Carol Padgham Albrecht, Ph.D.
Carol Padgham Albrecht
Professor of Oboe and Music History, Emerita
304 Music
208-885-7242
Lionel Hampton School of Music
875 Perimeter Drive MS 4015
Moscow, Idaho 83844-4015
Carol Padgham Albrecht joined the faculty in 1989. Her teaching duties included the oboe studio, and undergraduate and graduate music history courses.
- Ph.D., Musicology/Ethnomusicology, Kent State University
- M.Mus., Oboe Performance, North Texas State University, 1980
- B.A., Music, North Texas State University, 1974
Carol Padgham Albrecht, associate professor of oboe and music history, holds a degree in oboe performance from the University of North Texas and a doctorate in musicology/ethnomusicology from Kent State University. Her oboe teachers include Noah Knepper, Richard Henderson, Charles Veazey, John Mack and Felix Kraus.
Albrecht’s career interests have always included both performance and historical scholarship and outreach. Prior to joining the LHSOM faculty in 1989 she was a program annotator for the Fort Worth and the Kansas City Symphony Orchestras. She appeared frequently in recitals and chamber music concerts and performed with the Kansas City Symphony, the Philharmonia of Greater Kansas City, and the St. Joseph (Missouri) Symphony Orchestra. She also developed a large private oboe studio.
Albrecht is an ardent champion of all members of the oboe family and frequently adapts and performs music for the English horn and the lesser-known oboe d’amore. She performs with the Northwest Wind Quintet and teaches the oboe studio, and she recently formed the UI Double Reed Quintet, incorporating all the members of the double reed family, oboe through contrabassoon. Her historical teaching interests are also quite broad. She teaches the music history survey (medieval through romantic periods); orchestra literature; period courses in the baroque, classical and romantic eras; and she has directed graduate seminars in Beethoven and Wagner. Albrecht likes to incorporate perspectives from political history, art, literature, language and general culture into her classes.
Albrecht has given many papers at professional societies including the American Musicological Society, College Music Society, the International Conference on Romanticism and the Midwest Jewish Studies Association. Her primary research area is musical activity and journalism in early 19th century Vienna, but her interests also extend to music and papal politics in the 15th century, as well as historical woodwind literature and pedagogy. For the past ten years she has spent a portion of every summer conducting research in Viennese archives. Her current work in progress is a study of the operatic singing profession in Vienna between the deaths of Mozart (1791) and Haydn (1809). She also enjoys giving oboe clinics and workshops to support the study of the instrument in the Inland Northwest.
- Oboe
- Music History