UHC Sophomore Course Outline

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "UHC Sophomore Course Outline"

Transcription

1 UHC Sophomore Course Outline University Honors College Program Development Committee One semester of the University Honors College sophomore course consists of three units, each of which spends four to six weeks exploring practices of research, invention, and creation in and across three broad overlapping areas. This example semester incorporates units grounded in the disciplines of physics, history and music. Other units under development encompass engineering, literature, and public health. Each unit of this team-taught course focuses on a topic that exemplifies the modes of inquiry of a particular discipline or interdisciplinary area. The course then uses these units to engage with the variety of approaches to research, invention, and creation through small faculty-led discussion groups, allowing for an exploration and comparison of how different fields frame questions, conceive knowledge, and approach creation and discovery. Topics in these discussion sections provide common themes, such as authority and explanation, that weave through the different units. Units have lectures twice each week, a 2 hour weekly discussion, and incorporate labs, papers, problem sets, exams and other means of instruction and assessment as appropriate. Assignments make use of and further develop the competencies in writing and quantitative reasoning introduced in the freshman year. Work throughout the semester is maintained through an e- portfolio system allowing for an overall integrated assessment at the end of the semester. 1

2 1 Units 1.1 The Large Hadron Collider The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a 17 mile long underground ring straddling the French-Swiss border in which protons collide at extraordinarily high energies. Physicists involved with the construction and operation of this machine, one of the largest and most complex experiments ever mounted, come from hundreds of countries, some of them mortal enemies. This unit will use the example of the LHC to examine the principles and procedures of research in physics, and will engage with issues such as: What are the questions that the LHC is designed to address? Why is this large machine necessary and what led to its construction? What are the possible outcomes of the experiment? How does the LHC relate to other areas of physical science? Lectures 1. The Building Blocks of Nature I The constituents of matter and their interactions: from earth, air, fire and water to quarks and leptons. 2. The Building Blocks of Nature II Length scales and decoupling: the forces applicable to the cosmos; the forces of everyday life; atomic forces; subatomic physics. 3. Waves vs. Particles Light as a wave or a particle; diffraction and interference; Young s experiment; photoelectric effect. 4. Quantum Mechanics de Broglie and the wave character of nature; electrons as waves and particles; electron diffraction. 5. E = mc 2 2

3 Relativistic energy and momentum; particle collisions at relativistic momentum; probing the interior of the proton; particle creation. 6. Subatomic Microscopes Optical microscopes; electron microscopes; particle colliders. 7. The Standard Model I: The weak interactions, radioactivity and the W and Z particles. 8. The Standard Model II: Weaknesses and failures; the origin of mass; the Higgs. 9. The LHC: Speculation and experiment Discussions 1. The Charm Quark Proposed in a paper by S.L. Glashow and J.D. Bjorken in 1964, the charm quark was discovered simultaneously in experiments at Stanford, CA and Brookhaven, NY in But this paper by Glashow and Bjorken is rarely credited with the invention of this quark (except on Wikipedia). The reason: they introduced the idea on purely æsthetic grounds. In fact, Bjorken initially withdrew his support from this publication, rejecting the aesthetic argument as inappropriate for physics. Yet the suggestion turned out to be right. Does this validate the æsthetic argument? Were there better (i.e. more physical) arguments suggesting the existence of the charm quark? Were experiments motivated by the paper of Glashow and Bjorken to search for this quark? 2. Quark Confinement In the 1970s one of the most active areas of research in particle physics was the notion of confinement : the idea that free quarks (i.e. quarks in isolation) do not exist, but instead all quarks must be confined inside larger objects, such as the proton and neutron. Why was this idea being pursued? Why is it no longer a major research topic in physics? Why does it remain on the list of major unsolved problems in mathematics (e.g. the Clay foundation million dollar prizes)? 3. Authority and Explanation 3

4 How is consensus reached in physics? Who or what is the ultimate authority on the correctness of scientific explanation and theory? Einstein created the theory of relativity early last century; when questions concerning relativity arise do we turn to Einstein s papers? Do physicists even read or refer to these papers? 4. Strings and a Theory of Everything In the early 1970s a theory was proposed to explain the confinement of quarks and the proliferation of new particles being produced in accelerators. This theory was a failure, in that it did not correctly describe the results of experiments performed in the mid-70s. But the theory persists today in a modified form, where it is said to only apply at distances much shorter than those probed in current experiments, including the LHC. Can string theory provide a description of nature? Is experimental confirmation required? Is it physics? Is it even science? 5. Will the LHC destroy the earth? In 2008 Walter Wagner, a retired nuclear safety officer, filed a law-suit in federal court in Hawaii to stop the LHC from beginning operations. He argued that there was a significant possibility that the LHC might produce a black hole that would destroy the earth. This argument captured the public s imagination and remains one of the most common issues raised in public fora and press articles concerning this experiment. Is Wagner s argument valid? How can we assess the risk of experiments? How can we ever know the possible outcome of an experiment before it is performed? Assignments and Assessment Labs 1. Bubble Chamber Construct and use a simple bubble chamber to detect and analyze cosmic rays. 2. Electron Diffraction Reproduce the classic experiment that demonstrates the wavenature of the electron. 3. Monte Carlo and Root 4

5 Papers Use the root data analysis system to search for elementary particles in Monte Carlo data simulating the LHC. 1. Particle Discovery A 5 page paper describing the discovery of an elementary particle. 2. Black Holes and the LHC An article (in the style appropriate for a newspaper) giving a fair and balanced treatment of the LHC safety issue and potential dangers of scientific experiments. 5

