Creator of Somos Musicos

 

Composer, author and Professor Thomas Clark has served as Director of the School of Music since 2008.
Composer, author and Professor Thomas Clark served as Director of the School of Music 2008-2020.

With more than 50 years of musical experience, Thomas S. Clark enjoyed a 45-year college teaching and academic administration career, culminating in his final position as Professor of Music and Director of the Texas State University School of Music until 2020. He established the Somos Músicos student concert series and newsletter in 2009, continuing to edit what became this news blog until December of 2022.

His compositions have been performed at festivals throughout the U.S.A., in Canada, Japan, Australia, Brazil, New Zealand, three times at “Moravian Autumn” the Brno International Music Festival in the Czech Republic, and at the Festival Internacional Alfonso Reyes in Monterrey, Mexico. Several of his works, affiliated with BMI, are published by Borik Press and recorded on Centaur Records. His writing has appeared in several journals and in three published books.

Clark earned a Doctor of Musical Arts degree from The University of Michigan in 1976. He studied composition with Pulitzer Prize winner Leslie Bassett and was trombonist for Contemporary Directions, Michigan’s Rockefeller Foundation supported new music repertory ensemble.

After teaching at The University of Michigan, Indiana University, Pacific Lutheran University, and for 10 summers at the National Music Camp in Interlochen, Michigan, in 1976 Dr. Clark joined the music faculty of the University of North Texas. There he developed the New Music Performance Lab and served as Chair of the Doctor of Musical Arts program and Director of the Center for Experimental Music and Intermedia.

He went on to serve eight years as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and one year as Interim Dean of the UNT College of Music. In those administrative roles, he helped found the Texas Center for Music and Medicine, the Center for Shenkerian Studies, the Artist Certificate in Music Performance program, and the “ASPIRE” programs promoting academic success and student retention. He retired from UNT in 2004 and holds the title Professor Emeritus at that institution.

From 2004 through 2008, Dr. Clark served as Dean of the School of Music at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, an affiliated campus of the University of North Carolina system. He also served as Executive Director of the A.J. Fletcher Opera Institute, an exciting professional training program.

 

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