Department of Music
Courses
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About the Course Listings
Four views and tools each provide different ways of exploring the curriculum.
- Current Year Courses for this Department or Program lists only currently-offered classes, and includes scheduling and instructor information.
- The Three-Year Planner for this Department or Program lists all courses (in numerical order) offered during the current year and the last two years. Use it to understand the full course offerings from the department and how frequently courses are offered. This list does not include any scheduling information; instructor information is only historical and is likely to change in future years.
- The Tri-Co Course Search Engine lists the current offerings for all departments and programs at Haverford, Bryn Mawr, and Swarthmore Colleges, and includes scheduling and instructor information.
- The HC Academic Catalog Course Search Engine includes faceted searching (by division, domain, department, major, minor, and other fields) for all courses offered in the current year and the last two years. It does not contain scheduling information, but like the Three-Year Planner, can help you discover related interests and understand the typical pattern of offerings from year to year. This tool does not include all Bryn Mawr offerings.
Courses
MUSC H102 CHORALE (0.5 Credit)
Nathan Zullinger
Division: Humanities
Chorale is a large mixed chorus that performs major works from the oratorio repertoire with orchestra and student soloists. Attendance at weekly two-hour rehearsals and dress rehearsals during performance week is required. Entrance by audition. Students can start Chorale at the beginning of any semester. This course is graded universal P/F in which no numerical grade is assigned. Prerequisite(s): Audition and consent of the instructor.
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H110 INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC THEORY (1.0 Credit)
Ingrid Arauco
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
An intensive introduction to the notational and theoretical materials of music, complemented by work in sight-singing, keyboard harmony, and dictation. This course is appropriate for students who sing or play an instrument, but who have had little or no systematic instruction in music theory. Topics include time and pitch and their notation, scales, intervals, triads, basic harmonic progressions, melodic construction, harmonization of melody, non-harmonic tones, transposition, and key change (modulation). Students who wish to explore the art of musical composition will find this course especially useful, as two creative projects are assigned: the composition of a pair of melodies in the major and minor modes, and a 32-bar piece which changes key. Preparation for these projects is provided through listening and analysis of works in a variety of musical styles. Students having completed this course will be prepared to enter Music 203, the first semester of the theory sequence for music majors.
MUSC H111 LISTENING TO HISTORY (1.0 Credit)
Elaine Fitz Gibbon
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
When does music history begin in the West? How has Western music evolved and—just as importantly—why? This course teaches students to hear how musical style changes over time while considering the social and technological conditions that underpin such changes. We listen closely and critically to works by Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, and Stravinsky, among others, discussing these using a precise shared vocabulary. At the same time, we read historical documents closely related to musical sound: Bach’s frustrating negotiations with his church employers; Wolfgang Mozart’s intimate letters to his father and musical mentor, Leopold; the emotional testament in which Beethoven grapples with his hearing loss. Ultimately, we traverse a thousand years to discover how Western music went from being a liturgical ritual of plain, unaccompanied song to an extravagant secular form of entertainment for elite audiences in modern cities. No prior musical knowledge is required.
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H115 INTRODUCTION TO IMPROVISATION AND JAZZ HARMONY (1.0 Credit)
Leonardo Dugan
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
Intensive, hands-on introduction to the improvisatory practices and techniques of Black American Music/jazz, with a strong focus on both style and rhythm/groove. By the end of the semester, students will learn to play, analyze, and compose solos using blues/pentatonic scales, modes, and chord-based melodic structures. Pre-requisite(s): Prerequisite: the ability to play an instrument (voice included - scat-singers welcome!) Lottery Preference: Lottery with priority given to music majors and minors.
MUSC H122 AFRICAN AMERICANS, MUSIC, AND THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
How did African-American expressive culture become such an influential presence in the US? This course surveys the myriad genres and styles of African American Music from early jazz styles and urban blues to the birth of rhythm 'n blues, as well as contemporary expressions such as hip-hop. It explores development and impact of popular music particular to the United States, including its commercialization, mass mediation, and the penetration of mainstream America and the global market. Students will be introduced to seminal figures in the creation of African American popular music.
