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2012-2013 Graduate Catalog

Music D.A.

(Select from four emphases listed below or three emphases listed separately)

College of Performing and Visual Arts

Degree Requirements — 67-71 Credits

See “Music D.A.”.

Doctor of Arts in Music candidates will take written and oral comprehensive examinations at a time approved by the major advisor.

For additional information, see “Doctor of Arts Sequence and Check List” published by the School of Music.

See “Graduate Admission Requirements” for more information.

 

Collaborative Piano Emphasis

Conducting Emphasis

Jazz Studies Emphasis

Music Performance Emphasis

Degree Requirements

Required Emphasis Credits — 5-9 hours

MUS 623Individual Studies in Effective Teaching

1 - 3

MUS 794Supervised Practicum in College Teaching

2

MUS 623: Take 3 credits

MUS 794: Take 2-6 credits

Primary Emphasis — 18 hours

The primary emphasis area develops a major scholarly and/or performing function for the college and university level in Conducting, Collaborative Piano, Jazz Studies, Music Performance, or Music Performance (with an optional concentration in Pedagogy). Courses are selected by advisement based upon candidate's area of focus and upon the candidate's needs identified through the advisory examinations.

Secondary Emphasis — 10 hours

This area develops a secondary scholarly and/or performing emphasis in one of the DA degree emphasis areas: Music History and Literature, Composition, Music Performance, Conducting, Collaborative Piano, Jazz Studies, Music Education, Opera Theatre, or related areas outside Music. It is expected that a creative project of some type will be undertaken as part of the secondary concentration. The concentration area and its courses are selected by the candidate with the approval of the program advisor and the advisor for the Secondary Area of Concentration.

Elective Credits — 5 hours

Research Core — 13 hours

MUS 700Introduction to Doctoral Research

3

Select one Course (3 hours) (music history exam)

MUS 643Seminar: Medieval Music

3

MUS 644Seminar: Music in the Renaissance

3

MUS 645Seminar: The Baroque Period

3

MUS 646Seminar: The Classic Period

3

MUS 647Seminar: The Romantic Period

3

MUS 648Seminar: Music Since 1900

3

Music history exam: Dependent upon results of advisory exams

Select one Course (3 hours) (music theory exam)

MUS 50118th Century Counterpoint

3

MUS 502Harmony and Form I

3

MUS 503Harmony and Form II

3

MUS 603Analytical Studies in Music

3

Music theory exam: Dependent upon results of advisory exams

Select one Course (4 hours) (individual performance area)

MUS 551Individual Performance in Conducting

2

MUS 636Individual Performance in Jazz

2 - 4

MUS 665Individual Performance in Collaborative Piano

2 - 4

MUS 670Individual Performance in Voice

2 - 4

MUS 671Individual Performance in Piano

2 - 4

MUS 673Individual Performance in Strings, Harp or Guitar

2 - 4

MUS 674Individual Performance in Woodwinds

2 - 4

MUS 675Individual Performance in Brass or Percussion

2 - 4

MUS 677Individual Instruction in Composition

2 - 4

Dependent upon acceptance in performance area.

Research Proposal/Dissertation — 16 hours

MUS 797Doctoral Proposal Research

1 - 4

MUS 799Doctoral Dissertation

1 - 12

MUS 797: Take 4 credits

MUS 799: Take 12 credits

 

NOTES: The hours allotted to the doctoral dissertation may be divided between performance and dissertation requirements according to the plan of study as outlined and approved by the candidate's committee.

Performance, Conducting, Jazz Studies, and Collaborative Piano majors will perform two recitals for 8 semester hours and complete a four semester hour dissertation. Performance (with an optional concentration in Pedagogy) majors will perform one recital for four semester hours and complete an eight-hour dissertation. Students seeking the D.A. in Music Education, Music History and Literature or Composition will complete a 12-hour dissertation.

Composition majors will present a recital of their compositions written as part of their degree program.

A reading knowledge of one foreign language (typically French, German or Italian) is required by the following areas: brass, history and literature (a second language may be required through advisement), piano, strings, theory and composition, voice, woodwinds and instrumental conducting. Students in the areas of choral conducting and vocal performance should have skills in translation of vocal literature in one foreign language (French, German or Italian) as well as diction mastery of all three. In the woodwind and jazz studies areas a substitute research tool may be permitted after consultation and approval by the candidate's committee. For the collaborative piano emphasis, language proficiency will be examined upon entry. Candidates must demonstrate pronunciation proficiency in French, German, Italian and the International Phonetic Alphabet as well as reading proficiency in French, German, and Italian. Candidates with deficiencies will meet with their major advisor and other appropriate faculty to determine the best way to remedy those deficiencies. Students should contact the Graduate Coordinator or appropriate area faculty to clarify language requirements.

The candidate must complete two consecutive semesters (minimum of 9 semester credit hours per semester) of graduate work on the University of Northern Colorado campus in order to satisfy the Doctor of Arts residency requirement.

The Program Advisor or Graduate Coordinator will provide information concerning how the student's oral and research committees are formed, the student's responsibility in the committee process and the means of scheduling comprehensive examinations and the doctoral defense.

The Music Performance Emphasis has an optional concentration in pedagogy.