SCHOOL OF FINE ART & MUSIC Winter Semester 2016 MUSC* CRITICAL THOUGHT AND MUSIC

Similar documents
Art of Listening (MUAR ) p. 1

COURSE SYLLABUS MUSIC APPRECIATION MUS 1113 FALL 2014

HUMA1102 ENJOYMENT OF CLASSICAL MUSIC 2014 Fall

MUSIC APPRECIATION Survey of Western Art Music COURSE SYLLABUS

HUMA 115 ENJOYMENT OF CLASSICAL MUSIC 2011 Spring

Introduction To Music Bard High School Early College 2010/2011

HUMA1102 ENJOYMENT OF CLASSICAL MUSIC 2017 Spring

University of Arkansas-Monticello Division of Music Fall MUS 1113 Music Appreciation Online Syllabus

SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS AND MUSIC Fall Semester 2015 MUSC* GENRE & STYLE IN WESTERN ART MUSIC

NEW HAMPSHIRE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE. After successfully completing the course, the student will be able to:

Music: An Appreciation, Brief Edition Edition: 8, 2015

NEW HAMPSHIRE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE

Music 1A: Exploring Western Music Fall 2014 MW 2:00 3:20pm

Queens College, Aaron Copland School of Music Introduction to Music, spring 2011 Music 001, Section 9M3WA Room 226

Music 001 Introduction to Music. Section CT3RA: T/Th 12:15-1:30 pm Section 1T3RA: T/Th 1:40-2:55 pm

MUS 111: Music Appreciation

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE WINTER 2016 TR 14:30-15:50, L123

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

Music 154: Music Appreciation 3 cr. hrs.; 3 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.

I. ASCRC General Education Form. Dept/Program

Terms/Forms/Styles Representative. Machaut. Arcadelt. Farmer

Masterpieces of Western Art Music*

Music 302H History of Music II Lower Division Writing Course: 3 Credits Spring 2012 TR 11:10-12:30, Music 105

Queens College, Aaron Copland School of Music Introduction to Music, fall 2010 Music 001, Section 9M3WA Room 226

Music 111: Introduction To Music

ANGELO STATE UNIVERSITY SYLLABUS FOR MUSI 1306 MUSIC APPRECIATION

Music 105: Music Appreciation Spring 2011

COURSE OUTLINE MUS103

Music Department Conrad Grebel University College University of Waterloo Music 362: Piano Literature

THE ENJOYMENT OF MUSIC T&TH 9:00 AM to 10:15AM Office: PAC - M129 Phone: OFFICE HOURS: TBA or by appointment

History of Music II: Late Baroque and Classical MUS 133b, Spring 2016 Tuesday/Friday 11:00 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. Slosberg 212

Bergen Community College Division of Arts & Humanities Department of Performing Arts Course Syllabus MUS-107 History of Western Music Before 1750

The Basics of Reading Music

Music Appreciation, Dual Enrollment

NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE

Music 001 Introduction to Music Section CT3FA T/F, 12:15-1:30 pm Room 226

Fall 2015 Instructor reserves the right to change this syllabus FOUNDATIONS OF MUSIC MUSI 1304 Online Fall 2015

Music 111: Music Appreciation 1

Form as a Standardized Pattern. strophic form (A A A ) ternary form (A B A) fugue baroque dance form (a a b b) sonata form

1 Elements of Music: Sound, Rhythm, Melody, and Harmony 4 Sound 4 Rhythm 6 Melody 8 Harmony 9

None. Just bring an open mind.

