USC
University of Southern California
black horizontal bar for print styles

Doctor of Musical Arts

Degree Prerequisites

D.M.A. applicants must complete the appropriate master of music degree program or its equivalent.

Admission

Refer to School of Music Graduate Degrees, Admission Requirements.

Graduate Record Examinations

Scores from the General Test of the Graduate Record Examinations (GRE) are required for application and admission to the Doctor of Musical Arts degree. Test scores on the GRE that are more than five years old at the time of application are not accepted.

Graduate Committee Interview

Before the completion of 16 units beyond the master’s degree and before permission to present the second doctoral recital is requested, doctoral students must submit a detailed curriculum vitae to the Graduate Committee of the School of Music summarizing their background and objectives. The student will be evaluated on musicianship and general academic qualifications, teaching experience and the validity and quality of creative, literary or performance projects submitted. The committee determines the student’s continuation in the program, proposed areas of concentration and the guidance committee members.

Course Requirements

Each student is required to prepare four areas of concentration: the major field, an academic field (chosen from among musicology, theory and analysis, music education, choral music or sacred music), and elective areas selected in consultation with an advisor from two of the following: theory or compositional skills (composition, counterpoint, orchestration, band arranging or choral arranging); performance, early music or jazz studies; music education; sacred or choral music; conducting; performance pedagogy; electroacoustic media; a field outside of music. The academic field may not duplicate a major or an elective field. Admission to elective and academic fields must be approved by the department concerned, prior to the Graduate Committee interview.

The elective and academic fields are supported by courses that are determined by the department in which these fields are administered. Six to 8 units are taken in elective fields; 8 to 12 units in the academic field. No more than two of the four fields may be under the guidance of the same department within the School of Music, and at least one of the elective fields must result in a written examination as part of the qualifying examinations.

Required courses for each major curriculum are listed subsequently in this catalogue. Special requirements in any of the four areas of concentration (if any) are determined by the guidance committee member responsible for that area.

A minimum of 65 graduate units beyond the bachelor’s degree are required to complete the degree. Fifty-five or more units must be in music, 12 of these beyond the master’s level must be in the major. At least 40 of these must be at the 500 level or higher. All course work earned under these requirements for a doctoral degree is considered to be obsolete after 10 years from the date of completion of such work and may not be used to fulfill degree requirements.

Residence Requirement

A minimum of two years of full-time study beyond the Master of Music degree is required for the Doctor of Musical Arts. At least one year of full-time study beyond the master’s degree (8 units or more per semester) must be in residence at USC.

Grade Point Average Requirements

A minimum grade point average of 3.0 (A = 4.0) is required for all graduate course units in music. A grade of B or higher is required for all courses in the major.

Transfer Credit

The Degree Progress Department in the Office of Academic Records and Registrar determines whether course work taken elsewhere is available for transfer credit. A maximum of 30 units of transfer credit may be applied toward a doctoral degree in music. Whether such credit is applicable toward a specific requirement in a major or minor field is determined by the chair of the department in the School of Music in which the subject is taught, pending approval by the dean of the Thornton School of Music. Transfer credit petitions must be filed with the appropriate faculty chair and the chair’s decision made no later than the end of the first year in either the master’s or doctoral program. Transfer work must have been completed within 10 years of admission to the D.M.A. program to be applied toward that degree.

Foreign Language

A reading knowledge of French, German, Italian or Spanish is required of all students. Departments within the Thornton School may require additional language skills. All language requirements must be fulfilled one semester before the qualifying examination at the latest.

Guidance Committee

The guidance committee is composed of at least five members: two faculty from the major department, one of whom will serve as chair, and a faculty member from each of the three other areas of concentration. At least three members of a committee must be drawn from tenured and tenure-track faculty.

The committee administers the written and oral parts of the qualifying examination. The committee continues to serve until the qualifying examination has been passed, the dissertation topic approved (if applicable) and the student is admitted to candidacy. For students in curricula which require recitals, the guidance committee serves as the recital committee and is responsible for the format, content, scheduling, and approval of the required performances.

Qualifying Examination

The qualifying examination for the D.M.A. is administered by the student’s guidance committee. It is comprehensive, partly written and partly oral, and designed in part to test the student’s fitness for independence as a performer, composer, teacher, researcher and/or scholar. The student must obtain permission from the guidance committee to take the qualifying examination and schedule it at least two months in advance to ensure the committee’s availability. The examination may be taken either during the final semester of course work (except dissertation or individual instruction) or within two semesters immediately after, provided that all members of the guidance committee are available to administer it. In degree programs that require the presentation of four major recitals, at least two major recitals must be presented prior to the administration of the qualifying examination. Qualifying examinations will not be scheduled during summer sessions except under extraordinary circumstances and only with the written approval of all guidance committee members. All portions of the examination must be completed within one month.

Written examinations are prepared and read by the guidance committee. All of the student’s areas of concentration, except performance, conducting and composition, will be covered in a written examination or comparable project. The examination in performance, conducting or composition normally is a public recital, evaluated by appropriate members of the guidance committee. If the written examination is judged to be satisfactory, an oral examination is then given. This examination covers in depth topics discussed in the written examinations and/or new material, particularly when a recital in one or more areas of concentration has been presented.

