Fall 2021 Courses
Fall 2021 Undergraduate Courses
MUSI 1310 Basic Musical Skills
3.0 credits
Section 2 (Ben Rous): MWF / 10:00-10:50 am
Class Number: 10685
Section 3 (Justin Mueller): MWF / 9:00-9:50 am
Class Number: 10686
Study of the rudiments of music and training in the ability to read music. Prerequisite: No previous knowledge of music required.
MUSI 2302 Keyboard Skills (Beginning)
2.0 credits, instructor permission
Section 1 (John Mayhood): TR / 11:00 am - 12:15 pm
Class Number: 10687
Section 2 (John Mayhood): TR / 9:30-10:45 am
Class Number: 11738
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 2307 Play Guitar!
Mike Rosensky
2.0 credits, instructor permission
MW / 1:00-1:50 pm
Class Number: 14593
Fundamentals of playing the guitar: left and right hands, chords, strumming, and scales. We'll also incorporate rhythmic training, music theory, song form, pop/rock styles and accompanimental textures. A new course designed to improve guitar performance.
Please give a brief description of your guitar experience when you request instructor permission. I will contact students on my permissions list shortly after registration ends.
Students must provide their own guitar.
MUSI 2308 Voice Class
Pam Beasley
2.0 credits, instructor permission
MW / 4:00-4:50 pm
Class Number: 14598
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
Section 1: MW / 10:00-10:50 am
Class Number: 13413
Section 2: MW / 11:00-11:50 am
Class Number: 13414
"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
MW / 1:00-1:50 pm
Class Number: 13415
"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 2350 Technosonics: Digital Music and Sound Art Composition
Luke Dahl
3.0 credits
Section 100: MW / 10:00-10:50 am
Class Number: 14269
Discussion Sections:
Section 101 (Matias Vilaplana): M / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 14270
Section 102 (Matias Vilaplana): M / 1:00-1:50 pm
Class Number: 14271
Section 103 (Matias Vilaplana): M / 2:00-2:50 pm
Class Number: 14272
Section 106 (Corey Harris): W / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 14275
Section 107 (Corey Harris): W / 1:00-1:50 pm
Class Number: 14276
Section 108 (Corey Harris): W / 2:00-2:50 pm
Class Number: 14277
Section 109 (Rachel Gibson): F / 9:00-9:50 am
Class Number: 14278
Section 110 (Rachel Gibson): F / 10:00-10:50 am
Class Number: 14279
Section 112 (Rachel Gibson): F / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 14281
Section 113 (Siavash Mohebbi): F / 10:00-10:50 am
Class Number: 14282
Section 114 (Siavash Mohebbi): F / 11:00-11:50 am
Class Number: 14283
Section 115 (Siavash Mohebbi): F / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 14284
This class (www.technosonics.info) 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 2600 Jazz Improvisation
John D'earth
3.0 credits
TR / 3:30-5:00 pm
Class Number: 11531
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
Justin Mueller
3.0 credits
TR / 11:00 am - 12:15 pm
Class Number: 20416
This course will explore music of the later Baroque and Classical eras, from roughly 1680 to 1810. It will provide not only a deeper understanding of the composers we discuss and the compositional practices of the time, but also address issues germane to musico-dramatic realisation as they have been understood and debated, then and now. These will include questions of improvisation, performance practice, text–music relationships, and questions of staging and dramaturgy, among other topics. We will also read what people of the time were saying about this music, too—not just professional performers or music teachers, but critics, amateurs, listeners, philosophers, and others. This is all to suggest that we will not only come to know the pieces and composers we study in their own right, but also how they fit into the broader socio-political climate of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
MUSI 3050 Music and Discourse
3.0 credits
Section 1: Scott DeVeaux / MWF / 1:00-1:50pm
Class Number: 13538
Section 2: Karl Miller / MWF / 10:00-10:50am
Class Number: 17620
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.
MUSI 3090 Performance in Africa
Michelle Kisliuk
3.0 credits
TR / 3:30-5:00pm
Class Number: 19457
At this moment of inflection in political and expressive life in the United States and around the world, exploring how cultural identification and collective creation intersect can move us forward. This course, while introducing students to African performance with a primary focus on two music/dance traditions: Ewe of Ghana/Togo and BaAka of Central African Republic*, delves into practical music/dance making, community formation, dynamics of power, the balance of fluidity and fixedness in cultural processes, ethnic identity/issues of representation, and conceptions of race and gender in expressive culture. The course combines reading/writing/discussing in equal proportion with practical instruction in percussion, dance, and singing, which allows students to comprehend aesthetic principles from an embodied and personally invested, vulnerable perspective. No previous experience is required (though willingness to try is required), and the course is open to students of any background.
