H85.1196 001 Writing About Popular Music
DescriptionAny student or practitioner of recorded music requires the ability to communicate articulately about music in written form. Achieving a hands-on familiarity with a wide range of writing styles – from musician biographies, press releases and online blogs, to descriptions, reviews and critiques of musical performances – is the primary goal of this course. Students will also consider and analyze different approaches to writing music, across varying contexts, formats, styles, and methodologies; they will refine skills to describe a musical recording or performance with accuracy and understanding; analyze, understand, and produce quality criticism, reporting and journalism about music; consider the history and contemporary relevance of music writing and journalism; engage key theoretical writings and concepts in the study of popular music (i.e. Benjamin, Adorno, etc.); develop a series of practical writing and reading skills in writing that are immediately applicable in the recorded music workforce. Assignments may include weekly writing assignments of different lengths, and/or a substantial final paper, culminating in a total of approximately 20 pages of writing by the end of the semester. Students' work will be closely edited by the instructor; and through peer critiques, students in the class will also be engaged as editors.
Students interested in taking this course as noncredit should register for H99.8596.001.
This course is also open to High School students.
CategoriesRecorded Music, Music, Writing
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