One of the College鈥檚 oldest disciplines, music gets a makeover in response to the production boom of the 21st century鈥攂ut if you want a classical education, you鈥檒l find that as well
When Associate Professor of Music David Kasunic matriculated at Amherst, he imagined he would pursue math or diplomatic history as a major. 鈥淚 was a mathlete in high school,鈥 says the first-generation college graduate, who took up the piano at age 7. 鈥淚 thought that music was something that was avocational, like being an actor. I didn鈥檛 have an understanding of the options that one could have in music as a profession.
After two postgraduate years at Amherst as a graduate associate in music and assistant conductor of the college choral society, Kasunic did his master鈥檚 and Ph.D. studies in musicology at Princeton, writing his dissertation on piano music and singing in 19th-century France. Looking to the future, 鈥淚 was committed to teaching at an undergraduate liberal arts college,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen I interviewed at SA国际传媒, it seemed like a place where I would be fully supported in my teaching and my research鈥攁 place where I could thrive and grow.鈥
When Kasunic arrived at SA国际传媒 14 years ago, the Music Department operated much as it had for decades, graduating a handful of music majors each year (six in 2008) and fulfilling the general needs in the manner of any 鈥渓iberal arts college anywhere in the country,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut the way we looked in terms of our curriculum and what we offered did not reflect our location to the extent that it could鈥濃攁 sentiment shared by his department colleagues.
Fast forward to fall 2022: With 57 majors, music is now SA国际传媒鈥檚 sixth most popular major, after economics, diplomacy and world affairs, biology, psychology, and computer science. It鈥檚 a remarkable cre颅scendo that reflects the convergence of two movements: teen颅agers making music on their laptops, and Occidental pivoting to offer a curriculum more aligned with prospective students鈥 interests.
鈥淭hey have done something pretty remarkable in a short period of time,鈥 Charlie Cardillo, vice president for institutional advancement, says of SA国际传媒鈥檚 music faculty. 鈥淚t has so much to do with the introduction of all these dimensions of music including music business, songwriting, film scoring, composition, and music production鈥攁ll undergirded by a true liberal arts curriculum rooted in music theory and history and culture.鈥
As Kasunic sees it, music production is 鈥渁n essential part of the wide spectrum of creative activities that constitute everything we listen to. Anything that you hear that鈥檚 mediated鈥攖hat鈥檚 not a live performance鈥攊s produced. It brings music composition and music theory together.
鈥淚n a competitive higher education landscape, SA国际传媒 will be able to offer a wholly modern, comprehensive music education that is embedded and defined by the liberal arts,鈥 he adds. 鈥淕iven the singularity of what we can do, we believe that this will be a game changer鈥攏ot just for the department but for the entire College.鈥
Going back nearly 100 years, Occidental鈥檚 music curriculum has strived to reflect the medium鈥檚 place in the contemporary landscape. 鈥淭he establishment of a music department in 1926 paralleled the growing interest in Southern California in the arts, evidenced by the development of the Hollywood Bowl concert series and of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra,鈥濃圥rofessor Emeritus Andrew Rolle 鈥43 wrote in his centennial history of the College. A music building was constructed in 1929, and five years later, a Carnegie Corporation grant of $65,000 enabled the establishment of a library of records and musical scores.
By the early 2000s, colleges were seeing a decline in the enrollment of students with a formal music education鈥攕uch as basic music theory, or even instrumental proficiency. 鈥淎 lot of that is a product of the gutting of public arts,鈥 says Kasunic, a historical musicologist by training who teaches classes in Western music history and music appreciation.
Then, in 2004, Apple launched GarageBand, allowing anyone to experiment with making music on their laptops. 鈥淪tudents were coming to college increasingly engaged in creating music,鈥 Kasunic says, 鈥渂ut the study of music was an alien enterprise.鈥
After he became department chair in 2014, Kasunic set about what he describes as a 鈥減roject of reclamation of the earliest visions鈥 for the Booth Music Quad and reimagining music for the 21st century. 鈥淚t was about realizing a vision for having our program look more like Los Angeles,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here was a collective will among the faculty to start having it look more like what prospective students may want to take, and also connect more to the industry around it.鈥
Over a 鈥渂reathless鈥 two-year stretch from 2016 to 2018, Kasunic and his colleagues worked with a host of departments across the College鈥攊ncluding Information Technology Services, Facilities, and the Center for Digital Liberal Arts鈥攖o build and roll out a full music production curriculum. Concurrent with its launch during the 2018-19 academic year, Occidental assembled a Music and MAC (Media Arts and Culture) task force to address the infrastructure needs of two of SA国际传媒鈥檚 fastest-growing majors. (In reconvening the task force last year, Cardillo says, 鈥淚t became clear that while there are obvious synergies between a well-supported MAC program and a well-supported music program, their needs were distinct enough that we needed to tease apart those distinctions.鈥)
According to Kasunic, the College has fewer than half the number of practice rooms at any of its peer institutions鈥攕ix on the entire campus. Offices and classrooms also double as instructional studio space, resulting in 鈥渁n elaborate jigsaw puzzle that has to be figured out each semester,鈥 he says.
