Department of Music
Last updated: September 12, 2019 at 9:50 AM
Programs of Study
- Minor
- Major (BA)
- Master of Arts
- Master of Fine Arts
- Doctor of Philosophy
Objectives
Undergraduate Major
The Department of Music offers a broad-based undergraduate major that combines the study of theory, history, performance and composition. The core of the program consists of one to two years of theory (with associated labs that provide further training in musicianship skills), three semesters of the history of Western music, participation in University ensembles, electives chosen from a broad array of topics, and evidence of basic keyboard proficiency. Students may, if desired, opt for one of five specialized tracks within the music major or work with a faculty adviser to propose an alternate program in accordance with their own interests. Specialized tracks include:
Composition
Cultural Studies
History
Performance
Musical Theater Performance
Graduate Program in Music
The department offers graduate programs in two areas: composition and theory, and musicology.
Composition and Theory
The department offers three degree programs in composition and theory: MA (normally one year), MFA (normally two years), and PhD (normally two or more years following the three years of residency). The programs are designed to help students develop a command of the craft of composition. That objective is supported by studies in theory and analysis and in electro-acoustic music. The doctoral dissertation consists of two parts: an extended analysis thesis and a composition.
Musicology
The department offers three degree programs in musicology: MA (normally one year), MFA (normally two years), and PhD (normally two or more years following the three years of residency). The programs offer an integrated approach to the understanding of the nature, structural basis, and historical development of music. Students may elect to emphasize or concentrate in music history, or in theory and analysis. In the music history program, a variety of techniques and methodologies, including source studies, style development, and historiography, are applied to different repertories and historical problems. The theory and analysis program features work in the history of theory as well as analytic work in the context of theory construction involving the evaluation of pretonal, tonal, and contemporary analytic models. Courses consist of proseminars and seminars: proseminars survey an array of topics illustrating the representative avenues of research and methodological approaches and seminars typically concentrate on a single topic.
Learning Goals
Undergraduate Major
The learning goals for the Music Department are based on an integrated approach to the study of music, incorporating the following perspectives:
- Music as a technical discipline, with its own notation, materials and forms.
- Music as an artifact of different historical periods, cultures and societies, both Western and non-Western, in written as well as oral traditions.
- The practice of music in the context of both performance and composition.
- Music as expression and communication, fostering a deeply sympathetic understanding of peoples, a sense of community, and a humane and tolerant outlook on the world.
Coursework is based on three essential ways of knowing about and experiencing music, known as the THREE PILLARS OF THE STUDY OF MUSIC. The three Pillars can be summarized as follows:
Theory: Mastery of the basic materials of music and the rules governing their arrangement and organization.
History: The study of musical forms, repertory, and composers as they exemplify different styles and periods.
Performance: Direct collaborative experience of music through participation in departmental ensembles including chorus, chamber singers, orchestra, wind ensemble, early music ensemble, jazz ensemble, improvisation collective, Ghanaian drumming and dance, and chamber music.
Each of the three Pillars has its own set of Core Skills and Knowledge, summarized below. In addition, students develop skills and knowledge about music in relation to social justice.
Theory
Essential for work in theory is the development of self-criticism in the control of the basic materials of music and mastery of the rules governing their arrangement and organization in different musical styles. Courses in theory are aligned with work in ear training and musicianship, which develop aural skills necessary for identifying, writing and singing the basic elements of music.
Core Skills
- Train and develop skills for accurately hearing and matching sounds.
- Discriminate differences of pitch and duration in single voice and in combination, both in reading music (sight-singing) and notating it (musical dictation).
- Master the control of consonance and dissonance in written exercises.
- Shape and develop melodic lines both in terms of single voice continuity and in the simultaneous combination of voices.
- Understand the grammar of chords, cadence structures, and the place and function of chords in harmonic progressions.
- Synthesize concepts of form, melody, rhythm, and harmonic motion in the writing of music.
- Refine the understanding of compositional structure in discussion and performance by professional musicians.
Knowledge
- Capability to write in the style of traditional classical forms (minuet and trio; sonata movement).
- Ability to recognize and describe the structure of standard small musical forms.
- Strong foundation in functional harmony and counterpoint.
History
The study of the history of Western music from antiquity to the present day gives us a cultural and sequential context for the understanding of changing musical aesthetics and modes of expression. Evidence for examination includes historical depictions of music in society (written and pictured), theoretical and philosophical writings, notational systems, musical instruments, written and printed music, recordings, and performances.
Core Skills
- Consider the various ways in which society has used music in private/public, secular/religious contexts.
- Evaluate the changing standards of the musical aesthetic over time, including tuning systems, texture, timbre, melody and harmony.
- Listen critically to musical examples, identifying performing forces, form, and social function.
- Apply the principles of music theory in a historically appropriate manner.
Knowledge
- Ability to recognize and categorize historical and national style and to describe musical trends over time.
- Familiarity with the major composers of the Western canon and representative repertoire of the significant styles, forms and genres.
- Awareness of the nature, causes, directions, and influences of stylistic change.
Performance
Performance of music synthesizes knowledge and skills, bringing together text, context and technique by interaction with well-known, lesser-known, and newly written repertoire. Technical and expressive skills are practiced, and competency in solo and ensemble performance is expected. While strongly anchored in Western European classical repertoire, there are also opportunities for study and performance of historical music, jazz, popular and non-Western traditions.
Core Skills
- Demonstrate proficiency in chosen instrument/voice as well as a mastery of basic keyboard skills.
- Incorporate improvisation and aural learning skills in appropriate musical traditions (jazz, early music).
- Employ effective self-critique and problem-solving in private practice sessions and rehearsals.
- Work effectively within an ensemble in both a leading and responding role.
- Hear and act on subtle differences in pitch, timbre, balance, and articulation.
- Express musically the affective aspect of the compositions.
- Communicate verbally the musical ideas involved in creating a convincing performance, with the ability to compare alternatives and justify choices.
- Write clear and effective program notes.
Knowledge
- Ability to read musical notation fluently on chosen instrument or voice.
- Understanding of the information in a musical text: pitch, rhythm, articulations, tempo, dynamics, etc.
- Differentiation between various forms and genres of music, including different periods and traditions.
- Application of theoretical and stylistic knowledge to musical interpretation.
- Employment of effective listening and communicating techniques to solve ensemble issues (rhythm, intonation, etc.)
- Direct experience with performing in a variety of ensembles and venues.
- Familiarity with the works of major composers in the Western European tradition.
- Identification of the basic musical instrument families, their sounds and functions.
Music and Social Justice
The study of three Pillars presents a unique opportunity to link musical expression with human events of the past and present, thus fostering an inclusive and critical world view.
Core Skills
- Collaborate with colleagues in working toward a common goal.
- Recognize, respond to, and communicate the shared human expression embodied in all music.
Knowledge
- Value the benefit of self-reflection and inquiry in continually striving to become a better musician.
Specialized Track Options
COMPOSITION TRACK
In addition to the core requirements of the Music Major, students work closely with the Composition Track advisor to choose electives that focus on the skills necessary to create new works of music. Students in this track apply their knowledge of musical form and function, their awareness of genres and historical trends, and their familiarity with performance issues to develop their compositional voice. Upon graduation, students in this track will be prepared to pursue graduate degrees in composition.
HISTORY TRACK
As in the Composition Track, students in the History Track will enhance the core requirements with electives chosen in consultation with the History Track advisor. Through in-depth focus on specific composers and repertoires, and engagement in research and analysis, students will gain a deep understanding of the various ways in which music has served as a means of expression arising from the surrounding culture and ethos. This focus will enhance their own musical experience in addition to preparing them for graduate work in musicology.
PERFORMANCE TRACK
Students in the Performance Track are accepted by audition. In addition to the core requirements, students in this track work with the Performance Track advisor and their private instructor to select performance-related electives and prepare two recitals: a half-length program in the Junior year and a full-length program in the Senior year. Graduates of this track will be prepared for more advanced study towards a professional career in performance or music education.
MUSICAL THEATER PERFORMANCE TRACK
As in the Performance Track, students are accepted into the MTP Track by audition. Core courses and electives include performance-related offerings from both the Music and Theater departments. Students work with the MTP Track advisor and their private instructor to select performance-related electives and prepare two recitals: a half-length program in the junior year and a full-length program in the Senior year. Upon graduation, MTP graduates will be prepared to pursue advanced study in musical theater or audition for professional work.
CULTURAL STUDIES TRACK
Cultural Studies is a semi-independent track in music that is a reflective, critical and cross-disciplinary exploration of culture, with music as a primary lens. Students are encouraged to take courses across the academy in global studies, the creative arts, religion, languages, the social sciences, and the humanities in order to develop tools and strategies for the serious study of the various expressions of culture across place and time. Students are expected to apply critical thinking to issues of globalization, trans-nationalism, cultural production, and cultural rights, as they explore the flow of artistic expression across traditional boundaries: political, cultural, social. They are encouraged to study a non-Western instrument and to take the opportunity to study abroad. Upon graduating, a CST student will be prepared to pursue graduate study in ethnomusicology, music education, or (in some cases) performance, as well as fields outside of music, including cultural or international studies.
Because of the unique nature of this track, it encompasses its own list of core skills, knowledge, and social justice:
Core Skills
- Hear and identify unique musical values and aesthetic aims in a variety of Western and non-Western musical traditions.
- Make connections between cultural values and cultural expressions from Western and non-Western traditions.
- Recognize how cultural/social values are transmitted through music and other forms of human expression and activity.
- Investigate socio-political movements across time as well as place.
- Examine issues of identity and authenticity.
Knowledge
- Familiarity with the theory, practice, and performance of Western and non-Western musical traditions.
- Awareness of the intersections between social history and music history.
- Understanding of the complexity of cultural production and its effects on local traditions.
- Recognition of the intersections of gender, race and class in the formation of cultural values.
- Openness to religion and ritual as cultural expressions.
Social Justice
- Value the diversity of cultural expression.
- Take part comfortably in cross-cultural collaboration.
- Appreciate the uniqueness of, as well as the commonalities between, traditions.
- Be well-versed in issues of globalization.
Graduate Programs in Music
Master of Arts in Composition and Theory
Knowledge
- Studies in theory and in the comprehensive analysis of music.
- Knowledge of the techniques in writing for instruments.
- Knowledge of the techniques in writing for voice.
- Knowledge of the techniques of writing for electroacoustic media — both fixed media and interactive media.
- Knowledge in how to interact with performers and presenters in a professional manner.
- Knowledge of specific musical notational conventions such that compositional intent is communicated as clearly and efficiently as possible.
- Knowledge of specific musical notational conventions such that the student’s compositional intent is communicated as clearly and efficiently as possible.
Core Skills
- Develop a command of the craft of composition through faculty mentorship.
- Take steps toward establishing a personal creative voice.
- The craft of writing in tonal forms including sonata, fugue, and ternary forms.
- Comprehensive analysis of pre-tonal, tonal, and post-tonal music.
- Beginning and completing at least one substantial work while in residence, and seeing it through to performance.
Graduate Outcomes
- The program is designed for students who have composed music while undergraduates who wish to pursue an intense program in music composition, but are not yet sure if they want to commit to a full 2-year program. They may apply to extend the program to the 2- year M.F.A.
- Beginning the development of the craft of music composition at the highest professional level.
- Facility in music analysis and music theory.
- Knowledge of the use of electroacoustic media.
Master of Arts in Musicology
Knowledge
- Studies in music history and theory and in the comprehensive analysis of music.
- Knowledge of selected foreign languages.
- Study of representative literature on music, both older and current.
- Study of methodologies related to musical research.
- Practice in the writing, composition and presentation of scholarly research papers.
Core Skills
- Ability to read the musical notation of different historical periods.
- Skill in the techniques and styles of music from the middle ages to the present time.
