2016-2017 Courses
Fall 2016-Summer 2017
Fall 2016 Academic Courses
MUSI 1310 Basic Musical Skills
3.0 credits
Lecture / Section 1 (Jeff Decker): MWF / 9:00-9:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 10949
Lecture / Section 2 (Justin Mueller): MWF / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 10950
Lecture / Section 3 (Aldona Dye): MWF / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 10951
Study of the rudiments of music and training in the ability to read music. Prerequisite: No previous knowledge of music required.
MUSI 1993 Independent Study
1.0 - 3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 2070 Popular Music:
Karl Hagstrom Miller
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 9:00-9:50 am / Wilson 301
Class Number: 14423
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Lydia Warren): M / 11:00-11:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 14424
Section 102 (Lydia Warren): W / 11:00-11:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 14425
Section 103 (Lydia Warren): F / 11:00-11:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 14426
Section 104 (Timothy Booth): M / 10:00-10:50 / OCH S008
Class Number: 14864
Section 105 (Timothy Booth): W / 11:00-11:50 / OCH S008
Class Number: 14865
Section 106 (Timothy Booth): F / 9:00-9:50 / OCH S008
Class Number: 14866
Section 107 (Rami Stucky): M / 11:00-11:50 / OCH S008
Class Number: 20907
Section 108 (Rami Stucky): W / 10:00-10:50 / OCH S008
Class Number: 20908
Section 109 (Rami Stucky): F / 11:00-11:50 / OCH S008
Class Number: 20909
The Stories We Tell about Popular Music
This lecture course on the history of popular music in the United States from the 1880s to today is organized around a series of stories or themes that seem to crop up again and again when people talk about pop music. Each week we will explore one of these stories, the social and cultural forces behind the story, and how it functions to shape how people have heard and understood popular music. Origin stories, stories of tradition or community, stories of individual artistic creations and the factory production of pop, taste and race, becoming a star and selling out: each have been around for a long time, but often appear new every time they arrive. Focusing on the stories we tell about popular music can help us assess the value of the narratives we have and help us to write new ones. It can open our ears to continuities of sound, style, and politics across time. It can tune us in to subtle differences as well.
The course will reveal how popular music intersects with business, technology, social history, and the myriad ways Americans used music in their everyday lives. Music is beyond the grasp of words. Its ephemeral quality – its inability to be reduced to one meaning, one word, one story – is the very reason that music can affect us so. Tunes have reminded people who they are and declared who they hoped to become. They built communities and tore them apart, asked forgiveness and demanded justice. They have been shouts in the wilderness and quiet whispers of love. Music has given pleasure by invoking the past, imagining the future, exclaiming desires, or allowing artists and audiences – for the duration of the performance – to imagine the world is just how they want it to be. Because of this, it provides a useful and revelatory window into the history of the United States.
MUSI 2302 Keyboard Skills (Beginning)
2.0 credits, instructor permission
Lecture / Section 1 (Amy Coddington): TR / 11:00 am - 12:15 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 10953
Lecture / Section 2 (John Mayhood): TR / 12:30-1:45 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 13733
Introductory keyboard skills; includes sight-reading, improvisation, and accompaniment at the keyboard in a variety of styles. No previous knowledge of music required. Satisfies the performance requirement for music majors.
MUSI 2308 Voice Class
Pam Beasley
2.0 credits, instructor permission
Lecture: MW / 4:00-4:50 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 14234
An introductory course to basic vocal technique; discussion to include those elements essential for healthy singing in a variety of styles. Will involve group and solo singing to apply these elements. No previous voice training or musical background required.
MUSI 2340 Learn to Groove
Robert Jospe
2.0 credits
Lecture / Section 1: MW / 10:00-10:50 am / Hunter Smith Band Building
Class Number: 11596
Lecture: MW / 11:00-11:50 am / Hunter Smith Band Building
Class Number: 15390
"Learn to Groove" hand drumming and rhythmic fluency with Robert Jospe. This is a hands on drumming/percussion class using congas, djembes, claves, shakers, etc. This class is designed to enhance ones knowledge of syncopated patterns associated with jazz, rock, African and Latin American music and to improve ones facility in playing these patterns. This course will follow my book "Learn To Groove" and can include music students, non music students and is open to students of all skill levels. The course requires that students have or purchase a hand drum of their own. Congas, bongos, djembes, doumbeks or any other hand drums are appropriate.
MUSI 2350 Technosonics: Digital Music and Sound Art Composition
Peter Bussigel
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 12:00-12:50 / Maury Hall 209
Class Number: 13561
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Ben Robertson): M / 9:00-9:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13562
Section 102 (Ben Robertson): M / 10:00-10:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13563
Section 103 (Ben Robertson): M / 11:00-11:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13564
Section 104 (Alex Christie): T / 9:30-10:20 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13565
Section 105 (Alex Christie): T / 10:30-11:20 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13566
Section 106 (Alex Christie): T / 11:30 am - 12:20 pm / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13567
Section 107 (Aaron Stepp): W / 9:00-9:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13568
Section 108 (Aaron Stepp): W / 10:00-10:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13569
Section 109 (Aaron Stepp): W / 11:00-11:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13570
Section 110 (Eli Stine): R / 9:30-10:20 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13834
Section 111 (Eli Stine): R / 10:30-11:20 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13835
Section 112 (Eli Stine): R / 11:30 am - 12:20 pm / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 13836
Section 113 (Chris Luna): F / 9:00 - 9:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 15651
Section 114 (Chris Luna): F / 10:00 - 10:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 15652
Section 115 (Chris Luna): F / 11:00 - 11:50 am / New Cabell 268
Class Number: 15653
This class (www.technosonics.net) explores the history, theory and practice of digital music and sound art. Students learn tools and techniques of music technology that inform many genres and traditions. In addition to historical and theoretical concerns, students will experiment with digital tools for musical creation.
MUSI 2559 / Section 1: Sound Studies: Anthropology and the Art of Sound Experience
Noel Lobley
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 19495
Section 101 (Caitlin Flay): M / 9:00-9:50 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 21390
Section 102 (Caitlin Flay): F / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH S008
Class Number: 21391
Section 103 (Caitlin Flay): W / 9:00-9:50 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 21392
In this new course we combine approaches from musicology, anthropology, and sound studies in order to explore and experience music, sound and artistic practice in their human (and non-human) behavioural contexts. What are the creative, ethical and social dimensions of sound art? What does music composed through animal dreams sound like? How do we imagine and hear the sounds of underwater and atmospheric anthropology? How do sound art, technology and design transform urban space and everyday social and political experience? In answering these and other questions, we investigate local and global sound cultures and trace the ways in which their sounds are sampled, remixed and circulated.
No prior musical experience is required.
MUSI 2559 / Section 2: Music, Meaning, and the Arts
Michael Puri
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 11:00-12:15 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 19497
What does music signify, and how does it convey meaning? What cultural significance has it assumed in the West, and how has this changed over time? How does its collaboration with other arts inflect both its significance and signifying ability? This lecture course seeks to answer these questions in an inquiry that focuses on Western art music from about 1800 to the present. We will examine revolutionary works by artists such as Beethoven, Wagner, and Stravinsky, alongside equally groundbreaking texts by authors such as Nietzsche, Baudelaire, and Schoenberg. By the end of this course, you should be able to speak and write about music and its role in multimedia works with greater knowledge, fluency, and imagination. Further, you should know much more about the history of Western art and art music through a direct encounter with primary sources, both verbal and sonic. This course is intended for non-music majors; no prior musical experience is required or expected.
MUSI 2559 / Section 3: Composer/Performer Collaboration
Shawn Earle
2.0 credits
Lecture: F / 9:00-10:50 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 21244
This course is for performers and composers interested in creating new music. Students enrolled in the class will collaborate with one another and will build new pieces together. The class will also intersect with the New Music Ensemble and the Percussion Ensemble, directed by I-Jen Fang. Topics will focus on how composers and performers collaborate together to build new musical repertoire.
Students in the class may also benefit from the CCT Composition Mentoring Program. For information on joining the mentoring program which pairs CCT grad students and undergrads, please contact Eli Stine.
Music Majors wishing to apply this class for the Music Major should plan to additionally enroll in a 1-credit independent study with professor Burtner. The combination of the independent study and the Lab will count together as one 3000-level elective requirement towards the Major.
MUSI 2600 Jazz Improvisation
John D'earth
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 3:30-5:00 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 12912
The Jazz Improvisation Workshop explores the basic techniques and procedures for improvising in jazz and other musical contexts. No previous jazz or improvising experience is required but students must demonstrate a degree of fluency on their main instrument, an ability to read music and some familiarity with the basics of music theory. An individual interview/audition with the instructor is required before registering for this class.
