Global Arc

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You can now simultaneously browse international opportunities and on-campus courses; the goal is to plan coursework — before and/or after your trip — that will deepen your experiences abroad.

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Subject

Displaying 3411 - 3420 of 4003
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Analyzing Popular Music
This course introduces students to the issues involved in analyzing popular music, including rock, soul, funk, hip-hop, reggae, and electronic dance music from the late 1950s to the present. Listening closely without a score, we will discuss form, timbre, production, harmony and voice leading, rhythm, and music videos. Each week, we will read analytical articles dealing with a particular theoretical issue and analyze two to three songs in class.
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Studies of Orchestral Music
Particular works or groups of works by a single composer but with reference to other music, either by the same or by related composers. Two 90-minute lectures. Prerequisite: 206.
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Romantic Piano Music
A survey of piano music in the 19th century, including works for solo piano, songs for piano and voice, and concerti. Topics include the piano as instrument and innovation, piano genres and idioms, social contexts for piano performance, virtuosity. Prerequisites: 105, or experience as performer, or permission of instructor. One three-hour seminar.
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Contemporary Opera and MusicTheater
This course presents a rare opportunity to get a close-up experience of a professional production of a new opera. Andrew Lovett's one-act opera The Analysing Engine will be performed in November. Contributing to this activity will be the main focus of the first part of the course. Alongside this we will look at examples of chamber operas since 1945, such as Britten's The Turn of the Screw and Bernstein's Trouble in Tahiti. We will think about how music and drama are combined to create a unified artistic work. The course is aimed at anyone interested in opera, composing (or writing) or opera/theater production.
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Composing Like Beethoven
An exploration of Beethoven's style through model composition and analysis. We will consider a series of idioms or "schemas" that are central to Beethoven's style, including specific routines for handling parallel and contrary motion in the classical tradition, favorite sequences, and idioms that defy standard analysis. Students familiarize themselves by writing a series of model composition exercises, starting with small phrases and progressing to an entire sonata-form movement. We will consider how these patterns are embedded in specific Beethoven compositions. We may also explore the use of idioms in classical-style improvisation.
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The Composer/Performer
The course will explore the connections between composition and performance in a group and solo context. It is the goal of the course to help the student find his/her optimal and personal balance among concerns including but not limited too: abstract compositional technique and practical performance values; organization and spontaneity, surface and structure, strengths and obligations, material and effect, aural and visual. Activities in the class will include analysis, study of compositional techniques, performing, improvisation, collaboration.
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Schematic Thought and the Musical Imagination
How did musicians like Mozart churn out a seemingly endless stream of imaginative compositions? This question drove a revolutionary rethinking of music theory in the 21st century, creating a new discipline of music studies called schema theory. With the aid of cognitive science, schema theorists ask how musicians learn the skills they need to succeed in a competitive marketplace. This class explores what schemas are and their impact on the music we create and consume. Through reading, listening, and compositional exercises, we will explore the schematic basis of two disparate musical styles: 18th-century court music and 20th-century salsa.
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Monteverdi: Madrigal and Opera 1575-1650
Detailed examination of the principal genres of Italian secular music of the late 16th and early 17th centuries, using the works of Monteverdi as a main point of reference. Some attention to placing musical issues in a context of political and social history. Classes will concentrate on a close analysis of selected works by Monteverdi and his contemporaries, with emphasis on the relationship between text and music. Two lectures, one class. Prerequisite: one year of theory or permission of instructor.
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Bach and Handel
The contrasting careers and oeuvres of the two greatest representatives of the late baroque in music will be considered both individually and comparatively. Prerequisite: a year of theory or instructor's permission.
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Venice, Theater of the World
This course examines over a millennium of music, art, literature, and culture in Venice, using as its lens the theatricality of the city's unique topography, environment, and geographic position. Moving between modern and medieval, from the stage to the street, this course explores the lasting fascination of this ephemeral, implausible place. Topics include: public opera; civic ritual; tourism; Venice in fiction and film. An excursion to Venice will take place over the spring break.