Bachelor of Music: Concentration in Jazz/Ethnomusicology

Jazz/Ethnomusicology provides Music majors the tools to study, create, and teach responsibly from musical cultural perspectives that are not beholden to a Western European Classical tradition.  Jazz is intrinsic to African American (i.e. Black) history, and Ethnomusicology is an internationally recognized interdisciplinary field of musical research that focuses on the socio-cultural elements of (primarily oral) musical traditions of the world that resist the historical effects of colonialism, imperialism, and patriarchy.  

Program Learning Outcomes:

  1. Musical Literacy. Students will demonstrate proficiency in reading, notating, and transcribing music by ear. Students will demonstrate critical listening abilities through describing, analyzing, and articulating artistic and perceptual aspects of music.
  2. Performance. Students will demonstrate applied performance skills through accurate, and expressive instrumental or vocal performances.
  3. Creation. Students will be able to express compelling and original musical thought through arranging, composing, and improvising in a variety of styles and for a variety of purposes.
  4. Critical Understanding of Historical, Cultural, and Aesthetic Contexts. Students will be able to apply historical and cultural knowledge and aesthetic judgement in order to articulate significance and meaning in music within diverse contexts.
  5. To analyze and perform jazz standards, along with discussion of important artists in jazz history.
  6. To improvise and compose creatively with nomenclature and sensibilities of the jazz tradition.
  7. To research and discuss the field of ethnomusicology, its history, theory and methodology, and apply its interdisciplinarity with other areas of the humanities in both written and performative ways.
  8. To demonstrate critical cross-cultural perspectives regarding various socio-historical contexts of American jazz, and its relatedness to other global practices (particularly of the non-western world).

Bachelor of Music: Concentration in Jazz/Ethnomusicology - 65 units

Lower Division Core (20 units)

Foundational (3 units)

MUS 130/TH A 131The Foundations of Music Theory3

Theory/Musicianship (10 units)

MUS 200/TH A 234Fundamentals of Modern Musicianship3
MUS/TH A 221Ear Training I2
MUS 222Ear Training II2
MUS 232Diatonic Harmony3

Piano (2 units)

MUS 201Class Piano I1
Select One:1
Class Piano II
Beginning Jazz/Pop Piano

Technology (2 units)

MUS 237Introduction to Music Technology2

History (3 units)

MUS 281The American Musical Experience3

Upper-Division Core (13 Units)

Core (4 units)

MUS 542GWMusic in Culture and Context - GWAR3
Select One:1
Capstone Composition or Performance Project
Senior Thesis

Theory (3 units)

Select One:

MUS 403Chromatic Harmony3
MUS 440Jazz Harmony3

Music History (6 units)

Select Two:

AFRS 514African Musical Diaspora3
AIS 320American Indian Music3
MUS 505Music of the World's Peoples3
MUS 506Survey of Jazz3
MUS 513Asian Musical Diaspora3
MUS 515Latin American Musical Diaspora3
MUS 550Western European Music History from the Middle Ages to 17503
MUS 551European and American Classical Music History of the 18th and 19th Century3
MUS 552Classical Music History of Europe and the Americas in the 20th Century3
MUS 558Music of John Coltrane3
MUS 559Women in Jazz3

Concentration Requirements (32 units)

Take 4 units in any combination:4
Applied Music Lessons
Advanced Applied Music Lessons
MUS 270Improvisation Techniques2
Select One:2
Instrumental Performance and Research Seminar
Vocal Performance and Research Seminar
8 units chosen from MUS 370 - MUS 380; MUS 386 - MUS 3908
MUS 431Jazz Improvisation2
MUS 445Creative Concepts in Music2
MUS 524Introduction to Ethnomusicology3
3 additional units selected from the Music History options not already used to satisfy the Core3
6 units of Electives on advisement6

First-Time Student Roadmap (4 Year)

The roadmaps presented in this Bulletin are intended as suggested plans of study and do not replace meeting with an advisor. For a more personalized roadmap, please use the Degree Planner tool found in your Student Center.

First-Time Student Roadmap

General Advising Information for Transfer Students

  1. Before transfer, complete as many lower-division requirements or electives for this major as possible.
  2. The following courses are not required for admission but are required for graduation. Students are strongly encouraged to complete these units before transfer; doing so will provide more flexibility in course selection after transfer.
    • a course in U.S. History
    • a course in U.S. & California Government

For information about satisfying the requirements described in (1) and (2) above at a California Community College (CCC), please visit http://www.assist.org. Check any geographically accessible CCCs; sometimes, options include more than one college. Use ASSIST to determine:

  • Which courses at a CCC satisfy any lower-division major requirements for this major;
  • Which courses at a CCC satisfy CSU GE, US History, and US & CA Government requirements.

Remedial courses are not transferable and do not apply to the minimum 60 semester units/90 quarter units required for admission.

Additional units for courses that are repeated do not apply to the minimum 60 units required for upper-division transfer (for example, if a course was not passed on the first attempt or was taken to earn a better grade).

Before leaving the last California Community College of attendance, obtain a summary of completion of lower-division General Education units (IGETC or CSU GE Breadth). This is often referred to as a GE certification worksheet. SF State does not require delivery of this certification to Admissions, but students should retain this document for verifying degree progress after transfer.

Credit for Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, or College-Level Examination Program courses: AP/IB/CLEP credit is not automatically transferred from the previous institution. Units are transferred only when an official score report is delivered to SF State. Credit is based on the academic year during which exams were taken. Refer to the University Bulletin in effect during the year of AP/IB/CLEP examination(s) for details regarding the award of credit for AP/IB/CLEP.

Students pursuing majors in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines often defer 6-9 units of lower-division General Education in Areas C and D until after transfer to focus on preparation courses for the major. This advice does not apply to students pursuing associate degree completion before transfer.

Transferring From Institutions Other Than CCCs or CSUs

Review SF State's lower-division General Education requirements. Note that, as described below, the four basic skills courses required for admission meet GE Areas 1A/A2, 1B/A3, 1C/A1, and 2/B4 in the SF State GE pattern. Courses that fulfill the remaining areas of SF State’s lower-division GE pattern are available at most two-year and four-year colleges and universities.

Of the four required basic skills courses, a course in critical thinking (1B/A3) may not be widely offered outside the CCC and CSU systems. Students should attempt to identify and take an appropriate course no later than the term of application to the CSU. To review more information about the 1B/A3 requirement, please visit bulletin.sfsu.edu/undergraduate-education/general-education/lower-division/#AAEL.

Waiting until after transfer to take a single course at SF State that meets both US and CA/local government requirements may be an appropriate option, particularly if transferring from outside of California.