MUSI 2993: Independent Study
1.0 - 3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 3040 Studies in 20th and 21st-Century Music
Joel Rubin
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 11:00-12:15 / OCH B012
Class Number: 15518
Want to learn why people were beating each other up in the aisles at the premiere of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring? Why Schoenberg’s music is still avant-garde over a century after it’s creation? How the Jazz Age influenced classical music and vice versa? How folk and world musical traditions influenced classical music? What happened to the music under totalitarian regimes? How art movements like Dadaism and Minimalism influenced the direction of music? Why Boulez declared Schoenberg to be dead, and why he and his colleagues were later termed “fascists”? How did post-war music and electronic influence the Beatles and other pop musicians, and how did pop music and jazz feed into the development of minimalism? What is the place of women, and African-American and other minority composers in contemporary music? How did improvisation and Zen Buddhism influence John Cage and other post-war composers? Is John Zorn’s music classical, jazz or something else? And how on earth did Cage land a spot on “I’ve Got a Secret” or the US Navy band end up performing arrangements of Zorn? We cover that and more!
MUSI 3040, Studies in Twentieth and Twenty-first Century Music, offers insight into understanding the complex developments in Western art music from the turn of the 20th century to the present. We will study numerous compositional movements, composers and their works, looking at aspects such as compositional and performance style and techniques within the broader framework of social, cultural and political movements of the time. We will also read what the composers themselves and other writers from the time said about the music. The goal is to help you form your own opinions and interpretations of the music—not only of the examples that we study in class, but of the many others that you may encounter both during and after this class as performers, composers and/or listeners. While the course materials focus primarily on the Euro-American situation, we will also examine developments more globally, drawing on developments in popular, jazz, folk and world musical traditions.
Fulfills part of the 'Critical and comparative studies in music' requirement for majors. Prerequisite: MUSI 3310
MUSI 3050 Music and Discourse
3.0 credits
Fred Maus
Lecture: MWF / 1:00-1:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 13838
Studies the range of music that has flourished in the twentieth century, including modernist and post-modern art music, popular music, and world music, through historical, critical, and ethnographic approaches.
MUSI 3070 Intro to Musical Ethnography
Nomita Dave
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 3:30-4:45 pm, OCH 107
Class Number: 19696
This course explores ways of examining and representing music and sound as a fundamentally social practice. Such an approach looks beyond the notes to study music as part of human social life and experience. Readings and listenings will focus on a number of contexts from throughout the world, including Portuguese fado songs, rainforest soundscapes, and urban street dance in the U.S. We will consider in-depth the theories and methods involved in conducting research and writing about sound and music as social phenomena, considering the roles and perspectives of musicians, listeners, markets and the media. We will also examine the role of the researcher, considering the ethical issues involved in representing music and culture, both from elsewhere and ‘at home’. Students will apply the methods we discuss in class in a final project on music-making and –listening in and around Charlottesville.
MUSI 3310 Theory I
3.0 credits
Lecture / Section 2 (Fred Maus): MWF / 10:00-10:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 10956
Lecture / Section 3 (Scott DeVeaux): MWF / 11:00-11:50 / OCH B012
Class Number: 10957
Lecture / Section 3 (Kevin Davis): MWF / 9:00-9:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 21382
Studies pitch and formal organization in European concert music of the 18th and 19th centuries. Includes four-part vocal writing, 18th-century style keyboard accompaniment, key relations, and form. Students compose numerous short passages of music and study significant compositions by period composers.
MUSI 3332 and 3334 Musicianship I and II
2.0 credit
These lab courses give practical experience with many aspects of musical perception, performance, and creation. These will include sight-reading and sight-singing; dictation of melody, rhythm, and harmony; aural identification of intervals, chords, and rhythmic patterns; and exercises in musical memory and improvisation. Students entering the sequence take a test to determine the appropriate level of their first course. At the end of each course, students take a placement test to determine whether they may enter a higher level course. Courses may be repeated for credit, but each course may be counted toward the major only once.
MUSI 3332 Musicianship I
Lecture / Section 1 (Adam Carter): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 10959
Lecture / Section 2 (Tracey Stewart): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 10958
Lecture / Section 3 (Victoria Clark): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 18759
MUSI 3334 Musicianship II
Lecture (Kyle Chattleton): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 15391
MUSI 3370 Songwriting
Ted Coffey
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 2:00-3:15 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 13839
The goal of this course is to delve into songwriting; to develop your aural, analytic and creative abilities and to join them together in understanding and composing songs. You will learn about rhythm, melodic design, harmonic progression, lyrics and song forms. You will also work on eartraining, so that concepts you learn will be sonically meaningful. We will consider examples from a broad musical spectrum: blues, folk, tin pan alley, musicals, R & B, rock & roll, hip hop. We will also discuss the issues that songwriters encounter. You will have the opportunity to suggest songs for study, and some assignments will be done in groups. In these situations, we will organize groups that have complementary abilities for in-class performances. The Lab is a required part of the class, and you must sign up for a lab section. During the lab you will go over concepts we are covering in class, as well as work on additional eartraining, analysis and creative projects.
MUSI 3390 Introduction to Music and Computers
Luke Dahl
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 9:30-10:45 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 10960
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Jon Bellona): F / 11:00-11:50am / B011
Class Number: 10962
Section 102 (Jon Bellona): F / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 10961
Section 103 (Jon Bellona): F / 1:00-1:50 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 10963
Introduction to Music and Computers is an upper-level introductory course in music technology. Students gain theoretical, historical and practical knowledge of electronic and computer music. An emphasis is placed on creative hands-on experience composing music via digital technologies. Theoretical and practical topics include acoustics, recording, editing and mixing, MIDI, sound synthesis, and audio DSP. Students learn a host of skills and technologies useful for working with digital audio.
3390 fulfills the composition requirement of the Music Major. This is a composition class and key assignments are creative in nature. Note that you MUST register for the Lab (0 credits) as well as the course.
MUSI 3559 Making Art in/with Communities
Peter Bussigel
3.0 credits
Lecture: T / 4:00-4:50 & R / 4:00-6:00 / CAM 425
Class Number: 20087
What do we mean by community art? How can site-specific performance be used as a platform for social change? Is art-making a right or a privilege? This year-long, practice-driven course exposes students to the intersections of collective art-making and civic engagement. After careful consideration of the history, ethics, and organizational structures of community engaged art practices, we will work collaboratively with a designated community to design and implement art projects and programming. Drawing largely from site-specific performance and art practices, we will develop context-specific approaches to art-making that provide a platform for sharing community concerns.
MUSI 3993 Independent Study
1.0-3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 4331 Theory III
Michael Puri
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 2:00-3:15 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 10965
Studies in 18th-, 19th-, and 20th-century techniques and styles through analysis and composition. Prerequisite: MUSI 3320 or instructor permission.
MUSI 4507 Composers
Topic: Minimal Music: Drone- & Loop-Based Composition since 1960
Victor Szabo
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 12:30-1:45 / OCH 107
Class Number: 19274
This class explores the history and aesthetics of the drone and loop in Western music since 1960. We will study music by “minimalist” composers such as La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Meredith Monk, John Adams, Julius Eastman, Eliane Radigue, and Arvo Pärt. We will also explore the cultural history and aesthetics of drone- and loop-based popular musics such as hip hop, ambient, and EDM. Readings and discussions will address such questions as: What cultural and technological factors played a role in the genesis of “minimalism” in the 1960s? How might one compare minimal music with minimalist sculpture or painting? How did these composers engage African and Asian practices and philosophies? And how do we explain the connections between minimal music and dance, meditation, and trance? In addition to weekly assignments, students will undertake one major project (research, analysis, performance, or composition) of their choosing.
Pre-requisite: MUSI 1310 or 3310 or basic music theory.
MUSI 4519 Critical Studies of Music
Topic: Soundscapes: Music and the Environment
Noel Lobley
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 1:00-2:15 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 15392
Water drumming, desert songlines and honk-horn orchestras. Microphones, sound archives, and melting glaciers. Resonant rainforests, acoustic niche theory, and inter-species music-making. How do people, music and sound express, conserve and perform the environment? Combining interdisciplinary approaches from ecomusicology, soundscape ecology, sensory ethnography and composition, we will consider why studying contemporary and historical soundscapes through the lenses of heritage, conservation, sustainability and activism links us to some of the biggest threats facing the environment today.
