Siglind Bruhn
siglind@umich.edu

Siglind Bruhn, born 11 October 1951 in
Hamburg, Germany, is a music analyst/musicologist, concert pianist, and
interdisciplinary scholar. Since 1993 she has been working at the
University of
Michigan’s Institute for the Humanities as a full-time researcher in
the fields of “Music and Literature” and “Music in Interdisciplinary
Dialogue.” In addition she was, from 2000 to 2010, a Distinguished
Senior Research Fellow at the
University of Copenhagen’s Center for Christianity and the Arts and,
for the period 2004-2009, a chercheur invité at the
Sorbonne’s Institut d’esthétique des arts contemporains. In 2001
she was elected to the European Academy of Arts and Sciences; in 2008
she received an honorary doctorate from Linnaeus University,
Sweden.
Before coming to the United States, Siglind
taught at the University of Hong Kong, where she was the Director of
Studies for the Program in Piano Performance Pedagogy (1987-1993), and
at the Pianisten-Akademie in Ansbach, whose founding director she was
(1984-1987). Globally, she is or has been active on the Executive Board
of the Danish National Research Foundation’s International Postdoctoral
Center, on the Executive Board of the International Society for the
Interdisciplinary Study of Symmetry, as Vice President of the
International Association for Word and Music Studies, and as Commission
Chair in the International Society for Music Education. She has been a
Visiting Professor at the Central Conservatory in Beijing and a
visiting artist/visiting lecturer in most West European countries as
well as in China, Taiwan, Australia, South Africa, Namibia, Mexico,
Ecuador,
and on various American campuses.
Since 1993, Siglind has been devoting
herself fully to research and writing. In
1997, she was honored by being named the youngest (and first female)
Life
Research Associate at the University of Michigan’s Institute for the
Humanities. Internationally, she is an active member on research teams
such as the Équipe scientifique d’herméneutique musicale
(based at the University of Strasbourg,
France), the Nordic Society for Interarts Studies (based at the
University of Lund, Sweden), and the Musical Signification Project
(based at the University of Helsinki, Finland). Besides contributing
numerous articles to scholarly journals and
chapters to anthologies in both Europe and the United States, she has
authored over twenty books. One of
her books, Musical Ekphrasis: Composers Responding
to Poetry and Painting, has inspired dissertations in several
countries. As a co-author, she has edited five
volumes of
scholarly essays and three issues of a scholarly journal. She also
serves as co-editor of the book series INTERPLAY: Music
in Interdisciplinary Dialogue, published by Pendragon Press, and has
translated one music-theoretical book from English into German.
Her most recent completed research
projects are, in English, a book-length study on the Swiss
composer Frank
Martin and his recurring musical reflections on death (Pendragon Press
2011)
and, in German, a book trilogy on the German composer Paul Hindemith
(with one volume each examining and interpreting his great works for
the stage, his vocal compositions, and his instrumental compositions,
in time for the
commemoration in 2013 of the 50th anniversary of the death) and a first analytical appraisal of seminal works by Germany’s most successful composer of the younger generation, Jörg Widmann (*1973). Within the next year she will be embarking on a comprehensive study
of the work of French composer Claude Debussy.
As a concert pianist, she has given solo and
chamber music recitals in twenty-three countries on all five
continents.
She has recorded extensively with classical radio stations in several
countries and can be heard on two LPs and four CDs.
Siglind holds three post-graduate degrees: a
Master-of-Music equivalent in piano performance, piano pedagogy, and
music theory from the Musikhochschule Stuttgart [Staatsexamen
mit künstlerischem Hauptfach Klavier]; a Master of Arts in Romance
literatures and philosophy from the University of Munich, and a Ph.D.
[Dr.phil., summa cum laude] in music analysis, musicology, and
psychology from the University of Vienna, earned with a
dissertation on questions of musical hermeneutics in Alban Berg’s opera
Wozzeck.
(Last updated April
2013)