MUSC070 - THEORY/MUSICIANSHIP I

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC070 - THEORY/MUSICIANSHIP I
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
001
Section ID
MUSC070001
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
MUSIC BUILDING 210
Instructors
CARLSON, LUKE A
Description
This course will cover basic skills and vocabulary for reading, hearing, performing, analyzing, and writing music. Students will gain command of musical rudiments, including notation, reading and writing in treble and bass clefs, intervals, keys, scales, triads and seventh chords, and competence in basic melodic and formal analysis. The course will include an overview of basic diatonic harmony, introduction to harmonic function and tonicization. Musicianship skills will include interval and chord recognition, rhythmic and melodic dictation and familiarity with the keyboard. There will be in-depth study of selected compositions from the "common practice" Western tradition, including classical, jazz, blues and other popular examples. Listening skills--both with scores (including lead sheets, figured bass and standard notation), and without--will be emphasized. There is no prerequisite. Students with some background in music may place out of this course and into Music 170, Theory and Musicianship I. (Formerly Music 70, 71).
Course number only
070
Use local description
No

MUSC063 - BEGINNING SITAR II

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC063 - BEGINNING SITAR II
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
MUSC063401
Meeting times
TR 0500PM-0630PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 812
Instructors
MINER, ALLYN
Course number only
063
Cross listings
SAST107401
Use local description
No

MUSC054 - MUSIC AND LITERATURE

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC054 - MUSIC AND LITERATURE
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
MUSC054401
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
FISHER-BENNETT HALL 322
Instructors
JAJI, TSITSI E.PERELMAN, ROBERT
Description
This course examines the extraordinary influence of musical expression on literary works in the African American tradition. Drawing on a wide range of texts from fiction and poetry to autobiography, musicology, literary criticism and reportage, we will pay particular attention to how music figures as a sign of authenticity in black literature as slavery, the Great Migration of the early 20th century, class mobility and gender identities put pressure on the politics of belonging. Throughout the course the relationship between African American culture and the wider Black Atlantic will remain a crucial concern. We'll begin with the role of music as memory in accounts of remembered Africa songs in autobiographical work by W.E.B. Du Bois, Toni Morrisons Song of Solomon, and a film tracing a mourning song in the Gullah islands of South Carolina to its corollary among the Mende people of Sierra Leone. We'll then spend some time listening to vernacular music (spirituals, work-songs, and blues) and explore the politics of how and why these forms found varying degrees of acceptance, particularly in the milieu of the Harlem Renaissance and the New Negro movement. Students need not have an extensive background in musicology, but should be prepared to devot time to weekly listening.
Course number only
054
Cross listings
AFRC054401COML054401ENGL054401
Use local description
No

MUSC051 - AFRICAN MUSIC I

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC051 - AFRICAN MUSIC I
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
050
Section ID
MUSC051050
Description
African Contemporary Music: North, South, East, and West. Come to know contemporary Africa through the sounds of its music: from South African kwela, jazz, marabi, and kwaito to Zimbabwean chimurenga; Central African soukous and pygmy pop; West African Fuji, and North African rai and hophop. Through reading and listening to live performance, audio and video recordings, we will examine the music of Africa and its intersections with politics, history, gender, and religion in the colonial and post colonial era. (Formerly Music 053).
Course number only
051
Use local description
No

MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
601
Section ID
MUSC050601
Meeting times
R 0430PM-0710PM
Meeting location
MUSIC BUILDING 101
Instructors
ROMMEN, TIMOTHY
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.
Course number only
050
Use local description
No

MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
406
Section ID
MUSC050406
Meeting times
MWF 1000AM-1100AM
Meeting location
MUSIC BUILDING 101
Instructors
VEERARAGHAVAN, LEE
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.
Course number only
050
Cross listings
AFRC050406AFST050406ANTH022406FOLK022406
Use local description
No

MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
405
Section ID
MUSC050405
Meeting times
TR 1200PM-0130PM
Meeting location
MUSIC BUILDING 102
Instructors
MEADOWS, RUTH E.
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.
Course number only
050
Cross listings
AFRC050405AFST050405ANTH022405FOLK022405
Use local description
No

MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
404
Section ID
MUSC050404
Meeting times
MWF 0100PM-0200PM
Meeting location
MUSIC BUILDING 101
Instructors
ROTHCHILD, EMILY J
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.
Course number only
050
Cross listings
AFRC050404AFST050404ANTH022404FOLK022404
Use local description
No

MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
MUSC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term
2012A
Subject area
MUSC
Section number only
403
Section ID
MUSC050403
Meeting times
MWF 1200PM-0100PM
Meeting location
MUSIC BUILDING 101
Instructors
SWANSTON, JESSICA L.
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.
Course number only
050
Cross listings
AFRC050403AFST050403ANTH022403FOLK022403
Use local description
No