MUSI 4533 Advanced Musicianship
Michael Slon
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 2:00-2:50 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 18761
MUSI 4535 Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE)
Peter Bussigel
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 6:00-7:15 / OCH B011
Class Number: 20093
Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE) is an advanced seminar in composition, software programming and intermedia performance. The class explores the theoretical and practical aspects of composing and performing real-time interactive multimedia with computers. Emphasis is placed on gaining a deeper and more personal understanding of the possibilities of human-computer interaction in music and the arts. Students in the class form the Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE) and create new works for the group to perform. Musicians are encouraged to join MICE, and this class meets a composition requirement for the Music Major. Creative and technology-oriented students from the other Arts Departments and Engineering are also encouraged to join the class as we will focus on intermedia approaches to live performance with technology.
MUSI 4543 Sound Studio
Ted Coffey
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 3:30-4:45 / OCH B011
Class Number: 18762
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Ryan Maguire): TBA / OCH B011
Class Number: 21245
Pre-requisite: MUSI-3390, Permission of the Instructor
This upper-level seminar explores experimental techniques in sound recording, processing, mixing, and music production generally. The course assumes proficiency with DAWs, including experience using basic, commercial effects such as EQ, compression, and time-based effects. We will use MaxMSP (https://cycling74.com/products/max/) to create custom applications for playing with sound. Participants will find past experience with MaxMSP, other sound synthesis software languages, and-or programming / scripting languages helpful; however, willingness to embrace MaxMSP and thinking algorithmically will suffice. Beyond this technological focus, we will look at the role of instrumental performance in sound design — particularly experimental and so-called extended technique. Listening and reading assignments will complement weekly creative projects. Creative work will culminate in a final portfolio of sound design and songs.
MUSI 4559 Designing New Musical Instruments: Sound Synthesis & Control
Luke Dahl
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 3:30-4:45 / B011
Class Number: 15575
New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) is a growing field that explores technologies for performing music. NIME is interdisciplinary, incorporating perspectives from music, sculpture, engineering, human-computer interaction (HCI), and design. Starting in the Fall, we will offer a two-course sequence on designing, building, and performing with new musical interfaces. MUSI 4559 is the first class in this sequence.
This class will cover the basic skills needed for building new musical interfaces. We will learn real-time digital sound synthesis and use sensors to measure users’ movements as control data. The class is primarily project based, and we will prototype a number of new musical instruments to explore different types of synthesis and interaction. We will use microcontrollers and single-board computers to embed electronics within various physical form-factors. Some experience with music and technology is expected.
MUSI 4710 Instrumental Conducting I
Kate Tamarkin
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 2:00-3:15 / OCH 113
Class Number: 14434
MUSI 4993: Independent Study
1.0 - 3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll
Fall 2016 Graduate Courses
MUSI 7511 Current Studies in Research and Criticism
Richard Will
3.0 credits
Lecture: T / 2:00-4:30 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 11470
MUSI 7512 Studies in Jazz
Scott DeVeaux
3.0 credits
Lecture: R / 2:00-4:30 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: TBA
MUSI 7524 Field Research/Ethnography
Michelle Kisliuk
3.0 credits
Lecture: W / 2:30-5:00 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 18765
MUSI 7547 Materials of Contemporary Music
Matthew Burtner
3.0 credits
Lecture: T / 2:00-4:30 /OCH B011
Class Number: 18766
MUSI 7583 Proseminar in Composition
Judith Shatin
3.0 credits
Lecture: M / 3:15-5:45 pm / OCH Wilson 134
Class Number: 14435
MUSI 7582 Composition
3.0 credits
MUSI 8820: Advanced Composition
3.0 credits
MUSI 8840: Advanced Composition
3.0 credits
MUSI 8910: Supervised Research
3.0 credits
Reading and/or other work in particular fields under supervision of an instructor. Normally taken by first-year graduate students.
MUSI 8920: Supervised Research
3.0 credits
MUSI 8960: Thesis
3.0 credits
MUSI 8993: Independent Study
1.0-3.0 credits
Independent study dealing with a specific topic. Requirements will place primary emphasis on independent research.
MUSI 8998: Non-topical Research
3.0-12.0 credits
MUSI 8999: Non-topical Research
3.0-12.0 credits
MUSI 9010: Directed Readings
3.0 credits
MUSI 9910: Supervised Research
3.0 credits
Reading and/or other work in particular fields under supervision of an instructor. Normally taken by second year graduate students.
MUSI 9920: Supervised Research
3.0 credits
MUSI 9940: Independent Research
3.0 credits
Research carried out by graduate student in consultation with an instructor.
MUSI 9998: Non-topical Research
3.0-12.0 credits
Preliminary research directed towards a dissertation in consultation with an instructor.
MUSI 9999: Non-Topical Research
3.0-12.0 credits
Preliminary research directed towards a dissertation in consultation with an instructor.
Fall 2016 Ensembles
MUBD 2610, 2620, 2630 and 2640: Marching Band I-IV
Bill Pease
2.0 credits
Lecture: TRF / 6:00-8:20 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building
MUBD 2610
Class Number: 10873
MUBD 2620
Class Number: 10874
MUBD 2630
Class Number: 10875
MUBD 2640
Class Number: 10876
The Cavalier Marching Band is open to all students at the University of Virginia by audition. The band is comprised of members from nearly every major at UVA. A normal practice schedule is twice a week, with additional Friday practices on home game weeks. Attendance is mandatory at our band camp in August. There are no fees to be in the Cavalier marching Band. IF you are interested please contact the band office at 434.982.5347 or email William Pease .
MUEN 2690, 3690 and 4690 African Music and Dance Ensemble
Michelle Kisliuk
2.0 credits
Lecture: R / 5:00-6:30 pm / OCH 107
(registration number depends on student seniority in the ensemble)
MUEN 2690
Class Number: 15674
MUEN 3690
Class Number: 15675
MUEN 4690
Class Number: 15676
The African Music and Dance Ensemble is a practical, hands-on course focusing on several music/dance forms from Western and Central Africa with performances during and at the end of the semester. Though no previous experience with music or dance is required, we will give special attention to developing tight ensemble dynamics, aural musicianship, and a polymetric sensibility. Concentration, practice, and faithful attendance are required of each class member, the goal being to develop an ongoing U.Va. African Music and Dance Ensemble.
MUEN 3600 Jazz Ensemble
John D'earth
2.0 credits
Lecture: MR / 7:30-9:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10877
Led by internationally recognized jazz trumpeter/composer John D'earth, the Jazz Ensemble is a full-sized jazz big band, whose focus includes “head arrangements” group improvisation, world music and original compositions from within the band, along with music ranging from swing to bop to fusion. You'll gain valuable experience in ensemble playing and in the art of solo improvisation, and may take private instruction in jazz improvisation, perform in small combos and participate in jazz workshops held by such major figures as Michael Brecker, John Abercrombi, Dave Leibman, Bob Moses, Clark Terry, and Joe Henderson.
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3610: Charlottesville Symphony at the University of Virginia
Kate Tamarkin, Conductor
2.0 credits
Strings
Lecture / Section 100: W / 7:30-10:00 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10878
Sectionals: M / 5:30-7:00 pm
Section 101: Pete Spaar (Double Bass) / OCH B012
Class Number: 10880
Section 102: Adam Carter (Cello) / OCH S004
Class Number: 10881
Section 103: Ayn Balija (Viola) / OCH 113
Class Number: 10882
Section 104: Daniel Sender (Violin) / OCH 107
Class Number: 10883
Section 105: David Sariti (Violin) / OCH B018
Class Number: 10884
Brass / Woodwinds / Percussion
Lecture / Section 200: W / 7:30-10:00 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10879
Sectionals: W / 5:15-6:15 pm
Section 201: Elizabeth Roberts (Bassoon) / TBA
Class Number: 10888
Section 202: Katy Ambrose (Horn) / OCH 113
Class Number: 10886
Section 203: Kelly Peral (Oboe) / TBA
Class Number: 10889
Section 204: Shawn Earle (Clarinet) / TBA
Class Number: 10885
Section 205: Kelly Sulick (Flute) / OCH B019
Class Number: 10887
Section 206: Nate Lee (Trombone) / B012
Class Number: 10892
Section 207: Rachel Duncan (Trumpet) / 107
Class Number: 10891
Section 208: I-Jen Fang (Percussion) / B018
Class Number: 10890
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3620 Wind Ensemble
Bill Pease
2.0 credits
Lecture: M / 6:45-9:00 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building / Room 200
Class Number: 11399
The Wind Ensemble is a 45-member ensemble that features the most outstanding brass, woodwind, and percussion players at the University. The focus of this ensemble is to explore new literature as well as perform the masterworks of the wind band era. The wind ensemble also works with outstanding guest performers and conductors. This group is predominately made up of non-music majors who enjoy the genre of the wind band. Open to all University of Virginia students, auditions are held prior to the start of each semester. For more information on the Wind Ensemble, please visit our webpage at: http://music.virginia.edu/wind-ensemble.
