Program Requirements

General Program Requirements:
Number of Credits Required Beyond the Baccalaureate: 30

Required Courses:

Core Courses
MUST 8701Research in Music3
MUST 8749Current Topics in Musicology and Theory3
Focused Electives9
Select courses in Music Composition, Music History, or Music Theory
Free Electives 115
Total Credit Hours30
1

Students work with an advisor to select courses that align with their interests in music composition, music theory, musicology, or a cognate area such as performance.

Language Examination: To complete the degree, students must fulfill a foreign language requirement in French, German, Italian, Spanish, or another language with approval of the chair. This requirement may be fulfilled in any one of three ways:

  1. The student successfully completed four semesters of a foreign language as an undergraduate.
  2. The student passes a foreign language examination with the requisite language department.
  3. The student takes four terms of a foreign language. Since language credits are at the undergraduate level, they do not count toward the MA degree, but they do fulfill the language requirement.

Additional Requirements:
Diagnostic Examinations:
Diagnostic examinations in Aural Theory, Written Theory, and Music History are required for all entering master's students, except students in the Jazz Studies, Music Education, Music Technology, and Music Therapy programs, who arrange their examinations within their respective departments. In addition, Keyboard students take an additional two-hour examination in Keyboard Literature. As stated in the Boyer College Graduate Handbook, "students may not take final qualifying examinations nor perform graduation recitals until all diagnostic examinations have been successfully completed."

Entering master’s students who require the diagnostic examinations in Aural Theory, Written Theory, and Music History will be contacted by the Music Studies department to schedule the testing date and time.

A. Graduate Diagnostic Examination in Aural Theory

The examination lasts approximately 40 minutes and asks students to:

  1. Dictate a chord progression that modulates and contains chromatic harmony by writing out the bass line and identifying chords with Roman numerals and inversions.
  2. Complete a two-part melodic dictation that modulates and contains chromatic pitches.

B. Graduate Diagnostic Examination in Written Theory

The examination lasts one and one-half hours and is in three parts:

  1. Harmonic analysis of a diatonic chorale, and basic part-writing exercises using diatonic harmony.
  2. Harmonic analysis of a chromatic chorale, and part-writing exercises using chromatic harmony.
  3. Analysis of the form, motives and phrase structures of the first movement of a Classical-era piano sonata.

C. Graduate Diagnostic Examination in Music History

The examination consists of objective questions (multiple choice, matching, and/or true/false) covering musical works, composers, forms, styles, terms, and instruments. It is divided into five sections: Medieval/Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, and 20th Century.

D. Conditions for Exemption from Diagnostic Examinations

The requirement to take the Diagnostic Examination in any area is waived only for graduates of the Boyer College of Music and Dance who:

  • matriculate and enroll in the term immediately following completion of all undergraduate degree requirements; and
  • received grades of "B-" or better in every undergraduate course taken in each individual examination area to be waived.

Piano Proficiency Examination:
Before the end of their course of study, students in the Music MA program must take a piano proficiency exam, consisting of the following elements:

  1. A Bach chorale (prepared).
  2. The exposition of a symphony from the 18th or 19th centuries (prepared).
  3. The accompaniment of a song (German Lied or French Chanson; prepared).

Culminating Events:
Comprehensive Examination:
In their final term of study, students in the Music MA program take a three-hour comprehensive exam. Members of the department, appointed by the chair, devise the exam based on the coursework the student has taken for the degree.

Final Project:
The final project is an expanded version of a paper or music composition completed in a seminar. The result is intended to be suitable for use when applying to doctoral programs or to show an ability to teach in a particular area. Students submit a written paper in music theory or musicology OR one composition project to their advisor.