Bulletin Archive
This archived information is dated to the 2011-12 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
This archived information is dated to the 2011-12 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
University requirements for the D.M.A and Ph.D. are described in the "Graduate Degrees" section of this bulletin. The following statements apply to all the graduate degrees described below, unless otherwise indicated.
Department ExaminationsAll entering doctoral graduate students are required to take: (1) a diagnostic examination testing the student in theory (counterpoint, harmony, and analysis) and (for musicologists only) the history of Western art music; and, (2) a proficiency examination in sight-singing and piano sight-reading. These exams are given at the beginning of study in the department (usually the week before school begins). Teaching Assistant assignments and the funding associated with this portion of a graduate student's financial aid package are determined based upon successful completion of these exams.
None of Stanford's required undergraduate courses may be credited toward an advanced degree unless specifically required for both degrees. Only work that receives a grade of 'A,' 'B,' or 'Satisfactory' (a passing grade in an instructor-mandated credit/no credit course) in music courses numbered 100 or higher taken as a graduate student is recognized as fulfilling the advanced-degree requirements. Students may need to devote more than the minimum time in residence if preparation for graduate study is inadequate.
The following may be taken as electives for graduate credit:
Applicants are required to submit evidence of accomplishment (scores, recordings, and/or research papers, according to the proposed field of concentration) when they complete the application form. Applicants should arrange to take the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) well in advance of the December 14 application deadline. All components of the application are due by December 14. International students whose first language is not English are also required to take the TOEFL exam (with certain exceptions: see http://studentaffairs.stanford.edu/gradadmissions).
All of the following fields of study are declarable as subplans in Axess:
Doctor of Musical Arts degree (D.M.A.) in CompositionThe D.M.A. is offered to a limited number of students who demonstrate substantial training in the field and high promise of attainment as composers. Students may work in traditional and/or electronic forms. Breadth is given through studies in other branches of music and in relevant fields outside music, as desirable. The final project for this degree is a large-scale composition.
Doctor of Philosophy degree (Ph.D.) in Musicology
Doctor of Philosophy degree (Ph.D.) in Computer-Based Music Theory and AcousticsThe Ph.D. is offered in areas of the research of Stanford's graduate faculty: Musicology, including specialties in musical aesthetics, history of music theory, and performance practice; and Computer-Based Music Theory and Acoustics (CBMTA), specializing in research in musical acoustics at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA). The department seeks students who demonstrate substantial scholarship, high promise of attainment, and the ability to do independent investigation and present the results of such research in a dissertation.
ResidenceThe candidate must complete a minimum of 135 academic units (see Residency under the "Graduate Degrees" section of this bulletin). Doctoral candidates working on Ph.D. dissertations or Doctor of Musical Arts (D.M.A.) final projects that require consultation with faculty members continue enrollment in the University under Terminal Graduate Registration (TGR), after they have reached the required 135 academic units and have completed their Special Area examinations.
Qualifying ExaminationA written and oral examination for admission to candidacy is given just prior to the fourth quarter of residence for D.M.A. students and Ph.D. students in the Computer-Based Music Theory and Acoustics programs; for Ph.D. students in Musicology, the exams are given just prior to the eighth quarter of residence. This exam tests knowledge of history, theory, repertory, and analysis.
TeachingAll students in the Ph.D. or D.M.A. degree programs, regardless of sources of financial support, are required to complete six quarters of supervised teaching at half time. Music 280 (given in Spring Quarter and taken at the end of the first year) is a required course for Teaching Assistants. Additional quarters of teaching may be required by the department.
Required Courses
MUSIC 200. Graduate Proseminar (4 units)required of all composition and computer-based music theory and acoustics students entering directly from the bachelor's degree and of all students in musicology, regardless of entering degree level.
MUSIC 280. TA Training (1 unit)
MUSIC 301A. Analysis of Music: Modal (4 units)
MUSIC 301B. Analysis of Music: Tonal (4 units)
MUSIC 301C. Analysis of Music: Post-Tonal (4 units)
I. CompositionThe Doctor of Musical Arts (D.M.A.) degree in Composition is given breadth through collateral studies in other branches of music and in relevant studies outside music as seems desirable. In addition to degree requirements required of all doctoral graduate students and listed above, students must complete at least 24 units of:
II. MusicologyIn addition to degree requirements required of all doctoral graduate students and listed above, students must complete at least 43 units of approved courses including:
MUSIC 221. Topics in the History of Theory (35 units)
MUSIC 300A. Medieval Notation (4 units)
MUSIC 300B. Renaissance Notation (4 units)
MUSIC 310. Research Seminar in Musicology (2440 units); the requirement is for eight seminars of 3-5 units each. Students may petition to take up to two graduate seminars in other departments, in consultation with their adviser.
MUSIC 312A. Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, Ancients and Moderns: Plato to Nietzsche (4 units)
MUSIC 312B. Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, Contemporaries: Heidegger to Today (4 units)
MUSIC 330. Musicology Dissertation Colloquium (1-4 units); the requirement is for enrollment each spring beginning in year four and continuing to graduation.
III. Computer-Based Music Theory and AcousticsIn addition to degree requirements required of all doctoral graduate students and listed above, students must complete at least 28 units of approved courses including:
MUSIC 220A. Fundamentals of Computer-Generated Sound (4 units)
MUSIC 220B. Compositional Algorithms, Psychoacoustics, and Spatial Processing (4 units)
MUSIC 220C. Research Seminar in Computer-Generated Music (4 units)
MUSIC 220D. Research in Computer-Generated Music (12 units total)
MUSIC 320. Introduction to Digital Audio Signal Processing (4 units)
IV. Ph.D. in Music and HumanitiesThe department participated in the Graduate Program in Humanities leading to a Ph.D. degree in Music and Humanities. At this time, the option is available only to students already enrolled in the Graduate Program in Humanities; no new students are being accepted. The University remains committed to a broad-based graduate education in the humanities; the courses, colloquium, and symposium continue to be offered, and the Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages provides advising for students already enrolled who may contact DLCL Student Affairs at 650-724-1333 or dlcl@stanford.edu for further information. Courses are listed under the subject code HUMNTIES and may be viewed on the Stanford Bulletin's ExploreCourses web site.
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