Linda Pearse
Canada Research Chair in Music, Contact, and Conflict (since 2023), Dr. Linda Pearse is trained in musicology and performance studies. An active and engaged teacher and researcher, her work engages music prior to 1700, sound studies, intercultural encounter, historiography, and music history pedagogy.
Biography
As Canada Research Chair in Music, Contact, and Conflict (since 2023), Linda Pearse specializes in the intercultural encounter and music of the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Pearse is Associate Professor of Music at Mount Allison University (New Brunswick) and serves in an adjunct capacity at McGill University. Following studies at the Schola Cantorum (Basel), a career in Europe included regular performances with the Stuttgart Philharmoniker, the Stuttgart Opera House, the Basel Symphony, La Cetra, piano possibile, and the Stuttgart Musical Theater. Studies in performance at Indiana University Bloomington and musicology at McGill University round out her diverse international musical experiences. Pearse has served in administrative roles previously as Artistic Director of the San Francisco Early Music Baroque Workshop (USA) and the Sackville Festival of Early Music (Canada).
Pearse’s research, funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) as well as the Canada Council for the Arts, FACTOR Canada and other bodies, focuses on intercultural encounters, music history pedagogy, and the performance of early European art music, drawing on historiographical, performative, and traditional musicological frameworks.
Her most recent publication, The Early Trombone: A Catalogue of Music (Brepols 2023; 840 pp.), co-authored with H. Weiner and C. Leonard, documents nearly 9000 musical works specifying the trombone, from anonymous pieces mentioned in early sixteenth-century writings up to Haydn’s iconic oratorios The Creation and The Seasons on the cusp of the nineteenth century. As such, the catalogue provides a single resource for scholars, trombonists, chamber musicians, and conductors to access instrumental solo and ensemble, as well as choral works specifying trombone from the sixteenth through to the end of the eighteenth century.
Linked with her Canada Research Chair position, Pearse directs the SUMR (Sackville Undergraduate Music research) Lab, which offers paid research opportunities for students during the summer months.
An enthusiastic and dedicated pedagogue, Pearse collaborates with other researchers and pedagogues in rethinking the instruction of music history and its intersections with conflict and cultural encounter. In connection with a Symposium on Music and War (October 2024), Pearse is collaborating with colleagues K. Galway and A. Dodson, local Indigenous education specialists, and the SUMR Lab students to create educational materials aligned with New Brunswick’s new curriculum that address the needs of high-school teachers (SSHRC CG 2024).
Pearse also co-directs a research team with Margaret Walker (Queen’s, PI) and Sandria P. Bouliane (Laval, co-applicant) that brings together undergrad and graduate students from the three universities for the project “Changing Colonial Narratives in Music History” (SSHRC IDG 2021). Within the SUMR Lab, students acquire foundational research skills through their synthesis of the different methodologies, and benefit from enhanced preparation for graduate studies, such that they will already have experience working on a research team, performing meaningful research, and contributing to pedagogical outputs.
In addition to directing the SUMR lab, Pearse supports students working on Independent Student Research Grant projects, Experiential Learning courses, and Independent studies. Many of her students go on to study at Canada’s finest graduate institutions and to engage successfully in myriad other professional directions (e.g., arts administration, music education, music therapy). Her written publications bring her perspectives and experiences as a performer together with her consideration of intercultural encounter, musicology, and pedagogy.
In the artistic realm, Pearse has created intercultural projects with her collaborators Ann Waltner and John Watkins (University of Minnesota) that weave music, texts, images, and soundscapes.
How Do We Listen? tells the truth of the surviving family of a Shubenacadie Indian Residential School survivor, Virginia Acquin. The project combines soundscape, music, and text to create a performance which engages with historical and present cultural and religious contact in New Brunswick, all with an eye to the complex identities of Indigenous, specifically Wolastoqiyik and Mi’kmaq, and non-Indigenous peoples who reside in the region that is now known as the Province of New Brunswick (SSHRC IDG 2015; SSHRC Connection 2017; premiere Oct 2019; for documentary film and articles see links below).
Other intercultural projects include Matteo Ricci: His Map and Music that premiered in China (2010), and that considers Matteo Ricci’s Map of the World (1602), writings by Chinese literati, and the music that might have surrounded him. Venetia 1500, a work inspired by the Barbari aerial woodcut of Venice (c.1500), weaves new music by Canadian Kevin Morse (Mount Allison), early European art music, texts, and images, to explore the gritty world of Venice in the sixteenth century, and finding resonance with Maritime cultures in decline (2015).
