Note added by Anthony Ouellette (UCC) on 4-30-08: MUS 297 and MUS 497 were erroneously approved under MUS 299 and MUS 499. MUS 297 and MUS 497 are the correct numbers. From: web-form@Oswego.EDU Sent: Wednesday, March 26, 2008 10:44 AM To: ucc@oswego.edu Subject: Web Form: Course_Submission Department_Chair: Todd Graber Department_Chair_Email: tgraber@oswego.edu Additional_Contact: Julie Pretzat (Interim Associate Dean) Additional_Contact_Email: merchant@oswego.edu Course_Number: MUS 297 Course_Type: updated Course Course_Title: Oswego Festival Chorus Catalog_Description: This large choral group is open to all students, regardless of major, as well as to the greater Oswego community. It is a project-based course designed to provide an opportunity for the participants to become acquainted with standard oratorio and choral/orchestral masterworks and to participate in rehearsal and concert performances of such literature. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisites: Previous singing experience recommended. No audition required. Fl - every Fall: Yes Sp_every Spring: Yes Semester_Hours: 0-1 Justification: This course in ensemble performance acquaints the student with musical literature and the solution of problems involved in its performance. The course is targeted at all students regardless of major. Ensembles are project-based courses. Students learn to translate the written musical score into sound, work as a group in rehearsing the style, techniques, interpretation and balance of the whole, and present the final project to the public in a performance. All music majors must take 4 semesters of ensemble for 0 credit. Non-majors may use the course for elective credits and, pending approval, for General Education Knowledge Foundations: Fine and Performing Arts. Course_Objectives: The student will gain the tools necessary to bring the written score to life in rehearsal and performance. In the rehearsal laboratory and on the concert stage, the students will solve the problems and challenges found in the musical score. In the performances by the ensembles, the student will demonstrate an understanding of the principles and elements used in the music under study, sensitivity to, and creativity with the medium chosen. The work will be presented in a professional manner. The student will demonstrate knowledge of a variety of techniques in working with music, and some historical knowledge of the uses and development of the medium chosen. Course_Description: Course Outline: Repertoire from a wide variety of eras and styles will be selected and will change from semester to semester. From the beginning of the course, teaching techniques will enable all students to find procedures for solving the problems confronting him/her in the musical score. Methods of Instruction: Demonstration, laboratory experiences, individual and group seminars, recordings and lectures. Course requirements: Three hours of rehearsal each week, including sectionals, and a minimum of one performance each semester. Means of Evaluation: An evaluation will be made of the individual’s contributions towards preparation of the musical score, measurement of individual growth and achievement, evaluation of their class project each semester—a concert performance. Resources: Audio playback systems are owned by the Music Department. The Music Department supports an extensive library of choral music. No additional resources are required. Bibliography: Standard bibliography not applicable. Each semester the choir studies different compositions from the standard choral masterwork repertoire by a variety of composers from around the world. Carl Orff Carmina Burana Gabriel Faure Requiem George F. Handel Messiah Conrad Susa Carols and Lullabies Igor Stravinsky Symphony of Psalms Johannes Brahms A German Requiem Other_Comments: This is a course that has been offered for many years. This is an update of the course with a change in the descriptions to reflect current practice. We are also requesting a distinct number. The course has been listed with two others as MUS 299 – Non-Credit Ensembles. The ensemble requires as much work as other ensembles approved as 1 credit ensembles. The Music Department believes that the level of work required for this ensemble justifies it being approved as a 0-1 credit course. The course is also being submitted for General Education Approval for Fine and Performing Arts IP_Adress: 129.3.199.159