- Comprehensive analysis of pre-tonal, tonal, and post-tonal music.
- The writing of several research papers on various aspects of music.
- Criticism of published and unpublished writings on music.
Graduate Outcomes
The MA in musicology is designed for students who have completed an undergraduate degree in music and have shown some promise in writing about music. Many MA students are not yet committed to a PhD in musicology. The program offers them the choice of applying to PhD programs or of extending the MA into a two-year MFA in musicology. Most students elect the latter option.
Master of Fine Arts in Composition and Theory
Knowledge
- Studies in theory and in the comprehensive analysis of music.
- Knowledge of the techniques in writing for instruments.
- Knowledge of the techniques in writing for voice.
- Knowledge of the techniques of writing for electroacoustic media — both fixed media and interactive media.
- Knowledge in how to interact with performers and presenters in a professional manner.
- Knowledge of specific musical notational conventions such that compositional intent is communicated as clearly and efficiently as possible.
- Knowledge of various ways to embark on a career in music composition.
Core Skills
- Develop a command of the craft of composition.
- Take steps toward establishing an individual creative voice.
- The craft of writing in tonal forms including sonata, fugue, and ternary forms.
- Comprehensive analysis of pre-tonal, tonal, and post-tonal music.
- Writing of substantial analytical and theoretical papers.
- Beginning and completing at least one substantial work per year in residence, and seeing them through to performance.
- Establish a portfolio of work with which to apply to doctoral programs.
Graduate Outcomes
The MFA program is designed for students who are relatively certain that they wish to:
- Pursue a career in music composition.
- Command of the craft of music composition at the highest professional level.
- Development of a substantial portfolio of compelling creative work.
- High level facility in music analysis and music theory.
- Experience interacting with professional musicians.
- Establishing and enlarging the composition portfolio for application to doctoral programs.
Master of Fine Arts in Musicology
Knowledge
- Studies in music history, music theory and the comprehensive analysis of music.
- Knowledge of selected foreign languages with representative writings on music.
- Study of representative musical works and musicological literature.
- Study of the methodologies involved in musical research, analysis and writing.
- Practice in the writing, criticism and presentation of scholarly papers.
- Preparation for further study in musicology (at the PhD level).
- Learning about alternate careers in music.
Core Skills
- The ability to analyze and write about musical styles.
- Knowledge of current and older music theory and musicological writings.
- Knowledge of historical musical forms, such as sonata, fugue.
- The ability to read musical notation from various periods.
- Skill in the techniques and styles of music from the middle ages to the present.
- The ability to read musicological literature in two foreign languages.
- Writing a thesis under faculty supervision.
Graduate Outcomes
- The MFA program is designed for students who are relatively certain that they wish to pursue a career in musicology.
- Through four semesters of course work students take a total of twelve seminars and pro-seminars in music history.
- In a preparatory analysis seminar students learn the techniques of analysis of pre-tonal, tonal, and post-tonal music.
- Through guest lectures and colloquia students encounter representative musicologists from other universities.
- Through the writing of the MFA thesis students learn the necessary techniques. and methodologies demanded for a PhD dissertation.
Doctor of Philosophy in Composition and Theory
Knowledge
- Studies in theory and in the comprehensive analysis of music.
- Knowledge of the techniques in writing for instruments.
- Knowledge of the techniques in writing for voice.
- Knowledge of the techniques of writing for electroacoustic media — both fixed media and interactive media.
- Knowledge in how to interact with performers and presenters in a professional manner.
- Knowledge of specific musical notational conventions such that compositional intent is communicated as clearly and efficiently as possible.
- Knowledge of various ways to embark on a career in music composition.
- Experience of running a concert series.
- Techniques and strategies for teaching music at the college level, including ear training, music theory, fundamentals of music, music history, and music appreciation.
- Knowledge of writing grant applications.
Core Skills
- Develop a command of the craft of composition at the highest level.
- Development of an individual creative voice.
- The craft of writing in tonal forms including sonata, fugue, and ternary forms.
- Comprehensive analysis of pre-tonal, tonal, and post-tonal music.
- Writing of substantial analytical and theoretical papers.
- Ability to research and to present theoretical and compositional topics in a professional setting.
- The establishment of a substantial and substantive portfolio of individual creative works.
- Ability to teach music at the college level both to musicians and non-musicians.
- Experience in presenting and producing concerts.
- Development of strategies for creating and maintaining a career in music composition.
Graduate Outcomes
- Command of the craft of music composition at the highest professional level.
- Development of a substantial portfolio of compelling creative work.
- High level facility in music analysis and music theory.
- Substantial experience in teaching music at all levels.
- Comprehensive knowledge of the use of electroacoustic media.
- Experience fulfilling commissions and interacting with professional musicians.
- Administrative experience in running a concert series.
- Credentials for academic teaching jobs.
Doctor of Philosophy in Musicology
Knowledge
- Students may elect to emphasize or concentrate in music history, or in theory and analysis.
- The programs offer an integrated approach to the understanding of the nature, structural basis, and historical development of music.
- Students must demonstrate reading knowledge of two foreign languages in which there is substantial musicological literature.
- Students take two full years of seminars and pro-seminars in music history, theory and analysis from the middle ages to the present (twelve courses).
- After the second year of course work students take comprehensive examinations in music history and analysis.
- Upon completing the comprehensive examinations students embark on defining a dissertation topic under faculty mentoring and in defending it before the musicology faculty.
- Students encounter musicologists from other universities in lecture and colloquia series.
Core Skills
- Students must develop a command of the range of musicological literature and methodologies including source studies, style development, and historiography.
- Students learn to apply different methodologies varied repertories and historical problems.
- Students practice developing original research topics, prepare course papers and present them before faculty and other students; students learn to criticize musicological writings and presentations.
- PhD candidates in musicology participate as teaching fellows in the relevant undergraduate courses. Responsibilities include course preparation, lecturing, administering and grading exams and meeting individually with undergraduates
- Dissertation on a historical, theoretical, or analytical subject.
Graduate Outcomes
- Graduate Alumni.
- Develop their skills as researchers, writers, and teachers in higher education.
How to Become a Major
Students wishing to major in music should arrange to meet with the Undergraduate Advising Head, who will discuss the various options for majoring in music and assign them to a faculty adviser. Students who opt to focus their study by choosing a specific track will be given information on how to apply. For certain tracks, a writing sample, an original musical composition, or an audition is required. Students may declare the major after successful completion of MUS 101a and b with accompanying labs MUS 102a and b, and a basic piano proficiency assessment.
Once declared, majors wishing to take private instrumental or vocal lessons (MUS 111/112 a and b) are eligible to receive a private lesson subsidy in the amount of $450. To receive the lesson subsidy, the music major must be declared by the end of the second week of the semester in which they enroll in private lessons. Students enrolled in the second semester of theory I (MUS 101b and 102b) who intend to declare the music major may petition the music department for an “intended major” lesson subsidy by consulting the Undergraduate Advising Head. Students accepted into the Performance or Musical Theater Performance Track are required to enroll in private lessons during their junior and senior years (MUS 117 Jr. Recital/MUS 118 Sr. Recital), at no charge. NOTE: Registration in MUS 111/112 is always required by the registration deadline date, for both credit and non-credit (XC) sections.
How to Be Admitted to the Graduate Program
Applicants for study in composition and theory are required to submit evidence of qualification in the form of examples of original work in musical composition; they must also take a departmental written test in basic musicianship. Applicants for admission in musicology should submit examples of their prose writing on music. Musicology applicants wishing to specialize in theory and analysis should also submit examples of advanced work in musical theory.
Admission is granted for one academic year at a time. Readmission will be refused in cases where students have not demonstrated a capacity for acceptable graduate work.
Faculty
Mark Berger, Chair
Viola, Lydian String Quartet. Performance. Theory and analysis.
Yu-Hui Chang, Graduate Program Chair (Composition and Theory)
Composition. Theory and analysis.
Eric Chasalow, Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Composition. Analysis. Electronic music.
Eric Chafe
Music of Monteverdi. Bach. Wagner. Seventeenth century. Postromantic music. Twentieth-century music. Analysis.
Karen Desmond, Graduate Program Chair (Musicology)
Medieval Music. Medieval Theory and Analysis. Notation. Digital Musicology.
Robert Duff, Undergraduate Adviser, Performance Track (for vocalists)
Director, University Chorus and Chamber Choir. Choral and vocal performance. Conducting.
Judith Eissenberg, Undergraduate Adviser Cultural Studies Track (on leave spring 2020)
Violin, Lydian String Quartet. Chamber music performance and analysis. Director, MusicUnitesUS.
Emily Frey
Russian and Soviet music. History of opera, especially of the nineteenth century. Music and literature. Russian cultural history of the "long" nineteenth century. Music, politics, and law. Psychological realism.
Erin Gee, Undergraduate Adviser, Composition Track
Composition. Theory and analysis.
Joshua Gordon, Undergraduate Adviser, Performance Track (for instrumentalists) (on leave spring 2020)
Cello, Lydian String Quartet. Performance and analysis.
Neal Hampton
Director, Brandeis Orchestra. Musical theater composition.
Sarah Mead, Undergraduate Advising Head
Director, Brandeis Early Music Ensemble. The Authenticity Question.
Paula Musegades, Undergraduate Adviser, History Track
American Music. Popular Music. Music in Film.
Bob Nieske
Director, Jazz Ensemble. Jazz bass. Jazz improvisation and composition.
David Rakowski
Composition. Theory and analysis.
Andrea Segar
Violin, Lydian String Quartet, Performance and Analysis.
Vocal Instructors
Kristen Watson, soprano
Pamela Wolfe, soprano
Matthew Anderson, tenor
Krista River, mezzo-soprano
Instrumental Instructors
Violin
Judith Eissenberg
Andrea Segar
Paula Zeitlin, jazz violin
Viola
Mark Berger
Cello
Joshua Gordon
Viol
Sarah Mead
Double Bass
Elizabeth Foulser
Robert Nieske
Guitar
Phil Sargent
Flute
Jill Dreeben
Clarinet
Margo McGowan
Oboe
Staff
Bassoon
Margaret Phillips
Saxophone
Tom Hall, French Horn
Frederick Aldrich Trumpet
Alex Lee-Clark
Phil Grenadier
Bruce Hall
Trombone
Joel Yennoir
Tuba/euphonium
Michael Milnarik
Harp
Franziska Huhn
Piano
Ben Cook, jazz piano
Evan Hirsch
Jean Meltaus
Harpsichord
Frances Fitch
Organ
Frances Fitch
Christa Rakich
Percussion
Amit Kavthekar, tabla
Robert Schulz
Ben Paulding
Requirements for the Minor
- Theory: MUS 101a and 101b or 103a and 103b, along with the corequisite Theory Lab: MUS 102a and 102b or MUS 104a and 104b. Placement at the appropriate level is determined by exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (two semesters): chosen from MUS 131a, 133b, 135a.
- One additional music course. Note: MUS 1a, MUS 5a, MUS 10b, and ensembles MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may NOT count as an elective for the music minor.
- Students must receive a grade of C- or higher in any course taken to fulfill the requirements for completing the minor.
- No course taken pass/fail may count toward the minor requirements.
Requirements for the Major
- The major in music consists of the equivalent of twelve semester courses.
- Theory: MUS 101a, 101b, 103a, 103b, along with the corequisite Theory Lab: MUS 102a, 102b, 104a, 104b. Placement at the appropriate level is determined by exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (three semesters): MUS 131a, MUS 133b, and MUS 135a.
- Electives: Three semesters of courses from the music department. Eligible music courses include: MUS 31a - MUS 33b, MUS 37b, AMST/MUS 41a - MUS 55a, MUS 106a,b. A full year of private instruction, MUS 111a,b (Private Instruction: Instrumentalists) or MUS 112a,b (Private Instruction: Voice) with co-requisite ensemble may be counted only once for major credit. MUS 1a, MUS 5a, MUS 10b, and MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may NOT count as electives for the music major.
