- LocationUpperquad
- DescriptionCome join us for kickball, dodgeball, and more! Learn about BURG Peer Ed and Fandom Society as we pair up for the 3rd semester to bring you games on the lawn!
- Websitehttps://events.frostburg.edu/event/games_on_the_lawn
- CategoriesSocial Event
More from Lecture
- May 87:30 PMFaculty Artist Series: Mackenzie Jacob LaMont, PercussionFSU’s Department of Music Presents Dr. Mackenzie Jacob LaMont in Faculty Artist Series Concert, “DRUMS (mostly)”Frostburg State University’s Department of Music will present percussionist Dr. Mackenzie Jacob LaMont in his Faculty Artist Series concert, “DRUMS (mostly),” on Wednesday, May 8, at 7:30 p.m. in the Pealer Recital Hall of FSU’s Woodward D. Pealer Performing Arts Center. The concert is free and open to the public. This event will also be livestreamed; click the “Join Stream” button on this page a few minutes before the recital is scheduled to begin, or any time during the recital, to view the live performance.The program will feature LaMont on drums ... mostly. Listeners are invited to sink into the layers of mathematics found in pounding hand drums and timpani, to become immersed in a surround-sound bass drum experience and to listen as one of the oldest recorded drum rhythms in existence winds its way through the evening, slowly degrading until it is unrecognizable. There are sure to be a few surprises along the way.LaMont is an active composer, percussion performer, music educator and music industry/audio recording specialist. His recent compositions have been focused on the environment as well as political and philosophical issues, with the sound world inhabiting a space somewhere between minimalism and post-progressive rock with dashes of polystylism. LaMont has a doctorate in music composition with a cognate in percussion from the University of Cincinnati, College-Conservatory of Music. He is an assistant professor at FSU where he teaches percussion lessons and ensemble, composition lessons and courses, and various courses within the music industry track.For more information, contact FSU’s Department of Music at 301-687-4109.
- May 9All dayThank a Teacher Weekopportunity for students to submit thanks to teachers
- May 94:00 PMLearning Etiquette with Alpha Phi Omega and Career and Professional Development CenterAlpha Phi Omega and the Career and Professional Development Center have partnered to host an Etiquette Learning Workshop on Thursday, May 2 from 4-5:30 p.m. We will cover business attire, formal dining etiquette, and resumé-building. Please feel free to bring a laptop, a copy of your resumé, and any questions you have about formal etiquette.
- May 97:00 PMStudent Government Association General Body MeetingThe Student Government Association meets bi-weekly to:Discuss upcoming campus eventsHear and address student comments and concernsProvide funding to registered on-campus student organizationsDevelops and administers student self-government policies, provides many services to studentsCommunicate with faculty and administrationDecide how student activity fees will be spentSGA General Meetings are open to the entire campus community. We encourage you to attend to continue to keep Frostburg State great!All undergraduate students are encouraged to run for office in SGA and participate in shaping the future of the University.
- May 10All dayThank a Teacher Weekopportunity for students to submit thanks to teachers
- May 107:30 PMFSU Percussion Ensemble ConcertFSU’s Department of Music Presents Percussion Ensemble RecitalFrostburg State University’s Department of Music will present its Percussion Ensemble, directed by Dr. Mackenzie Jacob LaMont, in its spring performance on Friday, May 10, at 7:30 p.m. in the Pealer Recital Hall of FSU’s Woodward D. Pealer Performing Arts Center.Percussion Ensemble students include Benjamin Alvey, Gavin Baker, Leah Boggs, Bryce Campbell, Jacob Deaver, Grace Giles, Jacob Hunt, Jacob Hutzell, Joseph Louie, Eileen Martin, Bella McConnell, Joe Rubens and Julia Seddon. They will be joined by guest performers Dr. Joseph Yungen, Peter Lewis and Riess Mikula.The concert will include “Crown of Thorns” by David Maslanka, “Living Room Music” by John Cage, “Percussion Music” by Michael Colgrass and much more.The title “Crown of Thorns” is an obvious reference to Christ’s crown of thorns, but the name first came to Maslanka as a possible title for a piece after seeing a plant called the Crown of Thorns at the New York Botanical Gardens. Crown of Thorns is a thorny desert plant from the Middle East. The rambling, interweaving, vine-like stems suggested music to him. As he meditated on the words crown of thorns and the plant, and on the idea of a work for keyboard percussion ensemble, one image that arose was a seven-starred halo. The seven-starred halo is a transcended image of the crown of thorns, the crown of highest spiritual power arrived at through the greatest depth of suffering. The imagery is Christian, but the experience transcends religion, and is universal. The music is at times sober and reflective, but more often filled with a liberated energy and joy.One of the most influential 20th century composers, Cage pioneered a body of music that he described as “the contemporary transition from keyboard-influenced music to the all-sound music of the future.” “Living Room Music” is a piece Cage composed in 1940. It is a quartet for unspecified instruments, all of which may be found in a living room of a typical house, hence the title. “Living Room Music” is dedicated to Cage's then-wife Xenia. The work consists of four movements: “To Begin,” “Story,” “Melody” and “End.” Cage instructs the performers to use any household objects or architectural elements as instruments and gives examples: magazines, cardboard, “largish books,” floor, the wooden frame of a window, etc. The first and last movements are percussion music for said instruments. In the second movement, the performers transform into a speech quartet; the music consists entirely of pieces of Gertrude Stein’s short poem “The World Is Round” (1938) spoken or sung. The third movement is optional. It includes a melody played by one of the performers on “any suitable instrument.”“Percussion Music” (1952) was written while Colgrass was a sophomore at the University of Illinois. After using up all his jazz drum solo ideas in “Three Brothers,” he knew he needed to look outside of jazz for inspiration and decided to experiment with a Bach-like counterpoint on drums without specific pitches. He created a “keyboard” of 16 sounds from low drums to high temple blocks that were divided among four players. Since Bach’s music was non-percussive, Colgrass intended the work to be a gentle and melodic form of drumming, providing percussionists with a feeling of musical equality and respectability with classical musicians. The toy drum part was written for cardboard-shelled toy drums. These toy drums or “timp-toms” had a very clear pitch and a long decay and inspired Colgrass to write other works for drums with specific pitches. The part is often played on roto-toms.Admission is $10 for adults; $5 for seniors, members of the military and FSU faculty and staff; and free for students and children. Tickets are available at the University box office in the Lane Center Mondays through Fridays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., by phone at 301-687-3137 or online at https://frostburgtix.universitytickets.com/w/event.aspx?id=2043. Tickets will also be available at the door on the evening of the concert.For more information, contact FSU’s Department of Music at 301-687-4109.