MUS 207(F) Music in History I: Antiquity-1750
This course explores 1000 years of music-making in Western European culture, beginning with the philosophical and theoretical origins of that music in ancient Greece and extending
to the life and music of J.S. Bach. Topics covered will include how the sound of music
changed over a millennium; the different functions it served and how genres developed to
serve these functions; the lives of the men and women who composed, performed, and
wrote about music; and how the changing notation and theory of music related to its practice over the centuries. At the same time, the course provides an introduction to the modern
study of music history, sampling a broad range of recent scholarship reflecting an array of
critical approaches to the study of early music in our own day.
Format: three meetings per week; field trip(s) may be required. Evaluation will be based on
class participation, written assignments, midterm and final exams.
Expected enrollment: 8. Open to qualified non-majors with the permission of instructor. Required of Music majors.
Hour: BLOXAM