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 3: Flute Ensemble
Kelly Sulick
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10893
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 4: Woodwind Ensemble
Elizabeth Roberts
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10896
Explore, rehearse and perform woodwind chamber music, including both standard and more obscure works. Focus on developing chamber music playing skills, learning the tendencies of the woodwind instruments, developing musicianship, and enjoying making and sharing music! Instructor permission and audition required.
MUEN 3630, Section 5: Trombone Ensemble
Nate Lee
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10898
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition. Contact Nathaniel Lee to schedule an audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 8: Horn Ensemble
Katy Ambrose
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10897
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 9: Percussion Chamber Ensemble
I-Jen Fang
1.0 credit
Lecture: T / 9:30-10:50 am / OCH B018
Class Number: 10900
Restricted to Instructor permission by audition on first day of class.
Re-established in spring 2005 by I-Jen Fang, principal timpanist and percussionist with Charlottesville Symphony, the Percussion Ensemble is a chamber group that performs literature ranging from classical transcriptions to contemporary music. The ensemble draws upon a large family of pitched and non-pitched percussion instruments, and the number of players and amount of equipment varies greatly from piece to piece. Music reading skills and basic percussion technique on all percussion instruments is required. Previous percussion ensemble experience is highly recommended. If you are interested in joining please contact I-Jen Fang.
MUEN 3630, Section 15: Brass Quintet
Rachel Duncan
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10899
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 24: Woodwind Quintet
Shawn Earle
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: TBA
Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Chamber Music Ensemble
1.0 credit, Instructor permission by audition.
Lecture: / Section 1: Daniel Sender / TBA
Class Number: 10895
Lecture: / Section 17: Ayn Balija / TBA
Class Number: 10903
Lecture: / Section 18: David Sariti / TBA
Class Number: 10904
Lecture: / Section 20: Adam Carter / TBA
Class Number: 10905
Lecture: / Section 23: John Mayhood / TBA
Class Number: 12007
MUEN 3630: Jazz Chamber Ensemble
1.0 credit, Instructor permission by audition.
Lecture / Section 7: Pete Spaar / R / 5:30-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10901
Lecture / Section 12: Pete Spaar / F / 12:30-2:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10902
Lecture / Section 21: Jeff Decker / T / 5:30-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 11597
Lecture / Section 22: Mike Rosensky / F / 2:00-3:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 11598
MUEN 3640: Klezmer Ensemble
Joel Rubin
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 7:30-9:30 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 14436
Klezmer, originally the ritual and celebratory music of the Yiddish-speaking Jews of Eastern Europe, was brought to North America by immigrants around the turn of the last century. Since the 1970s, a dynamic revival of this tradition has been taking place in America and beyond. Klezmer’s recent popularity has brought it far from its roots in medieval minstrelsy and Jewish ritual and into the sphere of mainstream culture. The traditional klezmer style presents the experienced instrumentalist with a range of technical challenges with its characteristic note bends, rubati, Baroque-style embellishments and other micro-improvisational techniques, opening up a world of expressive possibilities not available to them from either classical music or jazz. This music was passed on orally from generation to generation, and many of the ornaments which are so integral to the klezmer sound can only be approximated by Western staff notation – not to mention the patterns of improvised variation which are the cornerstone of the style. There will therefore be an emphasis on learning by ear as much as possible, but we will be using music in the form of lead sheets and other written instructional materials to supplement sound examples.
The class focuses on the study and performance of various traditions, including the klezmer traditions of New York between the two world wars, 19th century Eastern Europe, as well as original contemporary compositions. Emphasis will be on learning by ear, improvisation within a modal context, and learning to develop a cohesive ensemble sound. Concentration, practice, and good attendance are required of each ensemble member.
Admission is by audition during first class period of semester or prior to that, by appointment with the instructor.
MUEN 3645: Bluegrass Workshop
Richard Will
1.0 credit, Instructor permission
Lecture: T / 7:00-8:00 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: TBA
This course seeks to develop the playing, singing, and improvising skills necessary for the idomatic performance of bluegrass music, while also providing an opportunity for discussion of its origins and development. Appropriate for experienced players working to improve their knowledge or for players versed in other genres to learn new styles.
MUEN 3650: University Singers
Michael Slon
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 3:30-5:30 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10907
The University Singers is the University's premier SATB ensemble, performing a cappella and accompanied choral literature ranging from chant to the works of contemporary composers. Past repertoire has included Bach's Mass in B minor, Orff's Carmina Burana, the Duruflé Requiem, and Bernstein's Chichester Psalms, as well as shorter a cappella works. Recent trips have taken the group to Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, New Orleans, New York City, Philadelphia, and the National Cathedral in Washington D.C., as well as the campuses of other American universities for collaborative concerts. The group has also been heard on European tours in England, Italy, Belgium, Germany, and Switzerland. Recent highlights have included performances with the Charlottesville Symphony at the University of Virginia, a concert and workshop with Bobby McFerrin, and a concert tour of the Southeastern U.S.
Students in the University Singers come from all six of UVA's undergraduate schools, including Arts and Sciences, Education, and Engineering, as well as several of the University's graduate and professional schools. Together, they enjoy an esprit de corps that arises from the pursuit of musical excellence and the camaraderie the singers develop offstage.
All singers at the University - undergraduates, graduate students, staff, and faculty are encouraged to audition. University Singers is offered for two hours academic credit. Michael Slon, who has conducted choruses at the Oberlin Conservatory and Indiana University School of Music, is the conductor. For more information on the University Singers, please visit our webpage.
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3651: Chamber Singers
Michael Slon
2.0 credits
Lecture: F / 1:00-3:15 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 10906
Chamber Singers is a select ensemble drawn from the University Singers. The ensemble meets once a week and focuses on music for chamber choir ranging from the Renaissance to contemporary pieces. Recent performances have included the Monteverdi Mass for 4 voices (1651), Britten'sHymn to St. Cecilia, and Bach's Cantata 150, as well as contemporary works by Meredith Monk and Eric Whitacre, and arrangements of classic jazz standards by Harold Arlen, Jerome Kern, and the King's Singers. Interested singers will be considered for the chamber ensemble as part of their University Singers audition. For more information, please visit our webpage.
Restricted to: Instructor permission
MUEN 3670: Early Music Ensemble: Baroque Orchestra
David Sariti
2.0 credit
Lecture: R / 7:00-9:00 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 11471
The Baroque Orchestra, directed by David Sariti, offers students the rare opportunity to perform music of the 17th and 18th centuries on the instruments for which it was written, at low pitch. Students use period instruments from the University's extensive collection, receiving personal instruction on the special techniques necessary, and must be accomplished on their modern counterparts.
MUEN 3680: New Music Ensemble
I-Jen Fang
1.0 credit
Lecture: R / 3:30-5:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10908
Restricted to Instructor permission by audition on first day of class.
Performance of vocal and instrumental music of the twentieth century.
A one-credit course at the University of Virginia, the New Music Ensemble explores and performs exciting music of our time. The ensemble consists of dedicated instrumentalists, singers and UVa performance faculty. We perform a wide variety of contemporary music suitable to our instrumentation, including new works created by UVa composers.
The New Music Ensemble seeks dedicated instrumentalists and singers to explore and perform a wide variety of contemporary music. To audition, come to the first class with your instrument. If you are interested in joining please contact I-Jen Fang.
Open to UVA students, community musicians and advanced high school students.
Spring 2017 Academic Courses
MUSI 1010 Introduction to Music
Richard Will
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 9:30-10:20 pm / Gilmer 190
Class Number: 13641
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Justin Mueller): F / 9:00-9:50 am / OCH S008r4
Class Number: 13642
Section 102 (Justin Mueller): F / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH S008
Class Number: 13643
Section 103 (Justin Mueller): F / 11:00-11:50 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 13644
What is music? How does it work? Why do we listen to it? We will study numerous examples, focusing on Western "classical" music, opera, religious music, musical theater, and film music. We will discuss all the activities that make up the experience of music, including but not limited to composing, improvising, dancing, performing, recording, marketing, selling, listening, and watching. We will ask how music shapes identities, our own and those of many different communities from the 18th century to the present. The goal is to help you form your own informed opinions about music, not just the examples on the syllabus but any music you may encounter. No musical experience necessary.
MUSI 1310 Basic Musical Skills
3.0 credits
Lecture / Section 1 (Jeff Decker): MWF / 9:00-9:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 10867
Lecture / Section 2 (Aaron Stepp): MWF / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 10868
Lecture / Section 3 (Kyle Chattleton): MWF / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 10866
Lecture / Section 4 (Victor Szabo): MWF / 12:00-12:50 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 21440
Study of the rudiments of music and training in the ability to read music. Prerequisite: No previous knowledge of music required.