- All majors in music are required to participate in a music department ensemble MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b (such as Early Music Ensemble, Chamber Music, Orchestra, Chorus, Jazz Ensemble) or MUS 116a,b with or without credit, for four separate semesters. Registration is required in either section, for-credit or non-credit (XC), to count toward the major. Students may petition to fulfill one semester of their ensemble requirement with participation in a professional non-Brandeis ensemble.
- Foundational Literacies: As part of completing the Music major, students must:
- Fulfill the writing intensive requirement by successfully completing: MUS 131a.
- Fulfill the oral communication requirement by successfully completing one of the following: AMST/MUS 35a, AMST/MUS 38a, AMST/MUS 39b, AMST/MUS 41a, or AMST/MUS 55a.
- Fulfill the digital literacy requirement by successfully completing one of the following: MUS 101a, MUS 107a, MUS 160b, or MUS 161a.
- Piano proficiency: Keyboard proficiency must be demonstrated by the end of the penultimate semester to graduation. Keyboard instruction under the basic piano program is offered for those students who are deficient at the keyboard. No fee is charged for this instruction and no course credit is granted.
- Additional requirements for candidates for degrees with distinction: To be eligible for honors in music, candidates must demonstrate superior ability through their overall record and a capacity for independent thought beyond the limits of their course program, by completing additional work such as a written thesis, an approved project in original composition, or a senior recital.
- Students must receive a grade of C- or higher in any course taken to fulfill the requirements for completing the major.
- No course taken pass/fail may count toward the major requirements.
- Music majors may choose to specialize in one of five tracks: composition, cultural studies, history, performance, or musical theater performance. These tracks combine core courses in theory and history with electives chosen in consultation with the undergraduate advising head and the track adviser. Students are encouraged to develop areas of interest within the track, in consultation with the respective adviser, and to choose appropriate electives for these areas.
- Alternative programs: At any time prior to the completion of the junior year, the student may, in consultation with his or her adviser, submit an alternative proposal for the completion of the major. Such proposals will be considered by the department on the basis of their coherence and appropriateness to specific goals.
Composition Track
Admission to the composition track is contingent upon submission of an original musical composition to the composition track adviser. Students in this track are eligible to take a semester of MUS 292a,b, contingent on submitting two or three original compositions to the track adviser during their junior year.
Core Courses
- Theory (four semesters): MUS 101a and 101b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 102a and b), and MUS 103a and 103b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 104a and b). Placement at the appropriate level is determined by an exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (three semesters): MUS 131a, MUS 133b and MUS 135a.
- MUS 106a is required and counts as one of the composition electives.
Electives
Two semesters of courses from music and/or related disciplines as approved by the track adviser. MUS 111a and b (Private Instruction: Instrumentalists) or MUS 112a and b (Private Instruction: Voice) may be taken once only for major credit.
Electives include: AMST/MUS 41a, MUS 106b, MUS 107a, MUS 160b, MUS 161a, MUS 162b, MUS 171a, MUS 172a,b, MUS 175a, MUS 292a and b. Note: MUS 1a, MUS 5a, MUS 10b, and ensembles MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may NOT count as electives for the composition track. See the end of this section for a list of electives offered outside of the music department.Cultural Studies Track
Core Courses
- Theory (two semesters): MUS 101a and 101b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 102a and b) or MUS 103a and 103b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 104a and b). Placement at the appropriate level is determined by exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (two semesters): two of the three following courses: MUS 131a, MUS 133b, or MUS 135a.
- MUS 3b (or alternative courses with permission of the department).
Electives
Six semesters of courses from music and/or related disciplines, of which three are to be music-related courses approved by the track adviser. Eligible music courses include MUS 4a, MUS 32b, AMST/MUS 38a, AMST/MUS 39b, AMST/MUS 41a – MUS 55a, MUS 106a – MUS 108a, MUS 131a, MUS 133b, MUS 135a, MUS 160b, MUS 171a, MUS 175a, MUS 185a, MUS 187b, MUS 189a, MUS 190a, MUS 195a. At least one course must explore issues of globalization. MUS 111a and b (Private Instruction: Instrumentalists) or 112a and b (Private Instruction: Voice) may be taken once only for major credit. Note: MUS 1a, MUS 5a, MUS 10b, and ensembles MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may NOT count as electives for the cultural studies track. See the full list of electives at the end of this section.
History Track
Admission to the history track is contingent upon submission of a writing sample to the history track adviser. The writing sample should be on a musical topic of your choice.
Core Courses
- Theory (four semesters): MUS 101a and 101b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 102a and b), and MUS 103a and 103b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 104a and b). Placement at the appropriate level is determined by exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (three semesters): MUS 131a, MUS 133b and MUS 135a.
Electives
Three semesters of courses from music and/or related disciplines, to be approved by the track adviser. MUS 111a and b (Private Instruction: Instrumentalists) or 112a and b (Private Instruction: Voice) may be taken once only for major credit. Note: MUS 1a, MUS 5a, MUS 10b, and ensembles MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may NOT count as electives for the history track.
Electives include: AMST/MUS 38a, AMST/MUS 41a, MUS 32b – 55a (excluding MUS 37b), MUS 185a – MUS 189a, MUS 190a, MUS 195a. See the full list of electives at the end of this section for electives offered outside of the music department.
Performance Track
Admission to the performance track is contingent upon a successful audition, normally at the end of the sophomore year.
Core Courses
- Theory (four semesters): MUS 101a and 101b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 102a and b), and MUS 103a and 103b (with associated two-credit labs MUS 104a and b). Placement at the appropriate level is determined by exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (three semesters): MUS 131a, MUS 133b, and MUS 135a.
- Ensembles: Students in the performance track are required to participate in a music department ensemble, MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b, or MUS 116a,b, with or without credit, every semester after acceptance in the track, for a minimum of four, taken in separate semesters. Students must be enrolled in either the credit or non-credit section of the course to count towards the major. Students who anticipate pursuing the performance track are encouraged to register for private instruction, MUS 111a,b or MUS 112a,b prior to auditioning.
- Recitals: Students in the performance track must register for private instruction leading to the junior recital (MUS 117a,b) and senior recital (MUS 118a,b). The recital in the senior year may be taken as Senior Project (MUS 99d) by petition. Students may not enroll in MUS 111a,b or MUS 112a,b for credit while enrolled in MUS 117/118a,b.
Electives
Three additional electives, two of which are concerned primarily with issues of performance, to be approved by the track adviser. MUS 111a and b (Private Instruction: Instrumentalists) or 112a and b (Private Instruction: Voice) may be taken once only for major credit. Note: MUS 1a, MUS 5a, MUS 10b, and ensembles MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may not count as electives for the performance track.
Performance electives include, AMST/MUS 41a, MUS 113a, MUS 116a,b, MUS 121a, and MUS 175a. See the full list of electives at the end of this section for electives offered outside of the music department.
Musical Theater Performance Track
Admission to the musical theater performance track is contingent upon a successful audition, normally at the end of the sophomore year.
Core Courses
- Theory (four semesters): MUS 101a and 101b (with associated lab MUS 102a and b), and MUS 103a and 103b (with associated lab MUS 104a and b). Placement at the appropriate level is determined by exam at the beginning of the semester. Students may be exempt from any portion of this sequence by exam.
- History (three semesters): THA 123a and any two of the following: MUS 131a, MUS 133b, or MUS 135a.
- Ensembles: Students in the musical theater performance track are required to participate in an ensemble, MUS 80a,b – 88a,b or MUS 116a,b, with or without credit, every semester after acceptance in the track for a minimum of four, taken in separate semesters. Students must be enrolled in either the credit or non-credit section of the course to receive credit towards the major. Up to two Brandeis Theater Company (BTC) musicals may be substituted for music department ensembles. Students who anticipate pursuing the musical theater performance track are encouraged to register for private instruction, MUS 111a,b or MUS 112a,b prior to auditioning.
- Recitals: Students in the musical theater performance track must register for private instruction leading to the junior recital (MUS 117a,b) and senior recital (MUS 118a,b). The recital in the senior year may be taken as Senior Project (MUS 99d) by petition. Students may not enroll in MUS 111a,b or MUS 112a,b for credit while enrolled in MUS 117/118a,b.
Electives
Three additional electives concerned primarily with issues of musical theater performance, from the music and theater departments, to be approved by the track adviser. Eligible music courses include: MUS 31a, MUS 32b, AMST/MUS 41a, MUS 113a, and MUS 175a. MUS 111a and b (Private Instruction: Instrumentalists) or MUS 112a and b (Private Instruction: Voice) may be taken only once for major credit. Note: MUS 1a, MUS 5a, and ensembles MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b may NOT count as electives for the music major.
Special Notes Relating to the School of Creative Arts Distribution Requirement
Private Instruction and Ensembles in Fulfillment of the Creative Arts Distribution Requirement
Please note that ensembles and private instruction (MUS 80a,b – MUS 88a,b, MUS 111a,b, MUS 112 a,b, and MUS 116a,b) yield half-course credit each; therefore, two semesters of ensemble or one semester of private instruction plus the corequisite ensemble are required to fulfill the creative arts distribution requirement. Students must notify the Registrar’s Office directly to have fulfillment of this distribution requirement added to their transcript.
Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts
Composition and Theory
- Seven and one-half courses at the graduate level: seminars in composition, proseminars in tonal writing; proseminars and seminars in tonal and nontonal analysis. Private instrumental or vocal instruction and ensemble performance may be counted for credit with permission of the program chair.
- A composition that is begun during the first semester, completed in time to be performed in the spring graduate composers' concert.
- One year of residency. The program may take an additional one or two semesters to complete as an Extended Master's student.
- Attendance at departmental composition colloquia.
Musicology
- Seven and one-half courses at the graduate level: proseminars and seminars in musicology (including an array of courses in different historical periods, in music analysis, and in history of theory). MUS 171a is required. Private instrumental or vocal instruction and ensemble performance may be counted for credit with permission of the program chair.
- Satisfactory completion of the language requirement in either French or German.
- A seminar paper written during the first semester, expanded with independent supervision of a faculty member during the second semester.
- One year of residency. The program may take an additional one or two semesters to complete as an Extended Master's student.
- Attendance at departmental musicology colloquia.
Requirements for the Degree of Master of Fine Arts
Composition and Theory
- Twelve courses at the graduate level: proseminars and seminars in composition, seminars in tonal and nontonal analysis, a course in electro-acoustic music (or demonstrated proficiency). MUS 172a is required.
- Examinations: Demonstration of competence by means of a portfolio review and written general examination at the end of the second year of study.
- Thesis: An original composition, the scope to be approved by the faculty in composition. The master’s thesis must be deposited electronically to the Robert D. Farber University Archives at Brandeis.
- Two years of residency. The program may take an additional one or two semesters to complete as an Extended Master's student.
- Attendance at departmental composition colloquia.
Musicology
- Twelve courses at the graduate level: proseminars and seminars in musicology (including an array of courses in different historical periods, in music analysis, and in history of theory). MUS 171a is required unless exemption is earned through examination.
- Satisfactory completion of the language requirement in either French or German. The language requirement should be satisfied by the end of the first year.
- Research Project: Either a thesis that is an analytical or historical study of a topic acceptable to the music faculty (40-50 pages minimum), or revised copies of two seminar papers that have been certified by the seminar instructor and at least one other faculty member as demonstrating a high degree of competence in research writing. Two copies of the thesis must be submitted to the program chair in final form no later than December 1 for a February degree, or April 1 for a May degree. The master’s thesis must be deposited electronically to the Robert D. Farber University Archives at Brandeis. For doctoral candidates, successful completion of the general examinations may be substituted for this thesis requirement.
