The primary mission of the program is to educate artists and designers in the interdisciplinary foundations of modern musical practice, through a rigorous yet flexible curriculum that focuses on the impact of technology on music’s creation, presentation, representation, and distribution.  The curriculum is delivered in two distinct stages.  

The first two years of the program are a candidacy phase, comprising primary core coursework in one of the three “home” departments (AA&A, IAM, or Music).  In years three and four, after students are officially admitted into the program, coursework consists of secondary core work in the other two departments, advanced electives drawn from any of the department’s, advanced science and math requirements, and four semesters of the central pillar course, The Sonic Experience.

Although the flexibility in curricular paths in years one and two leads naturally to student cohort pursuing divergent and/or asynchronous paths in their advanced studies, their studies are unified by the four-semester course sequence, The Sonic Experience, which functions as a crucible and laboratory in which the cohort uses its collective knowledge and experience to explore a range of advanced aesthetic, creative, theoretical, and technical issues and applications in music technology.  

Coursework for The Sonic Experience includes select core offerings in the two disciplines outside their primary core (providing breadth), advanced electives (providing depth), and a robust selection of science and mathematics courses (providing advanced facility with the mathematical principles underlying sound, music, acoustics, and digital signal processing).

Careers:

Graduates of the program are prepared for a wide range of music-related careers, including Composition, Performance, Recording, Producing, Sound Design, and Software and Hardware Development, as well as advanced graduate studies in fields that include Music, Programming, Human Computer Interaction (HCI) and User Experience (UX).