1. Music Around The World.
Introduction to the Study of Music. Music as a Reflection of
Society. Listening to Music from Around the World. Listening Sketch
for Shakuhachi Music: Koku-Reibo. Listening Sketch for Javanese
Gamelan Music: Gangsaran-Bima Kurda-Gangsaran. Listening Sketch for
Mbira Music: Mandarendare.
2. Fundamentals.
The Elements of Music. Musical Form. Making Music: Voices. Making
Music: Instruments. The Orchestra. Rehearsals. Emotion in Music.
Performances. Historical Periods and Individual Style.
3. The Art of Listening.
Sound, Rhythm, and Texture. Paul Dukas, Fanfare from La Péri. Music
and Words, Key, Dissonance. Franz Schubert, Song for Voice and
Piano, Gretchen am Spinnrade (Gretchen at the Spinning Wheel).
Form, Dynamics, Tempo, Meter, Cadences, and Key. Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart, Minuet and Trio from Symphony No. 18 in F Major, K.130.
Beats, Meter, Form, and Tone Color. Benny Harris, Crazeology.
Texture, Chromaticism, and Word-Painting. Maddalena Casulana,
Madrigal,Morte, te Chiamo (Death, I Call on You). Alastair Reid, “A
Lesson in Music.”
4. The Middle Ages: 400-1400.
General Characteristics of Medieval Music. The Music of the Middle
Ages. Kyrie (plainchant). Beatriz de Dia, Song, A chantar.
Perotinus, Viderunt Omnes. Guillaume de Machaut, Secular Song
(rondeau), Doulz Viaire Gracieus. Style Summary: The Middle
Ages.
5. The Renaissance: 1400-1600.
Life and Times in the Renaissance. General Characteristics of
Renaissance Music. Music in the Early Renaissance. The
Mid-Renaissance. Thomas Aquinas, Plainchant hymn, Pange Lingua.
Josquin Desprez, Kyrie from the Pange Lingua Mass. The Late
Renaissance. Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Motet, Exsultate
Deo. Thomas Morley, Two English Madrigals. Giovanni Gabrielli,
Canzona Duodecimi Toni. Tielman Susato, Ronde and Saltarelle. Style
Summary: The Renaissance.
6. The Baroque Era: 1600-1750.
Life in the Baroque Era. General Characteristics of Baroque Music.
The Early Baroque (1600-1700). Claudio Moneverdi, Excerpts from the
Opera Orfeo. Henry Purcell, Dido's Lament from the Opera Dido and
Aeneas. Arcangelo Corelli, Trio Sonata, Op. 3, No. 7, for Two
Violins and Basso Continuo. The Late Baroque (1700-1750). Antonio
Vivaldi, First Movement from Violin Concerto, Op. 8, No. 1, La
Primavera (“Spring”), from The Four Seasons. Johann Sebastian Bach,
Prelude and Fugue in E Minor. Johann Sebastian Bach, First Movement
from Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F Major. Johann Sebastian Bach,
St. Matthew Passion (Excerpt). George Frideric Handel, Giulio
Cesare, Act III, Scene 4. George Frideric Handel, “Halleluyah”
chorus from Messiah. Style Summary: The Baroque Era.
7. The Classic Era: 1750-1800.
From Absolutism to Enlightenment to Revolution. General
Characteristics of Classic Music. Giovanni Pergolesi, Opera, La
Serva Padrona (Duet from Act I). The Classic Masters. Franz Joseph
Haydn, Minuet and Trio from Symphony No. 45 in F-Sharp minor. Franz
Joseph Haydn, Fourth Movement from String Quartet, Op. 33, No. 2,
in E-Flat Major. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Second Movement from
Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major, K. 467. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
First Movement from Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K. 550. Style
Summary: The Classic Era.
8. Beethoven.
Beethoven's Life. Beethoven's Music. Ludwig Van Beethoven, Six Easy
Variations on a Swiss Tune for Piano Solo. Ludwig Van Beethoven,
Symphony No. 5 in C Minor. Ludwig Van Beethoven, Third Movement
from Piano Sonata in E Major, Op. 109. Style Summary:
Beethoven.
9. The Nineteenth Century.
The Age of Romanticism.
Part One: Early Romanticism.
Jeremy Yudkin was born in England and educated in England and the United States. He received his B.A. and M.A. in Classical and Modern Languages from Cambridge University and his Ph.D. in Historical Musicology from Stanford University. He has taught at the Palo Alto Community Adult School, San Francisco State University, the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, Harvard University and, since 1982, at Boston University's School for the Arts and the Tanglewood Music Center. A recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Boston University's Society of Fellows, the Camargo Foundation, and the Marion and Jasper Whiting Foundation, he has written articles for the Journal of the American Musicological Society, the Journal of Musicology, the Musical Quarterly, Musica Disciplina, and Music and Letters, and contributed to several volumes of essays. His research specialties include the Middle Ages, early Beethoven, and jazz studies. A noted lecturer, Professor Yudkin has given talks and presented papers across the United States and in Europe and Russia. He is the author of four previous books on various aspects of music and music history, including Music in Medieval Europe (Prentice Hall, 1989).
Dr. Yudkin is also an accomplished clarinetist, photographer, gardener, and soccer player. He and his wife, who is a teacher of French, have two children.
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