From: Kevin Austin (kevin.austin@videotron.ca)
Date: Tue Aug 07 2007 - 21:48:52 EDT
The design of the course includes a number of forms of converting
sonic information into graphic forms -- note the five or six (or
more) introduced in EAMT 205. As the new curriculum places this
course at the same level as 305 and the second year recording course
(along with topics course options), it is expected that the student
will have started to develop a fair degree of refinement in their
aural capacity.
Best
Kevin
At 9:42 PM -0400 8/7/07, Jean-Philipe Nault wrote:
> > This new course includes aural skills training
>> practised through a mixture of Audio Scene Analysis concepts, MIDI
>> sequencing,
>> and dictation.
>
>What kind of dictation?
>
>JP
>
>
>Quoting JOHN WINIARZ <jwiniarz@sympatico.ca>:
>
>> <<< ANNOUNCEMENT >>>
>>
>> If you are intending to take this new course, since enrollment is presently
>> low, please register as soon as possible to insure that it is offered.
>>
>> --------------------------------------
>> EAMT 399E Ear-Training Studio II (6 credits),
>> (For Electroacoustic & Music Technology Students):
>>
>> Given on Wed./Fri. 10:45-12:15 and taught by John Winiarz,
>> EAMT 399E is offered for the first time during the Sept. 2007-2008 academic
>> session.
>> This new course includes aural skills training
>> practised through a mixture of Audio Scene Analysis concepts, MIDI
>> sequencing,
>> and dictation.
>>
>> Pre-requisites are: EAMT 399C or MUSI 398D or MUSI 200 or written permission
>>
>> of
>> the Department
>>
>> SEE/VOIR:
>> http://www.salrestivo.org/NikolaTesla.jpg
>> Nicola Tesla, the great inventor in 1899, firing up his transmitter -
>> was he notating those 4 million volts of impulses? :)
>>
>>
>
>
>--
>JP Nault
>514-979-8544
>514-762-0255
>Need Drums Advice?
>jp.nault@gmail.com
>jean_nau@alcor.concordia.ca
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Sun Jul 03 2011 - 04:42:22 EDT