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Admission

You will be selected on an interview/audition in which personal aptitude, professional experience and educational qualifications are taken into consideration. After you have applied to UAC you are required to book yourself in for an interview/audition and download a questionnaire at this University’s online audition booking system available at:

If you have difficulty in accessing the web, call 1800 897 669. Please bring the completed questionnaire with you to the audition. At your audition you will be asked to perform from two contrasting pieces of music.

Full - time

Year 1

Autumn session

Musics, Histories and Flights of the Imagination

This unit replaces 100394 - Contemporary Arts 1: The Past in the Present. This unit maps a rich panorama of musical works, styles, genres and composers from the Medieval period to the beginning of the twentieth century. It shows how music evolved through the centuries and suggests that stylistic changes are linked to creative, musical minds, manifesting as innovative music on the one hand and as conformity to established practices on the other. Out of the abundance of new and old possibilities, the unit asks why composers choose to replicate some patterns to the neglect of others. What is meant by innovation and creativity? How do different genres and styles in different periods in music history come to the foreground while others recede into the background? The unit offers an appreciation of Western art music while considering the popular and folk traditions of the day. It explores how music gives rise to flights of the imagination as it connects with composers, performers and listeners.

Basic Composition, Craft and Theory

This unit replaces 101086 - Composition, Craft and Theory 1. This unit introduces basic theoretical knowledge such as scales, intervals, chords, progressions, melody-writing, transposition, etc. It provides ear training, some keyboard skills and an introduction to Finale software. Students will learn to compose simple melodies against primary chords and other simple chordal accompaniments, leading to the ability to compose in pastiche styles. Some classes will entail working with keyboards and the aural classes will build on the theoretical content presented in lectures.

Introduction to Music Performance

This unit replaces 101088 - Music Performance 1: Introduction to Performance. Students will develop their skills in rehearsal and performance through spontaneous music making in groups of various sizes in this unit. One module will involve the development of a substantial piece composed collaboratively. Through a series of lectures, students will be introduced to various approaches to improvisation and other modes of musical performance from the 20th and 21st Centuries, incorporating popular, experimental, Western and non-Western contexts. A written task will encourage students to contextualise the use of their instrument.

Introduction to Sound Technologies

This unit replaces 101140 - Digital Musics 1: Musical Contexts. This unit is the first of two foundation level units providing a practical and conceptual overview of the basic concepts and applications of electronic and digital sound technology in current music and media arts practice. Areas to be examined include the fundamentals of acoustics, elementary microphone, recording and mixing techniques, and an introduction MIDI systems and sequencing. Technical concepts are contextualised within a survey of contemporary electroacoustic music and sonic arts practice.

Spring session

Music: Modernism, Postmodernism and Beyond

This unit replaced 100395 - Contemporary Arts 2: Exploring the Topography. This unit explores music in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. It considers how the overarching paradigms of modernism and postmodernism shape our understanding of music. Performer and composer case studies will be used to illuminate philosophies and practices that underpin the music studied. The unit provides an historical, sociological and philosophical context for music and investigates the ways in which music signifies meaning according to its context. It explores the ways in which technological developments have given rise to a bewildering array of music in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The unit introduces some rudimentary music analysis and key terminologies and music vocabularies.

Composition, Craft and Theory

This unit replaces 101087 - Composition, Craft and Theory 2. This unit continues to study techniques used in writing music of a variety of styles, from different places and periods of history as well as on compositional voice related to composing. Course work includes composition in set styles, and the freer exploration of techniques in creative writing especially with regard to texture. Keyboard and aural classes will include practical experience in areas relating to the lectures. The unit aims to accommodate students who possess both score and aural literacy skills

Free and Notated Music Performance

This unit replaces 101089 - Music Performance 2: Notated and Free Musics. Free and Notated Music Performance encourages students to develop particular performance attributes through workshop modules focussed on group work. Students will make music from score-based formats and music that goes beyond the score and traditional modes of performance in the Free Improvisation module. A written task will prompt students to analyse performance practice and the role of the audience.

