Organ Performance majors typically take the following courses in the fall semester of their first year:

First-Year Experience Learning Community Courses

We will register you for these courses:

  1. Philosophy (PHIL 201)
  2. English Composition (ENG 101) OR Theology (TRS 201)

Why am I taking these classes?   Honors students take equivalent honors courses.

Major Courses

You will need to choose and register for these courses:

  1. MUPI 425 Private Organ Instruction
  2. MUPI 3XX Private Voice Instruction
  3. MUS 121 Ear Training I (see below for placement)
  4. MUS 123 Harmony I (see below for placement)
  5. MUS 4xx, Major Ensemble (Choir MUS 470b or Orchestra MUS 480)

Music Theory Placement

Incoming music students will receive a letter from the School of Music, Drama, and Art with information on how and when to take the Theory Evaluation Test to determine what level of harmony and ear training is appropriate for you. The test is accessed through blackboard. On Blackboard, the test can be found under a special Organization called Music Theory, History, and Composition testing (we will enroll you in this organization in June). Once you have logged in, navigate to the bottom left corner of the blackboard homepage, and under Organizations, click Music Theory, History, and Composition testing. Clicking the organization should take you directly to the test page, where you should see a listing for the Theory Evaluation Test in red.

The Theory Evaluation Test can only be taken once. Please note that if you are placed into Fundamentals of Music and your program requires class piano, you are highly advised to forego Class Piano until your second year.  

If you have taken the AP music theory exam, placement can be determined by the results of that exam; this information is included in the letter from the school.

About Your First Semester Courses

Studying organ performance at Catholic University will allow you to develop technically and artistically while also improving your ability to think critically, write and speak eloquently, and solve problems creatively.

Rigorous musical training is accomplished within a broader liberal arts curriculum. Courses in theology, philosophy, literature, and English composition round out your musical education. As you develop your ear, tune your voice, and polish your movement, you'll also study great works of literature, theology, and philosophy, allowing you to experience beauty in other forms, refine your critical faculties, and develop the cultural knowledge necessary for a practicing musician and a thoughtful human being.

Most of your music classes progress sequentially. It's important, therefore, to get and stay on track. Courses you take this semester will lay the foundation for much of the work you will do here. 

In addition to your LCs, you will take the following courses:

Music Theory: All music majors are placed into the appropriate level of harmony and ear training based on the online theory evaluation test. Any student who does not pass into Harmony I or Ear Training level 1 will not take any music theory in their first semester. Instead, they will take Fundamentals of Music (MUS 101) in the Spring of their first year and start on the Theory level 1 track in their sophomore year. 

Major Courses: Your study of organ performance begins two sets of private lessons: organ (MUPI 425) and voice (MUPI 3XX). Since the catalog and section number of private instruction depends on the instrument and instructor, you should contact your program head to be assigned an instructor. 

Performing Ensemble: All music students are part of a performing ensemble each semester they are a student. As an organist, you will take University Singers, MUS 470b, or Orchestra, MUS 480, as appropriate.

To learn more about the Organ Performance major, consult the School of Music, Drama, and Art's website.

Know which courses you want? Get registered.