MUSI 1620 History of the Wind Band
William Pease
2.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 11:00-11:50 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building
Class Number: 19878
The class is designed to give an introductory look at wind band music development from the early 20th century to present. The class does not require any previous musical experience. The course provides students with historical facts surrounding the wind band movement while allowing students to experience the music aurally.
MUSI 1993 Independent Study
1.0 - 3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 2070 Popular Music
Noel Lobley
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 12:00-12:50 am / Maury 209
Class Number: 13997
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Tracey Stewart): T / 9:30-10:20 am / OCH S008
Class Number: 13998
Section 102 (Tracey Stewart): T / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH S008
Class Number: 13999
Section 103 (Tracey Stewart): T / 12:30-1:20 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 14000
Section 104 (Timothy Booth): R / 9:30-10:20 am / OCH S008
Class Number: 14001
Section 105 (Timothy Booth): R / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH S008
Class Number: 14002
Section 106 (Timothy Booth): R / 12:30-1:20 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 14003
Section 107 (Ryan Maguire): T / 9:30-10:20 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 14689
Section 108 (Ryan Maguire): T / 11:00-11:50 am / Pavilion VIII 103
Class Number: 14690
Section 109 (Ryan Maguire): T / 2:00-2:50 pm/ OCH 113
Class Number: 14691
Section 110 (Rami Stucky): R / 9:30-10:20 am / OCH 107
Class Number: 14805
Section 111 (Rami Stucky): R / 2:00-2:50 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 14806
Section 112 (Rami Stucky): R / 12:30-1:20 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 14807
Scholarly and critical study of music circulated through mass media. Specific topic for the semester (e.g. world popular music, bluegrass, country music, hip-hop, Elvis Presley) announced in advance. No previous knowledge of music required.
Love, fame and money; heartbreak, obscurity and the rise and fall of immense industries. Popular musics touch, move, drive and become almost everyone on the planet, and yet how do we study the songs and sounds we hear everywhere and everyday. What makes music popular? Why do we like music? What identities, values and messages do we share through popular music?
In this course we will connect a dizzying range of popular music genres –from rock to reggae, from global hip hop to country, from EDM to love ballads – tracing fascinating stories that inevitably link love and temptation, money and crime, dreams and death.
Our special topics will include a close look at global hip hop, global rock, and the rise and fall of the recording industries.
MUSI 2302 Keyboard Skills (Beginning)
2.0 credits, instructor permission
Lecture / Section 1 (Caitlin Flay): TR / 11:00 am - 12:15 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 11452
Lecture / Section 2 (Caitlin Flay): TR / 9:30-10:45 am / OCH 113
Class Number: 13450
Introductory keyboard skills; includes sight-reading, improvisation, and accompaniment at the keyboard in a variety of styles. No previous knowledge of music required. Satisfies the performance requirement for music majors.
MUSI 2304 Keyboard Skills (Intermediate)
John Mayhood
2.0 credits, instructor permission
Lecture: TR / 12:30-1:45 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 11453
Intermediate keyboard skills for students with some previous musical experience. Satisfies the performance requirement for music majors. Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUSI 2306 Fretboard Harmony
Mike Rosensky
2.0 credits, Instructor Permission
Lecture: MWF / 1:00-1:50 / OCH B012
Class Number: 11454
The level of this course will vary, anywhere from beginning to advanced, each semester depending on the guitar experience of students who enroll. Students should contact Mike Rosensky (mlr5q@virginia.edu) during pre-registration letting him know of their interest in the course and of their intent to show up for the first class of the semester when the level and the make-up of the class will be ultimately determined.
In Fretboard Harmony a theory-based approach will be taken to understanding how musical materials (scales, arpeggios, chord voicings) "fit" on the guitar. The majority of class meeting time is spent with guitars in hand "drilling" new material. Practice methods will be explored, with an emphasis on learning how to practice effectively and efficiently.
MUSI 2340 Learn to Groove
Robert Jospe
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH B018
Class Number: 13121
"Learn to Groove" hand drumming and rhythmic fluency with Robert Jospe. This is a hands on drumming/percussion class using congas, djembes, claves, shakers, etc. This class is designed to enhance ones knowledge of syncopated patterns associated with jazz, rock, African and Latin American music and to improve ones facility in playing these patterns. This course will follow my book "Learn To Groove" and can include music students, non music students and is open to students of all skill levels. The course requires that students have or purchase a hand drum of their own. Congas, bongos, djembes, doumbeks or any other hand drums are appropriate.
MUSI 2342 Learn to Groove Intermediate
Robert Jospe
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH B018
Class Number: 14418
"Learn to Groove" hand drumming and rhythmic fluency with Robert Jospe. This is the intermediate level of the class. It is a hands on drumming/percussion class using congas, djembes, claves, shakers, etc. This class is designed to enhance ones knowledge of syncopated patterns associated with jazz, rock, African and Latin American music and to improve ones facility in playing these patterns.
MUSI 2370 Making Rock
Ted Coffey
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 3:30-4:20 pm / Maury 104
Class Number: 15021
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Ben Robertson): W / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH B011
Class Number: 15022
Section 102 (Ben Robertson): W / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 15023
Section 103 (Ben Robertson): W / 1:00-1:50 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 15024
Section 104 (Alex Christie): M / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH B011
Class Number: 19880
Section 105 (Alex Christie): M / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 19881
Section 106 (Alex Christie): M / 1:00-1:50 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 19882
An introduction to rock from the 1950's to the present, comprising musical, cultural and technological histories and compositional projects, informed by the points of view and poetic processes of their makers. The course is organized around musical and poetic foundations such as the backbeat, affect, control vs. abandon, distortion, production, the solo, and lyric innovation. Creative assignments involve producing musical expressions of rock.
MUSI 2559 Composer/Performer Collaboration
Shawn Earle
2.0 credits
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: TBA
This course is for performers and composers interested in creating new music. Students enrolled in the class will collaborate with one another and will build new pieces together. The class will also intersect with the New Music Ensemble and the Percussion Ensemble, directed by I-Jen Fang. Topics will focus on how composers and performers collaborate together to build new musical repertoire.
Students in the class may also benefit from the CCT Composition Mentoring Program. For information on joining the mentoring program which pairs CCT grad students and undergrads, please contact Eli Stine.
Music Majors wishing to apply this class for the Music Major should plan to additionally enroll in a 1-credit independent study with professor Burtner. The combination of the independent study and the Lab will count together as one 3000-level elective requirement towards the Major.
MUSI 2600 Jazz Improvisation
John D'earth
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 3:30-5:00 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 12285
The Jazz Improvisation Workshop explores the basic techniques and procedures for improvising in jazz and other musical contexts. No previous jazz or improvising experience is required but students must demonstrate a degree of fluency on their main instrument, an ability to read music and some familiarity with the basics of music theory. An individual interview/audition with the instructor is required before registering for this class.
MUSI 2993: Independent Study
1.0 - 3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 3020 Studies in 17th- & 18th-Century Music
Richard Will
4.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 2:00-3:15 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 19883
MUSI 3050 Music and Discourse
3.0 credits
Lecture / Section 1 (Karl Miller): MWF / 10:00-10:50 / OCH B012
Class Number: 10879
Lecture / Section 2 (Amy Coddington): MWF / 1:00-1:50 / OCH 113
Class Number: 14004
Studies the range of music that has flourished since the end of the 19th century including modernist and post-modern art music, popular music, and world music, through historical, critical, and ethnographic approaches. Prerequisite: The ability to read music, or any three-credit course in music, or instructor permission.
MUSI 3090 Performance in Africa
Michelle Kisliuk
4.0 credits
Seminar: T / 3:30-5:00 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 13452
Lab Section:
Section 101 (Lydia Warren): TR / 5:30-7:15 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 13584
Explores performance in Africa through reading, discussion, audio and video examples, and hands-on practice. Tuesday afternoon (4:00-5:10) is the seminar meeting, then the course meets together on Tu/Thu the evening with African Music and Dance Ensemble.* Students in Music 3090 are automatically part of the current semester's UVA African Music and Dance Ensemble. Your role in the Ensemble as learner and performer is crucial to your overall work in the course (also see description for MUEN 3690).
We will explore African music/dance styles, their sociomusical circumstances and processes, as well as performed resistances and responses to the colonial and post/neo-colonial encounter. In addition, we will address the politics and processes involved in translating performance practices from one cultural context to another. Each student's personal relationship to the material/experience will be integrated into study.