MUSIC 105, MUSIC APPRECIATON - Section Syllabus and Orientation Letter

ILLINOIS VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE Course Syllabus for Music 1000

The Art of Listening

Music Department Conrad Grebel College University of Waterloo. MUSIC 362: Piano Literature Winter 2015

Harvard University Extension School

BOG Fee Waiver Application

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

MUAR 211 Midterm I Prep. Dido and Aeneas Purcell Texture: imitative polyphony + homophony + word painting (homophonic) Genre: opera Language: English

2010 Kendall Hunt Publishing. Contents

Course Outline. TERM EFFECTIVE: Fall 2018 CURRICULUM APPROVAL DATE: 03/26/2018

School of Professional Studies

THREE-SUMMER MASTER OF MUSIC IN CHORAL CONDUCTING

Sophorr~ore Exarn: Student Study Guide for

Ultimate Substitute Teacher s Music Resource Guide

The Graduate Entrance Examination in Music History School of Music University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. STUDY GUIDE for FALL 2017

Breaking Convention: Music and Modernism. AK 2100 Nov. 9, 2005

Welcome to MUCT 2210 Exploring Classical Music

Chapter 6. The Middle Ages

Guide to the Exam in Music History for Entering Graduate Students University of Louisville

Harvard University Literature and Arts B-51 FIRST NIGHTS. Fall Monday and Wednesday (and one Friday), 10:00 a.m.

Vienna: The Capital of Classical Music

Introduction to Western Music

Writing Trails. with. Great Composers by Laurie Barrie

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2015

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2016

MU 100 INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC LITERATURE SPRING 2004 DR. MARGERY WHATLEY OFFICE: B208 ROBERTS HALL PHONE: ,

Music Appreciation Course Syllabus Fall 2016

CARNEGIE MELLON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC FORM AND ANALYSIS FALL 2011

Music Appreciation Course Syllabus Fall 2014

Queens College, Aaron Copland School of Music Rudiments of Music 1, fall 2010 Music 060, Section BM2WA or 1M2WA Room 363

Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music

MUMH 3510/5510 Music History, 1750-Present

General Examination in Historical Musicology. Monday, August 9, Wednesday, August 11, 2010

MUSIC APPRECIATION FALL 2003 Music 1003

SYLLABUS MUS 161: Piano Literature Prepared by Dr. Nancy Zipay DeSalvo Days/Time: MWF 3:10 4:10 PM Patterson Hall

Roop Hall CFA Studio 5 X 7871 M-W-F 10-10:50 (610) Office Hours: M-W-F 9-10AM or by appointment

MUS 1010, Introduction to Music Appreciation Course Syllabus. Course Description. Course Textbook. Course Learning Outcomes. Credits.

Handbook for Applied Piano Students

Carleton University The College of the Humanities Winter 2015 HUMS 3103: Western Music

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

MUS 4712 History and Literature of Choral Music Large Forms Monday/Wednesday - 12:30pm-3:00pm Room: Mus 120

Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School Music Department IB Music Theory and History Course Syllabus

Example 1. Beethoven, Piano Sonata No. 9 in E major, Op. 14, No. 1, second movement, p. 249, CD 4/Track 6

Music 3753: History of Music from Classical Antiquity to 1600 Fall 2017

PIANO DEPARTMENT HANDBOOK

Texas A&M University Central Texas MUSK MUSIC APPRECIATION 11:00-1:45, MW Founder s Hall, Room 203

Kennan, Counterpoint (fourth edition): REQUIRED Kostka and Payne, Tonal Harmony (sixth edition): RECOMMENDED

SAN FRANCISCO CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC

MS 402 MUSIC FROM THE CLASSICAL PERIOD TO THE 20TH CENTURY IES Abroad Vienna

UNDERGRADUATE MUSIC THEORY COURSES INDIANA UNIVERSITY JACOBS SCHOOL OF MUSIC

MUSC 1313-P03 MUSIC IN CONTEMPORARY LIFE FALL 2018

LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE FALL 2017 LBCL 392. History of Music in Western Civilization: Classical to Modern

Information about the Music History Portion of the Graduate Student Entrance Exam

Honors College Core Offerings. HON 124 Honors Core Understanding the Past and Understanding the Creative Arts, 3 hours

Music History. Middle Ages Renaissance. Classical Romantic Impressionist 20 th Century

