Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Florida State University Marching Chiefs is the official marching band of Florida State University.The band has served in this capacity since the 1940s and continues to perform at all home football games as well as several away games each year; they have also performed at baseball and softball games.
The Florida State University College of Music, located in Tallahassee, Florida, is one of sixteen colleges comprising Florida State University.The college houses two Grammy winners, a former concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic, a Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, a former leading tenor of the Metropolitan Opera, and the world's leading scholar in music therapy.
The program, featuring both guest artist Pamela Z and guest performers from the International Contemporary Ensemble, includes works by 20 composers.
As the winner of this year’s FSU College of Music Noles Onstage: Play Word of South competition, Phabrik prepares to perform at the festival.
The Florida State University (FSU) "Flying High" Circus located in Tallahassee, Florida, is an extra-curricular activity under Florida State University's Division of Student Affairs. All members of the FSU Circus are required to be a degree-seeking student registered at Florida State University and are accepted after an audition.
The FSU graduate student, opera vocalist and composer is excited to share his work at FSU’s Fundraising Preview concert of his "The Saturday Sorrow" on May 8 at Opperman Music Hall.
Each year the FMEA is the host organization that sponsors the Florida All-State bands, orchestras, and choirs. Audition music is selected and sent to schools all over the state. Students prepare and then audition, usually at the beginning of the academic school year in their county, by making a blind-audition recording.
The Warren D. Allen Music Library is located in the Housewright Music Building in the Florida State University College of Music and contains scores, sound recordings (albums and CDs), video recordings, books, periodicals, microforms and streaming media. [229]