- Two years of residency. The program may take an additional one or two semesters to complete as an Extended Master's student.
- Attendance at departmental musicology colloquia.
Requirements for the Joint Degree of Master Arts in Music & Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
The Music department offers the opportunity for Ph.D. students only to earn a joint M.A. with Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Topics include feminist theory, gender studies, cultural history and the investigation of work by and about women.
Program of Study
- WMGS 205a, the foundational course in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.
- One course in feminist research methodologies (WMGS 208b, or the Feminist Inquiry course offered through the Graduate Consortium in Women's Studies).
- Two courses at the graduate level from another department listed as electives in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Normally, only one of these courses may be a Directed Reading course (WMGS 310a,b).
- Four courses at the graduate level in the Music department. One graduate course from the consortium that is related to music & women’s, gender and sexuality studies may be substituted. One of the four courses must include a seminar paper that focuses on a topic related to women's and gender studies. In cases where this is not possible, an independent study leading to a paper addressing an issue specifically related to music & women’s, gender, and sexuality studies may be substituted. MUS 171a is also required.
- Attendance at all departmental musicology colloquia.
- Completion of a Master's research paper of professional quality and length (normally twenty-five to forty pages) on a topic related to the joint degree. The paper will be read by two faculty members, one of whom is a member of the music department and one of whom is a member of the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies core or affiliate faculty. In consultation with the primary advisor, a student may register for WMGS 299a,b, "Master's Project." However, this course may not count toward the eight required courses.
- Additional requirements as listed in the accompanying Ph.D. program.
Language Requirement
There is no additional foreign language requirement for the joint Master's degree.
Residence Requirement
One year.
Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy
Composition and Theory
- Sixteen courses at the graduate level. MUS 172a is required.
- Teaching: Preparation of graduate students for teaching careers is an integral part of the PhD programs in music. Beginning with the second year of residence, PhD candidates in composition participate as teaching assistants in the relevant undergraduate courses, for a minimum of six course assignments. All teaching comes under the guidance of the primary course instructors and the department chair.
If a student secures an outside fellowship with funding for dissertation research or dissertation writing, up to two semesters of the teaching requirement may be waived. The student still must have completed all other requirements except the dissertation in order to attain 'ABD' ('All But Dissertation') status. - Satisfactory completion of the language requirement in one language (French, German, Italian, or another language by petition).
- Examinations: General examinations during the second year. Oral qualifying examination in the third year.
- Dissertation: An original musical composition and a thesis on a theoretical or analytical subject. Two copies of the thesis, as well as an abstract not to exceed 350 words in length, should be submitted to the program chair no later than December 1 for a February degree, or March 1 for a May degree, of the academic year in which the PhD degree is to be conferred. Upon completion of the thesis, the candidate is expected to defend it in a final oral examination. The faculty in composition attempts to arrange for the performance of dissertation compositions whenever possible.
- Three years of residency.
- Attendance at departmental composition colloquia.
Musicology
- Twelve courses at the graduate level: proseminars and seminars in musicology (including an array of courses in different historical periods, in music analysis, and in history of theory). MUS 171a is required unless exemption is earned through examination.
- Satisfactory completion of the language requirement in French and German. Students may substitute another language for French by petition. The German requirement should be satisfied by the end of the first year.
- Teaching: Preparation of graduate students for teaching careers is an integral part of the PhD programs in music. Beginning with the second year of residence, PhD candidates in composition participate as teaching assistants in the relevant undergraduate courses, for a minimum of six course assignments. All teaching comes under the guidance of the primary course instructors and the department chair.
If a student secures an outside fellowship with funding for dissertation research or dissertation writing, up to two semesters of the teaching requirement may be waived. The student still must have completed all other requirements except the dissertation in order to attain 'ABD' ('All But Dissertation') status. - Examination: At the end of the second year, candidates must demonstrate competence by means of a written general examination.
- Four additional courses at the graduate level, normally MUS 401d (Dissertation Research), or other courses as recommended by the faculty.
- Dissertation proposal: fifteen- to twenty-page page prospectus of the dissertation developed in consultation with the dissertation adviser and presented to the musicology faculty for their approval, no later than the end of the third year of residency.
- Dissertation on a historical, theoretical, or analytical subject. Two copies of the doctoral dissertation, as well as an abstract of the dissertation not to exceed 350 words in length, should be submitted to the program chair no later than December 1 for a February degree, or March 1 for a May degree, of the academic year in which the PhD degree is to be conferred.
Dissertations should demonstrate the competence of the candidate as an independent investigator, his or her critical ability, and effectiveness of expression. Upon completion of the dissertation, the candidate is expected to defend it in a final oral examination. - Three years of residency.
- Attendance at departmental musicology colloquia.
Special Notes Relating to the Graduate Program
Master's Degree
Students may normally hold only one master's degree in the department.
Language Requirements
Language examinations to test reading proficiency are administered by the music department. Students will be asked to translate several passages with the aid of a dictionary. Foreign language course credits do not in themselves constitute fulfillment of the language requirements. Examinations will be offered once per semester. In case of failure, an examination may be retaken.
Instrumental Proficiency
At least moderate proficiency at the piano is required of all candidates for advanced degrees.
Electronic Music Studio
The Brandeis Electro-Acoustic Music Studio (BEAMS) with facilities for the composition of electronic music is available to qualified student composers. Director: Mr. Chasalow.
Courses of Instruction
(1-99) Primarily for Undergraduate Students
AMST/MUS
35a
History of Rock: Rock and Roll in American Culture
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Formerly offered as MUS 35a.
Examines the historical context, stylistic development, and cultural significance of rock and roll spanning 1950s through the present. Close attention paid to how instruments, technology, mainstream media, and popular culture affect how rock music is created, marketed, and celebrated worldwide. Usually offered every third year.
Paula Musegades
AMST/MUS
38a
American Music: From Psalms to Hip Hop
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Open to music majors and non-majors. Formerly offered as MUS 38a.
Explores the many varieties of folk, popular, and art music in American culture. We will focus on the stylistic development of select repertoires beginning with 18thcentury New England Psalm singing and African American traditions and continuing on through folk, jazz, art, pop, rock, and hip hop music. Throughout the course, music serves as a lens to examine diverse aspects of American culture and history with an emphasis on America’s shifting definition of identity. No musical background is required. Usually offered every third year.
Paula Musegades
AMST/MUS
39b
Protest Through Song: Music that Shaped America
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Open to music majors and non-majors. Does not fulfill the Main Currents in American Studies requirement for the major.
Examines 20th and 21st century protest music to better understand the complex relationships between music and social movements. Through class discussions, reading, writing, and listening assignments, and a final performance students will discover how social, cultural, and economic protest songs helped shape American culture. Usually offered every second year.
Paula Musegades
AMST/MUS
41a
Leonard Bernstein: Composer, Conductor, Educator, and Humanitarian
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Explores the life and career of Leonard Bernstein. As a composer, conductor, educator, and humanitarian, Bernstein played an important role in shaping American music and culture. Through class discussions, group projects, and reading, writing, and listening assignments, this course will help students better understand the musical, cultural, political, and educational influence of Leonard Bernstein both then and now. Usually offered every second year.
Paula Musegades
AMST/MUS
55a
Music in Film: Hearing American Cinema
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Formerly offered as MUS 55a.
Examines the aesthetics and the history of music in film. Through lecture, class discussions, screenings, and readings, the course teaches students how to critically read image, script, and music as an integrated cultural text, ultimately helping one understand and appreciate the progression of film and sound technology from the 1890s to the present. Usually offered every third year.
Paula Musegades
MUS
1a
Exploring Western Music
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Does not meet requirements for the major or minor in music.
A general introduction to the materials and forms of music, and a study of western musical literature. Training in analytical listening, based on selected listening assignments. Open to non-majors who are assumed to have little or no previous knowledge of music. Usually offered every second year.
Mark Berger
MUS
3b
World Music: Performing Tradition through Sound
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Open to all students. Required of all Cultural Studies track majors.
What are we listening to? Applies engaged listening skills and critical analysis for a deeper appreciation of (non-Western) music as a cultural expression. Focuses on particular traditions as well as social context, impact of globalization, cultural production, cultural rights, etc. Usually offered every year.
Judith Eissenberg
MUS
5a
The Beginner's Toolbox: Fundamentals of Music Notation and Performance
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Does not meet requirements for the major or minor in music.
For the general student with no musical background. Two hours a week will be devoted to the notation of music, including scales, intervals, keys, triads, rhythm, and meter. The third hour will be devoted to sight-singing and dictation. Reading knowledge of music is not required; a placement exam will be given on the first day of instruction. Usually offered every year.
David Rakowski
MUS
6b
Survey of West African Music: Dance-Drumming from Senegal to Nigeria
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Explores the dance-drumming of West Africa--a global music style with profound impact on contemporary world cultures. Through engaged listening, critical analysis of ethnomusicological readings, and experiential learning on African percussion instruments, we examine the cultural context and musical systems of West African dance-drumming music. Special one-time offering, spring 2020.
Benjamin Paulding
MUS
10b
What to Listen for in Music: An Ears-on Approach
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Does not meet the requirements for the major or minor in Music.
Introduces the fundamental materials and forms of music through ear training and the study of western musical literature and popular music, with listening assignments. For non-majors having little previous knowledge of music. Usually offered every second year.
Joshua Gordon
MUS
31a
Broadway Bound: The Craft of Composing Music and Lyrics for the Theater
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Open to music majors and non-majors.
Do you like to write poetry or plays? Have you written music and/or lyrics and want to try your hand at writing musical theatre? In this class, you will learn how music functions in a dramatic context by writing songs (alone or in collaboration with others) and regularly presenting your material for peer and instructor feedback. Contemporary and traditional musical theater masterpieces will be analyzed. Usually offered every second year.
Neal Hampton
MUS
32b
Elements of Jazz
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Open to music majors and non-majors.
Examines the development of Jazz styles from the origins of Jazz in the late 1800’s through today's Jazz masters. Early Jazz, Swing, Bebop, Cool, the year 1959, and Avant Garde are some of the styles we will be examining through recordings, videos, and in-class performances by local jazz musicians. The emphasis will be on learning how to listen to the various layers of the music and recognize specific stylistic techniques. Usually offered every third year.
Bob Nieske
MUS
37b
Back to the Future: Digging for the Roots of Western Music
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Prerequisite: MUS 5a or basic knowledge of music notation.
Dig for the roots of polyphony in the Western tradition. Unearth new concepts (from half a millennium ago) for understanding, hearing, and making music of any period. Compose melodies, improvise counterpoint, and learn to hear intervals with fresh ears. Usually offered every second year.
Sarah Mead
MUS
40b
Audio Culture and Digital Sound Production
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Prerequisite: Sophomore standing or permission of the instructor.
Studies the work of sound artists, scholars, producers, composers, and DJs who are contributing to the developing field of "sound studies." We'll explore audio culture - the ways in which we listen to and make sound --and learn about how the digital revolution has changed our hearing. Our work will lie at the intersection of the arts and the humanities, seeking to investigate the listening and sound-making experience from multiple angles. We'll learn to use the tools of humanities scholarship (reading, research, and writing) to explore sonic culture while also acting as sound creators, producing original digital audio work. Special one-time offering, spring 2020.
Jeremy Rapaport-Stein
MUS
48b
"Love is the Message": Dance Musics and their Cultures from Disco to Dubstep
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Explores the history of contemporary, popular dance music, from disco to dubstep, exploring concepts of authenticity, authorship, and appropriation and investigating the intersections between music, culture, society, and politics. Special one-time offering, spring 2020.
Matthew Heck
MUS
52b
Russian Music and Russian Power from Glinka to Putin
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Surveys the long and strong relationship between music and state power in Russian, beginning in the tsarist period and continuing through the present day. We will consider operas and symphonies, popular songs and state anthems, aiming to understand how political factors (including censorship, official artistic policies, and propaganda) have influenced the composition and reception of music in Russia, as well as how music has been used to serve-- and disturb-- the Russian state. Offered every second year.