HS Music Theory Music

Southern Methodist University Meadows School of the Arts, Division of Music

Music 384 History of Music: J.S. Bach through the 20th Century

Analysis of Post-Tonal Music (MUSI 6306) Spring 2006 Professor: Andrew Davis ( )

Transcription:

SCHOOL OF FINE ART & MUSIC Winter Semester 2016 MUSC*1060-01 CRITICAL THOUGHT AND MUSIC INSTRUCTOR: Shannon Carter TIME: Monday and Wednesday 10:00-11:20 LOCATION: MacKinnon Building, Rm. 107 OFFICE: MacKinnon 215 PHONE: x 53897 EMAIL: scarte05@uoguelph.ca OFFICE HOURS: Mondays 9:00-10:00 a.m. or by appointment COURSE RESTRICTIONS: MUSC*2280, MUSC*2600, MUSC*2610, MUSC*2620, MUSC*3630 CALENDAR DESCRIPTION: This course, intended for students who have not studied music formally, introduces the main concepts and terminology of Western art (Classical) music from the Medieval period through the 20th century by examples from a wide selection of musical works. The primary goal of this course is to give students the knowledge, general research methods, and listening skills necessary to think critically about sound in general and Western art music in particular. COURSE DESCRIPTION: Through lectures, guided listening, discussion and a written project, we will explore the genres and musical aesthetics of western art music repertoire spanning one thousand years. COURSE OUTCOMES: By the end of this course, students will be able to: 1. Discuss western art ( Classical ) music using discipline-specific vocabulary 2. Discuss main features and specific works of music from different eras Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and Twentieth Century music 3. Aurally identify elements of music and specific works from these periods 4. Explain the links between an historical context and the music of its time 5. Analyze a musical problem and create a series of questions to solve it 6. Utilize library tools to perform musicological research 7. Create a university-level written project

REQUIRED TEXT: Kerman, Joseph; Gary Tomlinson. Listen. 8 th Edition. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2015. (hard copy or ebook) In order to access the streamed music content of this book, students are required to register their textbook at: www.macmillanhighered.com/listen8e/downloads. If you have a used book, you may purchase a registration code from the University Bookstore. METHOD OF EVALUATION: Group Project: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------40% Piece overview and research proposal (due February 10) 10% Peer Assessment (due April 4) 5% Research Journal (due April 4) 10% Final Draft (due April 4) 15% Listening Test 1 (February 24) -------------------------------------------------------------------15% Listening Test 2 (March 30)-----------------------------------------------------------------------15% Final Exam April 20, 2016 11:30-1:30----------------------------------------------------------30% GROUP PROJECT Students will be placed in groups during the second week of class. Each group will receive a video clip that uses art music as its soundtrack, as well as the title of the piece of the referenced piece of music. Each group will use skills taught in two Research Workshops by our librarian Dave Hudson in order to further explore the context of the piece. Each student will be assigned a particular research question concerning the musical excerpt, and will be required to answer it in 500 words. Each student will also submit a summary of the work, as well as an analysis of the piece s meaning in its new filmic context. Each group will present a final draft of the assignment together. Students will be evaluated by their peers on their performance as a team member, and also on the quality of their submissions. Specific instructions for each element of the project will be uploaded to CourseLink, For more one-on-one active writing coaching, the writing support available through the library (see http://www.lib.uoguelph.ca/get-assistance/writing/book-appointments) is fabulous the staff there can help you improve your writing substantially, thus allowing you to get a better grade on the assignment. As an incentive to attend one or more of these sessions, I will offer bonus percentages of 1% for each appointment attended (bring receipt to me in class) up to a maximum of 5%. Appointments fill up: be sure to book yours early COMMUNICATION POLICY: I will always be happy to see you during my office hours, however, if you choose to get in touch by email, please remember: 1. To include the course code in the subject heading (I teach other courses, so I need to know to which course your question pertains: mix-ups have occurred in the past). 2. To include your first and last name within the body of the email. 3. That all emails must be sent from a University of Guelph email address only.

