Courses
Academic Courses
Music Theory
- MUS T109 Rudiments of Music I (3 cr.) Fundamentals of notation, ear training, and music reading. Melody and beginning harmony. Offered in face-to-face and online sections. Music Fundamentals Online is an alternative to T109 as a prerequisite to other music theory classes. A grade of C or higher is required.
- MUS T123 Music Theory for Music Business (3 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I or Z111 Introduction to Music Theory. Introduction to form and musical syntax in popular music styles, including pop, rock, blues, and hip-hop.
- MUS T124 Music Theory for Music Production (3 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I. Study and analysis of a broad repertoire of popular styles of music from the latter part of the twentieth century through the present.
- MUS T132 Musical Skills I (1 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I or equivalent, and T151 Music Theory and Literature I or O101 Fundamentals of Jazz Theory. It is strongly recommended that this course be taken concurrently with T152 Music Theory and Literature II. Diatonic melody and harmony; two-part counterpoint. Aural skills, music reading, and keyboard. A grade of C or higher is required.
- MUS T134 Popular Music Skills I (2 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I or Z111 Introduction to Music Theory. Aural recognition of sonorities, rhythms, and chord progressions related to popular music, as well as pitch pattern recognition and improvisation incorporating these concepts.
- MUS T135 Popular Music Skills II (2 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I and T134 Popular Music Skills I. A continuation of T134 Popular Music Skills I, focusing on more advanced rhythms and melodies, especially in popular repertoires.
- MUS T151 Music Theory and Literature I (3 cr.) P: Music Fundamentals Online, or T109 Rudiments of Music I with grade of C or higher, or Z211 Music Theory II with grade of C or higher. Introduction to the literature and analysis of music. Introduction to diatonic harmony.
- MUS T152 Music Theory and Literature II (3 cr.) P: T151 Music Theory and Literature I. Diatonic harmony continued, and introduction to chromatic harmony. Two-voice counterpoint and study of small forms.
- MUS T231 Musical Skills II (1 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I or equivalent, T132 Musical Skills I, and T151 Music Theory and Literature I or consent of instructor. It is strongly recommended that this course be taken concurrently with T251 Music Theory and Literature III. Melody, harmony, and counterpoint continued; some chromaticism. Aural skills, music reading, and keyboard. A grade of C or higher is required.
- MUS T232 Musical Skills III (1 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I or equivalent, T132-T231 Musical Skills I-II, and T151 Music Theory and Literature I or consent of instructor. It is strongly recommended that this course be taken concurrently with T252 Music Theory and Literature IV. Chromatic melody and harmony. Aural skills, music reading, and keyboard. A grade of C or higher is required.
- MUS T251 Music Theory and Literature III (3 cr.) P: O214 Jazz Harmony or T151-T152 Music Theory and Literature I-II. Study of music from the late sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries, with an emphasis on counterpoint, harmony, and form.
- MUS T252 Music Theory and Literature IV (3 cr.) P: O214 Jazz Harmony or T151-T152 Music Theory and Literature I-II; T251/T261 Music Theory and Literature III. Study of music of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with an emphasis on advanced harmonic procedures and analysis of larger forms.
- MUS T261 Music Theory and Literature III (3 cr.) P: O214 Jazz Harmony or T151-T152 Music Theory and Literature I-II. Honors equivalent of T251. Study of music from the late sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries, with an emphasis on counterpoint, harmony, and form.
- MUS T262 Music Theory and Literature IV (3 cr.) P: O214 Jazz Harmony or T151-T152 Music Theory and Literature I-II; T251/T261 Music Theory and Literature III. Honors equivalent of T252. Study of music of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with an emphasis on advanced harmonic procedures and analysis of larger forms.
- MUS T331 Musical Skills IV (1 cr.) P: T109 Rudiments of Music I or equivalent; T132-T231-T232 Musical Skills I-II-III. It is strongly recommended that this course be taken concurrently with T351 Music Theory and Literature V. Twentieth-century materials. A grade of C or higher is required.
- MUS T351 Music Theory and Literature V (3 cr.) P: O214 Jazz Harmony or T151-T152 Music Theory and Literature I-II; T251/T261-T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature III-IV. Each section will be devoted to the study and analysis of a specific style or genre of music since 1900.
- MUS T361 Music Theory and Literature V (3 cr.) P: O214 Jazz Harmony or T151-T152 Music Theory and Literature I-II; T251/T261-T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature III-IV. Honors equivalent of T351. Each section will be devoted to the study and analysis of a specific style or genre of music since 1900.
