15 credits
Level 1
First Term
MU1051 is structured to develop in tandem students
individual instrumental/vocal and ensemble skills. The Music Department boasts a high quality visiting tutor staff who
will provide access to 10 free, 1 hour, one-to-one lessons
on their principal study, students can also elect to split their studies
between two instruments and/or voice. Alongside instrumental and vocal
lessons students will join one of the departments many ensembles working in
weekly rehearsals towards high quality public performances. The
course is assessed through an end of course tutor report.
15 credits
Level 1
First Term
This course develops technical skills, allowing for development in personal compositional work, extending musical studies through hands-on working in a variety of compositional styles. It introduces students to composition and ensures that all music students have a sound knowledge of music theory. Rudiments are taught through the medium of composition. The foundations of good voice leading are laid through the study of counterpoint. Non BMus students registering for this course would need to have advanced musical literacy skills.
15 credits
Level 1
First Term
15 credits
Level 1
First Term
This course is designed to enhance musicianship skills. It gives the students a thorough grounding in Keyboard Skills for use within their career path. The Aural Skills part of the course is designed to improve listening skills and this is balanced with a practical Performance Skills class using Tonic Solfa and Kodaly rhythm names and handsigns. There is also a Reflective Concert Essay where students are expected to Reflect on 8 concerts per semester.
15 credits
Level 1
Second Term
15 credits
Level 1
Second Term
15 credits
Level 2
First Term
This course combines the study of three periods of music history, the late Baroque 1700-50; the classical 1750-1810 and the Romantic 1810-1900. Students study the main developments in cultural history in three periods – the Rococo, the Classical Era and Romanticism. The course delivery is by means of lectures and class seminars where in the latter, students have an opportunity to study aspects of musical history in greater detail and in an informal setting.
15 credits
Level 2
First Term
The course is designed to encourage personal artistic expression and to develop in students a range of skills, techniques and understanding to enable them to become effective composers. The course usually consists of two separate composition projects, culminating in the submission of a portfolio of student work. The projects each focus on one genre, such as composing for a percussion ensemble or for voice and students develop a variety of compositional techniques.
15 credits
Level 2
First Term
This course is designed to give a strong understanding of the important principals of musical harmony, beginning with Baroque music and moving through Classical harmony to the expressive musical language of the Romantic period. Students learn in weekly lectures but there are also more specific small group sessions and practical sessions led by professional musicians. This course is designed to develop essential techniques of composition, as well as offering invaluable insights into the styles and genres of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century composition.
15 credits
Level 2
First Term
15 credits
Level 2
First Term
15 credits
Level 2
Second Term
This course introduces students to educational practices and principles, with particular regard to music. Through lectures and workshops students will be encouraged to reflect upon the knowledge, skills and attributes learners develop in schools through the Curriculum for Excellence. Lesson planning and preparation, self-evaluation and classroom musicianship skills are all key areas of study. The course culminates in a three-week field experience in a secondary school.
15 credits
Level 2
Second Term
Introduction to Music and Communities is designed to act as either a stand-alone option or as a pre-requisite for entry to the Music and Communities Programme in Year III. The course is designed to give an overview of the Music and Communities Profession and the skills (academic and practical) required to excel in the professional field. The course is delivered through a series of lectures and practical workshops designed to engage students in a variety of learning and teaching styles, peer learning and reflective practice.
15 credits
Level 2
Second Term
15 credits
Level 2
Second Term
This course is intended for composers, singers, conductors and students with a general interest in the choral music of the 20th and 21st Centuries. During this course we will examine the music of some of the greatest composers of choral music in our time. We will study mostly sacred choral music by British composers, American composers and the Europeans particularly those developments in Eastern Europe and the Baltic States. The developments of these nations and regions will be put in historical perspective with the compositional and aesthetic developments of the previous generations.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
The aims of this course are to encourage personal artistic expression and to develop in students a range of skills, techniques and understanding to enable them to become effective composers. The course consists of one or more discreet composition projects centred on one particular genre (e.g. piano work, piece for percussion ensemble) and/or taking inspiration from a particular body of work (e.g. Schoenberg and his legacy, Impressionism). The exact content varies from year to year according to the composers contributing to the course, and the opportunities for workshops involving visiting composers and performers.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
MU3005 is structured to develop in tandem students individual instrumental/vocal and ensemble skills. The Music Department boasts a high quality visiting tutor staff who will provide access to 20 free, 1 hour, one-to-one lessons on their principal study, students can also elect to split their studies between two instruments and/or voice. Alongside instrumental and vocal lessons students will join one of the departments many ensembles working in weekly rehearsals towards high quality public performances. The course is assessed by a 20 minute recital
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
This course is designed to introduce students to early English keyboard music through practical engagement with the music and the instruments on which it was played, focusing on the music of William Byrd which had been composed before 1591, and published as the compilation My Ladye Nevells Booke. The course involves a practical engagement with the music in masterclasses during which students are introduced to the kinds of instruments on which it would have been played. Students are expected to participate actively in performance activities, but assessment is through written work.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
The aim of the course is to develop a critical awareness of form and structure in music both aurally and by means of studying various approaches to musical analysis. The analysis of musical scores will be related to music as experienced aurally in performance. By the end of the course, students will have developed an aural awareness of musical form and a sense of the way music is structured in various genres.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
The lecture-based classes discuss the theory of
acoustics and psychoacoustics related to sound production and propagation; the
physiology of the human ears and how the brain and the nerve system interact to
interpret and respond sound; the history of room and concert hall acoustics and
design both in classical and popular musical production; the review of
compositional and performance problems related to acoustic and psychoacoustic
phenomena; and tools with which to measure sound properties and room acoustics.