MUSC H134 ELECTRONIC MUSIC EVOLUTION: FROM FOUNDATIONAL BASICS TO SONIC HORIZONS (1.0 Credit)
Mei-ling Lee
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
Electronic music, a constantly evolving entity, has revolutionized the way we create and experience music. This course, Electronic Music Evolution, offers a deep dive into its history, theory, and practical application. From the Telharmonium's inception to contemporary interactive performances, students will develop critical listening skills. Hands-on use of cutting-edge production tools will enable students to compose electronic music works, exploring composition and performance alongside emerging electronic music theories. This course does not count for the Music major or minor. Lottery Preference: Music major / Music minor
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H140 TRANSATLANTIC SOUNDS (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
This course provides an overview of the world's musical traditions, with selected case studies from each of ten regions: Oceania, South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, North America, Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America. It introduces ways to think and write about the huge diversity of musical genres from different parts of the world, together with their performers, audiences, and cultural contexts.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H142 WORLDS OF MUSIC: EUROPE AND THE AMERICAS (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
This course is part of an ethnomusicology series: “Worlds of Music,” which covers music from Europe and the Americas, Africa and the Middle East, and Asia. This course provides an overview of the musical traditions of the Americas and Europe, with selected case studies that emphasize folk, traditional, and popular musics, together with their performers, audiences, and cultural contexts, including major musical instruments, traditional and popular genres, notation systems, musical concepts, and extra musical contexts. It combines musical analysis of representative examples with examination of social, political, and historical background to the musics of this region. The course is open to students from all disciplines; there are no pre-requisites and knowledge of music performance and theory is helpful but not necessary. This course does not count toward the major or minor.
MUSC H203 PRINCIPLES OF TONAL HARMONY I (1.0 Credit)
Mei-ling Lee
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
An introduction to tonal music theory and compositional practice, drawing on diverse American and European repertories. Explored are techniques of musical analysis, harmonization in four parts, and the craft of composition from the phrase level to larger units of structure. Composition of a set of variations, sonatina, or other homophonic piece is the final project. Lab period covers related aural and keyboard harmony skills. Prerequisite(s): MUSC 110 or instructor consent
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H204 PRINCIPLES OF TONAL HARMONY II (1.0 Credit)
Mei-ling Lee
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
Continuation of Music 203, covering chromatic harmony and focusing on the development of sonata forms from the Classical through the Romantic period. Composition of a sonata exposition is the final project. Three class hours plus laboratory period covering related aural and keyboard harmony skills. Required for the Music major or minor; should be taken the semester after Music 203. Prerequisite: Music 203.
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H208 PRIVATE STUDY: INSTRUMENTAL (0.5 Credit)
Heidi Jacob
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
All students enrolled in the private study program should be participating in a departmentally directed ensemble or activity (Chorale, Orchestra, etc.) as advised by their program supervisor. Students receive ten hour-long lessons with approved teachers for one-half credit, graded. All students in the private study program perform for a faculty jury at the end of the semester. Students assume the cost of their lessons, but may apply for private study subsidies at the beginning of each semester’s study through the department.
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H209 PRIVATE STUDY: VOICE (0.5 Credit)
Nathan Zullinger
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
All students enrolled in the private study program should be participating in a departmentally directed ensemble or activity (Chorale, Orchestra, etc.) as advised by their program supervisor. Students receive ten hour-long lessons with approved teachers for one-half credit, graded. All students in the private study program perform for a faculty jury at the end of the semester. Students assume the cost of their lessons, but may apply for private study subsidies at the beginning of each semester’s study through the department.
