麻豆国产AV

DCF94280-E8F7-F166-A62F886D097067AC
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About the Major

麻豆国产AV’s music concentration is very flexible and the music community vibrant, with abundant opportunities for students to create and perform. In addition to courses in music theory and history, private lessons, and various ensembles, the curriculum includes courses in world music, music and film, folk and country music, opera, the history of jazz, jazz arranging, composition, conducting, and music technology. Students can explore the state-of-the-art digital music studio, play in our Javanese gamelan, or hear legendary musicians share their experiences in our Fillius Jazz Archive.

Detailed information on courses, ensembles, lessons, facilities, and concentration requirements can be found at the .

Students Will Learn To:

  • Demonstrate active listening skills from among a wide variety of musical experiences and practices
  • Make links between various musical styles and their historical and cultural contexts
  • Demonstrate proficiency in various theories of music
  • Display skills in making music through performance, composition, recording, or production

A Sampling of Courses

Heather Buchman

Conducting

The elements of conducting, including baton technique, aural perception, rehearsal techniques and score study (both instrumental and choral).

Explore these select courses:

A study of how to listen to music and get the most out of it. Consideration of approaches to listening to Western art music, film music, jazz, popular music, and selected gamelan and African musics. Focus on strategies of active listening and learning a vocabulary for discussing musical perceptions in various kinds of music. Does not include study of musical notation.

The study of music through lessons in voice, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, saxophone, horn, trumpet, trombone, euphonium, tuba, piano, organ, harp, percussion, classical guitar, jazz/contemporary guitar, folk guitar, violin, viola, cello, and contrabass. Hour tutorial for one-half credit. Based on evaluation of Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory. A fee is charged.

This course explores the nature of silence in literature and music as a way to understand how sound, or lack thereof, came to shape modern Europe. We will discuss the history of silence as a philosophical concept, as a response to crisis, alienation and negation, gendered muteness, as well as the aesthetics of dissonance. Literary and musical selections include Boethius, Dante, Petrarch, Gaspara Stampa, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Robert Musil, Arnold Schoenberg, Theodor Adorno, Eugenio Montale, Anna Banti, Alda Merini,  Luigi Nono, Ingeborg Bachmann, George Steiner. 

The theoretical designs used in combo, big band and third-stream writing. Coverage of jazz scales, chords, voicings, ranges and tonal properties. Students are expected to compose and copy the parts to three compositions, one of which will be read and recorded.

Intensive study of music theory topics, analytical techniques, and compositional approaches applied to common musical forms and styles from different traditions, including Western classical music, popular, jazz, film, theater, and selected world music. Selected repertoire will emphasize 20th- and 21st-century practices.

Meet Our Faculty

Lydia Hamessley

John and Anne Fischer Professor in Fine Arts

lhamessl@hamilton.edu

Dolly Parton; American folk and traditional musics; banjo, music and film; medieval and renaissance music; music and gender

Alex B谩due

Assistant Professor of Music

abadue@hamilton.edu

musical theater, popular music, Latin American music, 20th- and 21st-century music, and popular-classical crossovers

Charlotte Botha

Assistant Professor of Music

cbotha@hamilton.edu

Choral repertoire and conducting; phonetic transcription of Afrikaans choral music; group vocal technique; choregie and interdisciplinary ensemble performance; text-painting in a cappella music; children鈥檚 choir composition; equity, diversity and inclusion in the choral literature canon

Heather Buchman

Chair and John L. Baldwin, Jr. Professor in Music, Acting Chair of Dance and Movement Studies

hbuchman@hamilton.edu

orchestral repertoire and conducting; ballet and opera conducting; trombone and low brass; solo performance; 20th- and 21st-century music

Ryan Carter

Associate Chair, Associate Professor of Music

rccarter@hamilton.edu

acoustic and electro-acoustic composition; post-tonal analysis; audio programming; algorithmic composition; mobile platform development of audio applications

