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Your search for courses for 22/SP and with code: MUSCETHNOPOP found 3 courses.
MUSC 338.00 Sonic Spectacles in Minnesota and Beyond: Music as Heritage 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 9, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
Requirements Met:
Special Interests:
In the last fifty years, governments and transnational entities such as the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) have increasingly called to safeguard cultural practices and historic buildings around the world. Through trial and error, social scientists and policymakers have realized that such cultural heritage preservation programs come with unforeseen consequences, especially regarding musical performance and the communities that practice such traditions. This course is divided into two sections. First, we will concentrate on case studies from around the world, considering the advantages, detriments, and best practices for recognizing and celebrating music as heritage. We will debate questions such as: What is heritage? How can something ephemeral such as music be ‘conserved’ for generations to come? What role does the West play in shaping musical practices around the world, and for who do we want to ‘save’ the music? Who makes decisions of what music should or should not be safeguarded, and what are the implications for local practitioners? Second, we will explore music festivals and other music heritage projects specifically in Minnesota. Learning from the mistakes of the past, the course will culminate with a collaborative class project that will contribute to a sensitive yet productive endeavor to document oral histories of musicians, or plan a festival/performance on campus that highlights musical life in and around Northfield.
MUSC 341.52 Rock Lab and Lab 6 credits
Closed: Size: 8, Registered: 8, Waitlist: 0
Weitz Center M126 / Weitz Center M027
M | T | W | TH | F |
---|---|---|---|---|
12:30pm1:40pm | 2:00pm5:00pm | 12:30pm1:40pm | 1:10pm2:10pm |
Requirements Met:
Other Tags:
This class combines performance and academic study of rock music. In the first half of the course, we will learn to perform simple songs in small-group coaching sessions with a polished public performance as a midterm goal. During the second half of the course, we will make recordings of these performances. Throughout the term, we will accompany performance and recording activities with readings and discussion about aesthetics, performance practice in rock music, and mediation of recording techniques, all extraordinarily rich topics in popular music studies. No performance experience is needed. The course will accommodate students with a range of experience. Students will be grouped according to background, interest, and ability. There is a required hands-on laboratory component, which will be assigned before the start of the course. In these smaller groups, students will perform, record, and work with sound in small groups. Work will include experimentation with electric instruments, amplifiers, synthesizers, microphones, recording techniques, performance practice issues, musical production, mixing, and mastering.
MUSC 341.53 Rock Lab and Lab 6 credits
Closed: Size: 8, Registered: 11, Waitlist: 0
Weitz Center M126 / Weitz Center M027
M | T | W | TH | F |
---|---|---|---|---|
12:30pm1:40pm | 12:30pm1:40pm | 1:10pm2:10pm | ||
2:00pm5:00pm |
Requirements Met:
Other Tags:
This class combines performance and academic study of rock music. In the first half of the course, we will learn to perform simple songs in small-group coaching sessions with a polished public performance as a midterm goal. During the second half of the course, we will make recordings of these performances. Throughout the term, we will accompany performance and recording activities with readings and discussion about aesthetics, performance practice in rock music, and mediation of recording techniques, all extraordinarily rich topics in popular music studies. No performance experience is needed. The course will accommodate students with a range of experience. Students will be grouped according to background, interest, and ability. There is a required hands-on laboratory component, which will be assigned before the start of the course. In these smaller groups, students will perform, record, and work with sound in small groups. Work will include experimentation with electric instruments, amplifiers, synthesizers, microphones, recording techniques, performance practice issues, musical production, mixing, and mastering.
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