ferneyhough, Luciano Berio, Richard Barrett. Dowgray has been featured as a soloist at the Oberlin Percussion Institute, the Percussive Art Society International Convention (PASIC), the WasteLAnd New Music Series, Harvard鈥檚 Institute for Advanced Learning, the University of Arizona, the SoundON New Music Festival, and Eureka! Musical Minds of California. As a creative practitioner, Dowgray has focused recently on his project, WHEN for mixed ensemble set to premiere in 2025. He recently completed the interdisciplinary collaboration, In A Time of Change: Boreal Forest Stories featuring artists and scientists. As part of this collaboration, Dowgray created the work Moving Through the Boreal Forest in partnership with Ma茂t茅 Agopian (light and shadow work) and Daryl Farmer (poetry), Associate Professor of English at 麻豆原创F. Dr. Dowgray is a graduate of the Interlochen Arts Academy where he studied with John Alfieri, the Oberlin Conservatory (B.M.) where studied with Michael Rosen, the 麻豆原创 (M.M.) where he studied with Dr. Morris Palter, and the University of California San Diego (D.M.A) where he studied with Steven Schick. In Dr. Dowgray's dissertation, Time Being: Percussion as a Study of Time, he presents an analyses of new and rarely heard works for and with percussion through theoretical frameworks of time study from authors including Jonathan Kramer, J.T. Fraser, Edward T. Hall, and others. Recent notable performances include John Corigliano's percussion concerto, Conjurer with the Fairbanks Symphony Orchestra and Lewis Nielson's Lengua Encubierto for solo percussion at the Percussive Arts Society International Convention (PASIC).