6 1.2 France During the Nazi Occupation During and after the Second World War, the French propagated and embraced a national myth that emphasized heroic resistance against the Nazi Occupation. What happened between the fall of France in June 1940 and the Allied liberation in the summer of 1944, was, however, considerably more complex. The usual dichotomy between collaboration and resistance, the good French and the bad French, ignores the ambiguities of les années noires, the dark years, in France. This unit introduces the problems and methods of historical research and writing by analyzing French culture and society during the Occupation. We begin with what historian and resistance fighter Marc Bloch called the strange defeat of the French military by the German invaders. The centerpiece of our story is the wartime experience of different individuals and groups, including the Parisian avant-garde, French and foreign-born Jews, resistance fighters, and Vichy sympathizers. We end with the relationship between history and memory in France from 1944 to the present, with particular emphasis on changing views of wartime collaboration. Focusing on a critical, ominous moment in modern history enables us to explore diverse historical subfields (political, social, military, economic, cultural, and intellectual) and primary sources (memoirs, letters, fiction, film, music, newspapers, government records, and architectural monuments). Throughout the lectures and discussions we will emphasize how historians frame problems; how they construct and test narratives; how they evaluate the validity of different types of evidence; how they interpret sources, including literature, film, and art; and how they deal with moral issues Readings Sources will include selections from secondary works ranging from the classic study by Michael Marrus and Robert O. Paxton, Vichy France and the Jews, to more recent scholarship including Robert Gildea, Marianne in Chains: 6

7 Daily Life in the Heart of France during the Occupation, Renée Poznanski, Jews in France during World War II, and Henry Rousso, The Vichy Syndrome: History and Memory in France since We will spend much of our time on close reading of a variety of primary materials including selections from Marcel Ophuls, The Sorrow and the Pity, Marc Bloch, Strange Defeat, Irène Némirovsky, Suite Francaise, Saul Friedlænder, When Memory Comes, The Journal of Hélène Berr, Varian Fry, Surrender on Demand, Olivier Messiaen s Quartet for the End of Time, Gertrude Stein correspondence in the Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center, the Mémorial du Martyr Juif Inconnu (Paris), and government records Lectures 1. Strange Defeat? 2. The New Regime 3. Collaboration and Resistance I 4. Collaboration and Resistance II 5. Art and Politics 6. The War Against the Jews 7. Nazi Art Looting 8. Aftermath: Liberation and Restitution 9. History and Memory Discussions 1. Authority and Explanation What constitutes an argument in history? Are there final explanations for historical events or phenomena? What constitutes progress in historical thinking? Does more recent scholarship supersede older works? Are historical works primarily valuable for the explanatory power of their theses or the force of their narratives? 2. Structures and Events In his historical work, Marc Bloch, a resistance fighter who was killed by the Nazis, emphasized the importance of the social sciences (geography, economics, demography, sociology, etc.) over political history and 7

8 mere events. To what extent do structures explain the Nazi Occupation and to what extent is it best understood in terms of individual choices? 3. Point of View How do historians points of view inform or distort their accounts? What problems are inherent in a field based on human actors interpreting the behavior of human actors? How do historians political and moral commitments shape their respective views of the course of events? 4. Evidence How do historians determine which sources are relevant to understanding an event or phenomenon? How do they authenticate or falsify sources? 5. Textual Interpretation How can works of art such as fiction, painting, architecture, music, and film inform historical analyses? Assignments and Assessment There will be two 3-5 page papers: The one will compare and contrast two historians views on wartime collaboration and resistance; the other will analyze a primary source. 8

9 1.3 The Music of Nature and the Nature of Music There is a long, and distinguished, corpus of musical compositions that, in one way or another, make reference to the sounds of nature. Antonio Vivaldi s Violin Concerto in E is entitled (La Tempesta di Mare), the opening measures of Gustav Mahler s Symphony #1 carry the instruction Like a sound of nature, the twentieth-century French composer Olivier Messiaen was an avid collector of bird songs, and Beethoven s Symphony #6 makes reference to brooks, birds, and thunderstorms. A more recent example is Thrushfield, a twelve minute work for flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano, percussion, and digital sampler, composed in 2000 by Boston University composer Richard Cornell. This unit provides an insight into the practice of creation, discovery, and invention in the area of musical composition by focusing on the intersection of musical artworks and nature. Its concern lies less with the musical imitation of natural sounds than with the way in which composers make use of musical nature how the pitches, timbres, and sounds that are the raw material of musical composition are manipulated by composers to create works that carry musical meaning. Among the issues to be explored in this unit will be a consideration of the broad array of physical systems that produce those sounds that we understand as music, the repertoire of tools and techniques that are now available for the analysis of musical sounds, the impact of innovations in the analysis and the production of musical sounds on compositional practices, and the techniques employed by composers in organizing this material into works of art that can claim, in one way or another, to make reference to nature. Listening assignments, drawn from a variety of seminal nineteenth and twentieth century works (indicated on the lecture schedule below) are an integral part of the course experience Readings Reading assignments for the course will be drawn from composers own writings and also important aesthetic and critical commentary including: Hector Berlioz, A Critical Study of the Beethoven Symphonies (on Symphony #6); Leonard Bernstein, The Unanswered Question (Charles Eliot Norton Lec- 9

10 tures), Lecture 3: Musical Semantics; Karlheinz Stockhausen, The Unity of Musical Time; John Strawn: The Intégrales of Edgard Varèse: Space, Mass, Element, and Form; Robert Cogan, Sonic Design; Olivier Messiaen, The Technique of My Musical Language; James Tenney, A History of Consonance and Dissonance Lectures 1. What s So Pastoral about Beethoven s Sixth? Like other artists, musicians have frequently looked to nature for models and materials, deriving rhythmic and pitch motives, growth processes, and formal principles from observation and interpretation of natural phenomena. But in what sense can a musical composition be said to be about nature? This lecture will explore this issue through an examination of one famous musical representation of nature: Beethoven s Symphony #6 (Pastoral). 2. The Mimesis of Natural Processes An examination of some of the different ways in which composers have employed the resources of the modern orchestra to offer stylized representations of nature (e.g., Claude Debussy s La Mer, Charles Ives The Housatonic at Stockbridge, Olivier Messiaen s Des Canyons aux Etoiles). This lecture will also consider attempts to map natural phenomena directly into musical scores (e.g., John Cage s use of star charts in his Etudes Australes) and the use of mathematical relationships derived from a natural process (e.g Iannis Xenakis, Pithoprakta; Béla Bartók, Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celeste) to underpin the formal proportions and the distribution of events in compositions. Finally, it will discuss the ways in which still other composers derive the substance and form of their compositions from an understanding of the physical nature of sound itself (e.g., Gérard Grisey, Périodes; James Tenney Spectral Canon for Conlon Nancarrow). 3. Musical Materials An exploration of the physics of sound production, including experiments with vibrating systems, waves, and Fourier decomposition. Tools for visualizing sound and for its analysis and re-synthesis will also be introduced. 4. The Morphology of Sound 10

