IMPORTANT NOTE: These are the archived stories for Belmont News & Achievements prior to June 26, 2023. To see current stories, click here.

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Alumnus Josh Turner Offers Up Memories, Inspiration to Belmont Students at Chapel

After a quick visit to check out Belmont’s new Gallery of Iconic Guitars (The GIG), alumnus and country music artist Josh Turner joined retired Director of Development Harry Chapman on the Massey Performing Arts Center stage for a chapel conversation and performance. Turner quickly engaged the packed auditorium with stories of his own time on campus and his ill-advised parking solutions.

“I was headed to speech class one day, and I could not find a place to park. So, I just parked on the soccer field. I got a ticket.”

Turner signed books and took photos with students following his appearance at Chapel Sept. 6.
Turner signed books and took photos with students following his appearance at Chapel Sept. 6.

Turner came to Belmont on the recommendation of a choral director in his home state of South Carolina and the encouragement of his parents who wanted their son to have a college education. At the time Turner simply wanted to pursue his music. Growing up, he couldn’t get enough of the rootsy, Americana, bluegrass sounds that defined traditional country. In fact, the first song he played in front of a crowd was the Randy Travis’ hit “Diggin’ Up Bones” when he was just 13.

“The more I dug into my musical heroes,” Turner explained, “the more I learned how to be Josh Turner.”

By 17, he was learning guitar and starting to write his own music, and a few short years later, he moved to Nashville and began studying at Belmont, a move that would launch his career.

“I was sitting in a desk against the wall in Clyde Rolston’s Entertainment and Career Development class, and the girl in front of me was interning for a publishing company. Long story short, I played her a demo of my songs, and that led to a publishing deal which then helped me get a record deal. That girl, Katherine, married Eric Church, and the girl who sat behind me in that class is the woman I married. So I got a publishing deal, a record deal and a wife out of the same class. Thank you Clyde!”

Turner’s wife, fellow alumna Jennifer Ford Turner, studied classical piano at Belmont and frequently tours and plays alongside her husband. Their family also now includes four sons who helped inspire the writing of Turner’s first book, “Man Stuff: Thoughts on Faith, Family and Fatherhood.” Turner also recently released his sixth studio album, “Deep South,” in March and has tour dates lined up for the rest of the year.

Josh Turner performs "Long, Black Train"He closed out the chapel, though, by reflecting back on his days on campus and the inspiration for his first hit, “Long Black Train,” which he sang at the conclusion of the event. The story began with the 1998 release of a Hank Williams Box Set, which Turner couldn’t afford to purchase but which he was able to find in Belmont’s Bunch Library music collection. After listening to the entire collection one night, Turner left the library for the walk back to his room in Hillside. “I got this vision of a long, black train moving through an open plain… I realized that the train was a metaphor for temptation, and I went back to my room and wrote three verses and a chorus that night. After class the next day, I realized the song wasn’t quite finished, and I wrote the fourth verse while working at the clubhouse. Today, after visiting The GIG, is the first time I walked in and out of the library since I wrote that song, and it gave me chills. It’s always fun to come back to play this song where it was born, here at Belmont.”

 

 

‘Belmont USA’ Program Expands University’s Nationally-Based Study Away Options

Belmont students can now earn academic credit through short-term and semester-long programs in New York, Los Angeles, Oregon, Washington, D.C.

Belmont University recently announced the expansion of its successful Belmont East (New York) and Belmont West (Los Angeles) programs—historically designed primarily for music and entertainment business students—to include new opportunities for students from any major to experience study away without securing a passport. An exclusive Belmont University experience away from Nashville, Belmont USA allows students to continue coursework for their undergraduate degree while gaining hands-on experience through experiential learning and internships. New sites now include Hollywood, Washington, D.C. and Oregon. Additional domestic locations may also be considered as the program moves forward.

Dr. Mimi Barnard, associate provost for interdisciplinary studies and global education, said, “As we challenge students to engage with and transform the world, it’s important that we provide them opportunities to experience different cultures and diverse parts of our increasingly global society. Belmont already offers study abroad trips on six of the seven continents, so expanding our reach with Belmont USA allows our students to dive more deeply into a variety of distinctly American experiences, but experiences that are entirely new to them. These new locations for domestic study will provide Belmont students a chance to expand their worldview without leaving the country.”