Gabe Condon

Assistant Professor of Music

gcondon@hamilton.edu

Jazz, composition, jazz pedagogy, jazz pedagogy in European Sinti communities

Rick Balestra

Lecturer in Music (Jazz Guitar)

rbalestr@hamilton.edu

jazz guitar

Suzanne Beevers

Lecturer in Music (Violoncello)

sbeevers@hamilton.edu

violoncello

Stephen Best

Lecturer in Music (Keyboard and Organ; Keyboard Harmony)

sbest@hamilton.edu

keyboard and organ; keyboard harmony

flute

Joe Carello

Lecturer in Music (Saxophone)

jcarello@hamilton.edu

Michael Cirmo

Lecturer in Music (Percussion)

mcirmo@hamilton.edu

percussion

Adam Dudding

Lecturer in Music (Folk Guitar)

adudding@hamilton.edu

folk guitar

Jon Garland

Lecturer in Music (Horn)

jgarland@hamilton.edu

voice

Marshall Henry

Lecturer in Music (bass)

mhenry@hamilton.edu

bass

Jessica King

Lecturer in Music (Bassoon)

jmking@hamilton.edu

Bassoon

Allan Kolsky

Lecturer in Music (Clarinet)

akolsky@hamilton.edu

clarinet

oboe

Ken Meyer

Lecturer in Music (Guitar)

krmeyer@hamilton.edu

classical guitar, fingerstyle guitar, solo and chamber music performance, guitar pedagogy, 20th-21st century music

Rick Montalbano

Lecturer in Music (Jazz Piano)

rmontalb@hamilton.edu

jazz piano

piano

voice

John Raschella

Lecturer in Music (Trumpet)

jraschel@hamilton.edu

trumpet

Monk Rowe

Joe Williams Director of the Fillius Jazz Archive and Lecturer in Music (Saxophone)

mrowe@hamilton.edu

Jazz history, Saxophone ensemble

Sar-Shalom Strong

Lecturer in Music (Piano) and Coordinator of Staff Pianists

sstrong@hamilton.edu

piano

Tina Toglia

Lecturer in Music (Piano)

ttoglia@gmail.com

piano

Edgar Tumajyan

Lecturer in Music (violin)

etumajya@hamilton.edu

Ubaldo Valli

Lecturer in Music (violin and viola)

uvalli@hamilton.edu

violin and viola

Sharon West

Lecturer in Music (Voice)

skwest@hamilton.edu

voice

harp

Careers After 麻豆国产AV

麻豆国产AV graduates who concentrated in music are pursuing careers in a variety of fields, including:

  • Sound Design, WHYY-FM, Philadelphia
  • Director of Finance, American Composers Forum
  • Professor of Music and Music Technology, California State University San Marcos
  • Conductor/Artistic Director, Indianapolis Opera
  • Pediatric Dentist
  • Violinist, American Ballet Theatre
  • Senior Manager Digital Products, Los Angeles Times
  • Executive Director, New Hampshire Humanities Council
  • Assistant Professor of Music-Voice, Crane School of Music
  • Senior Vice President, Bank of America

Explore 麻豆国产AV Stories

Alex Kim '25 and assistant prof. of music Charlotte Botha

Machine Learning Music

Alex Kim 鈥25, a music and math double-major, spent his summer exploring machine learning and music through the help of an Emerson grant. With the guidance of Assistant Professor of Music Charlotte Botha, Kim developed a vocal register classification tool through machine learning models.

Monk Rowe

Fourth Season of Jazz Backstory Launched

Monk Rowe, the Joe Williams Director of the Jazz Archive and lecturer in music performance (saxophone), recently announced the completion of Season 4 of the Jazz Backstory podcast.

Lydia Hamessley

Hamessley Discusses Dolly Parton in Atlas Obscura Podcast

鈥淒olly Parton鈥檚 Dreambox,鈥 on The Atlas Obscura Podcast, features an interview with Lydia Hamessley, the Eugene M. Tobin Distinguished Professor of Music.

Contact

Department Name

Music Department

Contact Name

Lydia Hamessley, Acting Chair

Office Location
198 College Hill Road
Clinton, NY 13323

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