11 A look at different ways of manipulating sounds through processes of filtering and recombination. Topics addressed include harmonic and inharmonic partials, ratios, intervals, consonance-dissonance, amplitude and loudness, vowel formants, noise, envelope, wave-length, period, phase, the time and frequency domains. Finally, consideration will be given to techniques for the visualization of structure not only of individual sonic components, but also of entire formal units of a composition. 5. A Brief History of Keyboards A survey of the transformation of keyboard instruments (clavichords, harpsichords, the piano forte) and the impetus that innovations in the technology of keyboards gave to new forms of composition; the impact of new compositions on keyboard design; composers transformations of the sounds of the piano (e.g., John Cage s pieces for prepared piano and George Crumb s Celestial Mechanics); experiments with player pianos (George Antheil s Ballet Mécanique and Colin Nancarrow s Studies for Prepared Player Piano). 6. Musique Concrète, Synthesizers, and Digital Sampling The impact of new technologies for the manipulation of sounds, including experiments with recorded sounds (e.g., Pierre Schaeffer s Etude aux Chemins de Fer), the impact of the Studio for Electronic Music (Karlheinz Stockhausen s Gesang der Jünglinge and Edgard Varèse s Poème Electronique); the advent of digital sampling. 7. Musical Research and the Process of Composition A discussion of the preparatory stages of musical compositions; the role of notes and sketches; the collection and analysis of sonic materials; drafts and experiments. 8. Thrushfield An analysis of the structure, musical rhetoric, and compositional argument of Thrushfield, a serenade for six instruments based on a single field recording that the composer transcribed into musical notation and analyzed. The recording serves as the source of all musical ideas in the composition: both thematic and transformational Discussions 1. Representation 11

12 What does it mean to say that a musical composition is, in one way or another, about nature? How does the musical representation of nature differ from the modes of representation employed in other artistic and scholarly endeavors? 2. Meaning What makes music meaningful? Does meaning lie in particular sounds (e.g., imitations of bird songs or other sounds of nature?), in the formal properties of the composition, or in the context of a work s performance? 3. Authority and Explanation What are the relevant criteria for interpreting musical compositions? What role, if any, do such factors as the composer s stated intentions or the historical context of the composition play? What is the import of aspects of a composition that cannot be heard (e.g., frequencies outside the range of human hearing, inscriptions in the score). 4. Innovation, Technology, and Inspiration How have developments in devices for producing sounds altered the character of the music that composers write? What are the implications of performing music on instruments that did not exist at the time of a work s composition (e.g., Bach on a modern concert grand)? 5. Interpretation and Performance What is the role of performance in understanding a musical composition? In what ways do recent compositional practices (i.e., electronic music or aleatory procedures) alter the relationship between a composition and its performance? Assignments and Assessment Labs Visualization and manipulation of sound. Paper A 4-5 page paper employing the analytic approaches discussed in this course as applied to one of the assigned compositions. 12

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes University Major/Dept Learning Outcome Source Linguistics The undergraduate degree in linguistics emphasizes knowledge and awareness of: the fundamental architecture of language in the domains of phonetics

More information

Chapter 12. Meeting 12, History: Iannis Xenakis

Chapter 12. Meeting 12, History: Iannis Xenakis Chapter 12. Meeting 12, History: Iannis Xenakis 12.1. Announcements Musical Design Report 3 due 6 April Start thinking about sonic system projects 12.2. Quiz 10 Minutes 12.3. Xenakis: Background An architect,

More information

Chapter 23. New Currents After Thursday, February 7, 13

Chapter 23. New Currents After Thursday, February 7, 13 Chapter 23 New Currents After 1945 The Quest for Innovation one approach: divide large ensembles into individual parts so the sonority could shift from one kind of mass (saturation) to another (unison),

More information

Poème Électronique (1958) Edgard Varèse

Poème Électronique (1958) Edgard Varèse 1 TAPE MUSIC Poème Électronique (1958) Edgard Varèse 8 2 3 MAGNETIC TAPE MAGNETIC TAPE 1928: Fritz Pfleumer invented magnetic tape for sound recording (German-Austrian engineer) 1930s: Magnetophone (AEG,

More information

Chapter Five: The Elements of Music

Chapter Five: The Elements of Music Chapter Five: The Elements of Music What Students Should Know and Be Able to Do in the Arts Education Reform, Standards, and the Arts Summary Statement to the National Standards - http://www.menc.org/publication/books/summary.html

More information

Chapter 1 Overview of Music Theories

Chapter 1 Overview of Music Theories Chapter 1 Overview of Music Theories The title of this chapter states Music Theories in the plural and not the singular Music Theory or Theory of Music. Probably no single theory will ever cover the enormous

More information

Music Theory. Degree Offered. Degree Requirements. Major Learning Outcomes MUSIC THEORY. Music Theory 1. Master of Music in Music Theory

Music Theory. Degree Offered. Degree Requirements. Major Learning Outcomes MUSIC THEORY. Music Theory 1. Master of Music in Music Theory Music Theory 1 Music Theory Degree Offered Master of Music in Music Theory The Master of Music in Music Theory is intended for performers and music educators who desire advanced training in the analysis

More information

COURSE OUTLINE MUS103

COURSE OUTLINE MUS103 COURSE OUTLINE MUS103 Course Number Intro to Music Course title 3 3 lecture/0 lab Credits Hours Catalog description: Designed to enhance the student's knowledge and enjoyment of music of a variety of styles

More information

Vocal Pedagogy and Performance

Vocal Pedagogy and Performance Vocal Pedagogy and Performance 1 Vocal Pedagogy and Performance Degree Offered: Doctor of Musical Arts in Vocal Pedagogy and Performance At this time, the School of Music is not offering the Doctor of

More information

BA single honours Music Production 2018/19

BA single honours Music Production 2018/19 BA single honours Music Production 2018/19 canterbury.ac.uk/study-here/courses/undergraduate/music-production-18-19.aspx Core modules Year 1 Sound Production 1A (studio Recording) This module provides