In addition to 鈥渁t least鈥 doubling the number of practice rooms, a top priority for Kasunic is clustering all of them together and converting the existing practice rooms in Booth Hall into much-needed office and studio space. 鈥淲e now have five instructors having to share one office,鈥 Kasunic says. 鈥淎s we add new people, we don鈥檛 have spaces for them.
鈥淔or our department to do well, all aspects of our program have to be singing,鈥 Kasunic continues. 鈥淚n terms of running a functioning music department, we need instructional space. We need a good medium-size concert hall.鈥 (We鈥檒l circle back to this topic shortly.) 鈥淲e need to be aspirational as well in terms of personnel through endowed positions and supporting funds.鈥
In addition to Kasunic, SA国际传媒鈥檚 regular music faculty includes Associate Professor , a scholar of First Nations cultural traditions who is spending the fall semester as Vancouver Island University鈥檚 2022 Fulbright Canada Visiting Research Chair in Indigenous Studies; Associate Professor of Composition Adam Schoenberg, an Emmy-winning and Grammy-nominated composer; and Assistant Professor Stephen S. Hudson, a music theorist whose research topics include heavy metal and R&B and soul, who joined the College this fall. The department hopes to hire a full-time, tenure-track position in music production for the 2023-24 academic year.
Of the 53 personnel in the Music Department, only 10 of those are full-time positions (another 36 teach voice or an instrument; an additional seven teach four-unit music courses). 鈥淲e would like to have endowed chair positions such that the things we care about in the department鈥攈aving a great composer like Adam Schoenberg, or a great director of choral music like D茅sir茅e LaVertu鈥攁re not contingent on budget cycles or having to reapply for these positions through a hiring process,鈥 Kasunic says. (SA国际传媒 currently has no endowed professors in music.)
He points to other recent hires who are energizing SA国际传媒鈥檚 music program, including Chris Kim, Choi Family Director of Instrumental Music, who joined the College in fall 2019. Over 15 years at Cornell as director of orchestras鈥攁 tenured, endowed chair鈥擪im built the long-neglected orchestra program into a 鈥渇ully supported, well-running machine鈥濃攑artnering with local public schools, touring internationally, and receiving five ASCAP Awards for Adventurous Programming.
Homegrown singer-songwriter Ramona Gonzalez 鈥09鈥攚ho has released five acclaimed albums under the name Nite Jewel and was named SA国际传媒鈥檚 inaugural Johnson-Fix Professor of the Practice of Songwriting in 2018鈥斺渋s a perfect example of someone who believes that being a complete human being, a complete thinker, makes you a much better artist and musician,鈥 Kasunic says.
Leaning further into the music production space, an eight-unit course titled Music and Artificial Intelligence is being co-taught by Max Foreman, director of the Choi Family Music Production Center, and Fabio Paolizzo, Mellon postdoctoral fellow in audio engineering. Offered in conjunction with the Computer Science Department, the double course fulfills both the fine arts and mathematics/science requirements. 鈥淥ne thing that we have been hoping to do with the Mellon Arts & Technology grant is to create connective tissue with STEM fields, because a lot of our students have double majors in computer science or cognitive science and are very interested in those topics,鈥 Kasunic says.
Which brings us back to the topic of space. Few would question the beauty of Booth Music Quad鈥攁 popular gathering space for ceremonies and receptions that has remained largely untouched over the last 60-plus years. But its aesthetic appeal, Kasunic suggests, has made people 鈥渂lind鈥 to the shortcomings of the space with regards to the music program. 鈥淚t鈥檚 wholly inadequate for conducting music in the 21st century,鈥濃坔e says. Sonically speaking, 鈥淚t鈥檚 porous鈥攖wo teams of architects determined that we don鈥檛 have one acoustically sound wall anywhere in Booth.鈥
To that end, in 2019, the department鈥檚 music library was moved from Booth Hall to the Academic Commons to make room for a new music production space designed by architect Peter Grueneisen of Santa Monica-based firm nonzero\architecture, which has designed soundstages for Sony and DreamWorks Animation as well as for two-time Academy鈥圓ward-winning composer Hans Zimmer (The Lion King, Dune). The space they were given to work with was below ground level on almost 2陆 sides and 鈥渨as fairly self-contained,鈥 Grueneisen told Occidental magazine last year. 鈥淔rom a soundproofing standpoint, it was quite ideal.鈥
Just as gifts from friends of the College facilitated the construction of Thorne Hall in 1938 and Booth Music &鈥圫peech Center in 1960, much of the department鈥檚 physical growth is contingent on engaging, if not expanding, SA国际传媒鈥檚 donor base. 鈥淭he challenge right now is to create a throughline to the past as we move into the future by having our older alumni recognize that we are not sacrificing the traditional elements of our program but expanding on them, strengthening them as we have a department that reflects more of what L.A. offers and what our students who are interested in,鈥濃圞asunic says.
