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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McGinnis Crowned Miss Murfreesboro 2016

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Mary Allyson McGinnis, a Belmont sophomore double majoring in music business and marketing, was crowned Miss Murfreesboro 2016 on Nov. 14 Middle Tennessee State University’s Tucker Theater. As Miss Murfreesboro, McGinnis will compete for the title of Miss Tennessee in June 2016. The winner of Miss Tennessee will progress to compete for the title of Miss America.

McGinnis has chosen Big Brothers Big Sisters as her volunteer platform, an organization that pairs adult volunteers with children facing adversity. “I truly love serving my community and have a passion for helping children transition through the adversity they face. It is important for us to prepare all children for success in life,” she said. McGinnis currently serves as president for Belmont’s student organization, Bigs@Belmont and has helped recruit 54 new members to work alongside children in the Nashville community.

To McGinnis, this is more than just a title and a crown. “It is my honor and privilege to represent Murfreesboro. I see this opportunity as a job and responsibility to be a positive role model and serve the community by being true to who I am.”

Belmont Celebrates Christmas by Offering Free Events to the Public

Belmont University celebrates Christmas and announces its Christmas gift to the Nashville community with a number of free events that are open to the public, as well as the televised airing of the annual holiday music spectacular, “Christmas at Belmont.”

Belmont Camerata will offer its annual presentation of “A Camerata Christmas,” a holiday celebration that includes the Corelli Christmas Concerto and bluegrass-style carols on Monday, Dec. 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the Belmont Mansion.

Christsmas_At_Belmont_Sunday_Performance_2015-131-X2The University’s Christmas concert series will conclude with the annual Christmas Eve Carillon Concert, held on Thursday, Dec. 24 at 2 p.m. at the campus Bell Tower, located just off the corner of Belmont Boulevard and Portland Avenue. Continuing a tradition begun during the Ward-Belmont days, the concert features traditional Christmas music played by Professor of Music Richard Shadinger on the tower’s 42-bell carillon, one of five carillons in Tennessee.

Of course, the holiday wouldn’t be complete without the annual “Christmas at Belmont” special. A presentation of this year’s performance, which featured 700 students, faculty and staff musicians from the School of Music and was hosted by award-winning country recording artist Kathy Mattea, will be shown in Middle Tennessee by Nashville Public Television (NPT-Channel 8) on Monday, Dec. 21 at 9 p.m. (CST) and Thursday, Dec. 24 at 8 p.m. Check local listings for additional air times in other parts of the country.

For a behind-the-scenes look at this year’s performance, click here.

Al-Shamma Publishes Article in Arab Stages

Dr. Jim Al-ShammaJames Al-Shamma, assistant professor of theatre, recently published an article in the Fall 2015 edition of the online, peer-reviewed journal, Arab Stages.

Titled “The Birth of Modern Iraqi Theatre: Church Drama in Mosul in the Late Nineteenth Century,” the article was co-authored with Dr. Amir Al-Azraki, lecturer at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.

Curb College Hosts Morris Lecture Series

Belmont’s second annual Morris Family Mentor and Lecture Series, sponsored by the Morris family, was held this fall through the Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business. The series of seminars honors industry professionals by bringing them to campus to continue to inspire others through their work in the entertainment and music industry. The Morris family honors these guests as Distinguished Lecturers.

The series kicked off with Ashley Gorley, this year’s ASCAP’s Songwriter of the Year. Gorley has written more than 20 No. 1 singles including Carrie Underwood’s “All American Girl,” Brad Paisley’s “American Saturday Night,” Luke Bryan’s “Crash My Party” and Rascal Flatts’ “Rewind.” Gorley’s publishing venture Taperoom Music has had three top 10 singles, one No. 1 and songs recorded by Blake Shelton, Sam Hunt and Keith Urban.

Worldwide Executive of Music and Music Marketing for Electronic Arts (EA) Steve Schnur followed Gorley as a Distinguished Lecturer for his work in the industry. Schnur is a longtime veteran of the music industry who has experience with many companies including Arista, Elektra and Capitol. Schnur turned EA into a leader in integrating the gaming industry with music with FIFA, Madden and The Sims.

The final Distinguished Lecturer of the semester was Pete Fisher, vice president and general manager of the Grand Ole Opry. Fisher has been with the Opry for the past sixteen years and, in that time, has transformed the Opry legacy. Throughout his time at the Opry, Pete has seen Carrie Underwood, Darius Rucker, Dierks Bentley and Blake Shelton, among many others, inducted as Opry Members.

Belmont Ranked on List of Least Expensive Private Schools

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Blog Social ranked Belmont no. 16 on its recent list of The 25 Least Expensive Private Schools.

Using data from the 2014-2015 school year provided by the U.S. Department of EducationStartClass found the 25 private universities with the lowest tuition for full-time students. For this study, only schools with at least 5,000 undergraduate students and a Smart Rating of 80 or higher were considered.

The rating scores each college on a scale of 0-100 in order to rate the overall quality and is determined based on financial affordability, career readiness, admissions selectivity, expert opinion and academic excellence.

Belmont Included on The Hollywood Reporter’s Top 25 Music Schools

In an article recently published in The Hollywood Reporter, Belmont is noted on a list of the top 25 music schools across the world. Crossing the continent and going as far as Paris, Seoul and London, the articles highlights schools where the “Emmy and Oscar winners of tomorrow are practicing.”

Coming in at No. 24, Belmont’s Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business is honored for its Nashville connections, as well as its programs in New York and California. The list also notes that Belmont has served as a springboard for American Idol and America’s Got Talent finalists, and graduates often find their way to the L.A. and New York music scenes.