Emily Frey
MUS
54b
Music and Poetry in the German Art Song During the Nineteenth Century
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Surveys the interaction of poetry and music in major masterpieces of the German art song (Lied) for voice and piano from the time of Beethoven and Schubert (c. 1815) to that of Strauss, Wolf and Mahler (c. 1900). All the major composers of Lieder will be covered. Usually offered every third year.
Mr. Chafe
MUS
56b
Romanticism in Music: Breakdowns, Breakups, and Beauty
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Intended for non-majors. Music majors and minors and any students who have taken MUS 101a,b must obtain permission from the instructor.
Considers musical expressions of psychological breakdowns, fragmented breakups, and experimental forms of beauty. Connects nineteenth century music with specific paintings, poems, and political events. Charts the towering influence of Romanticism on 20th and 21st century artists. Usually offered every fourth year.
Staff
MUS
80a
Early Music Ensemble
Offered exclusively on a credit/no credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Open to singers and instrumentalists interested in learning about the historical ancestors of their modern instruments. Instrumental and/or vocal experience and competency in sight-reading required. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
Examines the performance of music written before 1700. A large number of historical instruments are available for student use and instruction. Solo, ensemble, and one-on-a-part opportunities. Usually offered every year.
Sarah Mead
MUS
80b
Early Music Ensemble
Continuation of MUS 80a. See MUS 80a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Sarah Mead
MUS
81a
Brandeis University Chamber Singers
Corequisite: MUS 80a,b or MUS 82a,b. Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Full academic year participation expected. Significant vocal experience, aural skills and music literacy required. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
The Chamber Singers is the premiere ensemble at Brandeis University. The ensemble explores repertoire for chamber choir including all major genres from the Renaissance through present day. Singers prepare independently outside of scheduled rehearsals. Opportunities for one-on-a-part ensemble singing and solos. Usually offered every year.
Robert Duff
MUS
81b
Brandeis University Chamber Singers
Continuation of MUS 81a. See MUS 81a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Robert Duff
MUS
82a
University Chorus
Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Vocal placement auditions will be held at the start of the semester. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
Performs in concert great literature from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries. Aspects of singing, musicianship skills, and ensemble building are emphasized. Usually offered every year.
Robert Duff
MUS
82b
University Chorus
Continuation of MUS 82a. See MUS 82a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Robert Duff
MUS
83a
Jazz Ensemble
Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Admission by the consent of the instructor based on an audition. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
The Brandeis Jazz Ensemble has about 15 musicians from the Brandeis community. Instrumentation will vary according to annual fall auditions. Repertoire consists of pieces by jazz greats including Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus, Gil Evans, Sun Ra...as well as arrangements of tunes and original compositions by the director, Bob Nieske and students. Students are also encouraged to compose or arrange for the group with the assistance of the director. Each semester the ensemble performs 5 or 6 pieces as a full group and 4 or 5 as small groups for a different musical experience. Although saxophone, brass, piano, guitar, bass and drums are the traditional jazz instruments, the ensemble is also open to more “classical” instruments (strings and woodwinds). Lower brass such as French horn, trombone, euphonium and tuba are especially encouraged to audition. Students do not have to have any experience improvising but must be able to read well and have a good command of their instrument. At least one concert per semester. Usually offered every year.
Bob Nieske
MUS
83b
Jazz Ensemble
Continuation of MUS 83a. See MUS 83a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Bob Nieske
MUS
84a
Orchestra
Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Acceptance into ensemble contingent on instructor’s approval based on auditions held at the start of the semester. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
The orchestra gives several concerts each year performing major works from the symphonic repertory. Students prepare independently, outside of scheduled rehearsals. Usually offered every year.
Neal Hampton
MUS
84b
Orchestra
Continuation of MUS 84a. See MUS 84a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Neal Hampton
MUS
85a
Wind Ensemble
Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Placement auditions will be held at the start of the semester. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
The Wind Ensemble gives one to two concerts a semester. Members of the Wind Ensemble may be asked to play with the orchestra as needed for large-scale works. Usually offered every year.
Thomas Souza
MUS
85b
Wind Ensemble
Continuation of MUS 85a. See MUS 85a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Thomas Souza
MUS
86a
Improv Collective
Offered exclusively on a credit/no credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Placement auditions will be held at the start of the semester. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
Open to all Brandeis students who play an instrument or sing, regardless of skill or experience in improvising, the Improv Collective focuses on both individual creativity and group improvisation. The semester culminates with a performance in Slosberg Recital hall. Usually offered every semester.
Thomas Hall
MUS
86b
Improv Collective
Continuation of MUS 86a. See MUS 86a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every semester.
Thomas Hall
MUS
87a
Music and Dance from Ghana
Offered exclusively on a credit/no credit basis. Yields half-course credit. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. Instruments will be supplied by instructor.
Students in this course will study and perform a repertory of traditional music and dance of a variety of ethnic traditions from Ghana, West Africa. The drum ensemble includes bells, rattles and drums. The vocal music features call-and-response singing in local languages. The dances have choreographic formations as well as opportunity for individual expression. Drumming and dancing are closely intertwined; work will culminate in a final performance. Usually offered every year.
Benjamin Paulding
MUS
87b
Music and Dance from Ghana
Continuation of MUS 87a. See MUS 87a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Benjamin Paulding
MUS
88a
Chamber Music for Leonard Bernstein Fellows
Offered exclusively on a credit/no credit basis. Yields half-course credit. Only open to Leonard Bernstein scholars. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (80a,b – 88a,b) alone or Private Instruction and Ensemble together. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section.
Organizes Leonard Bernstein Fellows into chamber ensembles and assigned specific works to prepare for the semester. They will be coached by a member of the music department faculty and are expected to rehearse weekly in addition to the coaching sessions. Usually offered every semester.
Mark Berger, Judith Eissenberg, Joshua Gordon, and Andrea Segar
MUS
88b
Chamber Music for Leonard Bernstein Fellows
Continuation of MUS 88a. See MUS 88a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every semester.
Mark Berger, Judith Eissenberg, Joshua Gordon, and Andrea Segar
MUS
92a
Internship and Analysis
Staff
MUS
92b
Internship and Analysis
Staff
MUS
97a
Independent Projects
Yields half-course credit. Normally open only to music majors in their junior and senior years. May be taken twice for credit if no undue duplication of content is involved.
Reserved for projects such as directed readings, preparation of a work for performance, or internships that do not require written work (papers or compositions). Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
97b
Independent Projects
Yields half-course credit. Normally open only to music majors in their junior and senior years. May be taken twice for credit if no undue duplication of content is involved.
Reserved for projects such as directed readings, preparation of a work for performance, or internships that do not require written work (papers or compositions). Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
98a
Directed Independent Study
Open to qualified undergraduates.
Requires written work such as a historical or analytical essay, preparation of a critical edition, or the creation of an original musical composition. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
98b
Directed Independent Study
Yields four semester-hours credit (one course credit). Open to qualified undergraduates.
One-semester course with one semester credit. Requires written work such as a historical or analytical essay, preparation of a critical edition, or the creation of an original musical composition. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
99d
Senior Project
Open to seniors with a GPA in music of 3.00 or above. Admission by petition. May involve a thesis, musical performance, or composition. In all cases, it must produce written work. Usually offered every year.
Staff
(100-199) For Both Undergraduate and Graduate Students
MUS
101a
Theory and Musicianship I: Part 1
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Admission by placement exam to be given in class on the first day of instruction. Corequisite: MUS 102a.
A first course for students who already read music, but wish to develop a deeper involvement. Students investigate how music "works" by composing exercises based on examples of tonal music and literature that students are practicing for performance. Focuses on elementary harmony and voice-leading, counterpoint, analysis, and model composition. In the required one-hour lab (MUS 102a), students practice sight-singing and dictation, skills essential to music literacy. Usually offered every year.
David Rakowski
MUS
101b
Theory and Musicianship I: Part 2
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Prerequisite: MUS 101a. Corequisite: MUS 102b.
The second semester introduces broad concepts of theory and begins the process of learning to write and analyze music. By the end of the year, students will gain experience in counterpoint, harmony, and formal analysis, and will compose in a simple form. Throughout the year, the relationship of repertoire and theory is stressed. The required ear-training and keyboard lab meets separately. Usually offered every year.
David Rakowski
MUS
102a
Theory and Musicianship Lab I: Part 1
Corequisite: MUS 101a. Yields half-course credit.
Designed to help students develop essential music literary skills. Beginning sight-singing, simple melodic and harmonic dictation, and rhythmic studies. Materials drawn from the corequisite lecture course. Keyboard harmony. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
102b
Theory and Musicianship Lab I: Part 2
Corequisite: MUS 101b. Yields half-course credit.
See MUS 102a for course description. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
103a
Theory and Musicianship II: Part 1
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Prerequisites: MUS 101a,b and 102a,b. Corequisite: MUS 104a.
This course builds on MUS 101. Chromatic tonal harmony is covered, and short pieces of nineteenth century music are analyzed in depth. Students will analyze pieces on their own and write analytical papers. Students will also harmonize various chorale melodies. The required ear training and keyboard lab meets separately. Usually offered every year.
Erin Gee
MUS
103b
Theory and Musicianship II: Part 2
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Prerequisite: MUS 103a. Corequisite: MUS 104b.
A continuation of MUS 103a. Twentieth century styles and techniques are covered, including extended tonality and atonality. Several compositional projects are assigned and performed in class. Usually offered every year.
Erin Gee
MUS
104a
Theory and Musicianship Lab II: Part 1
Corequisite: MUS 103a. Yields half-course credit.
A continuation of MUS 102. More advanced exercises in sight-singing and dictation. Keyboard harmony. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
104b
Theory and Musicianship Lab II: Part 2
Corequisite: MUS 103b. Yields half-course credit.
A continuation of MUS 104a. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
106a
Undergraduate Composition
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Prerequisite: MUS 5a or equivalent experience. Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. May be repeated once for credit.
Students are introduced to a variety of compositional issues by writing five or six short pieces and one longer project. Concurrently, pertinent examples from the twentieth-century classical repertoire will be discussed. Usually offered every second year.
Erin Gee
MUS
106b
Advanced Undergraduate Composition
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Prerequisite: MUS 106a. Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis.
A continuation of MUS 106a, intended for more advanced undergraduate composers. Studies more advanced compositional concepts discussed in greater depth and more substantial pieces are assigned, for solo instruments, for voice, and for ensembles. Individualized projects are also given. Usually offered every second year.
Staff
MUS
107a
Introduction to Electro-Acoustic Music
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Prerequisite: Any music course or permission of the instructor.
A course designed to give students basic studio skills and a context for listening to and working in electronic music. Topics include basic acoustics, sound design, digital and analog recording techniques, and assignments on the pioneers and current practitioners of electro-acoustic music. Involves hands-on experience in the use of MIDI-controlled synthesizers, samplers, production equipment, and includes individual studio projects based on individual studio time. Usually offered every second year.
Davide Ianni
MUS
111a
Private Instruction: Instrumentalists
Offered on a credit/no-credit grading basis. Yields half-course credit. Placement auditions will be held at the start of the semester. Students registering for MUS 111a must also register for a departmental Ensemble (MUS 80a,b – 87a,b or 116a,b); 111a may NOT be taken alone. Students may petition to substitute one semester of a professionally directed non-university ensemble for their university Ensemble co-requisite. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (MUS 80a,b – 87a,b) alone or Private Instructions and Ensemble together. Successful completion of two semesters of MUS 111a,b may be applied only once toward the requirements for the major or minor in music. Course may be taken as a noncredit activity by registering in the XC section. Studio fee: $250 fee for majors in all tracks except Performance; $700 for non-majors.