All members of the guidance committee must be present at the oral examination and render a judgment on the acceptability of the qualifying examinations as a whole. The examinations will be reported as passing if there is no more than one dissenting vote on the guidance committee. A student must pass both the written and oral examinations to pass the qualifying examination. A pass on the examination cannot be made contingent upon any form of additional work.

If a student fails the qualifying examination, the guidance committee may permit the student to repeat it once at a mutually satisfactory time within a period of not less than six months nor more than one year from the date of the first examination. A student may not take the qualifying examination more than twice.

Admission to Candidacy

Admission to candidacy occurs after the student has passed the qualifying examination, upon formal action of the dean of the Thornton School. The dissertation or one final recital must be completed after admission to candidacy.

Doctoral Dissertation

A dissertation based on original investigation is required of candidates in sacred music, composition, music education and choral music. The dissertation must reveal scholarly ability, technical mastery, capacity for independent research and originality in creative thought.

Dissertation Committee
After the guidance committee recommends admission to candidacy and approves the dissertation, it is reduced to three members. This smaller committee guides the student through the completion of the final project. Additional members may be added at the discretion of the chair of the committee if the topic requires special expertise.

Registration
The student must register in 794 Dissertation each semester after admission to candidacy until degree requirements are completed. Registration for the dissertation in no less than two regular term semesters following admission to candidacy entitles the candidate to supervision by the dissertation committee. If the dissertation is not completed and accepted within two semesters, the candidate must register for 794 each semester thereafter until the document has been accepted. No more than 8 units of credit in 794 may be accumulated regardless of the number of semesters the candidate may be required to register.

A candidate who must withdraw temporarily from registration in 794 for a semester must formally report this before the beginning of that semester to the Office of Student Services, Thornton School of Music, requesting by petition a leave of absence. During a leave of absence the candidate will not be entitled to assistance from the guidance committee or to the use of university facilities. A leave of absence does not change the candidate’s responsibility for meeting the time schedules for the completion of degree requirements. Leave will be granted only under exceptional circumstances.

Format for Theses and Dissertations
All theses and dissertations submitted for requirements for graduate degrees must conform to university regulations in format and method of preparation. See Doctoral Dissertation.

Defense of the Dissertation
After meeting all requirements including the qualifying examination, the candidate must defend the dissertation. This defense occurs to determine for the committee that the candidate has attained the stage of scholarly advancement and power of investigation demanded for recommendation to the doctorate. While this oral defense is open to the general university community, only the members of the dissertation committee have the authority to recommend its acceptance or denial. The recommendation must be unanimous.

Departments differ in their ordering of these final steps, some holding the oral defense prior to approval for final typing, some holding it after the final typing. The following schedules apply in the two cases.

Defense of the Dissertation Prior to Approval for Final Typing
In this case a candidate defends the dissertation on the basis of an approved preliminary copy. If the defense is satisfactory, the committee then signs the approval for final typing; if additional work is required, the form is left unsigned until that work has been approved.

At the time the approval for final typing reaches the dean of the Thornton School of Music, the candidate submits the typed copy for the abstract of the dissertation.

The final typewritten copy of the dissertation, together with signed signature sheet and approval cards, must be presented to the Thesis Editor, the Graduate School, GFS 315, at least two weeks prior to the end of the semester in which the degree is to be received. Approval of format and acceptance by the Graduate School must be presented to the dean of the Thornton School of Music at least one week before the end of the semester.

Defense of the Dissertation Subsequent to Final Typing
At least seven weeks before the scheduled date of the defense of the dissertation, written approval for final typing by all members of the candidate’s dissertation committee must be filed with the dean of the Thornton School of Music. The typed copy for the abstract of the dissertation is due at this time.

At least five weeks before the date of the final oral examination, the original copy of the final draft of the dissertation, accompanied by a signature sheet and cards of approval signed by all members of the dissertation committee, must be submitted to the Thesis Editor for approval. This final draft must conform to the regulations provided by the university. See Doctoral Dissertation.

Abstract of Dissertation
Since the abstract of the dissertation is published in Dissertation Abstracts International, it should be written with care and be representative of the final draft of the dissertation.

Time Schedule

The D.M.A. is established on the assumption that a well-qualified student can complete it in three years of full-time work. If the student pursues part-time graduate study, or if the field of graduate work is not that of undergraduate study, more time may be required.

The time limit for completing the Doctor of Musical Arts degree is eight years. For students who earned an applicable master’s degree within five years prior to admission to the doctoral program, the time limit for completing the Doctor of Musical Arts degree is six years. Progress is measured from the beginning of the first course at USC applied toward the degree. Extensions will be granted by petition to the Thornton School for only the most compelling reasons.

