Facilities
Sage Hall
Sage Hall is home to the Department of Music. It houses abundant resources for music students and faculty, including an oustanding concert hall, an intimate recital hall, a digital classroom with electronic pianos, a well-equipped electroacoustic studio, an early-music room and numerous practice rooms with grand pianos.
Sweeney Concert Hall
Sweeney Concert Hall is one of the most sought–after concert halls in the northeast. This beautiful performance space seats more than 600, and its broad stage can readily accommodate the needs of a diverse range of performances, from solo recitals to large choral and orchestral ensembles. Sweeney's excellent acoustics are suitable for both vocal and instrumental performances. For information about reserving this space, please contact the department office staff.
Earle Recital Hall
Earle Recital Hall, located on the first floor of Sage Hall, is ideally suited for intimate performance occasions. The hall seats up to 120, and its stage can accommodate two grand pianos or small to medium ensembles. For information about reserving this space, please contact the department office staff.
Werner Josten Performing Arts Library
One of four libraries at Smith, the Werner Josten Library is one of the finest undergraduate music libraries in the nation. It is housed in the Mendenhall Center for the Performing Arts and is situated directly across a small courtyard from Sage Hall. The library contains an exceptional collection of more 108,000 volumes (books, scores, playscripts), 61,000 sound recordings, 3,300 video recordings and more than 260 current periodical titles. Access to the Internet is supplemented by a variety of full text and streaming audio and video databases. The Ankudowich Rare Book Room, the Einstein Manuscript Collection and other source material offer a rich opportunity for research. Besides the extensive listening facilities, there are individual and group study rooms as well as multimedia workstations.
Performance Instrument Resources
The Department’s instrument resources include excellent performance pianos and keyboard instruments: two Steinway “D”s, a Hamburg Steinway “C,” three harpsichords and three pipe organs (in the Helen Hills Hills Chapel and John M. Greene Hall) are regularly used for teaching and performance. The department’s fortepiano was built in 1985 by Robert E. Smith after a design by Conrad Graf.
The Department also has various woodwind, brass, and stringed instruments available for student use.
Digital Music Lab
The Digital Music Lab is home to thirteen workstations with 88-key weighted keyboards. The DML computers hold many exciting music software programs, including music notation software (Sibelius, Noteflight), Digital Audio Workstations (Reaper, Audacity), and other programs (Max MSP, SPEAR). Students who would like to request access to the Digitial Music Lab should email Anna Goudreau at agoudreau@smith.edu.