Instrumentalists will take ten 50-minute, private lessons per semester in the field of early music, jazz, or classical music while participating in a departmental ensemble. A ten-minute jury is required in the second semester. Usually offered every year.
Bob Nieske
MUS
111b
Private Instruction: Instrumentalists
Continuation of MUS 111a. See MUS 111a for special notes and course description.
A ten-minute jury is required for all students in the second semester. Usually offered every year.
Bob Nieske
MUS
112a
Private Instruction: Voice
Offered on a credit/no-credit grading basis. Yields half-course credit. Placement auditions will be held at the start of the semester. Students registering for MUS 112a must also register for a departmental Ensemble (MUS 80a,b – 87a,b or 116a,b); 112a may NOT be taken alone. Students may petition to substitute one semester of a professionally directed non-university ensemble for their university Ensemble co-requisite. A maximum of four course credits will be allowed for all enrollments in Ensemble (MUS 80a,b – 87a,b) alone or Private Instructions and Ensemble together. Successful completion of two semesters of MUS 112a,b may be applied only once toward the requirements for the major or minor in music. Course may be taken as a noncredit activity by registering in the XC section. Studio fee: $250 fee for majors in all tracks except Performance; $700 for non-majors.
Voice students will take ten 50-minute, private lessons per semester. Fundamental skills of breathing, resonating, and relaxing will be taught along with repertory appropriate to the individual student. A ten-minute jury is required in second semester. Usually offered every year.
Robert Duff
MUS
112b
Private Instruction: Voice
Continuation of MUS 112a. See MUS 112a for special notes and course description.
A ten-minute jury is required for all students in the second semester. Usually offered every year.
Robert Duff
MUS
113a
Introduction to Conducting
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Prerequisite: MUS 103a,b or permission of instructor.
Covers the fundamentals of choral and instrumental conducting techniques and is designed for all students interested in conducting musical ensembles. Fundamentals include basic metrical patterns, dynamic shading, cues, entrances, cutoffs, and uses of the left hand. All students have the opportunity to conduct several times throughout the semester. Usually offered every third year.
Robert Duff
MUS
116a
Chamber Music: from Page to Stage
Offered exclusively on a credit/no-credit basis. Yields two semester-hours credit (one half-course credit). May be repeated for credit. May be undertaken as an extracurricular, noncredit activity by registering in the XC section. Vocalists will be admitted on an individual basis and must take MUS 82 a,b: University Chorus or MUS 80 a,b: Early Music Ensemble as a corequisite. Informal auditions at the beginning of the semester.
Musicians bring their own experience, instinct, and theoretical knowledge to music-making through study and performance of chamber music in a supportive master class setting. Through coaching by a professional performer, readings, and listening to recordings, this course examines how performance practice, basic structural analysis, and historical context affect interpretation. Individual and ensemble preparation required. Class meetings include coaching, discussion/listening salon, masterclass and rehearsals, to be scheduled. Final public performance. Usually offered every year.
Judith Eissenberg
MUS
116b
Chamber Music from Page to Stage
Continuation of MUS 116a. See MUS 116a for special notes and course description.
Usually offered every year.
Mark Berger
MUS
117a
Junior Recital I
Yields two half-course credit. For music majors accepted into the performance or musical theater performance tracks only. Admission by the consent of the instructor based on an audition. Students may not enroll in MUS 111a,b or MUS 112a,b for credit while enrolled in MUS 117a,b.
Students will take ten one-hour private lessons in preparation for performance of a recital, to be given in the spring semester, of significant representative repertory appropriate to the instrument or voice of the student, including the selecting of repertory for a coherent program. Students are expected to demonstrate command of stylistic, technical, and expressive aspects of the chosen music. Requires passing a jury at the end of the fall semester. No studio fee. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
117b
Junior Recital II
Continuation of MUS 117a. See MUS 117a for special notes and course description. Includes final preparation for spring full recital. No studio fee.
Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
118a
Senior Recital I
Yields half-course credit. For music majors accepted into the performance or musical theater performance tracks only. Admission by the consent of the instructor based on an audition. Students may not enroll in MUS 111a,b or MUS 112a,b for credit while enrolled in MUS 118a,b.
Students will take ten one-hour private lessons in preparation for performance of a full recital, to be given in the spring semester, of significant representative repertory appropriate to the instrument or voice of the student, including the selecting of repertory for a coherent program. Students are expected to demonstrate command of stylistic, technical, and expressive aspects of the chosen music. Requires passing a jury at the end of the fall semester. No studio fee. Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
118b
Senior Recital II
Continuation of MUS 118a. See MUS 118a for special notes and course description. Includes final preparation for spring full recital. No studio fee.
Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
131a
History of Music I: Ancient through Early Baroque
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Prerequisites: MUS 101a and b, or by permission of the instructor. This course may not be repeated for credit by students who have taken MUS 131b in prior years.
A survey of music history from antiquity to the mid-17th century, considering major styles, composers, genres, and techniques of musical composition from a historical and analytical perspective. Topics include Gregorian chant, the motet and madrigal, Monteverdi and early opera, and developments in instrumental genres.
Karen Desmond
MUS
133b
History of Music II: Late Baroque and Classical
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Prerequisite: MUS 101a and b. This course may not be repeated for credit by students who have taken MUS 133a in prior years.
A survey of music from Vivaldi, Bach, and Handel through Beethoven and Schubert. Major styles, genres, and techniques of musical composition are discussed from historical and analytic perspective, based on a study of representative works.
Paula Musegades
MUS
135a
History of Music III: Romantic and 20th Century
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Prerequisites: MUS 101a and b. May not be taken for credit by students who took MUS 134b or 135a in prior years.
Surveys music history from c.1830 to the present, considering major styles, genres, and techniques of musical composition from a historical and analytical perspective. Styles and composers represented include Chopin, Liszt, Wagner, impressionism, serialism, Debussy, Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Bartok, and Babbitt. Usually offered every second year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
136b
Divas
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Though her name means “goddess,” the diva is frequently imagined as a creature with all-too-human failings; she is both talented and tempestuous, both revered and reviled. This course will explore the complex image of the diva in Western culture from the middle ages to the present day. We’ll treat the category of “diva” expansively – encompassing opera singers and pop stars, composers and castrati – and engage with thorny questions of gender, sexuality, race, class, and power, in hopes of understanding the enduring cultural potency of this compelling and problematic figure. Usually offered every second year.
Emily Frey
MUS
150b
Choral Methods
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Prerequisites: MUS 101a and b.
Introduces the prime elements of choral singing, regardless of criteria for idiom or genre. Students will be introduced to the examination of representative music suitable for groups at various levels of development, principles of programming methodology involving sight-reading and strengthening musicianship, building a choral program, rehearsal techniques, and issues pertaining to the development of a choral ensemble. Usually offered every second year.
Robert Duff
MUS
160b
Electro-Acoustic Music Composition (Laptopping)
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Preference given to students who have taken MUS 107a and majors in the departments of the School of Creative Arts.
A continuation of work begun in MUS 107a, with emphasis on composition and performance in the electro-acoustic medium. Course focus is on individual and collaborative projects. Work is carried out in BEAMS (Brandeis Electro-Acoustic Music Studio), but every effort will be made to equip students to compose on their own computers and to work collaboratively using the Internet. Composition projects are based on models since 1948 in the genres of musique concrete, "pure" and "live" electronic music, music for instruments and tape, and multidisciplinary works. A final project leads to the production of a concert. Usually offered every second year.
Eric Chasalow
MUS
161a
Electro-Acoustic Music Composition
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Prerequisite: MUS 107a or MUS 160b, or permission of the instructor. Intended for graduate students and advanced undergraduates.
Composing for electronic media. Advanced topics in software synthesis, sound design, studio production. Usually offered every second year.
Staff
MUS
162b
Seminar in MAX/MSP
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Advanced undergraduate students may enroll with permission of the instructor.
Topics related to the use of the MAX/MSP graphical programming language for composition, sound design, installation, and live performance. Participants engage in individual projects and study MAX patches by established practitioners. Individual and group research and presentations are required. Usually offered every third year.
Staff
MUS
171a
Form and Analysis
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Prerequisite for undergraduate students: MUS 103a and permission of instructor. Required of all Musicology graduate students during their first year, and Composition and Theory MA students. May not be counted for credit toward the course requirements for the MFA and PhD programs.
A proseminar in analytical approaches to Western music through representative examples from major composers from the Middle Ages through the early 20th century. Emphasis will be placed on the common practice period. Different theories of musical form will be applied to representative genres. Work on close harmonic analysis as well as large scale tonal and rhythmic structure will be included. Graduate students may be exempted by examination. Usually offered every year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
172b
Proseminar in Theory and Composition
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Required of all composition MFA and PhD students. May be repeated for credit.
Advanced study of chromatic and non-tonal harmony, as well as various analytical approaches to the 20th and 21st century music. Work includes writing exercises, keyboard harmony, and score study. Usually offered every second year.
Yu-Hui Chang
MUS
175a
Instrumentation and Orchestration
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Prerequisites: MUS 101a and b.
Technical projects in the art of writing for instruments and for groups of instruments, from chamber groups of various sizes to full orchestra. Score study of examples from 1770 to the present. Additional focus on notation and on rules for instrumental parts. Usually offered every second year.
David Rakowski
MUS
180b
Proseminar in Digital Musicology
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Deploys computational tools and methods to answer questions about music. The hands-on proseminar, for graduate students and advanced undergraduates, will teach music encoding and introduce various analytical methodologies in order to answer a variety of music research questions. Usually offered every third year.
Karen Desmond
MUS
184b
Proseminar in Medieval Music
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Broad coverage of the principal topics and research techniques of medieval music; structure of the liturgy, chant notation, oral transmission theory, tropes and sequences, polyphonic notation, and rhythmic modes. Introduction to standard bibliographic tools including editions, facsimiles, microfilms, liturgical books, and reference books. Usually offered every third year.
Karen Desmond
MUS
188b
Proseminar in Music of the Eighteenth Century
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In addition to tracing the evolution of the principal genres (e.g., sonata, symphony, string quartet, opera buffa, opera seria), the course assesses the historical position of the major figures from Bach and Handel to Mozart and Haydn. Particular emphasis is placed on understanding the phenomenon of the "style shift" from baroque to classical style. Usually offered every fourth year.
Staff
MUS
189a
Proseminar in Music of the Nineteenth Century
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A broad study of the principal stylistic developments and musical genres of the nineteenth century. Topics include significance of Beethoven on the musical thinking of the nineteenth century, the rise of national schools of composition, especially opera, and program music and its aesthetic and compositional bases. Usually offered every third year.
Emily Frey
MUS
190a
Proseminar in Music since 1900
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Examines music developing in Europe and the United States after 1900. The course divides into four periods - 1900-WWI, the Interwar years, WWII and the early cold war, and 1960s to the present - and explores select developments in compositional style, as well as interactions of music with cultural and political history within each of these periods. Usually offered every second year.
Staff
MUS
191b
Analysis of Extended Tonal Music
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Works in this course are selected from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Composers such as Wagner, Wolf, Debussy, early Schoenberg, Bartok, and Stravinsky. Music from the Renaissance and early baroque may also be examined. Usually offered every second year.
Mark Berger
MUS
192a
Topics in Analysis of Early Twentieth-Century Music
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Detailed examination of selected works composed between 1908 and 1951. Usually offered every second year.
Erin Gee
MUS
193b
Topics in Analysis of Contemporary Music
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Detailed examination of selected works since 1951. Usually offered every second year.
Yu-Hui Chang
MUS
196b
Sound and Space: Sound Installation and Movement Staging in the Field of Music Composition
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Students will design their own sound installation and learn how to build meaning through space and sound In relation to a cross-disciplinary research topic. This research will be modeled on methods cross-disciplinary project-building In various disciplines. Students will be informed by historical precedent In this field, design (and fulfill) a research goal around the production of the installation, and understand how to create (and to actually create by the end of the class) an intellectually rigorous and engaging interaction between the aural and visual. Usually offered every third year.
