Music, Theatre & Dance Classes
Open to All U-M Students
Enjoy your summer with inspiring courses from SMTD!
Looking for a Fun and Refreshing Elective?
Learn to dance, meditate, or manage an arts organization
Take classes from beginning guitar to African contemporary dance to world music
Escape the day-to-day stress with a fun, relaxing, creatively recharging class
Explore your talents! You can add a music minor to your degree with only 15 credits of mainly electives
Spring/Summer 2025 Courses
Open to All U-M Students • No Experience Needed
Spring 2025
ARTS ADMINISTRATION
Remote
THTREMUS 385: Performing Arts Management • 2 cr. • Asynchronous
GUITAR
Remote
GUITAR 110: Intro to Guitar • 2 cr. • T/Th 1:00pm
GUITAR 111: Intermediate Guitar • 2 cr. • T/Th 10:00am
MINDFULNESS
Remote
JAZZ 450/454/455: Contemplative Practice • 2 cr. • multiple times
MUSICOLOGY
Moore Building & Hybrid
MUSICOL 345: World Soundscapes • 3 cr. • T/Th 2:00 pm
MUSICOL 346: Black American Popular Music 1900s to Present • 3 cr. • MWF 10:00 am
MUSICOL 346/405: Music & Society • 3 cr. • T/Th 2:00 pm
Spring/Summer 2025
ACTING
Remote
THTREMUS 211: Introduction to Theatre & Drama • 2/3 cr. • Asynchronous
Summer 2025
ACTING
Remote
THTREMUS 211: Introduction to Theatre & Drama • 2/3 cr. • Asynchronous
MUSICOLOGY
Remote
MUSICOL 346: History of Music • 3 cr. • MW 4:00 pm
Is it on Central Campus or North Campus?
North Campus locations

Add a Minor to Your Degree with as Few as 15 Credits
SMTD MINORS AVAILABLE:
Dance • Global and Ethnic Performance Studies • Music • Performing Arts Management & Entrepreneurship • Playwriting • Theatre Design & Production
Questions? Email [email protected]
THTREMUS 385: Performing Arts Management
In this asynchronous online course, students will explore the key components of operating a nonprofit performing arts organization. Students will engage in evaluating real-world situations, and learn from guests in leadership positions in each module. Guests include a Broadway Producer, a board liaison from the Kennedy Center, the operations coordinator for the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, the Director of Development for Beth Morrison Project, and the Director of Marketing from Ballet Hispánico. Students will use the cases, course guest Q&As, and a book to inform the initial plans for a theoretical performing arts organization that they design in small pieces across the 6 weeks. Much of the course delivery is through video, with the option to link to Spotify and treat those components of the course like a podcast.
THTREMUS 211: Introduction to Theatre & Drama
This course introduces students to as many basic elements of the theatre, practical and theoretical, as time allows. It also presents a number of key plays from various periods, examining them in terms of their dramatic qualities, theatrical strengths, social and political contexts, performance history, and relevance today. This course is geared toward students who do not have extensive experience attending or participating in the theatre.
DANCE 100: Intro to Dance
DANCE 100.101 – African Contemporary
This course will focus on introducing students to authentic neotraditional dance movements from West Africa. Basic timelines and dance steps will enable students to grasp various dance movements, gestures, and expressions.
Guitar 110: Intro to Guitar
This introductory course in popular guitar style will teach students essential performance skills while building a deeper understanding of the cultural importance of the guitar in popular music. No prior guitar experience needed to enroll.
Guitar 111: Intermediate Guitar
This intermediate pop guitar course will teach students continued technical and performance-based skillsets on the instrument. Guitar 110: Intro to Guitar or comparable guitar experience recommended.