*In fall 2021, this course will include Baganda xylophone traditions from Uganda and will include the possibility of instrument-making.
*There will be a flexible additional lab meeting scheduled occasionally on Friday afternoons from 1:30-3:30.
MUSI 3310 Theory I
3.0 credits
Section 1 (Fred Maus): MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 14286
Section 2 (Natalia Perez): MWF / 10:00-10:50 am
Class Number: 18177
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.
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. Lectures, dictations, exercises, and quizzes will be in person on Mondays and Wednesdays. Singing and rhythm practice will be online on Fridays, and most homework assignments will also be completed online. Please contact Prof. Adam Carter with questions or concerns.
MUSI 3332 Musicianship I
Adam Carter
MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 10689
MUSI 3334 Musicianship II
Savanna Morrison
MWF / 12:00-12:50 pm
Class Number: 12143
MUSI 3350 Deep Listening
Fred Maus
1.0 credit
W / 11:00-11:50 am
Class Number: 14354
Exploration of collective activities that involve listening and making sound together, and other interactions, at the intersection of music-making and contemplative practices, drawing on the work of Pauline Oliveros, the Fluxus artists, and other musicians and thinkers. Weekly reading assignments for conceptualization in relation to the experiential component; weekly email responses to readings along with several brief reflective papers.
MUSI 3370 Songwriting
Ted Coffey
3.0 credits
TR / 2:00-3:15 pm
Class Number: 14287
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 3372 Writing Rap
A.D. Carson
3.0 credits
TR / 8:00-9:15 am
Class Number: 14592
This course focuses on the craft of writing raps. It is not necessary that students have previous experience writing raps to take this course. Students will listen to, attempt to deconstruct, and evaluate a broad range of rap music while learning the basics of composing lyrics. Along with writing raps, students will learn songwriting techniques and some theoretical approaches to composing larger works such as a “mixtape” or “album” through examinations of music, criticism, and literature.
MUSI 3559 New Course in Music
Topic: Amplified Justice
Bonnie Gordon and Nomi Dave
3.0 credits
TR / 9:30-10:45 am
Class Number: 17623
This yearlong community engaged course explores the connections between sound, voice, and claims for justice. What does justice mean, evoke, and promise for different people in particular times and places? How are justice claims made outside of the legal system and in everyday life, through stories, political actions, and art? What are the voices and narratives that are often left out of formal, disciplinary proceedings? Social media, mainstream news, and television show us how legal proceedings often silence stories. On the other hand, artists and activists amplify voices to incite change. This class digs into the dissonance between these voices and ways of hearing. The class exposes students to a range of research and engagement methods that work toward equitable community partnerships, and teaches students to think intentionally of the role of creative practice in redressing inequity. Students will have the opportunity to work with community partners and engage in creative practice. The class is connected to the new Sound Justice Lab. Prior musical experience is not necessary.
This is a year-long course through the College’s Civic & Community Engagement Program. Students are not permitted to enroll for just one semester.
MUSI 3570 Music Cultures
Topic: Curating Sound: Art, Ethnography, Practice
Noel Lobley
3.0 credits
MW / 2:00-3:15 pm / Wilson 142
Class Number: 20056
This practical and discovery-driven design course explores the intersections of curatorial practice, sound studies, ethnography, composition, sound art, and community arts practice, through a series of engagements linking archival collections, local and international artists and art and community spaces, and the method and philosophies of embodied and experiential deep listening. Drawing from both the histories and potential affordances of sound curation we engage with practical examples ranging from sub-Saharan Africa to Australia, and from Europe to New York, asking what it means to curate local sound within globalized arts circuits. We will explore multiple and diverse case studies where artists, curators, communities, industries and institutions have both collaborated and clashed, as we ask whether it is desirable or even possible to curate the elusive, invasive and ephemeral object, medium and experience of sound.
