Faculty of Arts & Science
2012-2013 Calendar

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Music

Faculty


Professors
R. Elliott, MA, Ph D (M)
J. Haines, MA, Ph D (T)
J. Kippen, Ph D (T)
M.A. Parker, MM, Ph D (M)
C.Clark, MA, Ph D (T)

Associate Professors
W. Bowen, MA, Ph D (S)
G.S. Johnston, MA, Ph D

Assistant Professors
J. Pilzer, Ph D
S. Vande Moortele, MA, Ph D

Faculty: Music Theory and Composition
Professors
K.N. Chan, Mus M, D Mus
C. Hatzis, M Mus, Ph D

Associate Professor
R. McClelland, Ph D

Assistant Professor
N. Palej, DMA

Senior Lecturers
J. Kruspe, Mus Bac
G. Kulesha
D. Patrick, Mus M
A. Rapoport, MA, Ph D
M. Sallmen, MA, Ph D

Lecturer
L. Kuzmenko, Mus Bac

Faculty: Peformance
Associate Professors
G. MacKay, M.Mus,D.M.
T. Promane, Hons Dip Mus

Assistant Professor
D. Briskin, MA

Senior Lecturer
J. Reynolds, M Mus, Ph D

Introduction

In the Faculty of Arts and Science, Music is approached as one of the liberal arts and taught as cultural history. This humanistic emphasis aims at a high degree of correlation with other disciplines such as Fine Art, Cultural Anthropology, Languages and Literatures, History, and Philosophy. Note that unlike students in the Mus.Bac. program at the Faculty of Music, students in the Specialist and Major programs are not given individual applied music instruction (e.g. piano or voice lessons). They are, however, offered a thorough grounding in musicology, and strong training in both ethnomusicology and music theory, with the option of increasing their exposure to the latter two disciplines via their upper-year option courses.

The courses with the prefix MUS are open to any student of the University. Even students with a strong music background should find them stimulating explorations of the world of music.

Students wishing to enter the Specialist or Major Program should examine the courses listed under HMU History of Music and TMU Theory of Music in the Faculty of Music Calendar. First-year specialist/major courses are available to a small number of students, who are admitted to them by audition and interview during Registration week. Those interested in ethnomusicology and the study of world music may audition on the basis of their comparable accomplishments in a non-Western instrumental or vocal performing tradition. All students are required to have completed Grade 2 Rudiments and Grade 3 Harmony from the Royal Conservatory of Music or acceptable equivalents as prerequisites, prior to the audition-interview. Knowledge of Western music history and theory ensures that students are not disadvantaged when facing the curricular requirements of the program. In this program the humanistic and historical approach is supported by courses in music theory which provide craft and analytical tools. The Specialist Program provides excellent preparation for a variety of professional activities including music criticism, library science, positions in the publishing, broadcasting, and recording industries, as well as for graduate studies in musicology and ethnomusicology leading to careers in university teaching. The program leads to the degree of Bachelor of Arts (honours). For programs leading to the degree of Bachelor of Music, the student should consult the Calendar of the Faculty of Music.

Students are encouraged to attend events sponsored by the Faculty of Music such as the Thursday Noon and Faculty Artists’ Series, opera productions and numerous concerts. For information refer to www.music.utoronto.ca or telephone 416-978-3744.
Faculty of Music Representative: Professor R. Elliott, Co-ordinator (416-978-3750)
Enquiries: Admissions Officer, Edward Johnson Building, Room 145 (416-978-3741); e-mail: undergrad.music@utoronto.ca


Visiting Professor
J. Packman, MA, Ph D

Music Programs


Music Programs

Enrolment in HMU and TMU courses, and, therefore, in the Specialist and Major programs, is limited to students who pass the audition-interview, held on September 4, 2012. Students are required to complete and submit the Student Profile available on-line at www.music.utoronto.ca prior to August 17, 2012. Hard copies are available from the Faculty of Music Registrar’s Office. You will then be assigned an audition time. Prospective candidates must perform at the Royal Conservatory of Music Grade Eight level, and demonstrate that they have Grade Two Rudiments and Grade Three Harmony or equivalents. Students interested in pursuing the Major or Specialist with the Ensemble option are required to pass an additional audition-interview for ensemble placement. Please refer to MUS 120Y. An information sheet is available at the Faculty of Music. (This is not required for the Music Minor program, see below.)