From 2008 to 2019, Pearse directed the early brass and string ensemble ¡Sacabuche! Extensive touring included performances in Beijing (China), Hong Kong and Macau (China), Hawaii, Chicago, Seattle, Vancouver Island, Calgary, Vancouver, Minneapolis, Indianapolis, New York, San Francisco, Bloomington (IN), Madison (WI), Kansas City, and Houston. In addition to work with ¡Sacabuche!, Pearse performed with La Rose des Vents, Pacific MusicWorks (Seattle), The Toronto Consort, Music of the Baroque (Jane Glover), Ensemble Caprice (Montréal), and the Spiritus Chamber Choir (Timothy Shantz).
With ¡Sacabuche! Pearse released two albums on the ATMA label: 17th-Century Italian Motets with Trombone (Sept 2015) and Hidden Treasures: 17th-Century Music of Habsburg and Bohemian (April 2021). She has recorded for broadcast with Harmonia (NPR), IPR, and WFIU, and with Cappella Artemisia. Her critical edition of Seventeenth-Century Italian Motets with Trombone is published with A-R Editions (April 2014).
Publications
Refereed Publications
BOOKS / CRITICAL EDITION
Weiner, Howard, Charlotte Leonard, and D. Linda Pearse. The Early Trombone: A Catalogue of Music. Epitome Musical. Turnhout: Brepols, 2023. [840 pp.]
Pearse, D. Linda, ed. 2014. “Seventeenth-Century Italian Concerted Motets with Trombone.” Vol. 19, Series 2. Collegium Musicum. A-R Editions, Yale University: Middleton, WI.
ARTICLES / BOOK CHAPTERS
Pearse, D. Linda, and Sandria P. Bouliane. 2024. “European Art Music is an Ethnic Music: Fraying the Edges in a Music History Classroom.” In Navigating Stylistic Boundaries in the Music History Classroom: Crossover, Exchange, Appropriation, edited by Esther M. Morgan-Ellis, 15–39. Modern Musicology and the College Classroom. London: Routledge.
P. Bouliane, Sandria, S. Arsenault, D. Linda Pearse, and M. E. Walker. 2022 (released 2024). “Remodeler le récit traditionnel de l’histoire de la musique : outils théoriques et pratiques pour l’enseignement universitaire.” Cahiers de la Société québécoise de recherche en musique 23(1): 11–25.
P. Bouliane, Sandria, and D. Linda Pearse. 2023. “Rencontres interculturelles: stratégies pour une pédagogie alternative de l’histoire de la musique.” In “Anti-Racist Pedagogies,” edited by Marcia Ostashewski and Meghan Forsyth. Special issue. MUSICultures: Journal of the Canadian Society for Traditional Music 50(1): 11–25.
Pearse, D. Linda. 2019 (released in 2021). “Expanding University Music Ensemble Curricula: Lessons from an Intercultural Artistic Collaboration.” Special Issue: Decolonizing Music Pedagogies. Edited by Margaret Walker and Robin Attas. Intersections: Canadian Journal of Music 39(1): 21–40.
Pearse, D. Linda, Angee Acquin, Robin Attas, and Ann Waltner. 2019. “Unpacking a Moment: Decolonization in the Performing Arts?” MUSICultures: Journal of the Canadian Society for Traditional Music 46: 1–31.
Pearse, D. Linda, Ann Waltner, Nicholas Godsoe. 2017. “Historically Informed Soundscape: Mediating Past and Present.” Journal of Sonic Studies 15. [peer-reviewed online journal]
Waltner, Ann, Qin Fang, D. Linda Pearse. 2010. “Performing Matteo Ricci: His Map and Music.” Ming Studies, Journal of the Society for Ming Studies 62: 1–24.
FORTHCOMING
Cumming, Julie E., and D. Linda Pearse. “Historical Pedagogy in the Graduate Musicology Seminar.” In Meaningful Gaps and Reliable Uncertainties: The Unexplored Potentials of Scholarly Reconstruction, edited by Carmela Barbaro and Gianluca Foschi. Proceedings of the British Academy Series (accepted 2023; expected 2024).
Pearse, D. Linda. “Georg Poss’s settings of Percussit Saul mille: A Response to the Ottomans.” (accepted 2023; expected 2025).
Work In Progress
Pearse, The Sonic Machine: Encounters between the Austrian Habsburgs and the Ottomans during the Thirteen Years’ War (1593–1606) (book).
BOOK REVIEWS
Pearse. D. Linda. 2020. Review of The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Brass Instruments. Edited by Trevor Herbert, Arnold Meyers, and John Wallace. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 2019. International Trombone Association Journal.
Pearse, D. Linda. 2018. Review of The Sixteenth-Century Trombone: Dimensions, Materials and Techniques. Hannes Vereecke. Épitome musical. Turnhout: Brepols, 2016. 254 pp. €75. Renaissance Quarterly 71(3): 1180–1182.