Throughout the entire course we will be working closely with professional artists and curators including Around HipHop Live Café and the Black Power Station (Makhanda, South Africa), the Kluge Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection (UVA/ Australia), and MOMENTNYC (New York). Our work will be to design content for live exhibitions linking Charlottesville with South Africa, Australia and New York.
MUSI 3993 Independent Study
1.0-3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
MUSI 4065 The "Black Voice"
A.D. Carson
3.0 credits
TR / 9:30-10:45 am
Class Number: 17625
This course focuses on critical analyses of and questions concerning “The Black Voice” as it pertains to hip-hop culture, particularly rap and related popular musics. Students will read, analyze, discuss a wide range of thinkers [artists included] to explore many conceptions and definitions of “Blackness” while examining popular artists and the statements they make in [and about] their art.
MUSI 4410 Orchestration II
Ben Rous
3.0 credits
MWF / 11:00-11:50 am
Class Number: 19393
This course will examine the symphony orchestra in detail, equipping students with all necessary skills to arrange or compose for any ensemble. We will learn the capabilities of every orchestral instrument, and study how they are combined by master composers. Students will create arrangements for string quartet, woodwind quintet, and full orchestra. The majority of these projects will receive readings by ensembles.
Projects may be completed with notation software or may be handwritten. No previous composition or arranging experience is necessary, but fluency in musical notation and familiarity with the basics of music theory are required.
MUSI 4507 Composers
Topic: Meet the Beatles
Scott DeVeaux
3.0 credits
MWF / 11:00-11:50 am
Class Number: 20343
Meet the Beatles offers a comprehensive introduction to the Beatles, the most consequential and powerful band of the twentieth century. We will examine the Beatles from numerous perspectives, some technical to music, others open to early rock 'n' roll history and the countercultural trends of the 1960s.
MUSI 4509 Cultural and Historical Studies in Music
Topic: The Music of Richard Wagner
Justin Mueller
3.0 credits
W / 2:00-4:30 pm
Class Number: 14288
This course seeks to explore the professional career and musical output of Richard Wagner, a polarizing figure in the world of Western music whose social, political, and theatrical ideologies have influenced everything from Hitler to Hollywood. With an in-depth look at works spanning the length of his compositional career, our meetings will serve as an occasion to assess how Wagner’s operas have been received on-stage and off by tracing their socio-political import and dramaturgical history from the time of their premieres through to the present. In addition to grappling with the works themselves, we will look at Wagner’s own writings on various subjects, as well as a variety of musical, literary, political, and philosophical ideas that inspired them, with a view to how and why performers, spectators, and scholars think through, understand, and come to reckon with the composer and his works in a twenty-first century context.
MUSI 4545 Computer Applications in Music
Topic: Designing Audio Effect Plugins
Luke Dahl
3.0 credits
MW / 3:00-4:15 pm
Class Number: 13370
Audio effects are common and useful tools used in the recording, mixing, and mastering of music and sound, as well as in sound design.
This course focuses on understanding, designing and implementing audio effects, and using them for musical projects. We will cover the signal processing involved in effects such as EQ, delay, chorus, flanger, reverb, distortion, and compression, and we will implement these effects as VST or AudioUnit plug-ins by programming in C/C++ and using the JUCE framework. We will emphasize the musical application of our designs, and as a final project students will create a unique new effect that addresses their own musical goals.
Enrollment is by instructor permission. Students are expected to have experience using digital audio tools, and to have a music-making or sound-based practice. Previous programming experience is _very_ helpful, but not required if you are enthusiastic and able to learn quickly!
MUSI 4600 Performance with Computers
Matthew Burtner
4.0 credits
TR / 2:00-3:15 pm
Class Number: 12442
Lab (Alex Christie): T / 3:30-4:30
Class Number: 12443
“Performance with Computers” (MUSI 4600) will teach Max/MSP/Jitter music and video programming for live performance, this semester we will focus on network-based musical performance. As we survive a present without in-person concerts, and look to a future in which live music events may be increasingly organized telematically, musicians can benefit from understanding interactive music and video tools, techniques and theory. This altering musical landscape presents extreme challenges, but it will also create new opportunities for those with knowledge of emerging interactive media technology and aesthetics. MUSI 4600 is a multifaceted class, involving lectures focused on aesthetics and theory, seminar discussions based on readings in interactive media, labs and hacking sessions focused on programming in Max/MSP/Jitter, and group collaborative jams using our instruments and/or computers.