Music Specialist (Arts program)

Enrolment in HMU and TMU courses, and, therefore, in the Specialist and Major programs, is limited to students who pass the audition-interview, held on September 4, 2012. Students are required to complete and submit the Student Profile available on-line at www.music.utoronto.ca prior to August 17, 2012. Hard copies are available from the Faculty of Music Registrar’s Office. You will then be assigned an audition time. Prospective candidates must perform at the Royal Conservatory of Music Grade Eight level, and demonstrate that they have Grade Two Rudiments and Grade Three Harmony or equivalents. Students interested in pursuing the Major or Specialist with the Ensemble option are required to pass an additional audition-interview for ensemble placement. Please refer to MUS120Y1. An information sheet is available at the Faculty of Music. (This is not required for the Music Minor program, see below.)

(10 full courses or equivalent, including three 300+ level courses and one 400+ level course)

First Year:
HMU111H1, TMU140Y1, one FCE at the 100- level in a language other than English
Higher Years:
1. HMU225H1, HMU126H1
2. HMU425H1, HMU426H1,  HMU430H1, HMU431H1, HMU432H1, HMU433H1, HMU450H1
3. TMU240Y1 and a half-course in advanced theory (TMU)
4. Three half-courses in history options (HMU)

NOTE: Part-time students will satisfy co-requisites by taking courses in the following order: TMU140Y1, HMU111H1, TMU240Y1, HMU225H1, HMU126H1

Music Specialist with Ensemble Option (Arts program)

Enrolment in HMU and TMU courses, and, therefore, in the Specialist and Major programs, is limited to students who pass the audition-interview, held September 4, 2012. Students are required to complete and submit the Student Profile available on-line at www.music.utoronto.ca prior to August 17, 2012. Hard copies are available from the Faculty of Music Registrar’s Office. You will then be assigned an audition time. Prospective candidates must perform at the Royal Conservatory of Music Grade Eight level, and demonstrate that they have Grade Two Rudiments and Grade Three Harmony or equivalents. Students interested in pursuing the Major or Specialist with the Ensemble option are required to pass an additional audition-interview for ensemble placement. Please refer to MUS120Y1. An information sheet is available at the Faculty of Music. (This is not required for the Music Minor program, see below.)

(10.5 full courses or equivalent, including three 300+ level courses and one 400+ level course)

First Year:
HMU111H1, MUS120Y1, TMU140Y1, one FCE at the 100-level in a language other than English
Higher Years:
1. HMU225H1, HMU126H1
2. Three-and-a-half full courses in history options (HMU), including HMU433H1 and 1.5 FCE of topic courses from the list HMU425H1, HMU426H1, HMU430H1, HMU431H1, HMU432H1, HMU450H1
3. TMU240Y1 and a half-course in 300+ level theory (TMU)
4. MUS220Y1

NOTE: Part-time students will satisfy co-requisites by taking courses in the following order: TMU140Y1, HMU111H1, TMU240Y1, HMU225H1, HMU126H1

Music Major (Arts program)

Enrolment in HMU and TMU courses, and, therefore, in the Specialist and Major programs, is limited to students who pass the audition-interview, held on September 4, 2012. Students are required to complete and submit the Student Profile available on-line at www.music.utoronto.ca prior to August 17, 2012. Hard copies are available from the Faculty of Music Registrar’s Office. You will then be assigned an audition time. Prospective candidates must perform at the Royal Conservatory of Music Grade Eight level, and demonstrate that they have Grade Two Rudiments and Grade Three Harmony or equivalents. Students interested in pursuing the Major or Specialist with the Ensemble option are required to pass an additional audition-interview for ensemble placement. Please refer to MUS120Y1. An information sheet is available at the Faculty of Music. (This is not required for the Music Minor program, see below.)

(7 full courses or equivalent, including at least 1.5 FCE at the 300-level and .5 FCE at the 400-level)

First Year:
HMU111H1, TMU140Y1
Higher Years:
1. HMU225H1, HMU126H1 and three further half-courses in history options (HMU)
2. TMU240Y1 and a half-course in advanced theory (TMU)
3. 1.5 additional HMU/TMU courses

Music Major with Ensemble Option (Arts program)

Enrolment in HMU and TMU courses, and, therefore, in the Specialist and Major programs, is limited to students who pass the audition-interview, held on September 4, 2012. Students are required to complete and submit the Student Profile available on-line at www.music.utoronto.ca prior to August 17, 2012. Hard copies are available from the Faculty of Music Registrar’s Office. You will then be assigned an audition time. Prospective candidates must perform at the Royal Conservatory of Music Grade Eight level, and demonstrate that they have Grade Two Rudiments and Grade Three Harmony or equivalents. Students interested in pursuing the Major or Specialist with the Ensemble option are required to pass an additional audition-interview for ensemble placement. Please refer to MUS120Y1. An information sheet is available at the Faculty of Music. (This is not required for the Music Minor program, see below.)