Email is checked once a day, during regular business hours (9:00-5:00), on weekdays. Email is NOT checked on weekends or after hours. Please plan your correspondence accordingly. ATTENDANCE & PARTICIPATION Students are expected to attend all classes regularly and punctually, and to conduct themselves in a respectful manner while in class. Cell phones, pagers, etc. must be turned off when you come to class. The use of computers for anything other than note taking is distracting to other students, and will not be tolerated. Lectures may not be recorded in any format without written consent from the instructor. If you are absent from classes during the semester, you will be expected to make up missed lecture material on your own. LATE WORK POLICY: Late assignments will not be accepted without the submission of compelling and evidence of a family, medical, or analogous emergency or crisis. documented COURSE SCHEDULE (non-graded items subject to revision) Week 1: Music Fundamentals Reading Kerman, chapters 1-5 Week 2: Medieval Music in the Cathedral and at Court Reading: Kerman, chapter 6 Listening: Hildegard of Bingen (1098 1179), Plainchant sequence, "Columba aspexit Bernart de Ventadorn (c. 1135 1194), Troubadour song, "La dousa votz" Pérotin, Organum, "Alleluia. Diffusa est gratia" (c. 1200) Guillaume de Machaut (c. 1300 1377), Chanson, "Dame, de qui toute ma joie vient" Week 3: Humanism and the Renaissance; From Renaissance to Baroque Reading: Kerman, chapters 7-8 Listening: Josquin Desprez, Pange lingua Mass (c. 1510) Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Pope Marcellus Mass (1557) Thomas Weelkes, Madrigal, "As Vesta Was from Latmos Hill Descending" (1601) Giovanni Gabrieli (c. 1555 1612), Motet, "O magnum mysterium" Henry Purcell, Dido and Aeneas (1689)

Week 4: Absolutism and the Rise of Instrumental Music Reading: Kerman, chapter 9-10 Listening: Antonio Vivaldi, Violin Concerto in G, La stravaganza, Op. 4, No. 12, second movement Antonio Vivaldi, Violin Concerto in E, Spring, Op. 8, No. 1 (before 1725) J.S. Bach, Prelude and Fugue in C Major, from The Well-Tempered Clavier (1722) Activity: Library Research Session 1 with Dave Hudson (Feb. 3) Week 5: From Absolutely Powerful to Absolutely Rational(?) Reading: Kerman, chapter 11 (section 2 only), chapters 12-13 Listening: George Frideric Handel, Messiah (1742) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550 (1788) Franz Joseph Haydn, Symphony No. 94 in G ("The Surprise") (1791) Franz Joseph Haydn, Symphony No. 99 in E-flat (1793) Franz Joseph Haydn, Symphony No. 101 in D ("The Clock") (1793 1794) Due: Group Project Proposal (Feb. 10) Week 6: The Late Classical Era and the Return of the Emotional Man Reading: Kerman, chapters 14-15 Listening: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Piano Concerto No. 23 in A, K. 488 (1786) Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphony No. 5 in C Minor, Op. 67 (1808) Test 1: Listening Test, covers weeks 2-5, multiple-choice Week 7: Romanticism Man Is Basically Irrational, Or, The Whole World Goes Nuts Reading: Kerman, chapters 16-17 Listening: Franz Schubert, "Erlkönig" (The Erlking) (1815) Frédéric Chopin, Nocturne in F-sharp, Op. 15, No. 2 (1831) Hector Berlioz, Fantastic Symphony: Episodes in the Life of an Artist (1830)