More information

Unit 8 Practice Test

Unit 8 Practice Test Name Date Part 1: Multiple Choice 1) In music, the early twentieth century was a time of A) the continuation of old forms B) stagnation C) revolt and change D) disinterest Unit 8 Practice Test 2) Which

More information

Research question. Approach. Foreign words (gairaigo) in Japanese. Research question

Research question. Approach. Foreign words (gairaigo) in Japanese. Research question Group 2 Subjects Overview A group 2 extended essay is intended for students who are studying a second modern language. Students may not write a group 2 extended essay in a language that they are offering

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 001S Applied Voice Studio 0 Credits MUS 105 Survey of Music History I 3 Credits A chronological survey of Western music from the Medieval through the Baroque periods stressing

More information

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS - COMPOSITION

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS - COMPOSITION McGILL UNIVERSITY SCHULICH SCHOOL OF MUSIC GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS - COMPOSITION All students beginning graduate studies in Composition, Music Education, Music Technology and Theory are required

More information

Syllabus: PHYS 1300 Introduction to Musical Acoustics Fall 20XX

Syllabus: PHYS 1300 Introduction to Musical Acoustics Fall 20XX Syllabus: PHYS 1300 Introduction to Musical Acoustics Fall 20XX Instructor: Professor Alex Weiss Office: 108 Science Hall (Physics Main Office) Hours: Immediately after class Box: 19059 Phone: 817-272-2266

More information

Second Grade: National Visual Arts Core Standards

Second Grade: National Visual Arts Core Standards Second Grade: National Visual Arts Core Standards Connecting #VA:Cn10.1 Process Component: Interpret Anchor Standard: Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art. Enduring Understanding:

More information

MUSIC (MUSC) Bucknell University 1

MUSIC (MUSC) Bucknell University 1 Bucknell University 1 MUSIC (MUSC) MUSC 114. Composition Studio..25 Credits. MUSC 121. Introduction to Music Fundamentals. 1 Credit. Offered Fall Semester Only; Lecture hours:3,other:2 The study of the

More information

YSTCM Modules Available to NUS students in Semester 1, Academic Year 2017/2018

YSTCM Modules Available to NUS students in Semester 1, Academic Year 2017/2018 YSTCM Modules Available to NUS students in Semester 1, Academic Year 2017/2018 Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music modules are divided into these categories: 1) General Education Modules (Human Cultures

More information

UNDERGRADUATE MUSIC THEORY COURSES INDIANA UNIVERSITY JACOBS SCHOOL OF MUSIC

UNDERGRADUATE MUSIC THEORY COURSES INDIANA UNIVERSITY JACOBS SCHOOL OF MUSIC UNDERGRADUATE MUSIC THEORY COURSES INDIANA UNIVERSITY JACOBS SCHOOL OF MUSIC CONTENTS I. Goals (p. 1) II. Core Curriculum, Advanced Music Theory courses, Music History and Literature courses (pp. 2-3).

More information

NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE

NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756-1791) Single pieces you may find: Eine Kliene Nachtmusic (for string orchestra), the Clarinet Quintet in A, Piano Concertos - (any you may have).

More information

Humanities Learning Outcomes

Humanities Learning Outcomes University Major/Dept Learning Outcome Source Creative Writing The undergraduate degree in creative writing emphasizes knowledge and awareness of: literary works, including the genres of fiction, poetry,

More information

SCHEME OF WORK College Aims. Curriculum Aims and Objectives. Assessment Objectives

SCHEME OF WORK College Aims. Curriculum Aims and Objectives. Assessment Objectives SCHEME OF WORK 2017 Faculty Subject Level ARTS 9703 Music AS Level College Aims Senior College was established in 1995 to provide a high quality learning experience for senior secondary students. Its stated

More information

The doctor of musical arts curriculum in conducting prepares students for careers in higher education and in the professional world.

The doctor of musical arts curriculum in conducting prepares students for careers in higher education and in the professional world. Conducting 1 Conducting Degrees Offered Master of Music in Conducting Doctor of Musical Arts in Conducting During the program of study, students at both the masters and doctoral levels will study repertoire

More information

Laboratory Assignment 3. Digital Music Synthesis: Beethoven s Fifth Symphony Using MATLAB

Laboratory Assignment 3. Digital Music Synthesis: Beethoven s Fifth Symphony Using MATLAB Laboratory Assignment 3 Digital Music Synthesis: Beethoven s Fifth Symphony Using MATLAB PURPOSE In this laboratory assignment, you will use MATLAB to synthesize the audio tones that make up a well-known

More information

Rachel Hocking Assignment Music 2Y Student No Music 1 - Music for Small Ensembles

Rachel Hocking Assignment Music 2Y Student No Music 1 - Music for Small Ensembles Music 1 - Music for Small Ensembles This unit is designed for a Music 1 class in the first term of the HSC course. The learning focus will be on reinforcing the musical concepts, widening student repertoire

More information

GLOSSARY for National Core Arts: Visual Arts STANDARDS

GLOSSARY for National Core Arts: Visual Arts STANDARDS GLOSSARY for National Core Arts: Visual Arts STANDARDS Visual Arts, as defined by the National Art Education Association, include the traditional fine arts, such as, drawing, painting, printmaking, photography,

More information

MUT 5629 ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES. Dr. Orlando Jacinto García. Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:00 AM -12:15 PM

MUT 5629 ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES. Dr. Orlando Jacinto García. Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:00 AM -12:15 PM MUT 5629 ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES Dr. Orlando Jacinto García Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:00 AM -12:15 PM Objectives and format: A required course for all graduate music students, Analytical Techniques is designed

More information

Reality According to Language and Concepts Ben G. Yacobi *

Reality According to Language and Concepts Ben G. Yacobi * Journal of Philosophy of Life Vol.6, No.2 (June 2016):51-58 [Essay] Reality According to Language and Concepts Ben G. Yacobi * Abstract Science uses not only mathematics, but also inaccurate natural language

More information

Music. Music Instrumental. Program Description. Fine & Applied Arts/Behavioral Sciences Division

Music. Music Instrumental. Program Description. Fine & Applied Arts/Behavioral Sciences Division Fine & Applied Arts/Behavioral Sciences Division (For Meteorology - See Science, General ) Program Description Students may select from three music programs Instrumental, Theory-Composition, or Vocal.