(7.5 full courses or equivalent, including at least 1.5 FCE at the 300-level and .5 FCE at the 400-level)

First Year:
HMU111H1, MUS120Y1, TMU140Y1
Higher Years:
1. HMU225H1, HMU126H1
2. TMU240Y1
3. 2.0 additional HMU/TMU options
4. MUS220Y1

Music History & Culture Minor

Enrolment in this program requires the completion of 4.0 courses.

(4 full courses or equivalent)

1. MUS110H1, MUS111H1
2. MUS200H1 or an alternative 200-level course in world music (MUS209H1 or MUS211H1)
3. 2.5 MUS courses from the list below, including one full course at the 300+ level. Either MUS120Y1 or MUS220Y1 can be counted towards the 2.5 MUS courses

Music Courses


Music Courses
First Year Seminars

The 199Y1 and 199H1 seminars are designed to provide the opportunity to work closely with an instructor in a class of no more than twenty-four students. These interactive seminars are intended to stimulate the students’ curiosity and provide an opportunity to get to know a member of the professorial staff in a seminar environment during the first year of study. Details here.


MUS courses offered in 2012-2013
MUS110H1    Introduction to Music History and Culture[24L]

IIntroduction to form, style and the interrelationship of music and culture. A basic ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1, VPMA80H3
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS120Y1    Vocal and Instrumental Ensembles I[144P]

Students rehearse and perform in concerts and reading sessions as assigned by the Faculty of Music. Provides experience in choral groups, orchestra, or in concert band and large wind groups of diverse instrumentation. Development of musicianship skills through performance of large ensemble works; emphasis on sight-reading, ear-training, and musical knowledge.

Attendance at all sessions is required. Placement audition and permission of the Department required.
Download the excerpt that is relevant to the instrument you would like to audition on; excerpts will be available at www.music.utoronto.ca beginning early July. Complete and return the MUS120Y1 & MUS220Y1 Audition Request Form before August 17, 2012.

Once your request form is received, you will be notified of your audition time. Placement audition will be held on September 5, 2012 from 4-10 p.m. in the Edward Johnson Building. The audition will be 10 minutes in length.

Exclusion: MUS291Y1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS209H1    Performing Arts of South Asia[24L]

Survey of classical, devotional, folk and popular musics and dances from the Indian subcontinent and their toll in the sociocultural life of the region. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS210H1    Music in Film[24L]

The theory and practice of how music is used in a variety of film genres, drawing on case studies from different eras in film history. Examples will be drawn primarily from European and North American cinema.

Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS220Y1    Vocal and Instrumental Ensembles II[144P]

Students rehearse and perform in concerts and reading sessions as assigned by the Faculty of Music. Provides experience in choral groups, orchestra, or in concert band and large wind groups of diverse instrumentation. Development of musicianship skills through performance of large ensemble works; emphasis on sight-reading, ear-training, and musical knowledge. Attendance at all sessions is required. Placement audition and permission of the Department required. Download the excerpt that is relevant to the instrument you would like to audition on; excerpts will be available at www.music.utoronto.ca beginning early July. Complete and return the MUS120Y1 & MUS220Y1 Audition Request Form before August 17.2012. Once your request form is received, you will be notified of your audition time. Placement audition will be held on September 5, 2012 from 4-10 p.m. in the Edward Johnson Building. The audition will be 10 minutes in length.

Prerequisite: MUS120Y1. Placement audition and permission of the Department required.
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS300H1    Music, Media and Technology [24L]

This course explores some of the ways in which music has been shaped through history, and particularly during the last 100 years, by technology and the media. Special attention will be paid to the record industry, broadcasting, and cinema. Examples from popular and art music traditions of the world will be used to illustrate the symbolic relationship between music and media. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS302H1    Symphony[24L]

Masterpieces in the symphonic genre from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS306H1    Popular Music in North America [24L]

A selected survey of North American popular music from the 1930s through present. Students will develop a critical framework for listening to and analyzing popular music in historical and social context by focusing on aspects of performance, representation, composition, mass media, aesthetics, and commodification. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS325H1    The Age of Haydn & Mozart [24L]

Selected works from the second half of the eighteenth century by Haydn, Mozart, and their contemporaries will be examined in cultural and historical context. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

Future MUS Offerings
MUS111H1    Historical Survey of Western Music

Historical survey of Western art music from the Middle Ages to the present. A basic ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1, VPMA99H3
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS200H1    Music of the World's Peoples[24L]

A survey of musical traditions from various regions of the world, with particular emphasis on the sociocultural contexts in which those musics are created and appreciated. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS202H1    Beethoven [24L]