Basic D.M.A. Curriculum

required for all D.M.A. candidatesUnits
MUCD 441* (2), MUCD 443 (2)4
MUCO 501 (2), MUCO 502 (2)4
MUED 5052
MUHL 570 2
MUHL electives numbered 500 through 6956
Ensemble2
20
*Choral music majors are exempt from taking MUCD 441.

Courses with similar content taken for graduate credit in another accredited institution may be substituted, subject to departmental approval. Master’s degree credit for ensemble taken at USC may fulfill this requirement, subject to departmental approval.

Choral Music Major

A keyboard proficiency test will be given by the choral faculty during the student’s first semester in residence to determine if additional study in keyboard is required.

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum**20
MUCM 440* (2), MUCM 541* (2), MUCM 542* (2), MUCM 641 (2), MUCM 643 (4), MUCM 794ab (2-2)16
MUCH 5712
MUCD 541 (4), MUCD 641 (2), MUCD 653 (2)8
Ensemble (500 level; choral music majors must participate in a choral ensemble each semester if enrolled for 4 or more units)2
MPVA 501 (2), MPVA 439 (2)4
MUCO 4412
Electives11
Conduct two principal choral concerts (at least one of which will include instrumental ensemble)0
65

*May be taken as part of the master’s degree.
**Choral music majors are not required to take MUCD 441.

Sacred Music Major

The Thornton School of Music is currently not accepting applicants to the D.M.A., Sacred Music, degree program.

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MUCM 440* (2), MUCM 541* (2), MUCM 542* (2), MUCM 641 (2), MUCM 643 (2)10
MUCH 473* (2), MUCH 474* (2), MUCH 570 (2), MUCH 571* (2), MUCH 572 (2), MUCH 790 (2), MUCH 794ab (2-2)16
MUCD 641 (2-2)4
MUEN 510 or MUEN 511 or MUEN 5122
MPVA 4392
Individual instruction 501 (P, OR or VO)3
MUCO 434 (2) or MUCO 441 (2)2
Electives6
Total required for degree65

*May be taken as part of the master’s degree.

Dissertation Options
For the D.M.A. in sacred music there are two options for fulfilling dissertation requirements, the choice to be made by the candidate in consultation with the guidance committee.

Option I The candidate will write a dissertation conforming to USC regulations in format and method of preparation. Refer to These and Dissertation.

Option II The candidate will present two lecture-recitals or a performance of a sacred choral work, or works, as the culmination of the historical and stylistic study of a circumscribed body of literature. This study and an analysis of the problems encountered in performance will be dealt with in a document which, although shorter than a dissertation, will conform to the technical requirements of Option I.

Composition Major

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MUCO 536 (4), MUCO 592 (4), MUCO 637 (4), MUCO 737 (4), MUCO 794ab (4)20
Electives25
Graduate recital0
65

Jazz Studies Major

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MUEN 5324
MUJZ 443 (2), MUJZ 545 (2), MUJZ 547 (4), MUJZ 653 (8), MUJZ 688 (4)20
Electives21
Two recitals of original compositions and arrangements written while in the D.M.A. program0
Lecture-recital in conjunction with an appropriate research project0
65

Music Education Major

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MUED 502* (2), MUED 503* (2), MUED 550* (2), MUED 601 (2), MUED 602 (2), MUED 603 (2), MUED 604 (2), MUED 790 (2), MUED 792 (2), MUED 793 (2), MUED 794ab (4)24
Electives21
65
*May be taken as part of the master’s degree.

Performance Major

It is the objective of the performance curriculum to combine high standards of performance with intellectual accomplishments appropriate to a university degree. Candidates electing this major must present at least four major public appearances: two solo recitals and two other appropriate appearances. The exact format, content and scheduling of the four appearances are the responsibility of the candidate’s guidance committee.

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
Individual instruction 653 (take organ, string instrument, vocal arts, studio guitar, wind instrument or percussion for a maximum of 12 units)12
Electives33
Two solo recitals and two other appropriate performances0
65

Performance Major -- Piano

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MPKS 653 (12), MPKS 520 (6)18
Electives27
Four graduate recitals: two solo recitals, one chamber recital, and one lecture-recital0
65

Performance Major -- Keyboard Collaborative Arts

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MPKS 481 (2), MPKS 560 (2), MPKS 561 (2), MPKS 653 (12)18
Electives27
Four doctoral level recitals; one with voice(s), one with instrument(s), one lecture recital, and other recital as approved0
65

The exact format, content and scheduling of the four graduate recitals are the responsibility of the candidate’s major professor.

Performance Major -- Early Music

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum*20
MPEM 653 (8); MPEM 650 (4)12
MUHL 572 (3), MUHL 589 (2), MUHL 591 (2)7
MUEN 6504
Electives22
Four graduate recitals: two as soloist and ensemble director, one lecture-recital, and one recital of the student’s choice0
65
*Must include MUHL 574 and MUHL 575.

Performance Major -- Classical Guitar

Curriculum RequirementsUnits
Basic D.M.A. curriculum20
MPGU 653 (12), MPGU 427 (3)15
MPKS 4812
Electives28
Two solo recitals and two other appropriate performances0
65