More information

Collaborative Piano. Degrees Offered. Degree Requirements. Collaborative Piano 1

Collaborative Piano. Degrees Offered. Degree Requirements. Collaborative Piano 1 Collaborative Piano 1 Collaborative Piano Degrees Offered Master of Music in Collaborative Piano Doctor of Musical Arts in Collaborative Piano The Master of Music in Collaborative Piano provides students

More information

Music Technology, M.S.

Music Technology, M.S. Music Technology, M.S. 1 Music Technology, M.S. Center for the Performing and Cinematic Arts / BOYER COLLEGE OF MUSIC AND DANCE (http://www.temple.edu/boyer) About the Program Not currently accepting applications

More information

Violin/Viola Studio Lessons Music 233/234t

Violin/Viola Studio Lessons Music 233/234t Violin/Viola Studio Lessons Music 233/234t Karen Davy 826-5439 Karen.Davy@humboldt.edu Office Hours: as posted on office door or by appointment Course Description: Individual instruction on the violin/viola.

More information

The Shimer School Core Curriculum

The Shimer School Core Curriculum Basic Core Studies The Shimer School Core Curriculum Humanities 111 Fundamental Concepts of Art and Music Humanities 112 Literature in the Ancient World Humanities 113 Literature in the Modern World Social

More information

RE: ELECTIVE REQUIREMENT FOR THE BA IN MUSIC (MUSICOLOGY/HTCC)

RE: ELECTIVE REQUIREMENT FOR THE BA IN MUSIC (MUSICOLOGY/HTCC) RE: ELECTIVE REQUIREMENT FOR THE BA IN MUSIC (MUSICOLOGY/HTCC) The following seminars and tutorials may count toward fulfilling the elective requirement for the BA in MUSIC with a focus in Musicology/HTCC.

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1 Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 2 Music Theory 3 Units (Degree Applicable, CSU, UC, C-ID #: MUS 120) Corequisite: MUS 5A Preparation for the study of harmony and form as it is practiced in Western tonal

More information

Spectral Sounds Summary

Spectral Sounds Summary Marco Nicoli colini coli Emmanuel Emma manuel Thibault ma bault ult Spectral Sounds 27 1 Summary Y they listen to music on dozens of devices, but also because a number of them play musical instruments

More information

National Standards for Visual Art The National Standards for Arts Education

National Standards for Visual Art The National Standards for Arts Education National Standards for Visual Art The National Standards for Arts Education Developed by the Consortium of National Arts Education Associations (under the guidance of the National Committee for Standards

More information

MUSIC (MUSI) 100 Level Courses. Music (MUSI) 1

MUSIC (MUSI) 100 Level Courses. Music (MUSI) 1 Music (MUSI) 1 MUSIC (MUSI) 100 Level Courses MUSI 100: Fundamentals of Music. 3 credits. Study of musical notation, interval and triad construction, reading of treble and bass clefs, scale construction,

More information

Music Appreciation Spring 2005 Music Test: Music, An Appreciation, Fourth Brief Edition by Roger Kamien (with CD s)

Music Appreciation Spring 2005 Music Test: Music, An Appreciation, Fourth Brief Edition by Roger Kamien (with CD s) Music Appreciation Spring 2005 Music 1003 Instructor: Jo Ann Schwader, e-mail jschwade@nwacc.edu NWACC One College Drive Bentonville, Arkansas 72712 479-619-2236 Office hours: Monday & Wednesday 8:00-9:00a.m.

More information

Midterm Review TechnoSonics People / Groups

Midterm Review TechnoSonics People / Groups Midterm Review TechnoSonics 2016 People / Groups Alvin Lucier Beatles Brian Eno Brian Wilson Charlie Christian Christian Marclay Clara Rockmore Daphne Oram Dave Smith David Bowie David Tudor Donald Buchla

More information

Montana Content Standards for Arts Grade-by-Grade View

Montana Content Standards for Arts Grade-by-Grade View Montana Content Standards for Arts Grade-by-Grade View Adopted July 14, 2016 by the Montana Board of Public Education Table of Contents Introduction... 3 The Four Artistic Processes in the Montana Arts

More information

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS MUSIC THEORY

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS MUSIC THEORY McGILL UNIVERSITY SCHULICH SCHOOL OF MUSIC GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS MUSIC THEORY All students beginning graduate studies in Composition, Music Education, Music Technology and Theory are required

More information

MUSIC (MU) Music (MU) 1

MUSIC (MU) Music (MU) 1 Music (MU) 1 MUSIC (MU) MU 1130 Beginning Piano I (1 Credit) For students with little or no previous study. Basic knowledge and skills necessary for keyboard performance. Development of physical and mental

More information

Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary, Adopted 2013

Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary, Adopted 2013 Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary, Adopted 2013 Statutory Authority: The provisions of this Subchapter A issued under the Texas Education Code, 7.102(c)(4)

More information

Department of Music Vocal Pedagogy and Performance Master of Music Degree Placement Examination Program Admission Requirements

Department of Music Vocal Pedagogy and Performance Master of Music Degree Placement Examination Program Admission Requirements The offers the following: Master of Music Degree, Graduate Certificate in Keyboard Pedagogy, Graduate Certificate in Instrumental Performance, Graduate Certificate in Voice Pedagogy. Master of Music Degree

More information

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, DUBLIN MUSIC

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, DUBLIN MUSIC UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, DUBLIN MUSIC SESSION 2000/2001 University College Dublin NOTE: All students intending to apply for entry to the BMus Degree at University College

More information

FINE ARTS Institutional (ILO), Program (PLO), and Course (SLO) Alignment

FINE ARTS Institutional (ILO), Program (PLO), and Course (SLO) Alignment FINE ARTS Institutional (ILO), Program (PLO), and Course (SLO) Program: Music Number of Courses: 52 Date Updated: 11.19.2014 Submitted by: V. Palacios, ext. 3535 ILOs 1. Critical Thinking Students apply

More information

Claude Debussy. Biography: Compositional Style: Major Works List:

