Home / Events / Speaker Series /
PitE Concert: Love Each Other, Love Your Earth-- Inspiring Environmental Change through Music and Literature
Feb
14
2012
Add to Cal
RC Keene Auditorium (East Quad)
701 East University Avenue
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1245
**Enter through the All-Glass Doors on East University Avenue**
You and your partner are invited to the Pre-Concert Valentine’s Day Reception at 7:30 p.m. in the Benzinger Library, upstairs from the auditorium.
Doors open at 8:15 p.m. This event is free and open to public (so bring your date!)
You and your partner are invited to the Pre-Concert Valentine’s Day Reception at 7:30 p.m. in the Benzinger Library, upstairs from the auditorium.
Joe Reilly is a singer, songwriter and environmental educator from Ann Arbor who writes songs from his heart. Through his music, Joe invites listeners to heal relationships with our selves, with each other, and with the earth. Joe uses his music to bring people together and build community across lines of race, class, gender, ethnicity, religion, age, and nationality. Joe will be joined in this concert by world-renowned musicians Gayelynn McKinney on Drums, Marion Hayden on Bass, and Allison Radell on Piano. You can find out more about Joe’s music at www.joereilly.org. Joe graduated from the University of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment in 2000 and is currently enrolled in the Master’s Program at the University of Michigan School of Social Work.
Composer Evan Chambers (b.1963) serves as Chair of Composition at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He is known for his intense vocal performances of his own contemporary Classical works, which are often influenced by folk music. He is also an avid Irish-traditional fiddler, and appeared as a soloist in Carnegie Hall with the American Composers Orchestra in 2008. His works have been performed by the Cincinnati, Kansas City, Spokane, Memphis, New Hampshire, and Albany Symphonies, among others, and has been described by the Washington Post as “luminous, wistful …undeniably poignant,” “with an elegant sense of restrained longing.”
Keith Taylor is an Adjunct Faculty member in the Masters of Fine Arts in Creative Writing Program, and serves as the coordinator of undergraduate creative writing. His primary interests include environmental literature/writing, contemporary poetry and fiction, European literature, and particularly translation from French and modern Greek.