Week 8: Musical Expressions of 19 th -Century Nationalism Reading: Kerman, chapters 18-19 Listening: Richard Wagner, The Valkyrie (1851 1856) Modest Musorgsky, Pictures at an Exhibition (1874) Activity: Library Research Session 2 with Dave Hudson (March 9) Week 9: Impressionism, Primitivism and Expressionism Reading: Kerman, chapters 20-21 Listening: Claude Debussy, Clouds, from Three Nocturnes (1899) Igor Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring, from Part I, "The Adoration of the Earth" (1913) Arnold Schoenberg, Pierrot lunaire (Moonstruck Pierrot) (1912) Week 10: Neoclassicism; Modernist Fusions Reading: Kerman, chapter 22 (sections 1-3) Listening: Maurice Ravel, Piano Concerto in G (1931) Béla Bartók, Music for Strings, Percussion, and Celesta (1936) Ruth Crawford, Prelude for Piano No. 6 (Andante Mystico) (1928) Week 11: American Modernism Reading: Kerman, chapter 22 (sections 4 & 5) Listening: William Grant Still, Afro-American Symphony (1930) Aaron Copland, Appalachian Spring (1945) Test 2: Listening Test, covers weeks 6-10, multiple-choice Week 12: Postwar Avant-Garde Just What Is Music Anyway? Reading: Kerman, chapter 23 Listening: Edgard Varèse, Poème électronique (1958) John Cage, 4 33 (1952) Steve Reich, Music for 18 Musicians (1974 1976) Tania León, Indígena (1991) Due: Peer Assessment, Research Journal & Final Draft Due (April 4)

University of Guelph Policies: E-mail Communication As per university regulations, all students are required to check their <mail.uoguelph.ca> e-mail account regularly: e-mail is the official route of communication between the University and its students. When You Cannot Meet a Course Requirement When you find yourself unable to meet an in-course requirement because of illness or compassionate reasons, please advise the course instructor (or designated person, such as a teaching assistant) in writing, with your name, id#, and e-mail contact. See the undergraduate calendar for information on regulations and procedures for Academic Consideration. Drop Date The last date to drop one-semester courses, without academic penalty, is Friday, 11 March 2016. For regulations and procedures for Dropping Courses, see the Undergraduate Calendar. Copies of out-of-class assignments Keep paper and/or other reliable back-up copies of all out-of-class assignments: you may be asked to resubmit work at any time. Accessibility The University of Guelph is committed to creating a barrier-free environment. Providing services for students is a shared responsibility among students, faculty and administrators. This relationship is based on respect of individual rights, the dignity of the individual and the University community's shared commitment to an open and supportive learning environment. Students requiring service or accommodation, whether due to an identified, ongoing disability or a short-term disability should contact Student Accessibility Services as soon as possible. For more information, contact SAS at 519-824-4120 ext. 56208 or email csd@uoguelph.ca or see the website. Student Rights and Responsibilities Each student at the University of Guelph has rights which carry commensurate responsibilities that involve, broadly, being a civil and respectful member of the University community. The Rights and Responsibilities are detailed in the Undergraduate Calendar Academic Misconduct The University of Guelph is committed to upholding the highest standards of academic integrity and it is the responsibility of all members of the University community faculty, staff, and students to be aware of what constitutes academic misconduct and to do as much as possible to prevent academic offences from occurring. University of Guelph students have the responsibility of abiding by the University's policy on academic misconduct regardless of their location of study; faculty, staff and students have the responsibility of supporting an environment that discourages misconduct. Students need to remain aware that instructors have access to and the right to use electronic and other means of detection. Please note: Whether or not a student intended to commit academic misconduct is not relevant for a finding of guilt. Hurried or careless submission of assignments does not excuse students from responsibility for verifying the academic integrity of their work before submitting it. Students who are in any doubt as to whether an action on their part could be construed as an academic offence should consult

with a faculty member or faculty advisor. The Academic Misconduct Policy is detailed in the Undergraduate Calendar. Recording of Materials Presentations which are made in relation to course work including lectures cannot be recorded or copied without the permission of the presenter, whether the instructor, a classmate or guest lecturer. Material recorded with permission is restricted to use for that course unless further permission is granted. Resources The Academic Calendars are the source of information about the University of Guelph s procedures, policies and regulations which apply to undergraduate, graduate and diploma programs.