Between the Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business and the University’s School of Music, Belmont offers 15 programs of study, including songwriting, audio engineering, commercial and classical music, as well as the school’s most recent edition, music therapy.

 

Physical Therapy Supports Miles and Music for Kids

The annual event raised $636K for Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital

Belmont University’s School of Physical Therapy partnered with the annual Dierks Bentley Miles and Music for Kids motorcycle ride and concert to benefit Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital on Nov, 1. The event is the unofficial kick-off to the biggest week of the year in Nashville–CMA week. This year marked the 10th year of the annual event, with Belmont’s PT program assisting as volunteer staff since its inception in 2006.

In the past decade, the ride and concert has raised more than three million dollars to help Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital and has gone to support the hospital’s pediatric palliative care program. The program supports the hospital’s sickest patients, many of whom are facing the end of life. This money enables families to focus on their kids. “Money raised goes to families so they can focus their prayers on their kids getting well and not have to worry and pray about money. There is so much positive energy there and so many great doctors,” Bentley said.

Sells, Bentley, VoightThe event is one Bentley said he looks forward to year round. “I look forward to this show more than any other show of the entire year. We get to do something for the community, give back to the community,” Bentley said before the event. “We could not have taken this event to the level it now is without the help of my friend Mike Voight and his students at Belmont University. The Belmont students have been integral to the success of this event from the inaugural ride ten years ago to its current size.  I always look forward to working with them.”

Belmont PT graduate and Adjunct Faculty member Ashley Campbell has volunteered for the past eight years, overseeing Belmont volunteers for the past five. Reflecting on the day Campbell stated, “The Belmont PT students are a huge part of the continued success of this event. I was so proud to be associated with such a great group of hard working and dedicated young adults.”

The sold-out event started with a motorcycle ride beginning at the Harley Davidson store in Columbia, 40 miles south of Music City, and ended downtown at the Ascend Amphitheater with a star studded concert. Brooke Eden was the first and followed by The Cadillac Three, Canaan Smith, Cole Swindell, Thomas Rhett and Florida Georgia Line. Bentley closed the night with a nearly hour-long set bursting with hits, including “Every Mile a Memory” and “I Hold On.”

Before his performance, Bentley brought Dalton Waggoner, a patient at Vanderbilt since his congenital heart defect diagnosis at two-days-old and Miles and Music inaugural participant, on stage. “Dalton is the riser of the night,” Bentley told the crowd, referring to his song “Riser” about resilience in the face of adversity. At the night’s end, Bentley brought Waggoner back on stage for the $636,479 check presentation, a total that made the event the most successful one yet.

Physical Therapy Professor Mike Voight, who along with colleague Dr. Pat Sells have coordinated Belmont’s participation with this event from the inception ten years ago said, “This was a great learning experience and fun event for our students. Not only did they get to meet and work with the stars of country music, but in doing so they also helped the community in a large way.”

Sells continued saying, “Our students have been involved in staging this event since the beginning and have become very well versed on how to pull together as a team and get things done. It is a real pleasure to watch them give and serve unselfishly. This is what service is all about.”

McEntire Presents Papers at Society of Biblical Literature

Mark McEntireProfessor of Biblical Studies Dr. Mark McEntire recently presented two papers at the Society of Biblical Literature in Atlanta. He presented “A More Coherent J” in the Genesis section and “A Book That Controls Itself: The Masorah of Hebrew Bible Manuscripts” in the Book History and Biblical Literature consultation.

The second presentation was a collaborative project with Dr. Tim Crawford and Dr. Danny Mynatt of the University of Mary Hardin Baylor.

Kuryla Presents Paper at US Intellectual History Meeting

Peter KurylaDr. Peter Kuryla, associate professor of history, presented a paper at the annual meeting of the Society for US Intellectual History held in Washington, D.C. Kuryla’s paper, “Lincoln’s Tragic Pragmatism: The Leap in the Dark and the Leap into Darkness” was part of a panel about John Burt’s historically situated work of political philosophy, Lincoln’s Tragic Pragmatism: Lincoln, Douglas, and Moral Conflict.

Burt, Paul E. Prosswimmer professor of American literature at Brandeis and literary executor for Robert Penn Warren estate, was part of the panel and offered a response. The US Intellectual History Society Blog posted the three person roundtable and Kuryla’s paper here.

Kuryla also published a peer-reviewed article in the journal Patterns of Prejudice entitled “Encountering the Southern Other: Imagining the Civil Rights Movement through Travel Narrative.

Ko Hosts UNESCO Recording Project at Ocean Way Nashville

Doyuen Ko, assistant professor of audio engineering technology, recently hosted a string orchestra recording session at Belmont’s Ocean Way Nashville studio for “Human Right Documentary Heritage – 1980 Archives for the May 18th Democratic Uprising in Gwangju, South Korea,” an international archival project.

In 2011, the project was listed on the UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) Memory of the World Register. This collaborative recording project provides musical documentary items, and Ko was responsible for directing and engineering a string orchestra recording. The session is the beginning of a multi-year collaboration with The May 18 Memorial Foundation.

The uprising refers to a popular uprising against military regime in the city of Gwangju, South Korea from May 18 to 27, 1980. The UNESCO Memory of the World Register citation reads that, “The May 18th Democratic Uprising not only played a pivotal role in the democratization of South Korea but also affected other countries in East Asia by dissolving the Cold War structure and achieving democracy.”

The Memory of the World Register lists documentary heritage which has been recommended by the International Advisory Committee and endorsed by the Director-General of UNESCO as corresponding to the selection criteria regarding world significance and outstanding universal value.