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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
1 credit. 4 hours. (Laboratory 4 hours.) Open to all students who play violin, viola, cello or bass interested in group performance. Performance of various types of orchestra music in public.
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1.00 Credits
1 credit. 4 hours. (Laboratory 4 hours.) Open to all students who play violin, viola, cello or bass interested in group performance. Performance of various types of orchestra music in public.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits. 3 hours. (Lecture 3 hours.) This course will introduce students to fundamental concepts of music notation and ear training through the use of scales, key signatures, intervals, chords, and chord progressions. This course is designed for the general student and the student preparing for music theory.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits. 3 hours. (Lecture 3 hours.) This course will introduce the student to the aesthetics of music through the study of musical eras including the Middle Ages through 20th century and music genres through vocal and instrumental mediums.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits. 5 hours. (Lecture 3 hours. Laboratory 2 hours.) This course will introduce students to beginning concepts of music notation and ear training through the use of intervals, scales, triads, seventh chords and their inversions, chord progressions in major and minor keys, and non-harmonic tones including suspensions, appoggiatura, and passing tones. Practical application will include sight-singing, ear training, and keyboard skills.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits. 5 hours. (Lecture 3 hours. Laboratory 2 hours.) Prerequisite: MUSI 110. This course is a continuation of Music Theory I and will introduce students to secondary triads, secondary sevenths, and secondary dominants and all their inversions, non-harmonic tones including suspensions, pedal tones, and added sixths, and modulation by secondary dominants to closely related keys.
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2.00 Credits
2 credits. 3 hours. (Lecture 1 hour. Laboratory 2 hours.) Prerequisite: Some experience with note reading in at least one clef and with rhythmic notation is recommended. A practical approach to keyboard techniques including harmonization, transposition, and sight reading.
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0.50 - 1.00 Credits
1-2 credit. 0.5-1 hour. (Laboratory 2-4 hours.) Private instruction in strings, brass, guitar, percussion, piano, voice, or woodwinds. Music from the standard repertoire as well as technical exercises on the instrument. Special enrollment fee in addition to regular tuition.
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0.50 - 1.00 Credits
1-2 credits. 0.5-1 hour. (Laboratory 2-4 hours.) Prerequisite: MUSI 114. Private instruction in strings, brass, guitar, percussion, piano, voice, or woodwinds. Music from the standard repertoire as well as technical exercises on the instrument. Special enrollment fee in addition to regular tuition.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits. 3 hours. (Lecture 3 hours.) A study of the rich ethnic background and evolution of jazz music and its many styles. African, African-American, and European cultures will be examined in terms of the role each has played, and continues to play, in defining and influencing American culture through jazz. Important performers, composers, musicians, educators, and writers of jazz will be identified with respect to their contributions to the art form. Critical listening activities supplement the course content.
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