Music Intensive

CANCELLED

Fall 2016 and Winter 2017 quarters

Taught by

music composition, performance

How shall we study music? We can watch others doing it on YouTube, we can hear others doing it on YouPod or we can read about others doing it on YouKindle.

Let's DO it! (Sadly, there's no "YouDo".)

Let's study music by creating and performing it. After all, music's a thing made by the brain, the heart and the fingers.

You'll be asked to study an instrument and perform for others in the class.  You will also be asked to write vocal and instrumental arrangements, sing and perform them. The class environment will not be a competitive one: the goal is to stretch out, learn, and challenge oneself rather than to compare one someone with another someone. The study of music requires a commitment to practice, to listen, to remember and to learn. This program offers you time in which to do just that.

You'll learn about writing harmonies, singing them, and about how difficult it is to write vocal parts that are interesting both melodically and harmonically. There will be a strong emphasis on ear training, sight singing, and aural dictation, along with studies in tonal harmony. You'll be asked to write and perform musical canons. We'll study the history of Western classical music, jazz music from the early 20th century, popular music of the past 50 years and experiments in music composition as well. There will be regular listening sessions, along with readings from the arts.

In class, students will be assigned performance groups, and each group will be asked to prepare a vocal or instrumental work. This will happen twice each quarter. Rehearsal time will be set aside for such practice, and the faculty will act as a coach for the rehearsals. Each quarter, students will be asked to write one substantial research paper exploring an aspect of music they are unfamiliar with. There will be class trips to concerts in Seattle and Portland, along with visiting guest artists throughout the year.

In addition to classroom activities, each student will be expected to take instruction in a musical instrument outside of class and bear the cost of that instruction (the faculty member can help you find a teacher for your instrument). Practicing an instrument is a way to bring together the seemingly separate activities of the brain, the heart and the fingers: it concretizes music theory, gives a goal to the wobbling fingers and releases the heart from its regularity of "thump thump thump".

Program Details

Fields of Study

aesthetics cultural studies music

Preparatory For

performance, music, arts administration, theater and education.

Quarters

Fall Open Winter Conditional

Location and Schedule

Campus Location

Olympia

Time Offered

Day

Online Learning

Hybrid Online Learning < 25% Delivered Online

Fees

$100 per quarter for concert and performance tickets.

Revisions

Date Revision
2016-03-17 This program has been cancelled.
2016-02-03 New fall-winter opportunity added.