Belmont’s first study away/internship program began in 1999 in Los Angeles, allowing music business students to explore another entertainment industry setting outside of Music City. The insights provided helped the program become a consistent offering, Belmont West, which now provides spots for up to 30 students each semester. Belmont East quickly followed in New York City. In both locations, students complete at least one internship along with 12-16 hours of academic courses. Though initially designed for music business majors, these programs now include students of any program of study with recent excursions done by students in public relations, theatre and marketing, among others.

A more recent addition, Belmont in Hollywood, was created after the 2012 launch of Belmont’s motion pictures major and provides a summer opportunity for students to experience the film industry first-hand. Belmont also now partners with the Washington Internship Institute to foster academic and internship opportunities in the nation’s capital. While also open to any major, this location offers specific focus to anyone interested in politics, domestic and international policy, global studies and law.

The final site in the Belmont USA roll out differs from the others in that it is not located in a major metropolitan area. Rather, Belmont in Oregon reimagines the classroom by putting students in an intentional—and unplugged—community setting in the mountains of the southern Oregon Cascades. Through a partnership with the Oregon Extension, students participate in intensive reading, daily writing, small group discussion and sustainable living. Held each fall, the Oregon Extension is divided into four segments of study: what is nature, what is community, what is a sustainable world and what does it mean to be human.

Applications for Belmont USA Spring 2018 semester programs are due September 15.

Boatman’s Work on Exhibit at Kentucky Gallery

Katie Boatman's Art on DisplayKatie Boatman, lecturer and director of galleries at Belmont University, has been invited to exhibit new work in A Curated Life: Mediations Between Art, Objects and Ideas at Clemens Fine Arts Gallery in Paducah, Kentucky. The show highlights several artists that also work as curators, exhibiting other artists’ work.

Boatman’s most recent painting, Meditation II, is on exhibit at the gallery. The piece is comprised of six 12″ x 12″ wooden panels and depicts fragmented, yet interconnected, ethereal forms that softly undulate with shift in color and value. The piece draws inspiration from The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot.

In addition, Boatman will participate in a correlating panel discussion where several exhibiting artists will discuss what it means to be a modern curator and the impact they have on how the public perceives contemporary and historical artwork.

Belmont President Issues Statement on Today’s DACA Announcement

As part of Belmont University’s Christian mission, we aim to be an inclusive and diverse community, welcoming all of God’s children to a place where education offers a hopeful future. Today’s announcement is a betrayal of trust to countless young people—including several of our own successful alumni—who met the requirements of DACA, came forward and identified themselves in order to pursue their dreams without fear. Now those same young people become among our most vulnerable of being deported because they trusted that their government had their best interest at heart.

In light of today’s rescinding of DACA, my first hope is that Congress would quickly establish a long-term legislative solution such as the bipartisan Dream Act, supported by leading Republicans and Democrats, which creates a pathway to citizenship for undocumented individuals. A second possibility would be the Bridge Act, another bipartisan bill, which would at least allow applicants to receive provisional protected presence and work/study authorization to be in the country.

We are in a time as a nation where it’s imperative that we understand who our enemies are. As I told our students on the first day of class this semester, our enemies are not individuals or countries or those with different opinions. Our enemies are hatred, bigotry, racism, hunger, lack of opportunities… our enemies are the things that keep us from living the life God has called us to, a life of loving our neighbors as ourselves.

—Dr. Bob Fisher, president
Belmont University

Belmont Green Roofs Featured in Nashville News

Belmont University’s green roofs were recently featured in “Bulger’s Beat,” a segment produced by Nashville’s WSMV, Channel 4. Dr. Darlene Panvini, professor of biology, spoke with Bulger from atop one of the roofs and highlighted the many uses each has for campus.

Panvini detailed student projects supported by the green roofs, as well as the importance of botany in the lives of all–not just those who learn from her outdoor classroom. “Life depends on plants,” she said. “Everything we eat, the air we breathe. Lots of materials we use all come from plants.”

