Ä¢¹½AV

Dr. Gregory Robinson

Titles and Organizations

Associate Professor and Director of GRADUATE STUDIES and ·¡°Õ±á±·°¿²Ñ±«³§±õ°ä°¿³¢°¿³Ò³Û,ÌýDewberry School of Music, CVPA

Contact Information

Phone: 703-993-5094
Campus: Fairfax
Building: de Laski Performing Arts Bldg
Room 432
Mail Stop: 3E3
Email: grobins8@gmu.edu

Biography

Dr. Gregory Joseph Robinson is Associate Professor of Music and Director of Ethnomusicology at George Mason Ä¢¹½AV’s School of Music. He received the Ph.D. from the Ä¢¹½AV of Pennsylvania and graduated summa cum laude from Colby College in Waterville, Maine. His current research projects center on rural music in southern Chile and Argentina, classic rock in the United States, and Latin American art music. His book, No Borders Between Gauchos: Music, Tradition, and the Post-Frontier in Chilean Patagonia (under contract with Oxford Ä¢¹½AV Press), deals with music, conviviality, and border relationships in southern Chile, where he conducted fieldwork from 2005 to 2007, and again in 2011 and 2013.

Robinson’s writings appear in the journal Ethnomusicology, the Latin American Music Review, the Yearbook for Traditional Music, the Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World, and in several edited collections. Recent honors and awards include a Fulbright Fellowship, an International Dissertation Research Fellowship from the Social Science Research Council, and a Faculty Summer Research Grant from the Vice President for Research and Development at George Mason Ä¢¹½AV. He has given invited lectures at The Catholic Ä¢¹½AV of America, the Ä¢¹½AV of Delaware, the Ä¢¹½AV of Pennsylvania, and Westminster Choir College. Additionally, he has presented his research at conferences in Santiago, Chile; Mexico City; Salvador, Brazil; Montreal, Canada; and Leeds, England; as well as at regional, national, and international conferences located in the United States.

At George Mason Ä¢¹½AV, Dr. Robinson teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in ethnomusicology, research methods, Latin American and Caribbean music, Indian music, and Western music history and theory. In addition, he coordinates Mason’s Ethnomusicology Minor and advises dissertations and theses within the School of Music, while also serving as an affiliate faculty member for Latin American Studies.

Robinson has performed in various musical genres. In recent years, he has performed extensively on accordion, guitar, and voice in southern Chile and Argentina, with a bluegrass and country ensemble in Philadelphia, in a samba ensemble at the Ģ¹½AV of Pennsylvania, and in various church choirs. He studied classical piano with Joseph Fennimore, Alvin Chow, and Cheryl Tschanz, and voice with Elizabeth Patches.

Associate Professor of Music

  • Musics of the World
  • Music History in Society III

Degrees

  • µþ´¡Ìý²Ñ³Ü²õ¾±³¦, Colby College
  • PhD, Ethnomusicology, Ä¢¹½AV of Pennsylvania