Readings, discussions, and written work will focus heavily on topics and issues related to the main music/dance traditions that we are learning to perform this semester, though we may venture beyond those areas from time to time. The course will explore both "traditional" and "popular" styles, leading us to question those categories. As we near the end of the semester, our discussions will focus in part on issues and planning around our ensemble concert in April.
MUSI 3310 Theory I
3.0 credits
Lecture / Section 1 (Aldona Dye): MWF / 9:00-9:50 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 13645
Lecture / Section 2 (Stephanie Doktor): MWF / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH B012
Class Number: 14427
Studies the pitch and rhythmic aspects of several musical styles, including European art music, blues, African drumming, and popular music. Focuses on concepts and notation related to scales and modes, harmony, meter, form, counterpoint, and style. Prerequisite: Ability to read music, and familiarity with basic concepts of pitch intervals and scales.
MUSI 3320 Theory II
3.0 credits
Lecture / Section 1 (Fred Maus): MWF / 11:00-11:50 am / OCH 113
Class Number: 19884
Lecture / Section 2 (Victor Szabo): MWF / 10:00-10:50 am / OCH 113
Class Number: 10880
Studies pitch and formal organization in European concert music of the 18th and 19th centuries. Includes four-part vocal writing, 18th-century style keyboard accompaniment, key relations, and form. Students compose numerous short passages of music and study significan compositions by period composers.
Prerequisite: MUSI 3310 or instructor permission.
MUSI 3332 and 3334 Musicianship I and II
2.0 credit
These lab courses give practical experience with many aspects of musical perception, performance, and creation. These will include sight-reading and sight-singing; dictation of melody, rhythm, and harmony; aural identification of intervals, chords, and rhythmic patterns; and exercises in musical memory and improvisation. Students entering the sequence take a test to determine the appropriate level of their first course. At the end of each course, students take a placement test to determine whether they may enter a higher level course. Courses may be repeated for credit, but each course may be counted toward the major only once.
MUSI 3332 Musicianship I
Lecture / Section 1 (Adam Carter): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 10881
Lecture / Section 2 (Victoria Clark): MWF / 9:00-9:50 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 21857
MUSI 3334 Musicianship II
Lecture (Eli Stine): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 10882
MUSI 3400 Ecoacoustics
Matthew Burtner
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 2:00-3:15 / OCH 107
Class Number: 13773
MUSI 3559 Making Art in/with Communities (New Course)
Peter Bussigel / Kathryn Schetlick
3.0 credits
Lecture/Section 1: T / 4:00-4:50 & R / 4:00-6:00 / Maury 113
Class Number: 20640
MUSI 3559 Women and Music (New Course)
Elizabeth Ozment
3.0 credits
Lecture/Section 2: TR / 3:30-5:00 / Maury 110
Class Number: 21158
This course examines women’s perspectives about music, and dominant perceptions of women’s participation in music. We will take a global approach to exploring to exploring women’s roles as creators, performers, patrons, and consumers of popular and art music traditions. We will read and discuss recent and sometimes controversial scholarship from the fields of musicology, ethnomusicology, feminist literary criticism, and cultural studies. The course will be organized topically, allowing for a comparative music study.
MUSI 3993 Independent Study
1.0-3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 4510 Cultural and Historical Studies
Topic: Music of Multicultural America
Joel Rubin
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 11:00 am -12:15 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 15030
“Music of Multicultural America” looks at American traditional and popular musics from a cross-cultural and multi-ethnic perspective. We will examine the traditions most often called “roots music,” including African-American blues and southern old-time string band music, which influenced the development of rock and roll and country and western. We will also study a wide range of other ethnic musical traditions, from Native American pow wows and Cajun to salsa, klezmer and Balkan-Gypsy-punk, which have influenced popular music-making of the past twenty-five years. Along the way we will treat a complex and shifting web of associated ideas, such as authenticity, heritage, nationalism, and multiculturalism, and the musical or music-marketing categories of folk, roots, indie rock, neo-cabaret, and world music. We will ask how “roots” traditions have fed into definitions of “American-ness” over the years, and whether recent trends represent signs of America’s transforming itself into a post-ethnic, post-racial society. This course is designed for music majors, but others may apply with instructor permission. For non-majors, musical literacy is not a requirement. It fulfills the Second Writing Requirement.
MUSI 4520 Critical Studies of Music
Topic: Music, Sound, and Embodiment
Fred Maus
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 2:00-3:15 / OCH 113
Class Number: 14005
MUSI 4535 Interactive Media
Topic: Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE)
Peter Bussigel
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 6:00-7:15 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 21162
Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE) is an advanced seminar in composition, software programming and intermedia performance. The class explores the theoretical and practical aspects of composing and performing real-time interactive multimedia with computers. Emphasis is placed on gaining a deeper and more personal understanding of the possibilities of human-computer interaction in music and the arts. Students in the class form the Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE) and create new works for the group to perform. Musicians are encouraged to join MICE, and this class meets a composition requirement for the Music Major. Creative and technology-oriented students from the other Arts Departments and Engineering are also encouraged to join the class as we will focus on intermedia approaches to live performance with technology.
MUSI 4545 Computer Applications in Music
Luke Dahl
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 4:00-5:15 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 15786
Discussion Section (Jon Bellona): R / 2:00-2:50 / OCH B011
Class Number: 21290
This course focuses on understanding and implementing audio effects and using them for musical projects. We will cover the signal processing involved in audio effects such as delay, reverb, chorus, flanger, distortion and compression, and we will implement these effects as Audio Unit plugins by programming in C/C++. We will emphasize the musical application of our designs, and as a final project students will have the opportunity to create a unique new effect that addresses their own musical goals. Previous programming experience is helpful but not required, as we will cover the necessary fundamentals.
MUSI 4559 Performance Studies in Classical Music (New Course)
Peter D'Elia
2.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 12:30-1:45 pm / B012
Class Number: 21482
What is performance, and how does it convey meaning? Where does the musical work lie, and can we know authorial intention? What does research tell us about how classical music has been performed in the past, and how might this knowledge change our own performance choices and interpretive process? In this class, we will explore these and related questions from a variety of viewpoints, drawing from the field of Performance Studies as well as scholarship on score analysis and performance, recording analysis, and historical performance practice. In addition to reading, discussing and writing about these broad questions, the class will allow you to reflect on your own approach to performance and to undertake a practice-based performance research project.
MUSI 4620 Audio Visual Environments
Peter Bussigel
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 12:30-1:45 / Wilson Hall Makers Space
Class Number: 21180
This is a course in audiovisual composition and time-based new media. Over the course of the semester, you will create fixed video pieces, learn interactive & real-time audiovisual techniques, and explore sculptural & networked approaches to combining sound and light.
MUSI 4720 Instrumental Conducting II
Kate Tamarkin
3.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 11:00-12:15 / OCH 107
Class Number: 14451
This course is a continuation of MUSI 4710, and is open only by instructor permission to those who have not taken MUSI 4710. It continues the study of the art and craft of instrumental conducting, focusing upon conducting and rehearsal techniques as applied to an orchestra. It includes instrumental transpositions, score reading, and clef reading. There is a strong focus upon the physical technique of conducting along with exploring the aspects of musicianship that go into forming a musical interpretation.
MUSI 4770 Choral Arranging
Michael Slon
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 2:00-3:15 / OCH B012
Class Number: 21181
This class will explore the art of writing for chorus and small vocal ensemble, and will aim at developing practical skills in creating and transcribing arrangements. Students will study a variety of examples from the repertoire, and attention will be paid to fundamentals of writing for the voice, setting text, etc. In addition the class will serve as workshop chorus, such that student arrangements can be performed and studied in the classroom.
Prerequisites: MUSI 3310 or Instructor permission. A basic knowledge of music theory, and a basic ability to sing from written sources will prove essential.
MUSI 4993: Independent Study
1.0 - 3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll
Spring 2017 Graduate Courses
MUSI 7509 Cultural and Historical Studies
Topic: Humor and Music
Michael Puri
3.0 credits
Lecture: T / 2:00-4:30 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 19885
As a rule, we don't take humor seriously enough. This seminar seeks to improve this situation by shining a spotlight on musical humor, one of its most powerful and pervasive manifestations. How does musical humor work? Where do we find it? What are the available theoretical frameworks for humor, and how might we apply them critically to an understanding of musical humor in particular? We will cast our net widely to answer these questions. Authors will include the likes of Bergson, Freud, Jameson, Hutcheon, Dyer, and Žižek, while topics will include irony, parody, pastiche, satire, camp, minstrelsy, the grotesque, the carnivalesque, and even seriousness itself--the straight man in the history of humor. Listenings will focus on Western classical music but will also incorporate other traditions as necessary. An ability to decipher and interpret musical scores will be helpful, but is not strictly required.