All of this, and more, contributes to Panvini and her student’s work on Belmont’s many green roofs. Bulger closed his segment with a nod to Panvini’s important work — in her indoor and outdoor classrooms — as she teaches students the importance of botany and the ways their lives are impacted by plants. It’s “all part of her botany passion,” Bulger said. “Now [she’s] shouting it from the rooftops.”

To see the segment, click here.

Senior Music Business Student Breaks onto Billboard Indicator Chart

linde lachance leaning on fence in a fieldLinde LaChance, a senior music business student, recently broke onto the Billboard Indicator Chart with her song, “Where We’d Be.” In addition to writing, performing and recording her music, LaChance also works as an Ice-Girl for the Nashville Predator’s Energy Team, serves as an executive member of Belmont’s chapter of Changing Health Attitudes and Actions to Recreate Girls (CHAARG) and continues her life-long passion of figure skating.

LaChance said, “One of the greatest gifts skating has given me is the tenacity to pursue something that knocks you off your feet time and time again.” She jokes that music is the same way, but she loves it because, “music brings us together in ways that defy lines of religious, social and political preferences, and I believe that’s incredibly important. That is why I love to write and sing.”

LaChance hopes to be an image of self-love, health and fitness for girls and women through her brand as an emerging musician.

Click here to view this week’s Billboard Country Charts, or visit LaChance’s website to learn more about her journey and her self-started record label, 3am Vibe.

Heard Published in The American Biology Teacher Journal

Matthew Heard head shotDr. Matthew Heard, assistant professor of biology, recently had an article accepted for publication in the journal The American Biology Teacher. The article is entitled “Using Life History Data to Examine Trade-Offs in Body Size and Reproductive Ability” and describes a laboratory exercise that Heard has used in his classes which helps students to learn about basic concepts and topics in ecology, evolution and natural history. The American Biology Teacher is an award-winning, peer-refereed professional journal for K-16 biology teachers.

Mathematics Major Receives Actuarial Scholarship

Kailee Gerzema Head ShotKailee Gerzema, mathematics major and senior, was awarded the Southeastern Actuaries Conference (SEAC) Scholarship for the 2017-2018 academic year. This competitive scholarship is available to students at southeastern U.S. universities who plan to pursue a career as an actuary.

Each year the SEAC funds actuarial science scholarships for full-time students at universities and colleges in the Southeast who have demonstrated a commitment to pursuing a career in the actuarial field. In 2017, we awarded 10 scholarships totaling $10,100 to individuals attending schools in the Southeast including Florida State University, University of Alabama, Georgia State University, University of Central Florida, Middle Tennessee State University, Belmont University, Clemson University and University of South Florida.

Hawley Releases Single and Music Video

Album coverWhen Dr. Scott Hawley, associate professor of physics, came to Belmont in 2006 to fulfill a career goal of teaching physics, he moved his second passion of making music to “the side.” Since then, he’s done a substantial amount of physics, but the music has been largely dormant. In August, however, Hawley released the single and music video for the song “Atlantis” from his upcoming album, “How You Ache.”

This album has been a true Belmont effort with significant contributions by faculty, alumni and current students:

  • Mixed by Audio Engineering Technology Professor Justin Dowse
  • Mastered by former Music Square East Facilities Manager Luke Gilfeather
  • Music video directed by audio engineering technology and film alumnus Seth Kays
  • Marketing plan developed by Clyde Rolston’s students, who selected “Atlantis” as the first single based on market research.

The full album will be available in late September. The video is available on YouTube at and the single is available by clicking here.

Rogers Travels to Arizona to Unveil Latest Project

The publicity piece for Christine Roger's art piece, soon to be unveiled in Tucson Arizona.Christine Rogers, assistant professor of photography is traveling to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tucson, Arizona to unveil her latest project in the collaborative series, Art, Nature, and Devotion, which pairs visual art with contemporary art music. This video piece was commissioned to pair with a live performance by the Tucson Symphony principal horn player Johanna Lundy and a piece of horn music called, “Sea Eagle” by Peter Maxwell Davies.

The Sea Eagle live on the coast of England. To create the video, Rogers used a local car wash to create the atmospheric and abstract wind and water.

Rogers will attend the live performance at the gallery opening and a second premiere at a Tucson movie theater.