Hallowinxer wrote:It's cool that you've also been in music school!What instrument did you had or are you still playing? But it's so sad that your courses have been so packed because most of the theory stuff require a lot time to understand, particularly aural and oral skills. When I was a kid at least I felt like we had enough time to do everything but nowadays the curriculum is really full because learning theory itself is not enough but we need to also teach improvisation and composing more and they take more time. Luckily it also work hand in hand - some students learn theoretical concepts better by playing and composing but some of them prefer writing and more "old-fashioned" methods. Well, every student is individual
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I played flute. I stopped after high school, cause I got braces and it became impossible to play and now I feel I would need to go to school again...
Oh, that so cool You were already composing in your school! I think that's definitely very teachable in many ways.
We never had that, but in all fairness my path was 3 years trying to cramp in the traditional 8 years...
Hallowinxer wrote:I think it's possible to study music psychology in some universities. We have programs on at least music therapy and musicology and I suppose music psychology is part of them. I don't know much about it since I don't have it in my degree. It should we useful and interesting tho! My degree is super packed so it's not easy to take more "extra" courses but sometime in the future I'd like to study even the basics of it.
We study mainly Western classical music but there're other programs for global music, folk music and jazz music for example. But music theory department is focused on classical music, mostly from renaissance to contemporary music. I'll specialize in early music (from medieval to baroque) because I'm super into it! But overall we have different analyse courses, some focusing on classisism and romantic era, some on 20th and contemporary era. It depends on what composers the teachers have chosen and you can also suggest your own ideas what to write essays and presentation about. We've focused on the composers of the traditional canon, such as J.S. Bach, Mozart, Haydn, R. Schumann, Schönberg and Ligeti but nowadays our teachers talk also more about woman composers and on our latest analysis course we're focusing on contemporary composers and many of them have been Finns. But we don't focus on Finnish composers, we analyse many works of different composers and many of the 20th century are new to me. We have one history course about Finnish music tho and later we can choose which composers we'll study more.
I was about to ask what classes, so thanks for sharing. It sound very interesting! I guess psychology of music is probably part of psychology studies.

My very uninformed opinion is, that your specialisation is the coolest

From what You're saying, there seems to be big focus on particular names and their oeuvre and vernacular music still bit slips through the cracks. Is that so?
And yeah, I am asking cause it's in the evolution of these traditions we can learn about past forms of studied societies, and we still don't know that much about "non-material" culture in archeo, so it's always great news when reaserch on that comes...
But still, it's awesome more and more people are included in the core teaching'

Hallowinxer wrote:I don't know much about Finnish music outside of classical music but one of our most famous Finnish composer is Jean Sibelius. Many Finnish composers were aware of what were the "trends" on music, studied abroad and tried different styles. Some other well-known Finnish composers are Kaija Saariaho, Einojuhani Rautavaara and Toivo Kuula. In our university there're also lots of composer students and their teachers are also composers.
In all fairness I can name only handfull composers from here, and one of them is counted as the part of the european canon, so there is that ...


Do You know who You will want to research?
Hallowinxer wrote:Oh it really sucks that many students need to work kinda full-time and unpaidSome of my friends on different fields have been very tired because first they've needed to work at a practice place 8 hours unpaid and after that continue to "real" work to afford their studies. It's just crazy.
Good thing for me, it was only month during summer, but still. And yeah your friends are some kind of tytans for doing that, but they also really shouldn't have too :/ Hope they are doing well.
Hallowinxer wrote:It's super interesting to hear about this because earlier I had no clue what's it like to study archeology!! I had no idea you had so many different subjects! Which did you find the most interesting? They sound super cool but I can imagine the exhaustion because the amount of new information is... crazy! We also read many theoretical articles weekly and I'm a really slow reader (and even slower because most of them are not in my mother tongue) but I've heard that in America they read much more in music theory departments and they don't even have enough time to read every book they've supposed to so I'm glad I study in Finland even though I often feel exhausted too. Because if the subject is interesting you really want to understand and learn everything but sometimes it's just not possible because the amount of articles and exercises is so large and the courses are so packed. But now it seems like no matter the field, we have the same problem with packed courses...
Yeah, I agree. It's counter-productive to overwhelm students with reading, cause it actually makes them learn less and not have time to follow ther interest, like You've said.
Also for me, in some casses it feels like putting burden teaching the material from teacher to student :/
Hallowinxer wrote:Your exams sound super stressfulWe don't have exams (moslty, there're only a couple of teachers who still have them) but we do our weekly exercises in analysing, writing and "composing" in a specific composers or historical style and in the end of the courses we often have a larger presentation and a larger essay. Also we discuss about the articles weekly in the classes. In historical composing we have a portfolio of all the music we've written, analysis and essays about different styles. I'm super happy we don't have exams because I'd be completely freaked out
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I get that it sound like that, and they are stressful, but after the first session everyone learns that it's ok to fail and try again without a problem. Though it does punishes your final grade. Still, learning that learning from failure is also an option is pretty important. It should be something common in earlier education, but unfortunately, at least here, it isn't

Which period/whose style composing was most fun for You and which was most challenging? Do You also need to perform your compositions?
Hallowinxer wrote:Did you also learn to read in example Egyptian hieroglyphs or analyse old paintings? I found out there're some scholars who have studied music from ancient Greece: they've re-constructed ancient instruments based on some they've found and also based on the paintings! And they've also somehow found out how they played the instruments because the positions of the musicians' fingers were so precisely painted and this is super interesting!
Btw it's so cool that you also had linguistics! Did you study any ancient languages deeper or more overall?
Unfortunately, linguistic was only one 1,5h lecture a week, so there wasn't much time to go deep into the topic, so we mostly sticked to basics. Also egyptology is a separate field of studies, so while I think people, who took Egypt as their specialisation in third year (or in second of masters) had some elements of it.
Also You could pick up languages as extra courses, like latin, or greek. I didn't take them, cause greek was at the same time one of my main subject, but I tried coptic, but had to drop it cause the tempo was way to fast to actually learn...
But there are classes on coursera about linguistic (from my second uni), which are quite good, if You ever have more time.

(Iconography was usually disscussed in relation to the topic of the course I guess. Once we had to memorize the sequence of plaques going around under the roof of parthenon

Yeah, I read about it too. I think there were also some reconstructions of babylonian music, as well as paleolithic.

Hallowinxer wrote:And I'm sad that the pandemic had such a large effect on your lab studies.![]()
Yeah, but it also saved me money and I had the oportunity to get into lab while doing conservation courses ^^
Hallowinxer wrote:My grandma and cousins like to eat it on ChristmasBut I think it's just their own tradition
Oh I see

