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Natalie L. Haslam College of Music

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MUSICOLOGY

The Musicology area of the College of Music encourages students to approach music as a culturally expressive form, engage with the musical richness of our world, and develop their own musical identities within an increasingly interconnected globe.

Our program incorporates historical musicology, ethnomusicology, and interdisciplinary studies within a rich, integrated mode of inquiry.

Our current faculty hold expertise in: American popular musics; Appalachian musics; African diasporic musics; musics of Bali; ethnographic methods; film studies; gender studies; medieval and Renaissance music; music and modernity; Nordic musics; religion and music; Russian and Eastern European musics; technology and music; sound studies and environment.

Study of Musicology at the University of Tennessee is strongly supported by the outstanding collections of the George F. DeVine Music Library.

Why study musicology?

  • To understand a wide variety of musics within their historical, cultural, and social contexts
  • To gain understanding and awareness of diverse cultural practices of music within today’s increasingly interconnected globe
  • To deepen and strengthen one’s own individual music interests
  • To gain expertise in interdisciplinary methodologies pertaining to the study of music
  • To participate in opportunities for collaboration, personal mentoring, and independent research
  • To pursue flexible curricula that can be tailored to suit individual interests
  • To hone writing skills, research and critical thinking abilities
  • To prepare for graduate study in historical musicology or ethnomusicology
  • To meaningfully participate in music outreach, music activism, music community building, or music non-profit work
  • To prepare for careers in music teaching, music academia, music publishing, or in allied disciplines such as music therapy, music librarianship, or museum studies

Undergraduate Programs

The Bachelor of Arts with Concentration in Music and Culture is an innovative, unique liberal arts degree ideal for students interested in music history and ethnomusicology. It is also suitable for those who intend to pursue related career paths in music librarianship, music journalism, music publishing, music therapy, or media industries.

The Music and Culture Minor is available to all undergraduate students at the University.  It offers focused studies in musicology that can be combined with any Bachelor’s degree.

Interdisciplinary Minors

The Musicology area also offers interdisciplinary minors: 

  • Interdisciplinary Studies in Music & Appalachia
  • Interdisciplinary Studies in Music & Asia 
  • Music & the African Diaspora 

These minors are open to all students at the University and offer specialized tracks for exploring specific musical traditions in their cultural, historical, social, and global contexts.  Each track incorporates possibilities to explore academic music study, performance experiences, and related cultural studies in allied disciplines.

Graduate Program

We offer a Master of Music with a Concentration in Musicology for students who wish to pursue advanced degrees in historical musicology or ethnomusicology. Our program emphasizes musics in their social, intellectual, and cultural contexts within an integrated program in historical musicology and ethnomusicology.

Graduates of this program are well qualified to pursue doctoral study in these fields, to continue into programs in music librarianship or museum studies, to pursue careers as teachers and academics in historical musicology or ethnomusicology, or to participate in meaningful public outreach, activism, or non-profit work related to music and culture.

Applicants to the graduate program in Musicology are encouraged to apply for our Graduate Teaching Assistantships in Musicology, which offer funding for study and additional opportunities to acquire teaching and research experience in the discipline.  Click here to view Graduate Teaching Assistantships.

For further information, contact Professor Rachel Golden, Coordinator of Musicology, [email protected].

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Assistantships
Resources

Meet Our Faculty

Jonathan Adams

Lecturer of Musicology

[email protected]
865-974-7567
Profile

Dale Disney

Lecturer of Musicology, Coordinator of Online Programs

[email protected]
865-974-7087
Profile

Leslie C. Gay

Associate Professor of Musicology

[email protected]
865-974-7525
Profile

Rachel May Golden

Area Coordinator & Professor of Musicology

[email protected]
865-974-8054
Profile

Sean McCollough

Senior Lecturer of Musicology

[email protected]
865-974-7556
Profile

Joni Pappas

Lecturer of Music

[email protected]
865-974-3241
Profile

Mehrenegar Rostami

Lecturer in Musicology

[email protected]
Profile

Local Resources

  • UTK Financial Aid and Scholarships
  • UT Writing Center

Other Links

  • American Musicological Society
  • International Association for the Study of Popular Music
  • The International Council for Traditional Music
  • International Medieval and Renaissance Music Conference
  • Music Library Association
  • Society for American Music
  • Society for Ethnomusicology

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Natalie L. Haslam College of Music

117 Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
1741 Volunteer Blvd.
Knoxville TN 37996-2600

Phone: 865-974-3241
General Inquiries:
[email protected]
Admissions: [email protected]



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The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

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