Chad Hamill
Dr.
Hamill is a dual specialist focusing on the classical music of northern India
and Native American music. In addition to teaching at NAU, he has taught
courses in indigenous and world musics at Cal Arts, Naropa University,
Washington State University and the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he
received a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology in 2008.
After
earning a BFA degree in African music from Cal Arts in 1993, Hamill began his
MFA studies in Indian classical vocal music under the direction of Pandit
Rajeev Taranath, world-renowned vocalist and master of the sarod. Soon after receiving his degree, Chad was asked to join the
North Indian classical department at Cal Arts where he taught courses in Indian
classical theory, sargam, private
lessons, and Indian classical ensemble. He performs regularly in the US and has
been featured alongside artists such as Pandit Ramesh Misra, Ustad Roshan
Bhartiya, Pandit Nayan Ghosh, Abhiman Kaushal and Arup Chattopadhyay. Chad
Hamill continues his lifelong study of Indian classical music under the
direction of his guru, Pandit Rajeev Taranath.
A
descendant of the Spokane tribe, Hamill’s doctoral dissertation, Songs from Spirit: Power and Prayer in the
Columbia Plateau, explores traditional song as a catalyst for spiritual
power among tribes of the interior Northwest. In addition to regularly giving
papers at national meetings for the Society for Ethnomusicology, he has
presented papers at Native American and indigenous studies conferences,
including AISA (the American Indian Studies Association) and NAISA (the Native
American and Indigenous Studies Association). He recently completed a
manuscript titled Songs of Power and
Prayer in the Columbia Plateau: The Jesuit, the Medicine Man, and the Indian
Hymn Singer (Oregon State University Press, 2012), which examines the role
of song– both Native and Catholic– in the perpetuation of indigenous identity,
a phenomenon he explores largely through the relationship between Gibson Eli
(Hamill’s his great-uncle) “the last medicine man of the Spokan tribe,” Fr. Tom
Connolly, a Jesuit active in the Columbia Plateau for over half a century, and
Mitch Michael, an Indian hymn leader. Songs
of Power and Prayer will be a part of an indigenous studies series titled, First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous
Studies.