Sturm presents faculty recital April 9

April 4, 2025

Hans Sturm
Hans Sturm

Lincoln, Neb.—Hans Sturm, Glenn Korff School of Music professor of bass, will present a faculty recital on Wednesday, April 9 at 7:30 p.m. in Westbrook Recital Hall Rm. 119.

The recital is free and open to the public. The recital will also be live webcast. Visit https://go.unl.edu/webcasts the day of the performance for the link.

The recital will be Sturm’s final faculty recital before he retires at the end of the semester. The program includes seven pieces that Sturm has composed over the years, along with one by Associate Professor of Composition, Emerging Media and Digital Arts Tom Larson, who will join him on the program, along with Associate Professor of Trumpet and Jazz Studies Darryl White and Sturm’s wife, jazz vocalist Jackie Allen.

Bookending the concert are two pieces that Sturm describes as “guided improvisations.” The program opens with Sturm’s “Deep Tones for Peace” (2025), which comes out of a project organized by USC’s Mark Dresser that asked bass players to send them recordings of meditative kinds of performances.

The program ends with Sturm’s “Braided Pillars” (2024), which is based on work Sturm did with Roscoe Mitchell, a founding member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) based in Chicago. 

“He moved to Madison, and we worked together for the better part of about 12 years and did some concerts and some recordings together,” Sturm said. “At the time this initial concept came up for ‘Braided Pillars,’ he was working on circular breathing and created a record on the Black Saint label called ‘The Flow of Things’ with his group called The Note Factory, which was a saxophone, two bass players and two drummers. So it was so many notes per square inch.”

Also on the program are three pieces that he will perform with Larson:  Larson’s “Still” (2016), as well as “Blanton Hymn” (2010) and “Brownian Motion” (2010), both by Sturm. They will be joined by White on “Brownian Motion.”

“These are pieces that we had developed when we went to the European bass convention in Copenhagen and played in the Royal Opera House there, and then on the way back, we stopped in Paris and recorded at Studio Davout,” Sturm said. 

The final three pieces on the program will be performed with Allen:  “NOLA Love Song” (2005), which was written for New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina; “Sing Your Song” (2020), which was part of the Nebraska Project that looked at musicians that came out of Nebraska; and “Rose Fingered Dawn” (2017), which was the title track of one of Allen’s records.

“These are pieces that I wrote for Jackie over the years,” Sturm said.

The audience can expect to hear a little of everything at the concert.

“I don’t want to say ‘Expect the unexpected,’ but it is sort of a retrospective,” Sturm said. “There’s a wide range of music.”

Sturm has taught at Nebraska since 2011. He has performed as a soloist, chamber, orchestral, jazz and improvisational musician throughout Europe, Asia, South America, Australia, Africa and the United States. He has served as president of the International Society of Bassists and recently wrote a biography of his mentor, “75 Years on 4 Strings: The Life and Music of François Rabbath.” For more on Sturm, visit https://go.unl.edu/sturm.