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H210 PRIVATE STUDY: KEYBOARD (0.5 Credit)
Heidi Jacob
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
All students enrolled in the private study program should be participating in a departmentally directed ensemble or activity (Chorale, Orchestra, etc.) as advised by their program supervisor. Students receive ten hour-long lessons with approved teachers for one-half credit, graded. All students in the private study program perform for a faculty jury at the end of the semester. Students assume the cost of their lessons, but may apply for private study subsidies at the beginning of each semester’s study through the department.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H214 CHAMBER SINGERS (0.5 Credit)
Nathan Zullinger
A 30-voice mixed choir that performs a wide range of mostly a cappella repertoire from the Renaissance to the present day, in original languages. The choir performs on and off campus, both public concerts and outreach concerts to underserved audiences. Requires attendance at three 80-minute rehearsals weekly. Entrance by audition at the beginning of the Fall semester each year. This course is graded universal P/F in which no numerical grade is assigned.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H215 CHAMBER MUSIC (0.5 Credit)
Heidi Jacob
Division: Humanities
Intensive rehearsal of works for small instrumental groups, with supplemental assigned research and listening. Performance is required. Students enrolled in Chamber Music have the opportunity to receive coaching from visiting artists on the Concert Artist Series and from resident ensembles. Performances take place at Haverford and Bryn Mawr Colleges, and other community venues. This course is available to those students who are concurrently studying privately, or who have studied privately immediately prior to the start of the semester. In addition, all students playing orchestral instruments must participate concurrently in the Orchestra, unless granted permission by the music director. Entrance by audition only. This course is graded universal P/F in which no numerical grade is assigned.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H216 ORCHESTRA (0.5 Credit)
Heidi Jacob
The Haverford-Bryn Mawr Orchestra has over seventy members and performs a wide range of symphonic repertory. Orchestra members are expected to attend one two-and-a-half hour rehearsal per week, and are guided in sectional rehearsals by professional musicians. There are three/four performances a year, including Parents/Family Weekend concerts. The spring Orchestra concert features the winner of the annual student concerto competition. Entrance by audition only. This course is graded universal P/F in which no numerical grade is assigned.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H225 MUSIC, MODERNISM AND THE AVANT GARDE (1.0 Credit)
Elaine Fitz Gibbon
Division: Humanities
Course assembles music by Debussy, Schoenberg, Berg, Stravinsky, Bartok, Hindemith, Weill, Prokofiev, Shostakovich, and many others, considered through reactionary priorities of modernist aesthetics. Topics include the search for order and control; music and the state; music, film, and electronic technologies; and new roles for composers, performers, and listeners. The class is organized around some two dozen important works, pieces chosen for their historical influence and for their acute formulation of musical and aesthetic problems. Prerequisite(s): Music 110, 111, or instructor consent
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H229 THINKING ABOUT MUSIC: IDEAS, HISTORY, AND MUSICOLOGY (1.0 Credit)
Richard Freedman
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
Core concepts and perspectives for the serious study of music. Students explore music, meaning, and musicological method in a variety of contexts through a set of six foundational themes and questions: Music and the Idea of Genius, Who Owns Music?, Music and Technology, The Global Soundscape, Music and the State, and Tonality, Sense, and Reason. Each unit uses a small number of musical works, performances, or documents as a focal point. In each unit we also read current musicological work in an attempt to understand the methods, arguments, and perspectives through which scholars interpret music and its many meanings. This course is required of all music majors and minors in their sophomore or junior year. Prerequisite(s): MUSC 110, 111, or 203
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H240 MUSICAL CULTURES OF AFRO-LATIN AMERICA (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
This course considers Afro-Latin American music within a broad cultural framework. The course surveys the historical and musical development of various social groups, who constitute the African diaspora in the Americas and the Caribbean. It explores African-influenced musical cultures and practices that emerged from syncretic practices among indigenous, African, and European people, focusing on folkloric, ritual, and popular forms of expression. Lottery Preference: Music majors
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H241 MUSIC AND SOCIAL JUSTICE (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
Music and Social Justice explores the relationship between ethnomusicology and social justice. The course introduces themes, concepts, tools, and methodologies of applied ethnomusicology, and discusses the role of the ethnomusicologist on a wide set of issues, including advocacy, indigenous people, education, agencies, and conflict. It considers traditional, popular, and ritual forms of music around the world and their significance to the struggle for social justice. The course is open to students from all disciplines; there are no pre-requisites and knowledge of music performance and theory is helpful but not necessary.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H242 THE LIVES OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS: CONCEPTS AND CLASSIFICATIONS (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
Ever wonder why a violin is not a fiddle or feel that traditional classifications are inadequate to express ALL a musical instrument is, including what they mean to you personally? This course explores the numerous formal and informal systems that humans in their desire to create rational structures, have created to classify and think about musical instruments around the world. It also explores the diversity of instrument-related philosophical, symbolic, disciplinary, and intellectual approaches and meanings that humans have conceived and that express the world's great cultural diversity.
