Biography
- PhD, musicology, Cornell University
- MA, musicology, Cornell University
- AB, music, Vassar College
Since joining Temple’s faculty in 1997, Steven Zohn has served as Provost’s Arts Fellow, Coordinator of Music History and the Boyer College’s Director of Graduate Studies. His research focuses on the music of Telemann and the Bach family, intersections of style and genre, print culture, reception history, domestic music-making, historical performance practices and music as intellectual property. His writings on these topics have been published widely in peer-reviewed journals, edited volumes, and reference works such as the Journal of the American Musicological Society, the Journal of Musicology, Eighteenth-Century Music, Bach Perspectives, the Journal of the Royal Musical Association, Early Music, Oxford Handbooks Online and The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Among his books are Music for a Mixed Taste: Style, Genre, and Meaning in Telemann’s Instrumental Works (Oxford University Press, 2008), The Telemann Compendium (Boydell, 2020) and Telemann Studies (Cambridge University Press). He has also edited volumes for the C. P. E. Bach and Telemann critical editions, and for the series Recent Researches in the Music of the Baroque Era.
In 2022, Zohn received the Georg-Philipp-Telemann-Preis der Landeshauptstadt Magdeburg (Georg Philipp Telemann Award of the State Capital of Magdeburg) for outstanding achievements in interpreting, cultivating and researching the life and works of Telemann. He was further invited to sign the “Golden Book” of Magdeburg for his work in fostering cultural connections between that city and Philadelphia. Zohn has also received the Noah Greenberg Award of the American Musicology Society and the William H. Scheide prize of the American Bach Society. His research has been supported by grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Philosophical Society and the German Academic Exchange Service.
Zohn has served as president of the Society for Eighteenth-Century Music, co-editor of the journal Eighteenth-Century Music, and general editor of the American Bach society, overseeing the society’s book series Bach Perspectives (University of Illinois Press) and ABS Guides (Oxford University Press). He also serves on several advisory and editorial boards, including that of the critical edition Georg Philipp Telemann: Musikalische Werke (Bärenreiter).
As a performer on historical flutes, Zohn co-directs the ensemble Night Music, holds principal positions with the Philadelphia Bach Collegium and NYS Baroque, and freelances with various other period-instrument ensembles. He has taught for The Juilliard School’s graduate program in historical performance and for Amherst Early Music. His recordings appear on the Acis, Avie, Centaur, and Newport Classic labels.
Among Zohn’s recent course offerings are “Music at Home: Domestic Musicking in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries,” “Sinning, Loving, Living, Dying: The Cantata in Context,” “Historical Performance Practices, 1700–1950,” “Music Minus One: Bach’s Music for Unaccompanied Melody Instrument,” and “Telemann and Music of the Enlightenment.”