Claude Debussy. Biography: Compositional Style: Major Works List: Claude Debussy Biography: Compositional Style: Major Works List: Analysis: Debussy "La cathédrale engloutie" from Preludes, Book I (1910) Discuss the Aesthetic Style this piece belongs to. Diagram the

More information

High School Photography 1 Curriculum Essentials Document

High School Photography 1 Curriculum Essentials Document High School Photography 1 Curriculum Essentials Document Boulder Valley School District Department of Curriculum and Instruction February 2012 Introduction The Boulder Valley Elementary Visual Arts Curriculum

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1. MUS 1530 Brass Class. Principles, concepts, difficulties typical of brass instruments and. MUS 1000 Performance Laboratory

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1. MUS 1530 Brass Class. Principles, concepts, difficulties typical of brass instruments and. MUS 1000 Performance Laboratory Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 1000 Performance Laboratory [0 credit hours (0, 0, 1)] Required of music majors and minors. Weekly departmental student recitals. Offered as P/NC only. MUS 1010 Concert Attendance

More information

MUS302: ELECTROACOUSTIC COMPOSITION AND SOUND DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES

MUS302: ELECTROACOUSTIC COMPOSITION AND SOUND DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES LECTURE 2: PRODUCTION, COMPOSITION, SOUND WORLDS AND PHILOSOPHIES DR BRIAN BRIDGES BD.BRIDGES@ULSTER.AC.UK MUS302: ELECTROACOUSTIC COMPOSITION AND SOUND DESIGN TECHNOLOGIES RECAP History of Electronic

More information

Arts Education Essential Standards Crosswalk: MUSIC A Document to Assist With the Transition From the 2005 Standard Course of Study

Arts Education Essential Standards Crosswalk: MUSIC A Document to Assist With the Transition From the 2005 Standard Course of Study NCDPI This document is designed to help North Carolina educators teach the Common Core and Essential Standards (Standard Course of Study). NCDPI staff are continually updating and improving these tools

More information

DAT335 Music Perception and Cognition Cogswell Polytechnical College Spring Week 6 Class Notes

DAT335 Music Perception and Cognition Cogswell Polytechnical College Spring Week 6 Class Notes DAT335 Music Perception and Cognition Cogswell Polytechnical College Spring 2009 Week 6 Class Notes Pitch Perception Introduction Pitch may be described as that attribute of auditory sensation in terms

More information

Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary

Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary Page 1 of 26 Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary Statutory Authority: The provisions of this Subchapter A issued under the Texas Education Code, 28.002,

More information

Music (MUSIC) Iowa State University

Music (MUSIC) Iowa State University Iowa State University 2013-2014 1 Music (MUSIC) Courses primarily for undergraduates: MUSIC 101. Fundamentals of Music. (1-2) Cr. 2. F.S. Prereq: Ability to read elementary musical notation Notation, recognition,

More information

DUNGOG HIGH SCHOOL CREATIVE ARTS

DUNGOG HIGH SCHOOL CREATIVE ARTS DUNGOG HIGH SCHOOL CREATIVE ARTS SENIOR HANDBOOK HSC Music 1 2013 NAME: CLASS: CONTENTS 1. Assessment schedule 2. Topics / Scope and Sequence 3. Course Structure 4. Contexts 5. Objectives and Outcomes

More information

Music 554 Music Literature: Orchestral Orchestral Literature San Diego State University Fall Semester 2013 MW 1:00-1:50, Music Room 261

Music 554 Music Literature: Orchestral Orchestral Literature San Diego State University Fall Semester 2013 MW 1:00-1:50, Music Room 261 Music 554 Music Literature: Orchestral Orchestral Literature Fall Semester 2013 MW 1:00-1:50, Music Room 261 Course Syllabus Instructor: Prof. Michael Gerdes Office: Music 222 Phone: (619) 594-4681 Office

More information

Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts. Subchapter A. Elementary

Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts. Subchapter A. Elementary Chapter 117. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Fine Arts Subchapter A. Elementary Statutory Authority: The provisions of this Subchapter A issued under the Texas Education Code, 28.002, unless otherwise

More information

Coastal Carolina University Faculty Senate Consent Agenda March 4, 2015 COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES AND FINE ARTS

Coastal Carolina University Faculty Senate Consent Agenda March 4, 2015 COLLEGE OF HUMANITIES AND FINE ARTS All changes are effective Fall 2015. Coastal Carolina University Faculty Senate Consent Agenda March 4, 2015 Academic Affairs (moved and seconded out of committee) Proposals for program/minor changes:

More information

Compositional Practices Music Composition 213, 413. (2017, Spring Term)

Compositional Practices Music Composition 213, 413. (2017, Spring Term) Compositional Practices 1955-80 Music Composition 213, 413 (2017, Spring Term) Instructor, Robert Morris Time: Tuesday, Thursday; 10:00-11:15 am The following lists the topics and pieces we will cover

More information

Compositional Practices Music Composition 213, 413. (2019, Spring Term)

Compositional Practices Music Composition 213, 413. (2019, Spring Term) Compositional Practices 1955-80 Music Composition 213, 413 (2019, Spring Term) Instructor, Robert Morris Time: Tuesday, Thursday; 10:00-11:15 am The following lists the topics and pieces we will cover

More information

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC ASSESSMENT PLAN. Overview and Mission

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC ASSESSMENT PLAN. Overview and Mission 1 CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC ASSESSMENT PLAN Overview and Mission The Department of Music offers a traditionally based course of study dedicated to providing thorough training

More information

Contents. Iannis Xenakis s Achorripsis (1957) : The Matrix Game. Iannis Xenakis ( ) Iannis Xenakis Achorripsis (1957) Distribution of Events

Contents. Iannis Xenakis s Achorripsis (1957) : The Matrix Game. Iannis Xenakis ( ) Iannis Xenakis Achorripsis (1957) Distribution of Events Contents Iannis Xenakis s Achorripsis (1957) : The Matrix Game Linda M. Arsenault (2002) Reviewed by Beomsoo Kim Iannis Xenakis Achorripsis (1957) Matrix Structure Distribution of Events 28 Columns (Time