A study of Beethoven’s musical style in historical context, including a non-technical consideration of Beethoven’s innovations based on listening to music and reading history. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1, VPMC85H3
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS204H1    The Age of Bach & Handel[24L]

A study of the representative major works in their social and cultural setting with emphasis on the high baroque style of Bach and Handel. No prior background in music or the ability to read music is not required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS205H1    Mozart[24L]

Mozart

Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS206H1    The World of Opera [24L]

Examination of selected operas from the eighteenth to the early twentieth century. Musical and dramatic styles will be considered in their cultural context. The ability to read music is not required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS207H1    Music for Orchestra [24L]

Study of selected orchestral works from 1700 to the present. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS208H1    Medieval and Renaissance Masterpieces[24L]

Medieval and Renaissance Masterpieces

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS211H1    The World of Popular Music[24L]

A survey of popular music traditions from various regions of the world with particular emphasis on the sociocultural contexts in which those musics are created and appreciated. Explores the role of the recording industry, media, festivals, and local institutions in shaping these music cultures both at home and in the international arena. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS225H1    Music: Islamic World [24L]

A survey of the musical systems of Muslim societies from North Africa to Southeast Asia, with special focus on the broader cultural contexts in which they are created, used, and appreciated. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS230H1    Music of the 1960s[24L]

Examination of musical and cultural aspects of the decade, with emphasis on North America. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS303H1    Music in the Contemporary World[24L]

The modern musical repertoire, including popular and traditional music from various parts of the world, will be studied from a variety of theoretical perspectives. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS305H1    Latin American and Caribbean Music[24L]

A survey of popular, folk, and religious music from Latin America and the Caribbean.  Each practice will be considered in its socio-cultural context with attention to the histories and discourses of racial and cultural mixing that deeply inform everyday life in nation-states including Peru, Brazil, Haiti, and Jamaica among others. 

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS308H1    Handel[24L]

Handel’s life and music will be examined in its cultural contexts.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS315H1    North American Vernacular Music[24L]

Explores vernacular music in North America, considering how musical performances and festivals of vernacular music map local, regional, and ethnic identities in North America. Specific case studies will include Scottish Highland, Tejano Conjunto, Métis Fiddling, Powwow, and Zydeco. No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS321H1    The Beatles [24L]

In The Ultimate Encyclopedia Of Rock, it was written of the The Beatles that “From three-minute pop classics to the psychedelic extravaganza of ‘Sgt. Pepper’, their songs soundtracked the Sixties. They were the greatest group in history. They probably always will be”. In addition to a survey of the group’s history, their recordings, and their films, this course aims to answer two basic questions: (1) what made the songs of The Beatles so successful? (2) in what ways did the band’s artistic output “soundtrack” the 1960s? No prior background in music or ability to read music is required.

Exclusion: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS330H1    Music, Violence, and War[24L]

An inquiry into the social life of music in situations of violence, war, social domination, and traumatic experience. Case studies include music and African-American slavery, the First World War, Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, the Asia-Pacific War, Khmer Rouge Cambodia, the Iraq Wars and others.

Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

MUS335H1    A Social History of the Piano[24L]

A survey of the changing roles and gendered associations of the piano c.1700 to the present day. Examples from the western art music tradition are compared to the acculturating force of the piano in other cultures, representations in the visual arts and film, and contemporary contexts of piano performance.

Exclusion: VPMB76
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

HMU, TMU Faculty of Music Courses
HMU111H1    Introduction to Music and Society[24L/12T]

An examination of musical thought and practice in Western and non-Western traditions.

Prerequisite: Permission of Department
Corequisite: TMU140Y1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

TMU140Y1    Materials of Music I[48L/72P]

Harmony: triads, non-harmonic materials, dominant seventh and derivatives, secondary dominants, simple modulation. Elementary forms and analysis of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature. Sight singing: melodic, rhythmic and harmonic dictation. Keyboard harmony: chords and scales in all major and minor keys; playing of cadence types, modulation to closely related keys, realization of elementary figured bass, two-part transposition, score reading in five clefs, and sight harmonization of simple melodies.

Prerequisite: Grade 2 Rudiments, Grade 3 Harmony (RCMT), Grade 8 level performing audition, permission of Department
Corequisite: HMU111H1
Distribution Requirement Status: This is a Humanities course
Breadth Requirement: Creative and Cultural Representations (1)

Note

HMU111H1 and TMU140Y1 are Prerequisites for all other HMU/TMU courses which are offered annually. Full details on these and other courses may be found in the Calendar of the Faculty of Music.