MUSI 7519 Current Studies in Research and Criticism
Karl Hagstrom Miller
3.0 credits
Lecture: M / 2:00-4:30 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: 15864
MUSI 7523 Issues in Ethnomusicology
Noel Lobley
3.0 credits
Lecture: W / 2:00-4:30 pm / OCH S008
Class Number: TBA
MUSI 7540 Digital Signal Processing for Musicians
Luke Dahl
3.0 credits
Lecture: M / 3:00-5:30 /OCH B011
Class Number: 14692
As musicians and composers we frequently use software tools to modify digital sound. Our ability to effectively deploy these techniques can be improved by understanding what digital sound is, how sounds are changed by these processes, and how they work “under the hood.” Audio Digital Signal Processing (DSP) may seem like technical wizardry, but in this class we will begin to demystify the processes and terms. What is the frequency domain and why is it important? How does a Fourier Transform work? What is a filter, how is one built, and why do some of them have poles? Etc. The class will be both hands-on (we will be analyzing and modifying sounds by writing code in Matlab), and theoretical (which may require re-acquainting yourself with some math).
MUSI 7547 Materials of Contemporary Music
Ted Coffey
3.0 Credits
Lecture: R / 5:00-7:30 pm / OCH B011
Class Number: 19886
Spring 2017 Ensembles
MUBD 2601 Basketball Band
Andrew Koch
2.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 6:00-8:00 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building
Class Number: 12595
The Basketball Band performs at every home men's and women's basketball game at the John Paul Jones Arena and all post season tournament games. Much of the music must be performed memorized. New music is introduced on a weekly basis. Students enrolling in Basketball Band must be a member of the current year's marching band course (MUBD 2610, 2620, 2630, or 2640).
MUEN 2600 Concert Band
Andrew Koch
1.0 credits
Lecture: W / 6:25-8:45 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building
Class Number: 10829
MUEN 2690, 3690 and 4690 African Music and Dance Ensemble
Michelle Kisliuk
2.0 credits
Lecture: TR / 5:30-7:15 pm / OCH 107
(registration number depends on student seniority in the ensemble)
MUEN 2690
Class Number: 13929
MUEN 3690
Class Number: 13491
MUEN 4690
Class Number: 13129
The African Music and Dance Ensemble is a practical, hands-on course focusing on several music/dance forms from Western and Central Africa with performances during and at the end of the semester. Though no previous experience with music or dance is required, we will give special attention to developing tight ensemble dynamics, aural musicianship, and a polymetric sensibility. Concentration, practice, and faithful attendance are required of each class member, the goal being to develop an ongoing U.Va. African Music and Dance Ensemble.
MUEN 3600 Jazz Ensemble
John D'earth
2.0 credits
Lecture: MR / 7:30-9:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10830
Led by internationally recognized jazz trumpeter/composer John D'earth, the Jazz Ensemble is a full-sized jazz big band, whose focus includes “head arrangements” group improvisation, world music and original compositions from within the band, along with music ranging from swing to bop to fusion. You'll gain valuable experience in ensemble playing and in the art of solo improvisation, and may take private instruction in jazz improvisation, perform in small combos and participate in jazz workshops held by such major figures as Michael Brecker, John Abercrombi, Dave Leibman, Bob Moses, Clark Terry, and Joe Henderson.
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3610: Charlottesville Symphony at the University of Virginia
Kate Tamarkin, Conductor
2.0 credits
Strings
Lecture / Section 100: W / 7:30-10:00 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10831
Sectionals: M / 5:30-7:00 pm
Section 101: Pete Spaar (Double Bass) / OCH B012
Class Number: 10833
Section 103: Ayn Balija (Viola) / OCH 113
Class Number: 10834
Section 104: Daniel Sender (Violin) / OCH 107
Class Number: 10835
Section 105: David Sariti (Violin) / OCH B018
Class Number: 10836
Section 102: Adam Carter (Cello) / OCH S004
Class Number: 12829
Brass / Woodwinds / Percussion
Lecture / Section 200: W / 7:30-10:00 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10832
Sectionals: W / 5:15-6:15 pm
Section 201: Elizabeth Roberts (Bassoon) / TBA
Class Number: 10837
Section 202: Shawn Earle (Clarinet) / TBA
Class Number: 10838
Section 203: Kelly Sulick (Flute) / OCH B019
Class Number: 10839
Section 204: Katy Ambrose (Horn) / OCH 113
Class Number: 10840
Section 205: Kelly Peral (Oboe) / TBA
Class Number: 10841
Section 206: I-Jen Fang (Percussion) / B018
Class Number: 10842
Section 207: Rachel Duncan (Trumpet) / 107
Class Number: 10843
Section 208: Nate Lee (Trombone) / B012
Class Number: 10844
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3620 Wind Ensemble
Bill Pease
2.0 credits
Lecture: M / 6:25-8:45 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building / Room 200
Class Number: 11450
The Wind Ensemble is a 45-member ensemble that features the most outstanding brass, woodwind, and percussion players at the University. The focus of this ensemble is to explore new literature as well as perform the masterworks of the wind band era. The wind ensemble also works with outstanding guest performers and conductors. This group is predominately made up of non-music majors who enjoy the genre of the wind band. Open to all University of Virginia students, auditions are held prior to the start of each semester. For more information on the Wind Ensemble, please visit our webpage at: http://music.virginia.edu/wind-ensemble.
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 1: Percussion Chamber Ensemble
I-Jen Fang
1.0 credit
Lecture: T / 9:30-10:00 am / OCH B018
Class Number: 10845
Restricted to Instructor permission by audition on first day of class.
Re-established in spring 2005 by I-Jen Fang, principal timpanist and percussionist with Charlottesville Symphony, the Percussion Ensemble is a chamber group that performs literature ranging from classical transcriptions to contemporary music. The ensemble draws upon a large family of pitched and non-pitched percussion instruments, and the number of players and amount of equipment varies greatly from piece to piece. Music reading skills and basic percussion technique on all percussion instruments is required. Previous percussion ensemble experience is highly recommended. If you are interested in joining please contact I-Jen Fang.
MUEN 3630, Section 2: Woodwind Ensemble
Elizabeth Roberts
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10846
Explore, rehearse and perform woodwind chamber music, including both standard and more obscure works. Focus on developing chamber music playing skills, learning the tendencies of the woodwind instruments, developing musicianship, and enjoying making and sharing music! Instructor permission and audition required.
MUEN 3630, Section 3: Horn Ensemble
Katy Ambrose
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10847
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 5: Flute Ensemble
Kelly Sulick
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10848
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 7: Woodwind Quintet
Shawn Earle
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10850
Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630, Section 8: Brass Quintet
Rachel Duncan
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 10851
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630: Jazz Chamber Ensemble
1.0 credit, Instructor permission by audition.
Lecture / Section 10: Pete Spaar / R / 5:30-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10852
Lecture / Section 11: Mike Rosensky / T / 5:30-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 11598
Lecture / Section 12: Jeff Decker / F / 2:00-3:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10854
Lecture / Section 13: Pete Spaar / F / 12:30-2:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10855
MUEN 3630, Chamber Music Ensemble
1.0 credit, Instructor permission by audition.
Lecture: / Section 14: John Mayhood / TBA
Class Number: 10856
Lecture: / Section 15: Daniel Sender / TBA
Class Number: 10857
Lecture: / Section 16: David Sariti / TBA
Class Number: 10858
Lecture: / Section 17: Ayn Balija / TBA
Class Number: 10859
Lecture: / Section 18: Adam Carter / TBA
Class Number: 10860
MUEN 3630, Section 19: Trombone Ensemble
Nate Lee
1.0 credit
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 13130
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition. Contact Nathaniel Lee to schedule an audition.
MUEN 3640: Klezmer Ensemble
Joel Rubin
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 7:30-9:30 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 14095
Klezmer, originally the ritual and celebratory music of the Yiddish-speaking Jews of Eastern Europe, was brought to North America by immigrants around the turn of the last century. Since the 1970s, a dynamic revival of this tradition has been taking place in America and beyond. Klezmer’s recent popularity has brought it far from its roots in medieval minstrelsy and Jewish ritual and into the sphere of mainstream culture. The traditional klezmer style presents the experienced instrumentalist with a range of technical challenges with its characteristic note bends, rubati, Baroque-style embellishments and other micro-improvisational techniques, opening up a world of expressive possibilities not available to them from either classical music or jazz. This music was passed on orally from generation to generation, and many of the ornaments which are so integral to the klezmer sound can only be approximated by Western staff notation – not to mention the patterns of improvised variation which are the cornerstone of the style. There will therefore be an emphasis on learning by ear as much as possible, but we will be using music in the form of lead sheets and other written instructional materials to supplement sound examples.
