Saturday, September 20
The Music of Freedom
1 PM – 3 PM
Free Admission

Program Description
Presenter – Dr. Ambre Dromgoole
Ambre Dromgoole is an experienced music scholar, artist, curator, and consultant who specializes in subjects relating to music, religion, race, gender, performance, and popular culture all of which she brings to her role as Assistant Professor of Africana Studies at Cornell University. Dr. Dromgoole received her B.A. in Religion and Musical Studies from Oberlin College and Conservatory, her M.A. from Yale Divinity School and Institute of Sacred Music, and PhD from Yale University. She has presented work for the Association of Black Women Historians, Society for Ethnomusicology, American Studies Association, and the American Academy of Religion to name a few. She has previously held fellowships with the Ford Foundation, Louisville Institute, Center for Lived Religion in the Digital Age at St. Louis University, the Sacred Writes project, and the Center for Material and Visual Cultures of Religion at Yale University. Her current book project There’s a Heaven Somewhere: A Sonic History of Black Womanhood documents the twentieth century history of itinerant women gospel musicians as a collective, paying particular attention to their musical trainings as girls in Afro- Protestant contexts as well as their formation in the entertainment industry.

Musician – Dr. Khyle Wooten
Khyle Wooten (he/they) a native of Philadelphia, PA, is Director of Choral Activities and Assistant Professor of Music Performance at Ithaca College. His professional educational posts prior to Ithaca College include the University of Tennessee, Knoxville and several charter schools in the cities of Philadelphia, PA, and Atlanta, GA. Wooten leads a unique life in music as an educator, conductor, researcher, and composer. Wooten leads ongoing research on the life and music of Lena McLin and extended choral works of Black women composers, presenting regularly at regional and national conferences. They are an inaugural fellow of the Future of Music Faculty Fellowship with the Cleveland Institute of Music (2021) and an inaugural composition fellow with the New Canon Project (2023); a mentorship initiative jointly curated by the American Choral Directors Association and the American String Teachers Association. His body of compositions include commissions from the Ithaca College Treble Chorale, the Roane Choral Society, the Cincinnati Song Initiative, the Tallahassee Symphony Orchestra MINA String Quartet. An Instrument (Rising Tide Press) and an arrangement of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s Life and Death (Hal Leonard) are among his recently published choral works. Wooten holds degrees in music education and choral conducting from Lincoln University of PA (BS), Georgia State University (MM), and Florida State University (PhD).
