Tammy L. Kernodle is a musicologist and the former President of the Society for American Music (2019–21). [1] [2] Her academic writing and public intellectual work has highlighted Black women musicians like Mary Lou Williams, Meshell Ndegeocello, Alice Coltrane, and Melba Liston and has considered African American women's role in contemporary gospel music and jazz. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
Kernodle holds a BM in choral music education and piano from Virginia State University, and an MA and PhD in music history from Ohio State University. [8]
Kernodle has been professor of musicology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio since 1997. [2] [8] In 2018 she was awarded the Benjamin Harrison Medallion in recognition of "Outstanding Contribution to the Education of the Nation," [9] and in 2021 she was awarded the title of University Distinguished Professor. Kernodle served as the President of the Society for American Music from 2019 to 2021. [1] In 2021 she was With Lisa Barg, Dianthe Spencer, and Sherrie Tucker, Kernodle formed the Melba Liston Research Collective whose members work toward "the inclusion of women musicians and analyses of gender in the emerging jazz historiographical directions of 'new' jazz studies". [10]
Her book, Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams, has been reviewed by Sherrie Tucker for Women and Music: A Journal of Gender and Culture, [7] Chris J. Walker for JazzTimes, [11] and Edward M. Komara for the Music Library Association's quarterly Notes. [12]
Kernodle has contributed to NPR's "Turning the Tables" series (2019) [5] [13] and to the Walker Art Center's digital exhibit "Creative Black Music". [14] She has appeared in several documentaries about the history of jazz, including The Girls in the Band (2011), [15] Mary Lou Williams: The Lady Who Swings the Band (2015), [16] and Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool (2019). [17]
She has been quoted or interviewed as an expert for The New York Times, [18] NPR's All Things Considered, [19] [20] and Marketplace. [21]
I fully expected that Tammy Kernodle's Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams would extend my knowledge of the life and especially of the music of Mary Lou Williams, but I didn't expect that this book would also push me to think more critically about how to negotiate the available paradigms for talking about Williams, to up the ante for why it is so important to do critical work in musical biographies, and to present, by example, a host of alternative models.
Tammy L. Kernodle is a musicologist and the former President of the Society for American Music (2019–21). [1] [2] Her academic writing and public intellectual work has highlighted Black women musicians like Mary Lou Williams, Meshell Ndegeocello, Alice Coltrane, and Melba Liston and has considered African American women's role in contemporary gospel music and jazz. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
Kernodle holds a BM in choral music education and piano from Virginia State University, and an MA and PhD in music history from Ohio State University. [8]
Kernodle has been professor of musicology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio since 1997. [2] [8] In 2018 she was awarded the Benjamin Harrison Medallion in recognition of "Outstanding Contribution to the Education of the Nation," [9] and in 2021 she was awarded the title of University Distinguished Professor. Kernodle served as the President of the Society for American Music from 2019 to 2021. [1] In 2021 she was With Lisa Barg, Dianthe Spencer, and Sherrie Tucker, Kernodle formed the Melba Liston Research Collective whose members work toward "the inclusion of women musicians and analyses of gender in the emerging jazz historiographical directions of 'new' jazz studies". [10]
Her book, Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams, has been reviewed by Sherrie Tucker for Women and Music: A Journal of Gender and Culture, [7] Chris J. Walker for JazzTimes, [11] and Edward M. Komara for the Music Library Association's quarterly Notes. [12]
Kernodle has contributed to NPR's "Turning the Tables" series (2019) [5] [13] and to the Walker Art Center's digital exhibit "Creative Black Music". [14] She has appeared in several documentaries about the history of jazz, including The Girls in the Band (2011), [15] Mary Lou Williams: The Lady Who Swings the Band (2015), [16] and Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool (2019). [17]
She has been quoted or interviewed as an expert for The New York Times, [18] NPR's All Things Considered, [19] [20] and Marketplace. [21]
I fully expected that Tammy Kernodle's Soul on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams would extend my knowledge of the life and especially of the music of Mary Lou Williams, but I didn't expect that this book would also push me to think more critically about how to negotiate the available paradigms for talking about Williams, to up the ante for why it is so important to do critical work in musical biographies, and to present, by example, a host of alternative models.