Erin Gee
(200 and above) Primarily for Graduate Students
MUS
200b
Teaching Music
Approaches to teaching music subjects at the college level. Subjects include strategies for teaching music appreciation, history and theory; evaluating and choosing textbooks; crafting a syllabus; grading; and teaching philosophies. Usually offered every third year.
David Rakowski
MUS
202b
Seminar in Seeing Sound: The History and Practice of Notation to c. 1500
From c. 900, music notation spread rapidly across Europe, and took root as a the way to record, archive, share, and eventually compose music. Students will transcribe music from a variety of notations and examine how the writing down of music transformed music practice. Usually offered every second year.
Karen Desmond
MUS
212a
Seminar: Analyzing Early Music (1300-1600)
An investigation of analytic approaches to pretonal music, including such issues as text-music relations, tonal structures, compositional planning, use of preexisting material. Usually offered every fourth year.
Karen Desmond
MUS
214b
Seminar: Baroque Topics
An in-depth investigation of one selected topic in baroque music. Topics may include the Monteverdi madrigals, seventeenth-century instrumental music, and the Bach Passions. The methodology employed varies according to the subject; emphasis is given to more recent research in most cases. Usually offered every fourth year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
216a
Seminar: Topics in Bach Interpretation
The interpretation of the music of J. S. Bach. Selected topics may include the Bach Passions, Bach's early cantatas, the Leipzig cantata cycles, Bach's instrumental cycles. Usually offered every third year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
217b
Topics in Music of the Eighteenth Century
An in-depth examination of selected topics in eighteenth century music. Usually offered every fourth year.
Staff
MUS
218b
Seminar in the Music of the Nineteenth Century
A detailed exploration of one historical, analytical, or stylistic issue of current significance to nineteenth-century musicology. Topics include the two versions of Verdi's Simon Boccanegra and cyclic organization in the song cycles of Robert Schumann. Usually offered every fourth year.
Emily Frey
MUS
219a
Seminar: Wagner
This seminar will study one of Wagner's major works in depth and from a variety of approaches: analytical questions; the sketches and drafts; Wagner's writings. Special emphasis will be given to Wagner's Schopenhauerian aesthetics. Usually offered every second year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
220a
Seminar: The German Postromantic Period
This course will study topics drawn from the period between 1860 and 1914. Topics may include Mahler's songs and symphonies, the aesthetics of late nineteenth-century music, the postromantic lied with particular emphasis on Hugo Wolf. Usually offered every second year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
221a
Topics in Music after 1900
Investigates selected topics in music since 1900 in depth. Topics will be determined by the instructor. Sample topics from previous years include Stravinsky's 'The Rake's Progress'; Schoenberg 'The Book of the Hanging Gardens'; Hindemith 'Mathis der Maler'. Usually offered every third year.
Eric Chafe
MUS
224b
Seminar in Medieval Music
An in-depth study of a selected topic in medieval music. Usually offered every third year.
Karen Desmond
MUS
225a
Seminar: Topics in the History of Theory to 1700
An investigation of topics in music theory (including the tonal system, solmization, modality, counterpoint, composition, musica ficta, notation) based on a close reading of theoretical treatises.
Staff
MUS
226b
History and Literature of Western Music Theory: 1850 to the Present
Usually offered every third year.
Staff
MUS
292a
Seminar in Composition
Group meetings and individual conferences. Opportunities for the performance of student works is provided. Usually offered every year. Specific sections for individual faculty members as requested.
Yu-Hui Chang and Erin Gee
MUS
292b
Seminar in Composition
Group meetings and individual conferences. Opportunities for the performance of student works are provided. Usually offered every year. Specific sections for individual faculty members as requested.
Yu-Hui Chang and Erin Gee
MUS
298a
Independent Study
Staff
MUS
299a
Individual Research and Advanced Work
Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
299b
Individual Research and Advanced Work
Usually offered every year.
Staff
MUS
401d
Dissertation Research
Specific sections for individual faculty members as requested. Required of all doctoral candidates.
Staff
Cross-Listed in Music/Composition Track
FILM
100a
Introduction to the Moving Image
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An interdisciplinary course surveying the history of moving image media from 1895 to the present, from the earliest silent cinema to the age of streaming media. Open to all undergraduates as an elective, it is the introductory course for the major and minor in film, television and interactive media. Usually offered every year.
Staff
Cross-Listed in Music/Cultural Studies Track
AAAS
125b
Caribbean Women and Globalization: Sexuality, Citizenship, Work
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Utilizing perspectives from sociology, anthropology, fiction, and music to examine the relationship between women's sexuality and conceptions of labor, citizenship, and sovereignty. The course considers these alongside conceptions of masculinity, contending feminisms, and the global perspective. Usually offered every second year.
Faith Smith
AAAS
133b
The Literature of the Caribbean
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An exploration of the narrative strategies and themes of writers of the region who grapple with issues of colonialism, class, race, ethnicity, and gender in a context of often-conflicting allegiances to North and South America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. Usually offered every second year.
Faith Smith
AAAS
155b
Hip Hop History and Culture
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Examines the history of hip hop culture, in the broader context of U.S., African American and African diaspora history, from the 1960s to the present. Explores key developments, debates and themes shaping hip hop's evolution and contemporary global significance. Usually offered every second year.
Chad Williams
AMST
35a
Hollywood and American Culture
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This is an interdisciplinary course in Hollywood cinema and American culture that aims to do justice to both arenas. Students will learn the terms of filmic grammar, the meanings of visual style, and the contexts of Hollywood cinema from The Birth of a Nation (1915) to last weekend's top box office grosser. They will also master the major economic, social, and political realities that make up the American experience of the dominant medium of our time, the moving image, as purveyed by Hollywood. Usually offered every second year.
Thomas Doherty
AMST
55a
Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in American Culture
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Provides an introductory overview of the study of race, ethnicity, and culture in the United States. Focuses on the historical, sociological, and political movements that affected the arrival and settlement of African, Asian, European, American Indian, and Latino populations in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Utilizing theoretical and discursive perspectives, compares and explores the experiences of these groups in the United States in relation to issues of immigration, population relocations, government and civil legislation, ethnic identity, gender and family relations, class, and community. Usually offered every year.
Staff
AMST
100b
Twentieth-Century American Culture
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Prerequisite: AMST 100a.
The democratization of taste and the extension of mass media are among the distinguishing features of American culture in the twentieth century. Through a variety of genres and forms of expression, in high culture and the popular arts, this course traces the historical development of a national style that came to exercise formidable influence abroad as well. Usually offered every spring.
Staff
AMST
129a
From American Movie Musicals to Music Videos
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Examines the spectacle of song and dance in movie musicals and music videos, beginning with the earliest talking pictures in the late 1920's and continuing to the present. Particular emphasis will be on technological change, race, gender and the commodification of culture, among other topics. Usually offered every second year.
James Mandrell
ANTH
1a
Introduction to the Comparative Study of Human Societies
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Examines the ways human beings construct their lives in a variety of societies. Includes the study of the concept of culture, kinship, and social organization, political economy, gender and sexuality, religion and ritual, symbols and language, social inequalities and social change, and globalization. Consideration of anthropological research methods and approaches to cross-cultural analysis. Usually offered every semester.
Jonathan Anjaria, Elizabeth Ferry, Sarah Lamb, or Janet McIntosh
ANTH
26a
Communication and Media
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An exploration of human communication and mass media from a cross-cultural perspective. Examines communication codes based on language and visual signs. The global impact of revolutions in media technology, including theories of cultural imperialism and indigenous uses of media is discussed. Usually offered every second year.
Janet McIntosh
ANTH
129b
Global, Transnational and Diasporic Communities
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Examines the social and cultural dimensions of diasporas and homelands from an anthropological perspective. It starts by critically engaging with more fundamental concepts such as state, identity, and movement. It then proceeds to debate the various contributions that anthropologists have presented to the understanding of human life in transnational and diasporic contexts. Topics to be discussed include homeland, place, migration, religion, global sexual cultures, kinship, and technology—all within a global perspective. Usually offered every second year.
Jonathan Anjaria or Sarah Lamb
ANTH
184b
Cross-Cultural Art and Aesthetics
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A cross-cultural and diachronic exploration of art, focusing on the communicative aspects of visual aesthetics. The survey takes a broad view of how human societies deploy images and objects to foster identities, lure into consumption, generate political propaganda, engage in ritual, render sacred propositions tangible, and chart the character of the cosmos. Usually offered every second year.
Javier Urcid
ANTH
202b
Advanced Ethnographic Research Methods
An intensive study of anthropological research and ethnographic practice, with particular attention to topic formation, field notes and evocative writing. Combines discussions ethnography with writing workshops. Readings include essays on research methodology and critiques of ethnographic practice, as well as ethnographic monographs that demonstrate sophisticated fieldwork practices. Writing workshops cover issues such as taking notes in the field and describing scenes, speech in action, characters, language and affect. Usually offered every second year.
Jonathan Anjaria
CA
125a
Provocative Art: Outside the Comfort Zone
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Presents, analyzes and discusses art that provokes controversies, discomfort, and other strong responses. This class will focus on a broad range of artistic expressions, including visual art, theater, film, music, and literature with Brandeis faculty as well as visiting artists. Usually offered every second year.
Gannit Ankori and Mark Brimhall-Vargas
CAST
150b
Introduction to Creativity, the Arts, and Social Transformation
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How can music, theater, dance and visual and other arts contribute to community development, coexistence, and nonviolent social change? In the aftermath of violence, how can artists help communities reconcile? Students explore these questions through interviews, case studies, and projects. Usually offered every year.
Toni Shapiro-Phim
ECS
100a
European Cultural Studies Proseminar: Modernism
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Explores the interrelationship of literature, music, painting, philosophy, and other arts in the era of high modernism. Works by Artaud, Baudelaire, Benjamin, Mann, Mahler, Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Kandinsky, Schiele, Beckett, Brecht, Adorno, Sartre, Heidegger, and others. Usually offered every fall semester.
Stephen Dowden
ECS
100b
European Cultural Studies Proseminar: Making of European Modernity
[
hum
wi
]
Investigates how the paradigm of what we know as modernity came into being. We will look at the works of writers and philosophers such as Descartes, Aquinas, Dante, Ockham, Petrarch, Ficino, Rabelais, and Montaigne. Artwork from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance will be used to understand better what "the modern" means. Usually offered every spring semester.
Michael Randall
ED
101b
Elementary School Curriculum and Teaching: Science, Arts and Other Topics
[
ss
]
Limited to MAT elementary students and undergraduate student teachers enrolling in ED 111e spring semester.
Focuses on principles and effective procedures for teaching elementary students inquiry-based science. Examines how art, creative drama, multicultural education, special education, and physical education affect teaching and learning. Usually offered every year.
Staff
ENG
101a
Studies in Popular Culture
[
hum
]
A critical analysis of contemporary culture, including television, film, video, advertising, and popular literature. Combines applied criticism and theoretical readings. Usually offered every second year.
Paul Morrison
ENG
107a
Women Writing Desire: Caribbean Fiction and Film
[
hum
]
About eight novels of the last two decades (by Cliff, Cruz, Danticat, Garcia, Kempadoo, Kincaid, Mittoo, Nunez, Pineau, Powell, or Rosario), drawn from across the region, and read in dialogue with popular culture, theory, and earlier generations of male and female writers of the region. Usually offered every third year.
Faith Smith
ENG
127b
Migrating Bodies, Migrating Texts
[
hum
nw
]
Beginning with the region's representation as a tabula rasa, examines the textual and visual constructions of the Caribbean as colony, homeland, backyard, paradise, and Babylon, and how the region's migrations have prompted ideas about evolution, hedonism, imperialism, nationalism, and diaspora. Usually offered every second year.
