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Graduate
Degrees
Master of Music in Music Theory/Composition
Graduate assistantships are available
to qualified graduate students for up to four
semesters. Recipients receive full tuition waivers.
If interested, graduate students should contact
the Office of Graduate Studies at 610-436-2943.
Requirements:
MM in Theory/Composition
students are required to take courses in Composition,
Computer Music, Form, Orchestration and Counterpoint
in addition to electives in Music History and
Music Theory/Composition. Depending on their area
of concentration, MM students prepare either a
masters thesis (advanced research paper) or a
large-scale composition under the supervision
of their advisor. Recent MM thesis papers have
studied the works of Stravinsky and Bernstein.
Recent MM thesis compositions have been written
and given their world premieres at WCU, scored
for large percussion ensemble, orchestra and concert
band. Graduates from the MM in Theory/Composition
program have gone on for more advanced study in
composition and/or theory at the doctoral level.
Most students from these programs aspire to become
college-level instructors, while others have gone
on to become freelance composers and arrangers.
Auditions
The interview for
the MM in Theory/Composition is based on two factors
as well: 75% of the interview is a measure of
the students composition and/or analytic
skills. Prospective Composers will be expected
to show and discuss three of their original scores.
If a recording is available of the score, students
are encouraged to bring it to the interview. Prospective
Theorists will be expected to take a written analysis
test, providing harmonic and formal analysis of
three short compositions from different musical
eras. 25% of the audition is a measure of the
students skills in sight-singing, dictation
and piano. Students will be expected to sing diatonic
and chromatic melodies at sight, take dictation
of diatonic and chromatic chord progressions,
and aurally identify a variety of tertian and
non-tertian sonorities. Students are expected
to prepare a piano work of early-intermediate
level difficulty.
Graduate Handbook
The Handbook
is provided for music students as a guide in program
planning for graduate studies in the West Chester
University School of Music. It furnishes a summary
of requirements and procedures needed for the
successful completion of the degrees of Master
of Music and Master of Arts.
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