The course module also include a month-long psychoacoustic lab sessions for
experimenting with key physical properties of sound and psychoacoustic
phenomena
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
This course introduces music students to the idea of community, to key theoretical concepts used in describing and analysing communities and to methods of finding out about communities, including observation, interviews, creative engagement, community profiling and use of data. It provides opportunities to think about the role of the arts in creating and sustaining communities, and develops skills in devising and delivering appropriate musical inputs in community settings and ways of evaluating impact on individuals, groups and communities.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
Practical Musicianship is a fully interactive course designed to develop students musicianship skill whilst providing the teaching techniques and resources required to transfer musicianship skills to participants in a diverse range of community settings regardless of starting ability. All students taking this course are also required to sing in the Music and Communities choir, designed to provide basic vocal training and as an introduction to vocal ensemble resources. This is a fun, activity filled practical course.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
Placement 1 is a practical course designed to develop further some of the work undertaken in MU2521, students will have the chance to explore an extensive set of community settings, at their choice and in their area of interest, developing a broad set of skills including; negotiation and networking skills, critical observation and reflective practice. As well as observing students will also be required to provide practical support for the communities they choose to engage with.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
30 credits
Level 3
First Term
30 credits
Level 3
First Term
This school experience places an emphasis on Music education from S1 to S4, with the opportunity to experience S5/S6 as appropriate. Students are expected to take responsibility for a range of classes; plan, implement, and evaluate progressively structured programmes of work throughout the school, taking into consideration a variety of approaches to teaching and learning, and for pupils' differing abilities; initiate some involvement in accompanying the instrumental performances of NQ pupils; become involved in extended curriculum and/or community activities; initiate and use their own resources in addition to those found in the school.
15 credits
Level 3
First Term
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
This course will introduce students to basic research methods and project planning in preparation for a final year dissertation project. Topics covered include developing a research topic, research proposals, project management, identification of primary and secondary sources, literature reviews, referencing and bibliographies.
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
This course is designed to enable musicians to contribute effectively in community settings by ensuring that they understand the various organisational, legal and procedural requirements of the context. Students will be encouraged to compare a range of different organisational structures and roles in community settings and to develop skills in collaboration and partnership working, including understanding the value base and standards in use by key professions working in communities and the resultant challenges for multidisciplinary work. Students will reflect on their own experience in communities as part of their analysis of theory and practice of community work.
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
Placement 2 is a practical course designed to facilitate the development of skills in an assistant practitioner role, each student will be paired with a Year IV student (undertaking MU401C) and will be required to provide extensive assistance and support throughout the duration of their allocated project. The course focuses heavily on the development of advanced observational and reflective skills as well as focusing on peer learning and support.
15 credits
Level 3
Second Term
MU35A1 is a practice led course that is designed to give participants an academic and practical understanding of the skills required as a conductor when lead an ensemble from rehearsal to performance. Topics covered in the course include; history of conducting, understanding the role of the conductor in amateur and professional settings, rehearsal planning, score preparation and conducting technique. All sessions are either based around structured discussion or practical activities.
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
This course is intended both for those interested in Renaissance music and for composition students who wish to explore the many possibilities of musical invention within a very controlled compositional environment. To acquire the basic tools of Renaissance composition, students progress through counterpoint exercises in two and three voices. Through more advanced exercises in motivic placement, canon, invertible counterpoint, and the fundamentals of improvised counterpoint, students learn to structure a complete composition, culminating in a motet for three voices. In addition, works are studied through analysis of compositions.
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
This school experience places an emphasis on Music education from S1 to S6, Students are expected to take responsibility for the full range of classes; plan, implement, and evaluate progressively structured programmes of work throughout the school, taking into consideration a variety of approaches to teaching and learning, and for pupils' differing abilities; initiate some involvement in accompanying the instrumental performances of NQ pupils; become involved in extended curriculum and/or community activities; initiate and use their own resources in addition to those found in the school.
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
This course will entail research work which will contribute to musicological understanding (at undergraduate level). Students will research a topic of their own choice (subject to approval), demonstrating knowledge and understanding of their chosen subject matter in the form of a 10,000 word dissertation.
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
The aim of this course is to allow promising student composers the opportunity to develop their own 'voice' by giving them a degree of creative freedom in what they produce. By the end of the course students are able to compose in a variety of genres, conveying a sense of structure and form in their music as well as working independently. Assessment is via a portfolio of compositions. Lasting c.20 minutes in performance.
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
30 credits
Level 4
First Term
15 credits
Level 4
First Term
15 credits
Level 4
First Term
This course is designed to enable students to plan their own projects with communities, including understanding and effectively engaging with the values and priorities of community stakeholders. Building on understandings from the ‘Working in communities’ course it develops understanding of collaborative goal setting and planning processes in community contexts and of the various policy and theoretical frameworks in which community development activity can be undertaken and evaluated. Evaluation processes are discussed in terms of both creativity and community development aims.
30 credits
Level 4
Second Term
30 credits
Level 4
Second Term
30 credits
Level 4
Second Term
This course aims to introduce students to the field of Eighteenth Century Italian sacred vocal music. As part of this course, students will develop musical editing skills and will learn about musical analytical techniques appropriate for music of this time and genre. Students will also be introduced to the intricacies of archival research. The course focuses mainly (but not exclusively) on the music of Antonio Vivaldi and Giovanni Maria Ruggieri.
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