This class is designed as a synchronous online course, with some material presented asynchronously as appropriate. There will be ample opportunity for in-person discussion both in class and labs and through office hours. Students should plan to attend the class on Zoom on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 2-3:15, and to participate in a lab each week which will be scheduled separately. The labs will teach programming techniques needed to complete a series of assignments and projects. Our class will also become a Mobile Interactive Computer Ensemble (MICE) and we will compose and perform a collaborative network ensemble piece to present online at the end of the semester.
No previous programming experience is required. An introductory composition and computer music class such as Intro to Computers in Music, Ecoacoustics, Songwriting, or Intro to Composition, or equivalent experience by instructor permission is prerequisite. Students are not required to play a musical instrument although musicians will find it useful to incorporate their instruments into the computer music framework.
Students should have access to a Mac OS or Windows computer with a network connection capable of running Zoom.
Each student should also purchase and install the Max software from Cycling74.com (student license is either $9.99 per month or $59 for a year). This software package includes Max, MSP and Jitter. Additional tools and readings will be provided digitally through Collab.
MUSI 4750 Choral Conducting I
Michael Slon
3.0 credits
Lecture: MW / 2:00-3:15 pm
Class Number: 17621
Studies in the basic technique and art of conducting, with weekly experience conducting repertoire with a small choral ensemble. Prerequisite: basic ear training, sight-reading. Previous experience in a choral or instrumental ensemble is preferred. Interested students should consult with the instructor before registering. Instructor permission is required.
MUSI 4993 Independent Study
1.0-3.0 credits
Instructor permission and instructor number required to enroll.
Fall 2021 Graduate Courses
MUSI 7510 Cultural and Historical Studies of Music
Topic: Music in Relation to Sexuality and Disability
Fred Maus
3.0 credits
W / 3:00-5:00 pm
Class Number: 14290
Music in relation to sexuality and disability, drawing extensively on The Oxford Handbook of Music and Queerness and The Oxford Handbook of Music and Disability Studies along with other scholarly writing mostly from the 1990s on.
MUSI 7511 Introduction to Research
Nomi Dave
3.0 credits
R / 2:00-4:30 pm
Class Number: 14291
MUSI 7526 Topics in Ethnomusicology
Noel Lobley
3.0 credits
T / 2:00-4:30 pm
Class Number: 12785
MUSI 7547 Materials of Contemporary Music
Ted Coffey
3.0 credits
T / 5:00-7:30
Class Number: 14377
MUSI 7583 Proseminar in Computer Music Composition
Matthew Burtner
3.0 credits
W / 2:00-4:30
Class Number: 14428
Fall 2021 Curricular Ensembles
MUBD 2610, 2620, 2630 and 2640 Marching Band I-IV
Elliott Tackitt and Andrew Koch
2.0 credits
Lecture: TRF / 6:00-8:15 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building
MUBD 2610
Class Number: 10634
MUBD 2620
Class Number: 10635
MUBD 2630
Class Number: 10636
MUBD 2640
Class Number: 10637
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 bands office at 434.982.5347 or email Elliott Tackitt.
MUEN 3600 Jazz Ensemble
John D'earth
2.0 credits
Lecture: MR / 7:30-9:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10638
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
Ben Rous, Conductor
2.0 credits
Strings
Lecture / Section 100: W / 7:30-10:00 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10639
Sectionals: M / 5:30-7:00 pm
Section 101: Pete Spaar (Double Bass) / OCH B012
Class Number: 10641
Section 102: Adam Carter (Cello) / OCH S004
Class Number: 10642
Section 103: Ayn Balija (Viola) / OCH 113
Class Number: 10643
Section 104: Jeannette Jang (Violin) / OCH 107
Class Number: 10644
Section 105: David Sariti (Violin) / OCH B018
Class Number: 10645
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
Brass / Woodwinds / Percussion
Lecture / Section 200: W / 7:30-10:00 pm / OCH 101
Class Number: 10640
Sectionals:
Section 201: Elizabeth Roberts (Bassoon) / W / 5:15-6:15 pm / OCH B020
Class Number: 13530
Section 202: Cody Halquist (Horn) / W / 6:00-7:00 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 13531
Section 203: Kelly Peral (Oboe) / W / 5:15-6:15 pm / TBA
Class Number: 10647
Section 204: Jiyeon Choi (Clarinet) / W / 5:15-6:15 pm / OCH B017
Class Number: 13532
Section 205: Kelly Sulick (Flute) / W / 5:15-6:15 pm / OCH Studio C
Class Number: 10646
Section 206: Nate Lee (Trombone) / W / 6:00-7:00 pm / OCH B012
Class Number: 10650
Section 207: John Nye (Trumpet) / W / 6:00-7:00 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 10649
Section 208: I-Jen Fang (Percussion) / W / 6:00-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10648
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3620 Wind Ensemble
Elliott Tackitt
2.0 credits
Lecture: M / 6:45-9:00 pm / Hunter Smith Band Building / Room 200
Class Number: 10915
The University of Virginia Wind Ensemble is open to all students at UVA by audition, and is conducted by the Director of Bands, Dr. Elliott Tackitt. This 45-member ensemble features the most outstanding brass, woodwind, and percussion players at the University, and rehearses in the Fall and Spring Semesters.