Sound Synthesis and the Sound Environment

This unit replaces 101141 - Digital Musics 2: Studio and Soundscape. As the second of two foundation level units, this unit builds on conceptual and practical work from Introduction to Sound Technologies, deepening students' practical and conceptual understanding of technology in contemporary music and media arts practice. Areas to be examined include digital field recording and soundscape techniques and concepts, an introduction to sound synthesis procedures and musical acoustics, creative sound design and synthesiser patch editing. Technical concepts are contextualised within a critical survey of contemporary electroacoustic music and sonic arts practice.

Year 2

Autumn session

Cultural Paradigms and Music

This unit replaces 101134 - Contemporary Arts: Music (Histories). This unit builds a critical theoretical foundation for music which informs the studio/practical studies, as well as preparing students for more advanced theoretical and critical studies. It is non-linear in approach, examining paradigmatic shifts and cultural theories, and their relationship to music. It includes the study of theories of authorship, corporeality, aesthetics, and power. It examines the field of musical production and the intersection of music with technology. It considers how musical taste is formed and explores the role of institutional practices in shaping music, musicians and musical taste. It situates music within the cultural paradigms of humanism and neo-liberalism, and modernism and postmodernism. It provides students with a broadly informed view of current issues informing contemporary music practice.

Music Composition: Concepts and Creativity

This unit replaces 101095 - Music Composition. This unit provides students with a firm grasp of and practical experience in the range of compositional techniques and skills required as a composer within a range of commonly-employed artistic media and genres. These skills will provide the basis for professional compositional activity. Students will cover issues at a theoretical level through lectures and tutorials, and in a practical fashion through assigned composition exercises and collaborations with musicians.

One sub-major unit

One elective unit

Spring session

Music and Meaning

This unit replaces 101083 - Contemporary Arts: Music (Meaning and Identity). Music has the capacity to move the emotions, to transport people to a higher plane of existence while at the same time anchoring them to the present moment and to each other. Against the backdrop of the ‘music and meaning’ debate, this unit explores the ways in which music creates meaning and affect. It shows how music asserts borders around nations, groups and cultures, becoming strongly identified with these. Yet, it also shows that these boundaries are constantly subverted, that meanings change when music spills over its categories of genre and style, and cultural group. The unit explores the processes of meaning-making in music, showing how these come to be experienced and understood, and changed.

Arranging Musics

The arranging of music is both a phonocentric and a notational practice: producer/arrangers of popular music workshop and rehearse ideas in a performance context, and arrangers of popular and art music score instrumental and vocal parts in notated form. This unit seeks to develop students' skills in the notational area via regular workshops, rehearsals and demonstrations, and a program of intensive listening and transcribing of idiomatic style elements and instrumentation.

One sub-major unit

One elective unit

Year 3

Autumn session

Modes and Codes in Music Production

This unit replaces 101084 - Contemporary Arts 3: Politics and Communities. The unit explores the impact of globalisation on codes, practices and modes of music production. It examines debates in music about the personal and the political, and the cultural and the economic. Adorno’s theories of standardisation and Attali’s idea that industrialisation gives rise to music becoming silenced through the mechanism of repetition (mass production, stockpiling and control by the music industry) will serve as the starting point for the unit. The unit will look at how music is positioned within global and local contexts. It will include topics on the operations of ideology and constructions of identity, including that of musical identity. How does the concept of genre have relevance to politics and aesthetics in music? How do technology and the digital revolution subvert the genre categories which have taken shape in music over the 20th century and beyond? The unit will uncover the multiple ways in which listeners, composers, operators, and producers give rise to an infinite array of possibilities in ‘music’.