Pearse, D. Linda. July 2015. Review of Berühmte Posaunen-Virtuosen: Friedrich August Belcke, Carl Traugott Queisser, Albert Robert Müller, Joseph Serafin Alschausky & Posaunisten des Gewandhausorchesters Leipzig [Famous Trombone Virtuosos: Friedrich August Belcke, Carl Traugott Queisser, Albert Robert Müller, Joseph Serafin Alschausky & Trombonists of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra] by Rolf Handrow (Reichenberg, Germany: Crescendo-Brass GbR, 2014). Printed in German. International Trombone Association Journal 43(3): 49–50.
Pearse, D. Linda. 2013. Review of “The Trombone in the Renaissance: A History in Pictures and Documents” by Stewart Carter (Bucina: Historic Brass Society; Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press, 2012). Historic Brass Society Journal (December): 57–61.
Non-Refereed Publications
Pearse, D. Linda. 2016. “Immediate Feedback: Principles from the Performing Arts Studio.” In Mount A Teaches, 195–212. Edited by Louise Wasylkiw and Jennifer Tomes. Friesen Press: Victoria BC.
Education
PhD Musicology, McGill University (ABD)
Doctor of Music, Indiana University Jacobs School of Music, 2011
Master of Music, Schola Cantorum Basiliensis, Basel, Switzerland, 2006
F. M. Alexander Technique Teacher Training Course, Basel, Swizterland, 2002
Artist Diploma, Hochschule für Musik, Trossingen, Germany, 2000
Bachelor of Music, McGill University, Montréal, 1996
Recordings
Pearse, D. Linda. April 2021. Audio Recording. Hidden Treasures: Seventeenth-century Instrumental and Sacred music from Habsburg and Czech Archives. Recorded in Montréal, May 2019, 61 minutes. ¡Sacabuche! Label: ATMA Classique.
Pearse, D. Linda, Angela Acquin, Brian Francis (Mi’kmaq), Ann Waltner. August 2020; forthcoming. How do we listen? Video-documentary for educational purposes. Nova Media Productions. Filmed October 1–4, 2019.
Pearse, D. Linda, artistic director. Video Recording. 2017. Excerpts from Hidden Treasures: The Austrian Habsburgs and the Kroměřiž Archives. Filmed September 22, 2017 in Sackville, NB by Améri Ka Productions. ¡Sacabuche!
Pearse, D. Linda. Video Recording. 2017. Collaborative Communities, ¡Sacabuche!
Pearse, D. Linda. Video Recording. 2016. Matteo Ricci: His Map and Music. Direct Light Studios, San Francisco, CA USA.
Pearse, D. Linda. CD Recording. 2015. Seventeenth-Century Italian Motets, ¡Sacabuche! Recorded in Montréal, ATMA Classique.
PRI Broadcast Recording. 2014. A Baroque Christmas in the New World, with Indiana University Historic Performance Institute, Public Radio International (PRI) – Harmonia, Christmas Broadcast 2014, recorded October 23–26, 2014
Smith, Candace. Audio Recording. 2006. Raphaella Aleotti: Le Monache di San Vito. Cappella Artemesia, Italy. Role: Performer
SRF Broadcast recording. 2004. Adolf Wölfli. Ruedi Häusermann (director). Theater Basel, Basel,
Switzerland. Role: Performer
Gordon, Michael (composer). Audio Recording. 2002. Decasia. Basel Sinfonietta. Basel, Switzerland. Role: Performer
Grants, awards & honours
Awards
Appointment as Canada Research Chair in Music, Contact, and Conflict, 2023–28
Paul Paré Excellence Award in Research, Mount Allison University, 2022–24
Association of Atlantic Universities, Excellence in Teaching Award, 2023
Herbert and Leota Tucker Teaching Award, Mount Allison University, 2023
The Newberry Library, Short-Term Fellowship, “Sounds of the Early Modern Period”, Newberry Library, Chicago, 2018
Paul Paré Award of Excellence 2016–2018, for excellence in Research, Scholarship, or Creative Activity, Mount Allison University
Marjorie Young Bell Faculty Fellowship, Mount Allison University, 2012–14
External Grants (selection only)
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), Insight Development Grant. 2021–2022. Changing Colonial Narratives in Music History. Co-Applicant; with Margaret Walker (PI, Queen’s) and Sandria P. Bouliane (Co-Applicant, Laval), $61,793
SSHRC, Connection Grant for Indigenous Research Capacity. 2018–2020. Principal Investigator; $48,811
Factor Canada, Juried Recording Projects, ¡Sacabuche! recording project, post=production costs of a recording of early Habsburg music, 2019. Two years, $6,900.
