Dr. Samantha Ege

Assistant Professor

Build a Statement of Purpose

Generate a tailored SOP for Dr. Samantha Ege. Improve your application with a focused, well-structured draft.

Biography

Dr. Samantha Ege is a lecturer and music historian known for her award-winning work on African American composer Florence Price and critically acclaimed recordings of underrepresented composers. Her current research includes the world-premiere recording of Avril Coleridge-Taylor's Piano Concerto with the BBC Philharmonic and a collaboration featuring new commissions with the BBC Concert Orchestra. A Fellow of the Royal College of Music, Dr. Ege has received numerous accolades including the American Musicological Society's Noah Greenberg Award and the Society for American Music's Irving Lowens Article Award. She regularly writes on African-descended composers for publications such as the New York Guardian and the New Statesman, and has contributed to BBC Radio 3 documentaries. Dr. Ege's performances span the UK, Europe, North America, and Southeast Asia, and she has played with notable orchestras like BBC Philharmonic and Oakland Symphony. Her academic journey includes a PhD in Musicology from the University of York and a BA (Hons) in Music from the University of Bristol, along with a year as an exchange student at McGill University.

Research Interests

Experience

Lecturer

2021-01-01 — Present

University of Southampton • Southampton, ENG, GB

Lecturer in Music, focusing on historical musicology and recovery work.

Lord Crewe Junior Research Fellow in Music

2019-01-01 — 2021-01-01

Lincoln College, University of Oxford • Oxford, ENG, GB

Research fellow focusing on African American music history.

Awards

#2023

Irving Lowens Article Award

2023-03-01
#2021

Noah Greenberg Award

2021-01-01