The class focuses on the study and performance of various traditions, including the klezmer traditions of New York between the two world wars, 19th century Eastern Europe, as well as original contemporary compositions. Emphasis will be on learning by ear, improvisation within a modal context, and learning to develop a cohesive ensemble sound. Concentration, practice, and good attendance are required of each ensemble member.
Admission is by audition during first class period of semester or prior to that, by appointment with the instructor.
MUEN 3645: Bluegrass Workshop
Richard Will
1.0 credit, Instructor permission
Lecture: T / 7:00-8:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 14130
This course seeks to develop the playing, singing, and improvising skills necessary for the idomatic performance of bluegrass music, while also providing an opportunity for discussion of its origins and development. Appropriate for experienced players working to improve their knowledge or for players versed in other genres to learn new styles.
MUEN 3646: Bluegrass Band
Richard Will
1.0 credit, Instructor permission
Lecture: T / 6:00-7:00 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 21183
This course seeks to develop the advanced playing, singing, improvising, and collaborating skills necessary to perform in a traditional bluegrass band, along with knowledge of bluegrass history and repertoire.
Prerequisite: MUEN 3645
MUEN 3650: University Singers
Michael Slon
2.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 3:30-5:30 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10862
The University Singers is the University's premier SATB ensemble, performing a cappella and accompanied choral literature ranging from chant to the works of contemporary composers. Past repertoire has included Bach's Mass in B minor, Orff's Carmina Burana, the Duruflé Requiem, and Bernstein's Chichester Psalms, as well as shorter a cappella works. Recent trips have taken the group to Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, New Orleans, New York City, Philadelphia, and the National Cathedral in Washington D.C., as well as the campuses of other American universities for collaborative concerts. The group has also been heard on European tours in England, Italy, Belgium, Germany, and Switzerland. Recent highlights have included performances with the Charlottesville Symphony at the University of Virginia, a concert and workshop with Bobby McFerrin, and a concert tour of the Southeastern U.S.
Students in the University Singers come from all six of UVA's undergraduate schools, including Arts and Sciences, Education, and Engineering, as well as several of the University's graduate and professional schools. Together, they enjoy an esprit de corps that arises from the pursuit of musical excellence and the camaraderie the singers develop offstage.
All singers at the University - undergraduates, graduate students, staff, and faculty are encouraged to audition. University Singers is offered for two hours academic credit. Michael Slon, who has conducted choruses at the Oberlin Conservatory and Indiana University School of Music, is the conductor. For more information on the University Singers, please visit our webpage.
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3651: Chamber Singers
Michael Slon
2.0 credits
Lecture: F / 1:00-3:15 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 10861
Chamber Singers is a select ensemble drawn from the University Singers. The ensemble meets once a week and focuses on music for chamber choir ranging from the Renaissance to contemporary pieces. Recent performances have included the Monteverdi Mass for 4 voices (1651), Britten'sHymn to St. Cecilia, and Bach's Cantata 150, as well as contemporary works by Meredith Monk and Eric Whitacre, and arrangements of classic jazz standards by Harold Arlen, Jerome Kern, and the King's Singers. Interested singers will be considered for the chamber ensemble as part of their University Singers audition. For more information, please visit our webpage.
Restricted to: Instructor permission
MUEN 3657 Voice for Stage
Pam Beasley / Brenda Patterson
2.0 credits
Lecture: R / 3:30-5:30 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 21182
A vocal performance class in which students alternately direct and perform in selected scenes. This course allows students to deepen their performing skills through alternating the roles of performer and director. Students will study assigned texts, scores and source materials from musical theater, opera and song and will then develop directorial and presentational/design concepts for productions, directing each other in short scenes. Prerequisite: Intermediate to advanced level/experience with solo singing and acting. instructor Permission Required.
MUEN 3670: Early Music Ensemble: Baroque Orchestra
David Sariti
2.0 credit
Lecture: R / 7:00-9:00 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 11451
The Baroque Orchestra, directed by David Sariti, offers students the rare opportunity to perform music of the 17th and 18th centuries on the instruments for which it was written, at low pitch. Students use period instruments from the University's extensive collection, receiving personal instruction on the special techniques necessary, and must be accomplished on their modern counterparts.
MUEN 3680: New Music Ensemble
I-Jen Fang
1.0 credit
Lecture: R / 3:30-5:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10863
Restricted to Instructor permission by audition on first day of class.
Performance of vocal and instrumental music of the twentieth century.
A one-credit course at the University of Virginia, the New Music Ensemble explores and performs exciting music of our time. The ensemble consists of dedicated instrumentalists, singers and UVa performance faculty. We perform a wide variety of contemporary music suitable to our instrumentation, including new works created by UVa composers.
The New Music Ensemble seeks dedicated instrumentalists and singers to explore and perform a wide variety of contemporary music. To audition, come to the first class with your instrument. If you are interested in joining please contact I-Jen Fang.
Open to UVA students, community musicians and advanced high school students.
Summer 2017 Academic Courses
Session I - May 15-June 10
MUSI 2390 / 3390 Introduction to Music and Computers
Ted Coffey
3.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 1:00-3:15 pm / New Cabell Hall 207
MUSI 2390 Class Number: 12164
MUSI 3390 Class Number: 12388
Introduction to the use of computers in music composition, with hands-on experience. At the 2000 level, the course is appropriate for non-majors and has no prerequisites. At the 3000 level, the course is appropriate for majors and other students who commit to advanced work.
Session II - June 12-July 8
MUSI 2070 / 4508 Popular Music / Topics in American Music
Kyle Chattleton
3.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 1:00-3:15 pm / NCH 407
MUSI 2070 Class Number: 12722
MUSI 4508 Class Number: 12387
History, analysis, and reception of popular music in the US from minstrelsy to Miley Cyrus. At the 2000 level, the course is appropriate for non-majors and has no prerequisites. At the 4000 level, the course is appropriate for majors and other students who commit to advanced work.
MUSI 2559 / 4535 Composing with Sound and Video / Interactive Media
Eli Stine
3.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 11:30-1:45 pm / NCH 268
MUSI 2559 Class Number: 12700
MUSI 4535 Class Number: 12211
History of electronic sound, video, and their relationship; basic audio and video editing skills; hands-on experience through creative projects. We will create sound design for film, video art (video-recorded and/or animated materials), and realtime multimedia projects. No experience with audio or video technologies required, though it is welcome. At the 2000 level, the course is appropriate for non-majors and has no prerequisites. At the 4000 level, the course is appropriate for majors and other students who commit to advanced work.
Session III - July 10-August 4
MUSI 1010 Introduction to Music
Craig Comen
3.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 10:30 am - 12:45 pm / NCH 309
Class Number: 12165
An introduction to the academic study of music. The class focuses primarily on the history of Western classical music, allowing us to develop a technical vocabulary to discuss music from many different repertories. We’ll explore the cultural frameworks of listening communities from the past, and develop a historical understanding of how we engage with music in the present. No previous musical experience required.
MUSI 2340 Learn to Groove
Robert Jospe
2.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 1:00-2:30 pm / Brooks Hall 103
Class Number: 12164
Study of rhythmic patterns associated with rhythms from West African, the Caribbean, Brazil, and the United States, through theory and performance.
MUSI 2559 / 4547 Sound Art
Rachel Devorah
3.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 1:00-3:15 pm / TBA
MUSI 2559 Class Number: 12701
MUSI 4547 Class Number: 12702
Historical survey of sound art; taxonomy of different sound art practices; use of emergent technologies in the discipline. A studio course with hands-on learning of the diverse skills needed to realize sound art works and develop methods of critique. At the 2000 level, the course is appropriate for non-majors and has no prerequisites. At the 4000 level, the course is appropriate for majors and other students who commit to advanced work.
4000-level students will create an original work for an exhibit at the end of the course.
Session III - July 10-August 4
MUSI 1010 Introduction to Music
Craig Comen
3.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 10:30 am - 12:45 pm / NCH 309
Class Number: 12165
An introduction to the academic study of music. The class focuses primarily on the history of Western classical music, allowing us to develop a technical vocabulary to discuss music from many different repertories. We’ll explore the cultural frameworks of listening communities from the past, and develop a historical understanding of how we engage with music in the present. No previous musical experience required.
MUSI 2340 Learn to Groove
Robert Jospe
2.0 credits
Lecture: MTWRF / 1:00-2:30 pm / Brooks Hall 103
Class Number: 12164
Study of rhythmic patterns associated with rhythms from West African, the Caribbean, Brazil, and the United States, through theory and performance.