Canada Council for the Arts, Travel Grant, Arts Abroad, supporting travel for tour to Honolulu and Kona, Hawaii, 2017, $9,300.
Canada Council for the Arts, Explore and Create, supporting a recording of early Habsburg music, 2017. Two years, $15,000.
New Brunswick Arts Board, Career Development Grant, Arts by Invitation, September 2017. One year, $1758.33
Canada Council for the Arts, Recording Grant for “Hidden Treasures.” 2016–2018 (extended to 2020), $15,000.
SSHRC, Insight Development Grant, Musical Mappings in the Early Modern World: Encounters, Exchanges, Collisions, June 2015. Lead applicant – Pearse; Collaborators – Ann Waltner and John Watkins (University of Minnesota); Two years, $67,485
Factor Canada, Juried Recording Projects, ¡Sacabuche! recording project, 17th Century Italian Motets with Trombone, 2014–2015; One year, $10,000
New Brunswick Arts Board, Arts by Invitation, ¡Sacabuche! Minneapolis Tour, Matteo Ricci: His Map and Music, Venetia 1500, Italy Invades Poland!, April 2014; One year, $1,750
Canada Council for the Arts, Travel Grants to Musicians, ¡Sacabuche! Matteo Ricci: His Map and Music, Tour to China, June 2013; One year, $2,000
New Brunswick Arts Board, Documentation Grant, ¡Sacabuche! Venetia 1500, 2012–2013; Two years, $7,000
SSHRC, Connection Grant. 2024–2025. Music, War, and Conflict: Mobilizing Knowledge from Academic Symposium to School Curriculum. Principal Investigator (K. Galway co-applicant; A. Dodson collaborator); $24,977
SSHRC, Partnership Grant. 2023–2027. Digital Analysis of Chant Transmission, J. Bain, Principal Investigator, Pearse Co-Applicant; $2,499,650
Internal Grants (2011–present)
President’s Research and Creativity Award (PRCA), Mount Allison University. Funding for student RAs to work in research lab activity (2021–23)
Marjorie Young Bell Fund, Category A, Sabbatical Leaves, 2021
Marjorie Young Bell Fund, Category B Conference Travel, 2020 (extended to 2022)
Marjorie Young Bell Fine Arts and Music Awards, “How Do We Listen? Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Collaboration in Performance and Film”, support for Indigenous Speaker, October 2019
PRCA. Funding for research and creative activity (2016–18, extended to 2020)
MTA Connects SSHRC Aid to Small Universities Fund 2016, Collaborative Workshop on Creative and Scholarly Practice, Mount Allison University, for a workshop with Indigenous musicians in September 2017
Marjorie Young Bell Fund 2015, Category B Conference Travel, funding to support travel costs for "Early Music: From Manuscript to Market," paper presentation and residency in Bloomington, IN, USA October 2–6
Bridge Funding 2014, for reworking a SSHRC Insight Development Grant (see SSHRC IDG, Musical Mappings, above)
J.E.A. Crake Foundation 2014, funding for Colloquium and Workshops for students with visiting professional artists of the 17th-Century Italian Motets recording and concert
Special Projects Fund 2014, Music Department, funding for Colloquium and Workshops for students with visiting professional artists of the 17th-Century Italian Motets recording and concert
Marjorie Young Bell Fine Arts Award 2014, funding for Colloquium and Workshops for students with visiting professional artists of the 17th-Century Italian Motets recording and concert
Marjorie Young Bell Fund 2014, Category A Sabbatical Leaves, Research Trip to Vienna, research on early manuscripts and prints leading to the creation of a Catalogue of Early Music for Trombone.
President’s Research and Creative Activities Fund 2014, funding for continued work on SSHRC IDG proposal project (received 4A ranking), 2014
CultureWorks Grant, funding for exploratory conversations about the Venetia 1500 project.
President’s Research and Creativity Fund 2013, funding for an audio recording of 17th-Century Italian Motets with Trombones
Marjorie Young Bell Fund 2013, Category B Conference Travel, funding for travel to lecture and perform at the Early Music Vancouver Summer Festival, August 2013
Special Projects Fund 2013, Music Department, funding for visiting artists, North American Works for Bass Trombone concert
Special Projects Fund 2013, Music Department, funding for visiting artists, Atlantic Brass
Marjorie Young Bell Fund 2012, Category B Conference Travel, funding to present paper at the International Historic Brass Symposium, New York, NY, USA, July 12, 2012
Marjorie Young Bell Faculty Fellowship 2012–2014, funding for the creation of the interdisciplinary project Venetia 1500, premiered in Sackville, September 29, 2013. Title: 2012–2014 Marjorie Young Bell Faculty Fellow