More information

Division of Music. Division of Music Mission. Division of Music Goals and Outcomes. Division Objectives. Proficiencies. Minot State University 1

Division of Music. Division of Music Mission. Division of Music Goals and Outcomes. Division Objectives. Proficiencies. Minot State University 1 Minot State University 1 Division of Music Chair Erik Anderson Division of Music Mission The mission of the MSU Division of Music is to provide courses of study and performance opportunities in music that

More information

Fine and Performing Arts Course Offerings

Fine and Performing Arts Course Offerings Fine and Performing Arts Course Offerings 2017-2018 Two-Semester Courses Studio Art: 2-semester course, 1 credit None Students who take Studio Art learn the basics of drawing and painting, including both

More information

1000 PERFORMANCE ATTENDANCE

1000 PERFORMANCE ATTENDANCE Music - MUSI 1 Music - MUSI Courses MUSI 1000 PERFORMANCE ATTENDANCE (0) LEC. 1. SU. Pr., Enrollment in MUAP. Required during each semester of MUAP enrollment. Monitored attendance at studio and departmental

More information

College of MUSIC. James Forger, DEAN UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS. Admission as a Junior to the College of Music

College of MUSIC. James Forger, DEAN UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS. Admission as a Junior to the College of Music College of MUSIC James Forger, DEAN The College of Music offers undergraduate programs leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Music and Bachelor of Arts, and graduate programs leading to the degrees of

More information

MUSIC (MUSI) Music (MUSI) 1

MUSIC (MUSI) Music (MUSI) 1 Music (MUSI) 1 MUSIC (MUSI) MUSI 100 Performing Arts On Stage (3 crs) No credit toward music major or minor programs. May not be repeated for credit. Introduction to music listening and theatre appreciation.

More information

Total Section A (/45) Total Section B (/45)

Total Section A (/45) Total Section B (/45) 3626934333 GCE Music OCR Advanced GCE H542 Unit G355 Composing 2 Coursework Cover Sheet Before completing this form, please read the Instructions to Centres document. One of these cover sheets, suitably

More information

MOZART, THE COMPOSER Lesson Plans

MOZART, THE COMPOSER Lesson Plans Lesson Plans October-December 2008 UNIT: LESSON: Mozart, The Composer 1 and 2. Mozart s early years AIMS To know of Mozart s early years life facts and some of his CONTRIBUTION TO COMPETENCES Communicative:

More information

hhh MUSIC OPPORTUNITIES BEGIN IN GRADE 3

hhh MUSIC OPPORTUNITIES BEGIN IN GRADE 3 hhh MUSIC OPPORTUNITIES BEGIN IN GRADE 3 HHH MUSIC OPPORTUNITIES Elementary School All Half Hollow Hills students receive classroom music instruction from Kindergarten through grade 5. The curriculum in

More information

2 nd Grade Visual Arts Curriculum Essentials Document

2 nd Grade Visual Arts Curriculum Essentials Document 2 nd Grade Visual Arts Curriculum Essentials Document Boulder Valley School District Department of Curriculum and Instruction February 2012 Introduction The Boulder Valley Elementary Visual Arts Curriculum

More information

Messiaen: Musical Expressions of Birdsong and Christian Spiritualism

Messiaen: Musical Expressions of Birdsong and Christian Spiritualism Messiaen: Musical Expressions of Birdsong and Christian Spiritualism MUH 3212 Final Research Paper April 13, 2014 Emily Judd Olivier Messiaen was much more than a typical composer of music. He traveled

More information

MUS 173 THEORY I ELEMENTARY WRITTEN THEORY. (2) The continuation of the work of MUS 171. Lecture, three hours. Prereq: MUS 171.

MUS 173 THEORY I ELEMENTARY WRITTEN THEORY. (2) The continuation of the work of MUS 171. Lecture, three hours. Prereq: MUS 171. 001 RECITAL ATTENDANCE. (0) The course will consist of attendance at recitals. Each freshman and sophomore student must attend a minimum of 16 concerts per semester (for a total of four semesters), to

More information

Bachelor of Music Piano Performance Specialization

Bachelor of Music Piano Performance Specialization Bachelor of Music Piano Performance Specialization This degree is designed to prepare students for further graduate study in music, for careers in performance, or for careers in related fields such as

More information

Beethoven s Fifth Sine -phony: the science of harmony and discord

Beethoven s Fifth Sine -phony: the science of harmony and discord Contemporary Physics, Vol. 48, No. 5, September October 2007, 291 295 Beethoven s Fifth Sine -phony: the science of harmony and discord TOM MELIA* Exeter College, Oxford OX1 3DP, UK (Received 23 October

More information

College of MUSIC. James Forger, DEAN UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS. Admission as a Junior to the College of Music

College of MUSIC. James Forger, DEAN UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS. Admission as a Junior to the College of Music College of MUSIC James Forger, DEAN The College of Music offers undergraduate programs leading to the degrees of Bachelor of Music and Bachelor of Arts, and graduate programs leading to the degrees of

More information

Interview with Sam Auinger On Flusser, Music and Sound.

Interview with Sam Auinger On Flusser, Music and Sound. Interview with Sam Auinger On Flusser, Music and Sound. This interview took place on 28th May 2014 in Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin. Annie Gog) I sent you the translations of two essays "On Music" and "On Modern

More information

Music Performance: Woodwinds

Music Performance: Woodwinds Music Performance: Woodwinds 1 Music Performance: Woodwinds Bachelor of Music in Music Performance: Woodwinds The performance curricula are especially designed for students wishing to prepare themselves

More information

Capstone Design Project Sample

Capstone Design Project Sample The design theory cannot be understood, and even less defined, as a certain scientific theory. In terms of the theory that has a precise conceptual appliance that interprets the legality of certain natural

More information

Compositional Practices Spring Term Robert Morris, Instructor. Class Times: Tues. Thur., 8:30 10:00 am

Compositional Practices Spring Term Robert Morris, Instructor. Class Times: Tues. Thur., 8:30 10:00 am Compositional Practices 1955-80 Spring Term 2015 Robert Morris, Instructor Class Times: Tues. Thur., 8:30 10:00 am T (Jan 13) Generalized isomorphism of pitch and time; time point system. Babbitt String

