Columbia University has been at the helm of sound innovation for over fifty years with faculty specializing in composition, improvisation, music theory, musicology, installation, sculpture, instrument building, acoustics, music cognition, and software development. Faculty from the Computer Music Center, along with colleagues from Composition, Visual Arts, and Engineering, led the development of the new interdisciplinary area in Sound Arts that leads to the Master of Fine Arts degree awarded by the School of the Arts. The creative core of the program is augmented by practical and theoretical courses, including Critical Issues (in both Music and Visual Arts), Sound: Physics and Perception, and Programming and Electronics for Art and Music, which expose students to a variety of historical and contemporary forms and perspectives.
Sound Arts students also attend the Visiting Artists Lecture Series (VALS) organized by the Visual Arts Program that exposes students to an array of artists from around the world on a weekly basis. A shared studio/workshop at the Computer Music Center (CMC) , near the shops and studios of Visual Arts Program, serves as the students' home base. Second-year Sound Arts students are assigned small private studios inside the shared space.
Sound Arts students have access to production facilities and equipment including a recording studio, rehearsal room, electronics lab and wood, metal and ceramics shops, the Digital Media Center computer lab, and the Visual Arts equipment cage. Students also have access to the extensive sound archives of the Center for Ethnomusicology; books, scores, sound recordings, and videos from the Gabe M. Wiener Music & Arts Library; and other musical resources available through the Music Department.
Columbia University, United States
Columbia University has been at the helm of sound innovation for over fifty years with faculty specializing in composition, improvisation, music theory, musicology, installation, sculpture, instrument building, acoustics, music cognition, and software development. Faculty from the Computer Music Center, along with colleagues from Composition, Visual Arts, and Engineering, led the development of the new interdisciplinary area in Sound Arts that leads to the Master of Fine Arts degree awarded by the School of the Arts. The creative core of the program is augmented by practical and theoretical courses, including Critical Issues (in both Music and Visual Arts), Sound: Physics and Perception, and Programming and Electronics for Art and Music, which expose students to a variety of historical and contemporary forms and perspectives.
Sound Arts students also attend the Visiting Artists Lecture Series (VALS) organized by the Visual Arts Program that exposes students to an array of artists from around the world on a weekly basis. A shared studio/workshop at the Computer Music Center (CMC) , near the shops and studios of Visual Arts Program, serves as the students' home base. Second-year Sound Arts students are assigned small private studios inside the shared space.
Sound Arts students have access to production facilities and equipment including a recording studio, rehearsal room, electronics lab and wood, metal and ceramics shops, the Digital Media Center computer lab, and the Visual Arts equipment cage. Students also have access to the extensive sound archives of the Center for Ethnomusicology; books, scores, sound recordings, and videos from the Gabe M. Wiener Music & Arts Library; and other musical resources available through the Music Department.
Columbia University, United States