Talk:Jocelyn Hagen

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I added these sources to meet the guidelines:

  1. Fietzer, William (April 4, 2019). "[CONCERT REVIEW] Jocelyn Hagen's The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci". Classical Post. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  2. ^ Munce, Chris. “Episode 7: The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci with Jocelyn Hagen,” Choralosophy, Podcast audio, April 8, 2019, https://choralosophy.com/category/podcasts/.
  3. ^ Strempel, Eileen (January 2017). "Consortium Commissioning: Jocelyn Hagen's Song Cycle Kiss". The Journal of Singing. 73 Issue 3: 251–260 – via ProQuest.
  4. ^ Garrett, Margaret Ann. “A Director’s Guide for Staging the Song Cycle Songs of Fields and Prairies by Jocelyn Hagen.” DMA diss., Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2008.https://digital.library.sbts.edu/handle/10392/464
  5. ^ Hughes, John C. (November 2011). "Reviewed Work: Benedictus. Jocelyn Hagen (b.1980: 2007)". The Choral Journal. 52, Issue 4: 69–70 – via ProQuest.
  6. Tiedemann, Garrett (Mar 27, 2019). "Leonardo da Vinci comes to life in new work by Minneapolis composer Jocelyn Hagen". Classical MPR. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  7. Culloton, Michael (2013). "Jocelyn Hagen and Timothy Takach: An Introduction to their Choral Music and a Study of their Positions within a Lineage of Minnesota-Based Composers". North Dakota State University Repository.
  8. Myers, Matthew J. (March 2020). "A Conductor's Guide to amass by Jocelyn Hagen". LSU DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS.

And added this source to verify the List of Works: https://www.jocelynhagen.com/list-of-works/

Three best sources to verify notability:

1. Culloton, Michael (2013). "Jocelyn Hagen and Timothy Takach: An Introduction to their Choral Music and a Study of their Positions within a Lineage of Minnesota-Based Composers". North Dakota State University Repository. https://library.ndsu.edu/ir/handle/10365/27231 This source is a doctoral dissertation examining the choral music of composers Jocelyn Hagen and Timothy Takach, and their contributions to the thriving choral music community in Minnesota.

2. Myers, Matthew J. (March 2020). "A Conductor's Guide to amass by Jocelyn Hagen". Lsu Doctoral Dissertations. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6234&context=gradschool_dissertations This source is a doctoral dissertation analyzing Jocelyn Hagen's multi-movement choral work, amass, and its innovation of the genre of the mass. (This piece also received 3rd place in the American Prize in Composition (Choral—Professional Division) in 2014. http://www.theamericanprize.org/compwinners2013.html )

3. Hagen's piece, The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, was reviewed by William Fietzer in The Classical Post: Fietzer, William (April 4, 2019). "[CONCERT REVIEW] Jocelyn Hagen's The Notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci". Classical Post. Retrieved August 27, 2020. https://classicalpost.com/read/2019/4/4/concert-review-jocelyn-hagen-the-notebooks-of-leonardo-da-vinci (and was scheduled for a performance at Carnegie Hall (April 19, 2020) but was cancelled due to COVID19: https://www.carnegiehall.org/Calendar/2020/04/19/Cancelled-The-National-Concert-Chorus-The-National-Concert-Orchestra-0830PM )

ELmalpass (talk) 16:21, 17 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

@ELmalpass: these sources are focused narrowly on Hagen's work. It is possible an article about a prominent piece written by the subject could be considered notable as a separate article. To accept a draft on the composer, we need some WP:SECONDARY coverage of biographical information about Hagen. ~Kvng (talk) 13:10, 20 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]