The focus of this ensemble is for students to explore their artistic potential in a collaborative environment. Wind Ensemble members enjoy the opportunity to practice and perform more challenging chamber music and wind band works encompassing a variety of composers, styles, and musical time periods.
The Wind Ensemble has a history of including performing artists from UVA’s Department of Music as soloists, as well as guests from abroad. Musically-inclined students from every College and School are encouraged to participate in auditions, which are held the first week of the semester.
Students interested in auditioning for Fall 2021 are encouraged to visit the Audition Information webpage.
MUEN 3630 Chamber Music Ensembles
1.0 credit, Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630 Double Reed Ensemble
Kelly Peral
1.0 credit
Lecture / Section 16: TBA
Class Number: 12595
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630 Flute Ensemble
Kelly Sulick
1.0 credit
Lecture / Section 3: TBA
Class Number: 10651
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630 Horn Ensemble
Cody Halquist
1.0 credit
Lecture / Section 8: TBA
Class Number: 10653
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630 Jazz Chamber
1.0 credit, Instructor permission by audition.
Section 7: Pete Spaar / R / 5:30-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10656
Section 12: Pete Spaar / F / 12:30-2:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10657
Section 21: Mike Rosensky / T / 5:30-7:00 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 11031
Section 22: Mike Rosensky / F / 2:00-3:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 11032
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630 Percussion Ensemble
I-Jen Fang
1.0-2.0 credit
Lecture / Section 10: T / 9:30-10:50 am / OCH B018
Class Number: 10655
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 String Chamber Music
Section 9: Jeannette Jang / TBA
Class Number: 14607
Section 17: Ayn Balija / TBA
Class Number: 10658
Section 18: David Sariti / TBA
Class Number: 10659
Section 20: Adam Carter / TBA
Class Number: 10660
Section 25: John Mayhood / TBA
Class Number: 13054
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3630 Trombone Ensemble
Nate Lee
1.0 credit
Section 5: TBA
Class Number: 10654
Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition. Contact Nathaniel Lee to schedule an audition.
MUEN 3630 Woodwind Ensemble
Elizabeth Roberts
1.0 credit
Lecture / Section 4: TBA
Class Number: 10652
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 Woodwind Quintet
Jiyeon Choi
1.0 credit
Section 2: TBA
Class Number: 13567
MUEN 3645 Bluegrass Workshop
Richard Will
1.0 credit, Instructor permission
Lecture: T / 7:00-8:00 pm / OCH 107
Class Number: 12341
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 107
Class Number: 12778
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: 10662
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: 10661
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 3660 Ensemble Music with Piano
John Mayhood
2.0 credits
Lecture: TBA
Class Number: 13533
Studies in the preparation and performance of ensemble music with piano. Focus is on the development of collaborative skills and a practical understanding of cultural and theoretical context. Repertoire to be studied varies from semester to semester.
MUEN 3670 Early Music Ensemble: Baroque Orchestra
David Sariti
2.0 credits
Lecture: R / 7:00-9:00 pm / OCH 113
Class Number: 10962
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. Restricted to: Instructor permission by audition.
MUEN 3680 New Music Ensemble
I-Jen Fang
1.0 credit
Lecture: R / 3:30-5:30 pm / OCH B018
Class Number: 10663
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.