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H243 ETHNOMUSICOLOGY IN THEORY AND PRACTICE (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
What do ethnomusicologists do? This course is an introduction to the field of ethnomusicology. It surveys its history, examines various ethnomusicological theories and perspectives, and explores its methodologies. We will read and discuss the works of major ethnomusicological scholars and explore the interdisciplinary nature of the field, particularly in connection with musicology, anthropology, and cultural studies. In order to encourage a deeper understanding of ethnomusicological perspectives and methods, the course includes a fieldwork-related project.
MUSC H250 WORDS AND MUSIC (1.0 Credit)
Richard Freedman
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
This course will be devoted to the amazing vocal music of the European Renaissance, exploring the ways in which literary and musical modes of interpretation repeatedly informed each other during this period. How do literary readings of texts differ from musical ones? How did Renaissance musicians bring their own habits as readers to musical and verbal texts they sang and played? Our primary texts will be the works themselves: French chansons, Italian madrigals, Latin motets, and solo songs of the fifteenth through early seventeenth centuries. We will study poetry by Petrarch, Tasso, Christine de Pizan, Ronsard as interpreted by composers like Guillaume Dufay, Josquin Desprez, Cipriano de Rore, Orlandus Lassus, Luca Marenzio, Claudio Monteverdi (and plenty of others, too). Our discussions will be both historical (exploring the values and artistic ideals at work in the European Renaissance) and critical (investigating the ways of knowing or relating words and music).
MUSC H251 STRANGE MUSIC: MONSTERS, GHOSTS, AND ALIENS ON STAGE AND SCREEN (1.0 Credit)
Richard Freedman
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts)
Scholars of film often speak of the camera as an “all-seeing eye.” But what role does the ear play in cinematic experience? This course will explore the history, character, and function of music (and sound) in the first half of the twentieth century (and beyond): how they worked with (and against) the camera’s gaze to complicate narratives, to articulate time, and more generally to represent feeling and identity. This term will put special focus on the non-human: monsters, ghosts, aliens, and more generally the idea of the magical or supernatural. What does such radical Otherness sound like? How has it been represented musically? And how have composers and sound designers put such conventions to work in films of the last 100 years, from Metropolis and Nosferatu to Dune and Arrival? To answer these questions we’ll explore the silents, the early sound film and (especially) the long arc of composers (from Eric Korngold to Bernard Herrmann and from John Williams to Hans Zimmer. We’ll consider the legacy of Romanticism, the possibilities of Modernism, and even the Avant Garde, and learn about orchestration, harmony and thematic process as they contribute to cinematic narrative. We will also consider various theories of sound, music, and film staked out by film and operatic composers themselves, as well as critical and scholarly essays by leading writers on the monstrous, the alien, and the supernatural. Crosslisted: VIST Prerequisite(s): No formal prerequisite, but some previous study of either music or visual media would be helpful
MUSC H255 ENCODING MUSIC: DIGITAL APPROACHES TO SCORES AND SOUND (1.0 Credit)
Richard Freedman
Division: Humanities; Symbolic Reasoning
Domain(s): A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts); C: Physical and Natural Processes
How do we represent music, in all its forms, from concept to practice? What sorts of systems have humans devised to learn, transmit, and preserve music? How have we collected and categorized music? And what might these activities look like in an era of ubiquitous data? In this course musicians and computer scientists will team up to explore two key dimensions of the digital revolution for music: data about music, and music as data. Pre-requisite(s): This course is open to students interested in music, computer science or data science. Some previous coursework or experience with either (but not both) would be good preparation for this course. That is either: a basic working knowledge of musical concepts (staff notation, guitar tablature, scales and keys, or work with MIDI) or some familiarity with computer code (Python, XML) or data structures. Lottery Preference: Music Majors and Minors. BMC Data Science Minors. CS Majors.
