Richard
Wolf
Professor of Music
Ethnomusicology
rwolf@fas.harvard.edu
031 Memorial Hall (office location)
Postal address: Music Building / Harvard University / Cambridge, MA 02138
617-494-7678 (messages: 617-495-2791)
In 1980, an extraordinary performance of
south Indian classical (Karnatak) music forever changed the life of
Richard Wolf, erstwhile electric guitarist and student of Renaissance
lute and classical guitar. In 1982 this experience led him to devote a
year of music and Tamil language study in south India. After returning
to Oberlin College the following year, he completed the last few courses
toward a bachelor's degree in Mathematics (1984) and then devoted
himself to ethnomusicological study.
Following fourteen months of further study in India,
Wolf began his graduate work at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign; there he completed a Master of Music thesis exploring
social-cultural as well as technical components of Karnatak "style"
(bani) (1989). For his PhD dissertation, Wolf conducted fieldwork for
two years on the music and ritual of one of the tribal minority
populations of the Nilgiri Hills, the Kotas (1997).
In November 1996, the final draft of
Wolf's PhD thesis was still in the mail when he boarded a plane with his
wife to commence two-and-a-half years of new field research. This work
in north India and Pakistan centered on drumming, “recitation,” and
music in public Islamic contexts. Wolf returned from south Asia to take
up a position at Harvard in 1999 and has remained there ever since.
Wolf's thematic interests include
emotional complexity in ceremonial contexts, the constitutive properties
of musical action in rituals, the poetics of non-verbal activities, the
musical qualities of languages and the analytic potentials of
particular languages for the study of music. Wolf speaks Tamil and draws
from his study of several other languages, including Urdu and Persian,
in his research and writings. His studies of the Kota language, soon be
published, will include a dictionary.
Several publications address issues of
music and Islam in south Asia including “The poetics of Sufi practice:
Drumming, dancing, and complex agency at Madho Lal Husain (and beyond),”
(American Ethnologist 2006). His monograph entitled The
Voice in the Drum: Music, Language and Emotion in Islamicate South and
West Asia is currently under preparation for the University of
Illinois Press. He has also drafted another monograph, provisionally
titled Song and Subjectivity in Modern India, based on
continuing research on south Indian folk and tribal music. Wolf's
interest in sociomusical processes that transcend the borders of South
Asia is reflected in the edited volume, Theorizing the Local:
Music, Practice, and Experience in South Asia and Beyond (Oxford
University Press, New York, 2009).
Wolf has been the recipient of numerous
grants and fellowships, including recent awards from the Radcliffe
Institute for Advanced Study, the American Council of Learned Societies,
the Social Science Research Council, the National Endowment for the
Humanities, and the American Institute of Pakistan Studies. Wolf's first
book, The Black Cow's Footprint: Time, Space, and Music in the
Lives of the Kotas of South India (Permanent Black, 2005 and
University of Illinois Press, 2006), earned the Edward Cameron Dimock,
Jr. Prize in the Humanities.
In the summer of 2009, Wolf was Invité at
the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris and
Gastprofessur für ethnologische Nilgiriforschung at the Institute for
Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Munich. He has
served on several editorial boards and currently serves on the Executive
Committee and Board of Trustees of the American Institute of Pakistan
Studies. In addition to teaching and writing about music, Wolf
occasionally performs on the vina; he is a disciple of the
renowned performer, Ranganayaki Rajagopalan.
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