College of Music announces new Applied Jazz Strings course

The College of Musics Thompson Jazz Studies Program is excited to announce the addition of Applied Jazz Stringstaught by recent alumna and current泭Jazz Studies Lecturer Enion Pelta-Tillerto the colleges following BA, MM and DMA jazz performance degrees: BA with jazz emphasis, MM jazz performance + pedagogy and DMA jazz performance.
Jazz music is about more than trumpets, trombones, saxophones, bass, drums and the likeand no one knows that better than Pelta-Tiller. An accomplished musician, composer and educator, shes well aware of the rich history and complex contemporary reality of the uniquely American genre. Specifically, the role of stringed instruments in jazz holds a special place in Pelta-Tillers heart, and its no wonder:泭Shes a brilliant violinist and the varied history of jazz has long informed her approach to the instrument.泭
From her roles as a founding member of the critically acclaimed indie-folk group泭泭to directing the College of Musics泭Cross-Genre American Roots Strings Ensemble,泭Pelta-Tillers musical resume has incorporated a wide array of cues from the genre, past and present.
Especially in earlier forms of jazz, theres a strong tradition of violin players, Pelta-Tiller explains. Players like Stuff Smith, St矇phane Grappelli and Eddie South are some of the prominent names from that early era of the music who are really foundational to where strings in jazz comes from, and what people are still doing with string instruments in jazz.泭
I mean, even Ornette Coleman played the violin on some recordings, she adds, referring to the seminal free jazz pioneer of the 60s and 70s.
The role of strings in jazz has long been overlooked by historians and even musicians, but Pelta-Tiller will soon bring jazz strings back in the spotlight for College of Music students and performers: With approval by the universitys curriculum committee to launch the Applied Jazz Strings course in fall 2026, violinists, violists and cellists will be offered an in-depth experience into the profound and multifaceted role of strings in the birth, development and current course of jazz.泭
From exploring the violinists who led early jazz ensembles in the 20s and 30s to the bluegrass players and Western Swing pioneers who added new folk-based elements to the genre, the new course will shed fresh light on jazz and its component parts. Specifically, it will illustrate how African American musical traditions, European theory elements and folk strains from across the country fused in a uniquely American art form thats only continued to evolve and grow.
String instruments have been a part of jazz since its earliest days, notes Pelta-Tiller. But theyve been sidelined somewhat and its very exciting to bring back awareness of that history. I think a lot of students of jazz dont get to experience or study much of that early history and by bringing back these instruments, theres more of an opportunity to engage with it.
Indeedaccording to Pelta-Tillerengagement is key: She aims to ensure that students have plenty of opportunities to perform, even envisioning a full ensemble of string players taking on all the varied roles of a traditional jazz groupfrom rhythm to melody to percussion.
Its an ambitious vision that aligns both with Pelta-Tillers own musical history and the colleges泭universal musician approach to achieving its mission. Its exciting to revisit all this music that I love through my students eyes and finding new ways of engaging with it myself, she concludes.
Questions? Email泭thompsonjazzstudies@colorado.edu. For application info, visit泭釵棗梭棗娶硃餃棗.梗餃喝/鳥喝莽勳釵/硃餃鳥勳莽莽勳棗紳莽.