MUSIC 300B: Renaissance Notation
Western notation of the Middle Ages and Renaissance: principles, purposes, and transcription.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3-4
Instructors:
Rodin, J. (PI)
MUSIC 300C: Medieval Methodologies (DLCL 300, ENGLISH 300)
An introduction to the essential tool-kit for medievalists, this course will give all medievalists a great head start in knowing how to access and interpret major works and topics in the field. Stanford's medieval faculty will explain the key sources and methods in the major disciplines from History to Religion, French to Arabic, English to Chinese, and Art History to German and Music. In so doing, students will be introduced to the breadth and interdisciplinary potential of Medieval Studies. A workshop devoted to Digital Technologies and Codicology/Palaeography will offer elementary training in these fundamental skills.
Last offered: Winter 2018
MUSIC 302: Research in Musicology
Directed reading and research. May be repeated for credit a total of 14 times.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum
| Units: 1-5
| Repeatable
14 times
(up to 70 units total)
Instructors:
Barth, G. (PI)
;
Berger, K. (PI)
;
Gill, D. (PI)
;
Grey, T. (PI)
;
Hadlock, H. (PI)
;
Hinton, S. (PI)
;
Kronengold, C. (PI)
;
Mahrt, W. (PI)
;
Rodin, J. (PI)
;
Schultz, A. (PI)
MUSIC 305A: Analysis and Repertoire: Medieval and Renaissance
Analytical approaches to genres, styles, forms, and techniques of Western music from [chant and early polyphony through the sixteenth century]. Issues of aesthetics, history, and interpretation viewed through representative repertoire, readings, and analytical methods.
Last offered: Autumn 2017
MUSIC 305B: Analysis and Repertoire: Baroque to Early Romantic
Analytical approaches to genres, styles, forms, and techniques of Western music from the seventeenth through the mid-nineteenth centuries. Issues of aesthetics, history, and interpretation viewed through representative repertoire, readings, and analytical methods.
Last offered: Winter 2018
MUSIC 305C: Analysis and Repertoire: Late-Romantic to Contemporary
Analytical approaches to genres, styles, materials and techniques of Western music from the mid-nineteenth century through the present. Questions of aesthetics, history and performance explored through musical analysis. Representative repertoire and readings, and a range of analytical methods.
Last offered: Spring 2018
MUSIC 305D: Analysis from a Compositional Perspective
Introduction to analysis, examining diverse examples in part chosen from, otherwise supplementing and illuminating, the graduate composers' qualifying exam list; consideration of aesthetic premises and motivations, and of implications for contemporary compositional practice.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4
Instructors:
Ulman, E. (PI)
MUSIC 310: Research Seminar in Musicology
For graduate students. Topics vary each quarter. May be repeated for credit a total of 8 times.
Terms: Aut, Spr
| Units: 3-5
| Repeatable
9 times
(up to 45 units total)
Instructors:
Hadlock, H. (PI)
;
Rodin, J. (PI)
MUSIC 312A: Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, Ancients and Moderns: Plato to Nietzsche
For graduate students. Primary texts focusing on the nature, purposes, and uses of music and other arts.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 3-4
Instructors:
Berger, K. (PI)
MUSIC 312B: Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, Contemporaries: Heidegger to Today
For graduate students. Primary texts focusing on the nature, purposes, and uses of music and other arts.
Terms: Win
| Units: 3-4
Instructors:
Berger, K. (PI)
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