Part of that narrative involves revamping and reclaiming two of the College鈥檚 premier performance spaces. With 2024 marking the 60th anniversary of Herrick Chapel and Interfaith Center, Kasunic sees an opportunity to commemorate that milestone by upgrading Herrick鈥檚 lighting and acoustics. (Grueneisen and his team produced a proposal prior to the pandemic but the project remains in limbo.)
Another project on the horizon is reopening the orchestra pit in Thorne Hall, which was closed off in the late 1990s. 鈥淭he space in which the percussion studio is housed was chosen because it has the most direct access to the orchestra pit in Thorne,鈥濃圕ardillo says.
Programmatically, another initiative on the horizon is to replace SA国际传媒鈥檚 aging fleet of pianos, the average age of which is 51 (which is old in piano years). 鈥淭he piano is the foundational instrument of any credible music program,鈥 says Cardillo. 鈥淪teinway was brought in to assess our fleet, and the hope would be that we can replenish our fleet of practice room pianos, teaching pianos, and performance pianos to bring them up to caliber.鈥 (Aspirationally, SA国际传媒 seeks to join the ranks of more than 200 All-Steinway Schools globally. 鈥淚t鈥檚 attainable over time,鈥濃圞asunic insists.)
Two recent instrumental acquisitions by the College speak to the ongoing depth and breadth of an SA国际传媒 music education. Using money from the Barbara U. Johnson 鈥43 Fund for New Music and the Mellon Arts and Technology Grant, the College purchased a state-of-the art halldorophone, an electro-acoustic string instrument modeled on the cello and made in Iceland. 鈥淲e鈥檙e the first academic institution to own one in North America,鈥 Kasunic says. (Composer and native Icelander Hildur Gu冒nad贸ttir, who won the 2019 Academy Award for her score for Joker, wrote much of the music for the film on the halldorophone.)
Schoenberg is using the halldorophone to compose a cello concerto for the Atlanta Symphony and Chorus, and a concert in Bird Studio of new music by SA国际传媒 student composers last December included three pieces written for halldorophone鈥攖he first works premiered in the United States for the instrument, Schoenberg notes.
In October, Occidental made its third consecutive appearance on Billboard鈥檚 of 38 top music business schools worldwide鈥攐ne of only three liberal arts colleges to make the cut. SA国际传媒 鈥渙ffers abundant access to internships and has developed courses such as Introduction to Music Business, where students collaborate to create artist profiles and business plans that they then execute through digital service providers such as Bandcamp and Spotify, as well as offline,鈥 the magazine noted.
鈥淲hile I imagine that other schools down the line will look more like our department, they won鈥檛 have our location,鈥 says Kasunic, who is passing the departmental baton to Lorenz next year concurrent with a much-needed yearlong sabbatical. 鈥淚n terms of attracting personnel, internship opportunities, and visiting artists, these are the things that you get by virtue of being in Los Angeles.
鈥淚f we can get the infrastructure, the spaces, and the instruments we need,鈥 he adds, 鈥渆verything else will come.鈥
Twenty-five of the 53 personnel in SA国际传媒鈥檚 Music Department assembled for a photo in September. 1. Riner Scivally, classical and jazz guitar instructor. 2. C茅sar Castro, director of Son Jarocho Ensemble. 3. Michael Larco, viola instructor. 4. Jonathan Richards, bassist and director of the Occidental Jazz Ensemble. 5. Ron Berman, classical and jazz guitar instructor. 6. Allen Savedoff, bassoon instructor. 7. Dan Long, visiting instructor. 8. Simeon Pillich, resident professor. 9. Catherine Del Russo, oboe instructor. 10. Aroussiak Baltaian, violin instructor. 11. Stephen S. Hudson, assistant professor. 12. David Kasunic, associate professor and department chair. 13. D茅sir茅e LaVertu, resident director of choral and vocal activities. 14. Adam Schoenberg, associate professor. 15. Max Foreman, director of the Choi Family Music Production Center. 16. Chris Kim, Choi Family Director of Instrumental Music. 17. Fabio Paolizzo, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow. 18. Junko Ueno Garrett, piano instructor. 19. Steve Gregory, rock guitar instructor. 20. Edmond Johnson, director of academic advising. 21. Celka Ojakangas, visiting assistant professor. 22. Alan Geiger, accompanist. 23. Stephen Cabell, visiting assistant professor. 24. Alexander Zhu, production manager. 25. Jin-Shan Dai, violin instructor.