- MUS T400 Undergraduate Readings in Music Theory (1-3 cr.) Independent study on a topic approved by the music theory department prior to enrollment in the course.
- MUS T410 Topics in Music Theory (3 cr.) P: T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature IV. Study of selected compositions of a particular composer, historical period, or genre. Emphasis on music and its relation to theoretical and compositional ideas. May be repeated for different topics.
- MUS T412 Advanced Aural and Keyboard Techniques (3 cr.) P: T232 Musical Skills III and T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature IV, or consent of instructor. Listening in context to music of various style periods. Keyboard skills (e.g., figured bass, harmonization, and score reading).
- MUS T416 Counterpoint: Variable Topics (3 cr.) P: T232 Musical Skills III and T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature IV. The techniques of counterpoint with an emphasis on a particular style, such as that of the sixteenth or eighteenth century.
- MUS T417 Analysis of Tonal Music (3 cr.) P: T232 Musical Skills III and T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature IV. Analytical techniques for the study of tonal music of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
- MUS T418 Music and Ideas (3 cr.) P: T252/T262 Music Theory and Literature IV. An introduction to the philosophy of music and the history and problems of musical aesthetics.
- MUS T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students (3 cr.) Part writing, form, and harmonization. Meets the proficiency requirement with a grade of C or higher. If T511 Aural Music Theory Review for Graduate Students is also required, T508 should be taken first.
- MUS T509 Sight-Singing Review for Graduate Students (1 cr.) Music reading involving intervals, scales, chord outlines, and rhythm patterns through sight singing and performance of prepared melodies in solo and ensemble settings. Meets the proficiency requirement with a grade of C or higher.
- MUS T511 Aural Music Theory Review for Graduate Students (1 cr.) Dictation of musical examples including rhythms, intervals, chords and chord proressions, melodies, two-voice contrapuntal examples, and contextual listening examples. Meets the proficiency requirement with a grade of C or higher. If T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students is also required, it should be taken before T511.
- MUS T545 Introductory Analysis of Music Literature (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. Basic techniques of analysis applied to a selection of music literature emphasizing works from the seventeenth century through the early twentieth century.
- MUS T550 Readings in Music Theory (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. Introduction to the discipline of music theory: objectives, issues, trends, methods, resources, and literature.
- MUS T551 Analytical Techniques for Tonal Music (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. In-depth analysis of common-practice repertoire through multiple techniques, including the study both of pitch and of rhythm.
- MUS T555 Schenkerian Analysis (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. Develops skill in applying Heinrich Schenker’s analytic method for tonal music of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
- MUS T556 Analysis of Music Since 1900 (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. Analytical techniques for music of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
- MUS T561 Music Theory: Variable Topics (3 cr.) May be repeated for different topics.
- MUS T565 Stylistic Counterpoint: Variable Topics (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. Analysis of, and composition in, the contrapuntal style of a given period, e.g., J. S. Bach and his contemporaries, the sixteenth-century sacred style, the Romantic period. May be repeated for different topics.
- MUS T591 Music Theory Pedagogy (3 cr.) P: T508 Written Music Theory Review for Graduate Students or equivalent. Comparative analysis of teaching techniques, procedures, and materials, with practical application.
- MUS T619 Projects and Problems in Music Theory (1-3 cr.) P: Consent of music theory department. Investigation and research in the field of music theory designed to meet individual needs of graduate students.
- MUS T623 History of Western Music Theory I (3 cr.) European musical systems of antiquity; modal, rhythmic, and contrapuntal music theory to 1600.
- MUS T624 History of Western Music Theory II (3 cr.) European music theory from 1600 through the mid-twentieth century.
- MUS T650 Dissertation Topic Workshop (1 cr.) P: Completion of three doctoral seminars (T658 Seminar in Music Theory: Variable Topics). This workshop, normally to be taken during the last semester of coursework, is aimed at developing the dissertation topic and writing the topic prospectus. Students will meet under faculty supervision to discuss ideas, critique each other's analyses and writing samples, suggest readings, and so forth.
- MUS T658 Seminar in Music Theory: Variable Topics (3 cr.) May be repeated for different topics.
- MUS T659 Public Lecture (0 cr.) Formal presentation to the public of a research paper. This course is eligible for deferred (R) grading.