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H266 COMPOSITION (1.0 Credit)
Ingrid Arauco
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
Preparation of a portfolio of compositions for various instruments and ensembles. Weekly assignments designed to invite creative, individual responses to a variety of musical ideas; experimentation with harmony, form, notation, and text-setting. Performance of student works-in-progress and final reading/recording session with professional musicians. Recent classes have had their compositions read by Network for New Music, percussionist Phillip O’Banion, and the Amernet String Quartet. Prerequisite(s): MUSC 204 and instructor consent
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H268 SONIC NARRATIVES - STORYTELLING THROUGH SOUND SYNTHESIS (1.0 Credit)
Mei-ling Lee
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
"Sonic Narratives" is a course that combines traditional instruments and electronic music technologies to explore storytelling through sound. The course explores the language of sound as a potent narrative tool, covering advanced sound synthesis techniques such as Additive, Subtractive, FM, Granular, and Wavetable Synthesis using state-of-the-art tools like KYMA and Logic Pro. Beyond technical proficiency, students will explore how these synthesis techniques contribute to diverse fields, from cinematic soundtracks to social media engagement. Pre-requisite(s): MUS 134, or consent of the instructor. No standard notation knowledge will be necessary, but a fundamental understanding of sound and musical elements would be beneficial. Lottery Preference: Music major / Music minor
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H303 ADVANCED TONAL HARMONY (1.0 Credit)
Ingrid Arauco
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
Study of late 19th-century harmonic practice in selected works of Liszt, Wagner, Brahms, Fauré, Wolf, Debussy, and Mahler. Exploration of chromatic harmony through analysis and short compositions; final composition project consisting of either art song or piano piece such as nocturne or intermezzo. Musicianship lab covers related aural and keyboard harmony skills. Prerequisite(s): MUSC 204
(Offered: Fall 2024)
MUSC H304 COUNTERPOINT (1.0 Credit)
Ingrid Arauco
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
Exploration of contrapuntal techniques and forms, such as canon, two-part invention, and fugue, with an emphasis on the works of J.S. Bach and beyond. Featured this semester will be the study of counterpoint in contemporary styles. This is a studio course which will result in a portfolio of works for various instruments, ranging from harpsichord to percussion. We will be writing for Philadelphia’s Network for New Music and other guest artists, who will visit our class to offer feedback, perform and record your work. Advising note: This course is particularly valuable taken prior to senior year if you intend to complete a thesis in composition. Prerequisite(s): MUSC 204
(Offered: Spring 2025)
MUSC H320 CHORAL CONDUCTING (1.0 Credit)
Nathan Zullinger
Division: Humanities
Domain(s): A: Creative Expression
This course will offer an introduction to conducting choral ensembles. Students will learn to synthesize the many aspects of conducting, including physical communication, artistic leadership, and musical study. In addition to incorporating elements of music history and theory, this course will emphasize additional skills such as score study, group vocal technique, and performance practice in different musical eras. Prerequisite(s): MUSC 204 and MUSC 229; MUSC 102 or MUSC 214, and any one of the following: MUSC 208, 209, 210
MUSC H480 INDEPENDENT STUDY (1.0 Credit)
Edwin Porras, Heidi Jacob, Ingrid Arauco, Mei-ling Lee, Nathan Zullinger, Richard Freedman
Division: Humanities
Prerequisite(s): Approval of department and consent of instructor
(Offered: Fall 2024)