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Winter Term Returns to SFCM

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From becoming a discerning listener, to the impact of Bob Dylan, to wine and music pairing, students at SFCM are choosing between a wide range of creative classes.

January 11, 2022 by Mark Taylor

By Mark Taylor

Have you ever wondered how to write songs across all genres? If tap dancing can make you a better musician? Or if listening to Bach pairs well with red, or white wine? All these questions and more will be answered during this year's Winter Term at the 草莓视频福利院 Conservatory of Music.

Winter Term is the time of year when students who are usually focused on their particular instrument or program are asked to try something new. Conservatory faculty have created an array of class options, some of which are designed to help a musician delve deep into critical listening, while others ask you to put on some dancing shoes. 鈥淪imply put, we want enjoyment and a cultivation of curiosity,鈥 said Dean Jonas Wright. There are roughly 90 winter term classes this year with about 40 student projects. This year faculty have brought back some classic favorites, and introduced some exciting new options for the roughly two-week period this January. 

For those eager to grow their musical ear, Music Theory and Musicianship鈥檚 Scott Foglesong is offering 鈥淐reative and Critical Listening鈥 for students. This is the fourth time he has offered the class, which is aimed at developing a more discerning listener, 鈥淥ne who is relatively free of the, 鈥榤e like, me no like鈥 mindset in favor of an approach that evaluates every aspect of the performance,鈥 Foglesong said. The class promises to have students listen and analyze both historical and new music with an overarching goal of leaving them with an earful of knowledge. 鈥淒iscernment comes with breadth and experience. So each day we鈥檒l start out identifying some areas to think about in the piece in question, before launching into as many recordings as we can cover in the time allotted,鈥 Foglesong added. 

He has been called one of the greatest songwriters of all time covering nearly every genre for more than six decades, Bob Dylan. For the first time, SFCM鈥檚 Carl Nagin is teaching 鈥淎rt, Theft, and Invention in the Music of Bob Dylan.鈥 The class delves into the music of the first songwriter to win the Nobel Prize. 鈥淥n one level, this is really a class about invention, imagination, and musical intelligence. Dylan has said a lot about how he works and creates, I want students to feel that the creative processes that go into his songwriting are accessible to them,鈥 Nagin said. Students are encouraged to find their own paths through Dylan鈥檚 songs by composing musical work that arranges, reimagines or evokes his songs. The class will also go through Dylan鈥檚 latest work, 鈥淩ough and Rowdy Ways鈥 which has some classical roots, 鈥淭here鈥檚 a song that uses Offenbach鈥檚 Barcarole, followed by a homage to blues singer Jimmy Reed, and then a 17-minute narrative about the Kennedy assassination that is devastating in its critical awareness of the consequences of that event and how it still haunts us. He released it the day shelter-in-place protocols took effect in California. Talk about relevant!鈥 Nagin added.

What composer best pairs with a daytime ros茅? Music History and Literature professor Alexander Stalarow plans to explore that answer with, 鈥淲ine and Music Pairing鈥. The course doubles as an introduction to great wines of France and California, and to the growing world of pairing wine with music. Stalarow spent several years living in France and is a self-taught wine aficionado. 鈥淲e first study together wine flavor and aroma wheels and how we can use them to describe a wine鈥檚 character. Then we think about which of these characteristics have musical analogues,鈥 Stalarow said. The collaborative course then workshops what goes together, 鈥淚 try to present ideas for music and wine pairings in as many possible ways, regional or cultural connections, contexts for drinking and listening, and of course, characteristics of a wine and given piece of music as we perceive them.鈥 Stalarow hopes students have fun, but learn a valuable lesson in taste, both for the tongue, and the ear, 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e tasting affects what and how we listen, and what we are listening to affects what we鈥檙e tasting,鈥 Stalarow added. Students must be 21 to attend.

If a student is looking to tap into a new talent, Opera and Musical Theatre鈥檚 Lauren Mayer is offering, 鈥淭ap Dancing for Musicians鈥. Mayer has taught the course before and says most of the time, it comes naturally to musicians who are trained to think about counting, accents, and multi-tasking, 鈥淥ur ability to count is a huge asset, and being able to count while executing something physically comes naturally to musicians,鈥 Mayer said. The class is designed as a basic introduction to tap dancing, where Mayer hopes students learn something new that may make them a better musician, but also let loose and have fun, 鈥淪tudents tend to get stuck in their heads and to focus on the demanding aspects of their instruments, which is important, but music and art are also about entertainment and fun, and tap is the most fun of all dance styles,鈥 Mayer added.

Learn more about Winter Term at SFCM.