More information

Music 25: Introduction to Sonic Arts

Music 25: Introduction to Sonic Arts Syllabus Page 1 of 6 Music 25: Introduction to Sonic Arts Professor Ashley Fure Hallgarten 203 ashley.r.fure@dartmouth.edu Office Hours: Wednesdays 1 3 pm, or by appointment Tonmeister (X-hour) Instructor:

More information

La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name

La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name I. Listening Skill For each excerpt, answer the following questions. Excerpt One: - Vivaldi "Spring" First Movement 1. Regarding the element

More information

6 th Grade Instrumental Music Curriculum Essentials Document

6 th Grade Instrumental Music Curriculum Essentials Document 6 th Grade Instrumental Curriculum Essentials Document Boulder Valley School District Department of Curriculum and Instruction August 2011 1 Introduction The Boulder Valley Curriculum provides the foundation

More information

THEATRE (TH) Theatre (TH) 1

THEATRE (TH) Theatre (TH) 1 Theatre (TH) 1 THEATRE (TH) TH 1323 Acting I Description: Ensemble techniques and creative improvisation; vocal and physical development for the actor; theories and techniques of acting; fundamental scene

More information

Glossary of Rhetorical Terms*

Glossary of Rhetorical Terms* Glossary of Rhetorical Terms* Analyze To divide something into parts in order to understand both the parts and the whole. This can be done by systems analysis (where the object is divided into its interconnected

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) MUS 110 ACCOMPANIST COACHING SESSION Corequisites: MUS 171, 173, 271, 273, 371, 373, 471, or 473 applied lessons. Provides students enrolled in the applied music lesson sequence the opportunity

More information

MUSIC. Curricula Available to Music Majors. Administered by the Department of Music and Theatre. Bachelor of Music

MUSIC. Curricula Available to Music Majors. Administered by the Department of Music and Theatre. Bachelor of Music Music 1 MUSIC Administered by the Department of Music and Theatre Undergraduate Study The Department of Music and Theatre offers a strong undergraduate music program, where students study with full-time

More information

Course Syllabus Art Appreciation ARTS (787) /

Course Syllabus Art Appreciation ARTS (787) / Semester with Course Reference Number (CRN) Instructor contact information (phone number and email address) Course Syllabus Art Appreciation ARTS 1301 (787) 406-2606 / Lourdes.correacarlo@hcc.edu Office

More information

ESSEX COUNTY COLLEGE Humanities Division MUS 100 Music Appreciation Course Outline

ESSEX COUNTY COLLEGE Humanities Division MUS 100 Music Appreciation Course Outline ESSEX COUNTY COLLEGE Humanities Division MUS 100 Music Appreciation Course Outline Course Number & Name: MUS 100 Music Appreciation Credit Hours: 3.0 Contact Hours: 3.0 Lecture: 3.0 Lab: N/A Other: N/A

More information

THEORY AND COMPOSITION (MTC)

THEORY AND COMPOSITION (MTC) Theory and Composition (MTC) 1 THEORY AND COMPOSITION (MTC) MTC 101. Composition I. 2 Credit Course covers elementary principles of composition; class performance of composition projects is also included.

More information

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliate(s). All rights reserved. NES, the NES logo, Pearson, the Pearson logo, and National

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliate(s). All rights reserved. NES, the NES logo, Pearson, the Pearson logo, and National Music (504) NES, the NES logo, Pearson, the Pearson logo, and National Evaluation Series are trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries of Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliate(s). NES Profile: Music

More information

SOUNDINGS? I see. Personal what?

SOUNDINGS? I see. Personal what? James Tenney Phone conversation: Hello? Is this JIM TENNEY? Yes. This is WALTER ZIMMERMANN. very small space. It occured to me that these might nicely make postcards, or "Score Cards", and I called the

More information

Advanced Placement Music Theory

Advanced Placement Music Theory Page 1 of 12 Unit: Composing, Analyzing, Arranging Advanced Placement Music Theory Framew Standard Learning Objectives/ Content Outcomes 2.10 Demonstrate the ability to read an instrumental or vocal score

More information

General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music

General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music Music Study, Mobility, and Accountability Project General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music Excerpts from the National Association of Schools of Music Handbook 2005-2006 PLEASE

More information

Physical Modelling of Musical Instruments Using Digital Waveguides: History, Theory, Practice

Physical Modelling of Musical Instruments Using Digital Waveguides: History, Theory, Practice Physical Modelling of Musical Instruments Using Digital Waveguides: History, Theory, Practice Introduction Why Physical Modelling? History of Waveguide Physical Models Mathematics of Waveguide Physical

More information

MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses. Music (MUS) 1. MUS 110 Music Appreciation (3 Units) Skills Advisories: Eligibility for ENG 103.

MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses. Music (MUS) 1. MUS 110 Music Appreciation (3 Units) Skills Advisories: Eligibility for ENG 103. Music (MUS) 1 MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses MUS 100 Fundamentals Of Music Techniques (3 Units) Learning to read music, developing aural perception, fundamentals of music theory and keyboard skills. (Primarily

More information

MUSIC TECHNOLOGY MASTER OF MUSIC PROGRAM (33 CREDITS)

MUSIC TECHNOLOGY MASTER OF MUSIC PROGRAM (33 CREDITS) MUSIC TECHNOLOGY MASTER OF MUSIC PROGRAM (33 CREDITS) The Master of Music in Music Technology builds upon the strong foundation of an undergraduate degree in music. Students can expect a rigorous graduate-level

More information

Mu 101: Introduction to Music

Mu 101: Introduction to Music Attendance/Reading Quiz! Mu 101: Introduction to Music Instructor: Dr. Alice Jones Queensborough Community College Fall 2018 Sections F2 (T 12:10-3) and J2 (3:10-6) Reading quiz Religion was the most important

More information

Department of Music. Bachelor of Music Degree. Admission to the Department of Music. COLFA Signature Experience

Department of Music. Bachelor of Music Degree. Admission to the Department of Music. COLFA Signature Experience Department of Music The Department of Music offers the Bachelor of Music degree and the Bachelor of Arts in Music degree. Within the Bachelor of Music degree, students may select a concentration in Music

More information