MUSICOL 346: History of Music
This course is a social-ontological study of global and popular music through the lens of musicology, ethnomusicology, anthropology, sociology, and philosophy. We will interrogate the historical, social/cultural and philosophical theory, as well as methodologies through which popular music illuminates societal structures and behavior. Such an undertaking will involve the critical analysis of popular musics from selected social contexts of the globe. By problematizing the notion of “popular culture” and/or “popular music”, we will critically explore popular music as sound and practice – which engenders behavior, discourse, social structures, and methodologies of study. Analytical approaches to the study of this course will include musical and textual transcription, hermeneutics, semiotics, as well as social/cultural analysis (through close readings of discourse). Throughout the course, we will pay special attention to how processes of globalization shape the production, circulation, and consumption of popular music in the digital age. By the end of the course, students should be able to critically analyze how popular music various shapes social entities into complex assemblages.
JAZZ 450/454/455: Contemplative Practice
450/550: The Contemplative Practices Seminar
This seminar introduces sitting meditation. Students follow a daily practice through video instruction by Martha as well as guided meditation audios. Students read
Thich Nhat Hanh’s book: The Miracle of Mindfulness.
455/555: Nature-based Contemplative Practice
This course teaches practices that deepen our connection with the natural world by expanding our conversation with Nature. Students learn the practice of ‘reciprocity’ with the elements of air, fire, water, and earth. These practices renew the connection between humans and their environment and help activate the ‘feeling-state’ of being a member of an earth community.
454/554 Special Topics/”Finding Your Way”
Through reflective writing, this course helps students explore life-path questions. Areas of reflection include: career goals, relationship, values, awareness of the natural world, intentions for participating in community, the role of the arts, and personal priorities.
MUSICOL 122: Intro to World Music
This course introduces students to world soundscapes and cultures through the lens of ethnomusicology – the study of music in the context of culture. It analyzes the ever-changing balance between traditional and modern ideas of music – in systems of learning, performance techniques, and ways of writing and recording music.
MUSICOL 346.001: Black American Popular Music 1900s to Present
In this course, we will examine the history and development of Black American popular musics from their first appearances on recordings to the present. Students will gain familiarity with the emergence, development and reception of the different artists and styles within Black American musical history; keeping an eye towards moments of intersection and divergence. A core component of this class will be taking an interdisciplinary perspective, centered around the combination of academic music studies and the multidisciplinary field of Black studies, as a way to understand Black American popular musics in their historical, social, and cultural context.
MUSICOL 345.001: Music and Society
Engaging the discipline of ethnomusicology, this course examines how various folk, popular, and art music traditions have developed in relation to disparate cultural and social contexts around the world. Through a series of theoretical considerations and case study observations, we will explore how music constructs and conveys meaning, how it shapes and maintains social interactions and identities, and how it evolves in relation to shifting performance contexts, technological developments, and socio-political circumstances. Case studies include musical traditions from South and Southeast Asia, Africa, South America and the Caribbean, among others. Course content will include recorded lectures, synchronous class sessions, audio/visual/reading materials, and weekly online discussion posts.
MUSICOL 345: World Soundscapes
This course introduces undergraduate students to the conceptualization of the notion of soundscapes through the lens of ethnomusicology, music studies, communication studies, cultural anthropology, architecture, and urban studies. We will examine the ways in which the environment, architecture, as well as social and historical conditions give rise to soundscapes, and how these in turn shape meaning, human behavior, and identities. By tracing the use of the term “Soundscape” taking clues from the work of Canadian music composer Murray Schafer and media scholar, Jonathan Sterne, we will critically examine the soundscapes of selected world cultures, including but not limited to the US, Latin America, Japan, South India, Indonesia, Europe, Korea, Papua New Guinea, and Africa. Reflecting upon the dialectical relationship between sonic and non-sonic entities of our world, we will analyze the intertwining nature of the sonic-spatial practices, discourses about sonic practices, as well as the social/political conditions that give rise to such practices in the first place. Positioning varying social processes of producing soundscapes within the context of postcoloniality as well as technological and transnational development, we will critically analyze the ever-interweaving nature of soundscapes – through the lenses of architecture, sound studies, anthropology, ethnomusicology, musicology, and the recording industry.