In order to engage the
kinds of non-Western undergraduate populations that are becoming
predominant in American urban colleges, music appreciation surveys must
expand their focus to areas beyond the standard literature and integrate
its findings with those of other related disciplines. Only then the
students can see the relevance of—and make a connection between—the
class contents and their overall education. This
presentation, integrating popular culture and standard repertoire in the
music appreciation classroom, focuses on selected instances of the TV show
“Who Wants to be a Millionaire?,” examining how music is used at
different moments to enhance specific moods or emotional atmospheres.
Looking at this contemporary show familiarizes the students with basic
tools for music analysis, such as the ability to interpret tempo, melodic
and rhythmic design, harmonic language, and motivic development. Once the
students are equipped with this basic terminology, they are prepared to
deeper experience, and better understand, an aria from Mozart’s “Don
Giovanni.” Presented
at the 2005 CMS International Conference, Madrid, Spain.
Presented
as part of the interdisciplinary symposium "The Status of the Document in the Digital Age: A Multidisciplinary
Approach." ED-MEDIA 2005 - World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia & Telecommunications. To be co-presented with
Lori Anderson-Moseman,
Megan Elias, Belle Gironda, and
Ken Golden. Montreal, Canada, June 2005.
Rote teaching and learning have their place, but not in a music course and an art and design course in which two dozen students at Queensborough Community College enrolled together. Through a shared theme, shared assignments, and a shared commitment to making the content relevant and the process active and engaging, two instructors fashioned a powerful environment for learning. Available for download at:
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/abstract/110430912/ABSTRACT
This paper searches for consistent principles of formal organization in
Peter Maxwell Davies's Eight Songs for a Mad King. The study addresses
first the musical-theatrical frame created by the composer and the words
provided by Randolph Stow; later, it proceeds to examine the relation of
those two components to other aspects of the musical structure. Presented
at the 33rd. Annual Meeting of the Music Theory Society of New York State. Baruch College, CUNY. New York, NY, 9–10 April 2005.
How can music appreciation & digital art and design be integrated into a learning community? How can one engage a multicultural student population? This
is a hands-on forum for teachers of the humanities who are interested in active learning and interdisciplinary ways of knowing. Basic principles of aural and visual designed
are explored by analyzing and reinventing a segment of a contemporary anime remake of the silent classic, “Metropolis.”
Participants have an opportunity to think about script, screen image, and soundtrack; identifying how music (tempo, dynamics, texture, harmony, instrumentation) and image (line, form, color, light) communicate information and help set the tone and mood in film.
Forum lead with Ken Golden and
Sarah Standing at the League for Innovation Conference, New
York, March 2005.
La Femme Fatale in Queens
Boulevard
Paper read at a CUNY Junior Faculty Research Colloquium in Queens College, November 2004.
The Obsolete Classroom
Paper read at
QCC's Second College Conference. November 2004
Co-authored with Dr.
Eduardo Marti, President of Queensborough Community
College, and Professor
Peter Gray, of the English Department at Queensborough Community College.
Published in the Community College Journal. Available for download at:
www.aacc.nche.edu.
Piazzolla’s Tango Nuevo departed from traditional
tango in many ways, for instance by featuring new, more aggressive rhythmic
gestures. The new style also featured a more sophisticated phrase-structure,
independent from the dance or the words. Both aspects of the change, intrinsically
related to each other, were in fact rooted in the performance practice of
singers (Gardel among them) of the "old style" tango.
This paper was presented in the Seminar Tango, Bandoneón, Piazzolla,
organized by the Music Department of the Graduate School and University
Center of City University of New York in march of 2000. Click
here to see pictures and read more about that event.
Available for
download in: Latin
American Music Review
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