Music and Analysis

Analysis enables students to acquire a deep and rich understanding of music. This unit presents a variety of analytical methods that have been used on a diverse range of musics from both notated and non-notated traditions. Students will learn to apply these methods to a variety of musics through lectures and tutorials. They will gain knowledge of standard and non-standard structures. Models of analysis will range from those which are designed to focus on music as a meaning-making system in and of itself and those which encompass models developed outside the discipline of music, such as those that utilise critical theories.

One sub-major unit

One elective unit

Spring session

Music in Theory and Practice

This unit replaces 101085 - Contemporary Arts 4: Futures. The unit introduces a range of approaches to research used by musicologists and music practitioners. It includes methods which are empirical and theoretical, qualitative and quantitative, ethnographic and analytical, and those emergent in practice-based research, including the idea that practice is research. Students will delineate their own research topics and work on research papers which may involve a creative practical component. Students will propose and report on their research in progress, including its theoretical underpinnings, retrieve and critically evaluate an appropriate literature for their project, and discuss the methods they intend to use for their data collection and analysis. The tutorial will give students an opportunity to present work for feedback and critique.

Music Project

This unit is a study of music practice that provides students with the opportunity to create and present musical projects in music composition, music performance and electro-acoustic performance and composition, and/or a combinations of these. This work is conceptually connected with the endeavours undertaken in students sub-major units. It allows students to generate extended material and to bring together skills and knowledge developed in previous years, and is designed to offer students insight into the practical realities of music practice post tertiary education.

One sub-major unit

One sub-major or elective unit

Sub-majors

All students must complete one of the following sub-majors. One of the other sub-majors may also be completed using elective places.

Composition

Sound Technologies

Music Performance

Bachelor of Music


There's more to music at UWS - see why.

Music is probably the most ubiquitous and universal art form. It transcends geographical, national, political, cultural and racial boundaries, and evokes the full spectrum of emotions in listeners around the world. By virtue of its power to move people, it also possesses a unique power to do immeasurable good; music is one of the few art forms capable of encouraging introspection, inspiring social awareness and unity, and even informing policy.

The UWS Bachelor of Music takes an eclectic, modern and inclusive approach to music repertoire and performance. It gives you an opportunity to develop your professional and creative potential in making and appreciating music in your own culture and other cultures (both old and new), by focusing on the repertoire and media of the 20th and 21st centuries. You will have opportunities to use our recording studios, multimedia and MIDI labs, and digital audio/video suites. You can also gain practical experience in performance, concert administration and production, western and non-western groups, recording, composition, audio production, library research and retrieval, world music, film music and collaboration.

Course Details

UAC Code Campus UAI 2008
708225 Penrith N/A

Duration

3 years full-time.

Note: 'part-time' refers to study load, not to timetabling of evening classes.

A Career in Music

As a UWS Music graduate, you may pursue roles in a vast range of exciting fields, including:

  • performance
  • teaching
  • artistic direction
  • composition
  • sound design
  • audio engineering
  • multimedia
  • arts administration
  • concert management
  • community music

Assumed Knowledge

Any two units of Music or equivalent recognised practical skills.

Application Information

To lodge an application for the course of your choice check the Application Information.

Selection Criteria

You will be selected on an interview/audition in which personal aptitude, professional experience and educational qualifications are taken into consideration. After you have made you application to the University Admissions Centre (UAC), you need to book yourself in for an interview/audition through the UWS Admissions Online Booking System and download a questionnaire from this site. Please bring your completed questionnaire to the audition. At your audition you will be asked to perform two contrasting pieces of music. 

If you have difficulty accessing the web call the UWS Course Information Centre on 1800 897 669.

Oppurtunity for Further Study on completion of course

An Honours stream is available for meritorious students.

Graduates with appropriate unit sequences can go on to a teacher education award. On completion of course graduates may qualify to apply for the Master of Teaching (Secondary).

Do you need more information?

Request a course and application information pack:
Course Enquiry Form
International Course Enquiry Form

For further assistance contact us.