Music M656 Course Schedule

Music M656
Music Since 1900:
Modernism, Tradition, and the Avant-Garde

Spring 2008

Indiana University Jacobs School of Music


| About M656 | Schedule | Reserves | Listening List | The Journal | Group Presentations |


Course Schedule

Table of Contents


Asterisks (*) denote readings and listening excerpts about which you are to write in your journal. The writing assignments are informal and are to be written in your journal. Because the writing assignments will be discussed in class, they cannot be accepted late. See the journal webpage for detailed instructions on the journal.

Use the "listening:" links below to access the listening assignments through Variations2 or to obtain more information on the assigned recordings, including full names and titles, performers, and call numbers for the CDs and scores.


Part I: Modernism in Germany and Austria

WEEK ONE
Tuesday, January 8

introduction to the course: goals and syllabus
modern music, modernism in music, and what makes music modern

Thursday, January 10

the origins of modernism in the nineteenth-century concert hall
historicism, emulation, and progressivism in modern music

WRITING ASSIGNMENT (in your journal):

reading:


WEEK TWO
Tuesday, January 15

Schoenberg (1): from tonality to atonality

reading:

listening:

Thursday, January 17

Schoenberg (2): atonal works
Erwartung and amotivic atonality
Pierrot Lunaire and "composing with the tones of a motive"

reading:

listening:


WEEK THREE
Tuesday, January 22

Schoenberg (3): Schoenberg the Reactionary
the logic, purpose, structure, and meaning of twelve-tone music
analysis and discussion of the Piano Suite and Fourth Quartet

reading:

listening:

Thursday, January 24

Webern: musicology, organicism, and "The Path to the New Music"
those left out of the canon, and why: forming groups for group presentations

listening:


WEEK FOUR
Tuesday, January 29

JOURNALS DUE
the rhetorical and the organic: Alban Berg and the possibility of popularity
imitations of tonality and of traditional musical types: how can something sound tonal and not be tonal?

reading:

listening:

Thursday, January 31

a different "path": Richard Strauss, musical rhetoric, and the survival of tonality
neo-classic, neo-Baroque: reviving/revisiting historical styles and the vogue for early music as a form of modernism
neo-tonality in Hindemith: what is tonality in the twentieth century, anyway?

listening:


WEEK FIVE
Tuesday, February 5

FIRST EXAMINATION


Part II: Modernism in Other Nations

WEEK FIVE, continued
Thursday, February 7

symbolism and symmetry: Debussy and Scriabin

reading:

listening:


WEEK SIX
Tuesday, February 12

Stravinsky from The Rite of Spring through neo-classicism

reading:

listening:

Thursday, February 14

Bartók: integrating peasant and classical traditions without compromising the distinctive traits of either

reading:

listening:


WEEK SEVEN
Tuesday, February 19

JOURNALS DUE
Charles Ives and the European mainstream: the "peripheral" composer as a measure of the central intellectual issues of the first four decades of the twentieth century
Ives and autobiographical music: capturing in music a present-day scene, a memory of long ago, an experience of the spirit

WRITING ASSIGNMENT:

reading:

listening:

Thursday, February 21

other American modernists: George Gershwin, William Grant Still, Ruth Crawford Seeger, and Aaron Copland

reading:

listening:


WEEK EIGHT
Tuesday, February 26

two mid-century masters: Britten in England, Messiaen in France

reading:

listening:

Thursday, February 28

SECOND EXAMINATION



Part III: The Avant-Garde and Postwar Trends

WEEK NINE
Tuesday, March 4

the avant-garde and experimental traditions before the Second World War
Satie, Thomson, and the deflation of Romantic aspiration
Ives, Cowell, and exploration of new musical resources

WRITING ASSIGNMENT:

reading:

listening:

Thursday, March 6

the liberation of sound: futurism, Varèse, and electronic music
the post-electronic orchestra: music of texture and process

reading:

listening:


Spring Break


WEEK TEN
Tuesday, March 18

changes: the career of John Cage
post-war serialism and super-serialism in the U.S.A. and Europe

reading:

listening:

Thursday, March 20

quotation and neo-romanticism: the uses of history
once more around emulation: is it avant-garde to write like Mahler or Strauss?

reading:

listening:


WEEK ELEVEN
Tuesday, March 25

minimalism and beyond: Steve Reich, Arvo Pärt, and John Adams

WRITING ASSIGNMENT:

reading:

listening:

Thursday, March 27

recent American pragmatists and individuals

reading:

listening:


WEEK TWELVE
Tuesday, April 1

JOURNALS DUE
other recent trends and music in the 1990s (and 2000s?)

reading:

Thursday, April 3

First group presentation


WEEKS THIRTEEN AND FOURTEEN

Group Presentations


WEEK FIFTEEN
Tuesday, April 22

Final group presentation

Thursday, April 24

the mockery of the past
summaries and reflections, final thoughts and evaluation: where we have been, what we have seen, what we have missed, and where we want to go next time


FINAL EXAMINATION

Thursday, May 1, 5:00-7:00 PM
[an earlier alternative or substitute time may be scheduled]

Back to Top



| About M656 | Schedule | Reserves | Listening List | The Journal | Group Presentations |


Last updated: 4 January 2008
URL: http://www.music.indiana.edu/som/courses/m656/M656schd.html
Copyright © 1998-2008 by J. Peter Burkholder