Faith Smith
ENG
151b
Performance Studies
[
dl
hum
]
Explores paradigms for making performance inside and outside of institutionalized theater spaces, with an emphasis on the performance of everyday life. Students read theories of theater and performance against paradigmatic dramatic texts and documents of social performance. Combining theory with practice, students explore and make site-specific and online performances. Usually offered every third year.
Thomas King
FA
174a
Art and Trauma: Israeli, Palestinian, Latin American and United States Art
[
ca
]
A comparative and critical examination of the various ways in which personal traumas (illness, death, loss) and collective traumas (war, the Holocaust, exile) find meaningful expression in the work of modern and contemporary artists from diverse regions. Usually offered every second year.
Gannit Ankori
GS
202b
Critical Global Issues
This foundational seminar examines key issues from the primary area of concentration in the global studies program. The specific focus of the seminar will vary from year to year, reflecting the changing relevance of particular issues as well as the specific interests of the instructor. Usually offered every year.
Kristen Lucken
HISP
111b
Introduction to Latin American Literature and Culture
[
djw
dl
fl
hum
nw
]
Prerequisite: HISP 106b, or HISP 108a, or permission of the instructor.
Examines key Latin American texts of different genres (poems, short stories and excerpts from novels, chronicles, comics, screenplays, cyberfiction) and from different time periods from the conquest to modernity. This class places emphasis on problems of cultural definition and identity construction as they are elaborated in literary discourse. Identifying major themes (coloniality and emancipation, modernismo and modernity, indigenismo, hybridity and mestizaje, nationalisms, Pan-Americanism, etc.) we will trace continuities and ruptures throughout Latin American intellectual history. Usually offered every semester.
Jerónimo Arellano, Lucía Reyes de Deu, or Fernando Rosenberg
HIST
61a
Cultures in Conflict since 1300
[
ss
wi
]
Explores the ways in which cultures and civilizations have collided since 1300, and the ways in which cultural differences account for major wars and conflicts in world history since then. Usually offered every year.
Paul Jankowski
IGS
10a
Introduction to International and Global Studies
[
dl
ss
]
"Globalization" touches us more every day. Introduces the challenges of globalization to national and international governance, economic success, individual and group identities, cultural diversity, the environment, and inequalities within and between nations, regions of the globe, gender, and race. Usually offered every year.
Kerry Chase or Chandler Rosenberger
JAPN
135a
Screening National Images: Japanese Film and Anime in Global Context
[
hum
nw
]
All films and readings are in English.
An introduction to some major directors and works of postwar Japanese film and anime with special attention to such issues as genre, medium, adaptation, narrative, and the circulation of national images in the global setting. Usually offered every third year.
Matthew Fraleigh
PHIL
113b
Aesthetics: Painting, Photography, and Film
[
ca
hum
wi
]
Explores representation in painting, photography, and film by studying painters Rembrandt, Velázquez, and Vermeer, as well as later works by Manet, Degas, Cézanne, and Picasso; photographers Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, Edward Weston, Walker Evans, Alfred Stieglitz, and Diane Arbus; and filmmakers Renoir and Hitchcock. Usually offered every second year.
Andreas Teuber
SOC
1a
Order and Change in Society
[
ss
]
An introduction to the sociological perspective, with an emphasis on an analysis of problems of social order and change. Topics include gender, work and family, poverty and inequality, race and ethnicity, democracy, social movements, community, and education. Usually offered every year.
Wendy Cadge, Karen Hansen, Carmen Sirianni, or Michael Strand
SOC
120b
Globalization and the Media
[
ss
]
Investigates the phenomenon of globalization as it relates to mass media. Topics addressed include the growth of transnational media organizations, the creation of audiences that transcend territorial groupings, the hybridization of cultural styles, and the consequences for local identities. Usually offered every third year.
Laura Miller
SOC
154a
Community Structure and Youth Subcultures
[
ss
]
Examines how the patterning of relations within communities generates predictable outcomes at the individual and small-group level. Deals with cities, suburbs, and small rural communities. Special focus is given to youth subcultures typically found in each community type. Usually offered every second year.
Staff
WMGS
105b
Feminisms: History, Theory, and Practice
[
deis-us
oc
ss
wi
]
Prerequisite: Students are encouraged, though not required, to take WMGS 5a prior to enrolling in this course.
Examines diverse theories of sex and gender within a multicultural framework, considering historical changes in feminist thought, the theoretical underpinnings of various feminist practices, and the implications of diverse and often conflicting theories for both academic inquiry and social change. Usually offered every year.
ChaeRan Freeze, Keridwen Luis, or Faith Smith
Cross-Listed in Music/History Track
AAAS
79b
African American Literature of the Twentieth Century
[
hum
ss
wi
]
An introduction to the essential themes, aesthetic concerns, and textual strategies that characterize African American writing of this century. Examines those influences that have shaped the poetry, fiction, and prose nonfiction of representative writers. Usually offered every second year.
Aliyyah Abdur-Rahman or Faith Smith
AAAS
125b
Caribbean Women and Globalization: Sexuality, Citizenship, Work
[
ss
wi
]
Utilizing perspectives from sociology, anthropology, fiction, and music to examine the relationship between women's sexuality and conceptions of labor, citizenship, and sovereignty. The course considers these alongside conceptions of masculinity, contending feminisms, and the global perspective. Usually offered every second year.
Faith Smith
AMST
35a
Hollywood and American Culture
[
ss
]
This is an interdisciplinary course in Hollywood cinema and American culture that aims to do justice to both arenas. Students will learn the terms of filmic grammar, the meanings of visual style, and the contexts of Hollywood cinema from The Birth of a Nation (1915) to last weekend's top box office grosser. They will also master the major economic, social, and political realities that make up the American experience of the dominant medium of our time, the moving image, as purveyed by Hollywood. Usually offered every second year.
Thomas Doherty
AMST
55a
Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in American Culture
[
ss
]
Provides an introductory overview of the study of race, ethnicity, and culture in the United States. Focuses on the historical, sociological, and political movements that affected the arrival and settlement of African, Asian, European, American Indian, and Latino populations in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Utilizing theoretical and discursive perspectives, compares and explores the experiences of these groups in the United States in relation to issues of immigration, population relocations, government and civil legislation, ethnic identity, gender and family relations, class, and community. Usually offered every year.
Staff
AMST
100b
Twentieth-Century American Culture
[
dl
ss
]
Prerequisite: AMST 100a.
The democratization of taste and the extension of mass media are among the distinguishing features of American culture in the twentieth century. Through a variety of genres and forms of expression, in high culture and the popular arts, this course traces the historical development of a national style that came to exercise formidable influence abroad as well. Usually offered every spring.
Staff
ECS
100b
European Cultural Studies Proseminar: Making of European Modernity
[
hum
wi
]
Investigates how the paradigm of what we know as modernity came into being. We will look at the works of writers and philosophers such as Descartes, Aquinas, Dante, Ockham, Petrarch, Ficino, Rabelais, and Montaigne. Artwork from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance will be used to understand better what "the modern" means. Usually offered every spring semester.
Michael Randall
FA
45b
Art of the Early Renaissance in Italy
[
ca
]
May not be taken for credit by students who took FA 45a in prior years.
Examines major painters, sculptors, and architects in Florence, Rome, and Venice from Giotto to Bellini (1290-1500). Important themes include the revival of Antiquity, the visual arts and the culture of Humanism, the Rise of the Medici, art and the ideal of the Republic, the development of art theory and criticism, Naturalism and the Sacred image, and the relation of artists and patrons during times of crisis (Black Death, Pazzi Conspiracy, and Savonarola). Usually offered every second year.
Jonathan Unglaub
HIST
147a
Imperial Russia: From Westernization to Globalization
[
ss
]
Examines the processes and problems of modernization--state development, economic growth, social change, cultural achievements, and emergence of revolutionary and terrorist movements. Usually offered every year.
Gregory Freeze
RECS/THA
148a
Russian Drama: Text and Performance
[
hum
oc
]
Open to all students. Conducted in English. Students may choose to do readings either in English translation or in Russian. Formerly offered as RECS 148a.
Examines the rich tradition of Russian drama and theater. Readings include masterpieces of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, including those by Chekhov, Pushkin, Gogol, Ostrovsky, Mayakovsky, Erdman, and others. Usually offered every second year.
David Powelstock
Cross-Listed in Music/Performance Track
ED
101b
Elementary School Curriculum and Teaching: Science, Arts and Other Topics
[
ss
]
Limited to MAT elementary students and undergraduate student teachers enrolling in ED 111e spring semester.
Focuses on principles and effective procedures for teaching elementary students inquiry-based science. Examines how art, creative drama, multicultural education, special education, and physical education affect teaching and learning. Usually offered every year.
Staff
ENG
151b
Performance Studies
[
dl
hum
]
Explores paradigms for making performance inside and outside of institutionalized theater spaces, with an emphasis on the performance of everyday life. Students read theories of theater and performance against paradigmatic dramatic texts and documents of social performance. Combining theory with practice, students explore and make site-specific and online performances. Usually offered every third year.
Thomas King
Cross-Listed in Music/Theater Performance Track
THA
10a
Theater as Performance
[
ca
]
Develops the student's ability to read a theatrical text through the lens of the directorial mind and the voice/body/imagination of the performer. Reading, discussions, papers and exercises about acting, directing, dance, performance art, devised work, etc. will constitute the bulk of this course. Intended for Theater majors as well as students with no theater experience. Usually offered every year.
Adrianne Krstansky and Ryan McKittrick
THA
23a
Movement for the Stage I
[
ca
]
Prerequisite: THA 10a or permission of the instructor.
The actor's job is to create action out of meaning and meaning out of action. Exercises designed to lead students into their imaginations in order to bring courage and responsiveness into the body. Focus on building necessary tools to create the balance between free form and free expression and an artistic and intelligent relationship to theater. Usually offered every year.
Susan Dibble
THA
35a
The Audition
[
ca
]
Prerequisite: THA 21b.
Actors obtain work through an audition process; therefore, actors need to audition well. This course aims to prepare mid- and upper-level acting students for that process. Topics include resumes, material selection, preparation, and practice in various kinds of auditions using both classical and contemporary literature. Usually offered every second year.
Robert Walsh
THA
115a
The Human Voice for Life and Art
[
ca
]
Prerequisite: THA 10a or permission of the instructor.
Explore the un-boundaried voice – deeply breathed and dynamically embodied. Traditional Anglo-American methodologies are combined with archetypal imagery and ethnic vocal styles organized to harness untapped resources of energy, deepen full-bodied breath connection, and strengthen imaginative muscles in order to invigorate a more personal connection to your voice. In this workshop-style course we will explore and celebrate the wide range of colors, timbres, heights and depths available to the human voice. The course is appropriate for actors, singers, and anyone interested in exploring their vocal potential in a creative environment. Usually offered every year.
Marya Lowry
THA
130a
Suzuki
[
ca
]
Counts as one activity course toward the physical education requirement. Undergraduates may repeat this course twice for credit, once with each instructor.
Developed by the Japanese theater artist Tadashi Suzuki, the Suzuki method of acting training develops physical strength, stamina, and agility while engaging the imagination and will of the actor. Through a series of walks, statues, and marches, students are taught to breathe and move from the core of their bodies. This training allows students to act from physical impulse, resulting in a deep and personal experience of language and the world of play. Usually offered every semester.
Staff
THA
132a
Collaborative Theater Making
[
ca
]
May be repeated once for credit.
An exploration of the process of collaborative creation from the idea to performance. Students work as performers, directors, writers, and designers to create original theater pieces based on current events, literature, theater, genres, and personal obsessions. Usually offered every year.
Adrianne Krstansky