Master in Music and Musicology – Music Technology and Media | Antonine University

Faculty of Music and Musicology
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Master in Music and Musicology – Music Technology and Media

Explanations in Arabic, documentation in French, English, and Arabic

  • 36Credits
  • 2Duration of the program
  • $175Price
Official Name of the Program Master in Music and Musicology – Music Technology and Media
Official Degree Level Master
Price/Credit Collective course: $175 – Individual course: $220
Campuses Availability Hadat–Baabda

Program Objectives

This program responds to the growing need of Lebanese society, which is inherent in music-related professions.

It is, above all, about the Lebanese school education sector, which needs to recruit large number of music educators. This need arises from the implementation of a law-making music education mandatory at all school levels, as well as from the establishment within the CRDP of a comprehensive music education program for all pre-university education cycles. Teaching music at the secondary level in particular requires educators who have received university-level training in music education sciences at the master’s level.

It is also about music therapy, the adjunct care sector in neurology and psychiatry, using musical listening, and music practice. The profession of music therapist (as an allied healthcare worker collaborating with teams of neurological and psychiatric specialists) is in a promising emerging phase in Lebanon.

Furthermore, it addresses professionals in musical sound and music production, expert researchers in the integration and processing of music in media (including the press), through the use of digital technology and artificial intelligence, as well as qualified researchers in musicology and experts in the musical traditions of Western Asia and the Mediterranean. It also targets high-level professional musicians (specializing in Eastern musical traditions and baroque music) who possess an academic background in musicological research.

Graduates of this program are expected to become musical experts, and researchers in musicology – above all, music educators, music therapist (as allied healthcare workers collaborating with neurological and psychiatric specialist teams), professionals in musical sound and digital music technology, or cultivated, high-level professional musicians, notably in Western Asian and ancient European and Mediterranean musical traditions. They are expected to pursue these careers in higher education institutions, in public or private schools, as well as in technical schools and music schools, in healthcare centers (music therapy), in cultural and/or media production companies, or in professional music performance and training settings.

This master’s program, offered with six concentrations, enables students to develop and deepen their musical and general musicological skills, as well as those specific to each of the six concentrations, while introducing a strong component of scientific research training. As a fully professionalizing high-level degree, the successful completion of this master’s program (with a GPA above 3.3/4) also paves the way for doctoral enrollment. The Faculty of Music and Musicology offers its top graduates the opportunity to benefit from co-supervision agreements with Sorbonne University and the Institut de Recherche en Musicologie, while remaining affiliated with the Faculty’s Research Center on Musical Traditions.

These music-related professions require the articulation of several types of complementary skills. Some of these skills are general:
1. essential practical and theoretical musical competencies, in Levantine and European music;
2. scientific research skills, inherent in musicology and related disciplines of targeted concentration.
Others are specific :
3. pedagogical competencies (M_MM_SEM) ;
4. health care competencies (M_MM_MTP).
5. technological competencies (M_MM_MTM) ;
6. advanced oriental music competencies (M_MM_MSA) ;
7. advanced western music competencies (M_MM_MSE).
It is also about soft-skills :
8. verbal and musical, written and oral communication ;
9. critical thinking ;
10. scientific rigor ;
11. ethical correctness ;
12. friendliness in diversity.

Graduates of this program, while becoming school music educators, music therapists (allied healthcare professionals working in collaboration with neurological and psychiatric specialist teams), professional musicians, experts in digital music sound technology, or high-level music critics in the press and media, may also pursue doctoral studies to become university teacher-researchers.

Eligibility

The Master’s program in Music and Musicology (M-MM) is primarily intended for holders of a Bachelor’s degree in Music and Musicology in the same concentration (awarded by the FMM-UA or any other accredited higher education institution). When the bachelor’s degree was completed in a concentration different from the one targeted for the master’s, the candidate must complete required remedial courses, at the undergraduate level, in the chosen concentration during the first year of the master’s program. If the candidate has previously validated courses listed among these remedial requirements, they are, of course, exempt from taking them again.

Conditions of admission in Master
For all plans:
1. hold a Lebanese Baccalaureate, or its equivalent;
2. hold a BA in music and musicology, which the transcript is examined by the FMM Transfers and Equivalences Commission, with an average of more than 15/20 (in European system) or a GPA higher than 2.6 (in the American system);
3. pass on an orientation interview with the Dean.

Teaching Methods

Educational practices are classified into
1. Lectures in musicology, music education sciences, and music therapy, which follow the traditional lecture format while integrating complementary and diverse learning strategies, notably technopedagogy, group work, case studies, and the preparation of documentary syntheses and presentations by students;
2. Research seminars;
3. Courses in musical training (Levantine and Western) and harmony, which combine ear training through musical listening, memorization, group singing, collective and individual sight-reading, and musical dictation, while also using technopedagogy and group activities;
4. Supervised music therapy practice internships.

Evaluation Process

Assessment components
The system for assessing students’ achievement of course learning outcomes is based on the evaluation components as follows, depending on the types of courses taught:

1. Theoretical courses A of mainly lecture-based teaching leading to a cumulative assessment of four evaluative components, as follows:

  • Component 1, with 20%: continuous evaluation (classroom activities, tests, assignments, oral presentations, etc.);
  • Component 2, with 20%: Test 1 (Written test of 30 minutes);
  • Component 3, with 20%: Test 2 (Written test of 30 minutes);
  • Component 4, with 40%: Final exam (anonymous test taken at the end of the semester);

2. Theoretical courses B of mainly lecture-based teaching leading to a cumulative assessment of four evaluative components, as follows:

  • Component 1, with 20%: continuous evaluation (classroom activities, tests, assignments, oral presentations, etc.);
  • Component 2, with 20%: Test 1 (Written test of 30 minutes);
  • Component 3, with 20%: Test 2 (Project presentation);
  • Component 4, with 40%: Final exam (anonymous test taken at the end of the semester);

3. Courses of western musical training, Mashriq musical training, and harmony, leading to a cumulative evaluation consisting of six evaluative components, as follows:

  • Component 1, with 10%;
  • Component 2, with 10%;
  • Component 3, summary, with 30%;
  • Component 4, with 10%;
  • Component 5 with 10%;
  • Component 6, summary, with 30%.

4. The internships are evaluated by the supervising teacher as follows:

  • Component 1, evaluation of internship participation, with 30%;
  • Component 2, evaluation of placement learning outcomes, with 30%;
  • Component 3, evaluation of the placement report with 40%.

5. Individual musical practice courses shall be evaluated by the teacher and a Board of Examiners as follows :

  • Component 1, continuous assessment, with 60%;
  • Component 2, assessment by the Board of Examiners, with 40%.

The passing grade for all courses in the graduate is set at 70/100.

Grading
The scoring of results and the conditions for graduation differs between

  • The students under the academic regime without GPA (cohorts enrolled for the first time in a Bachelor’s or Master’s program before September 2019 and not concerned by the calculation of the GPA) and
  • The students covered by the academic regime with GPA (cohorts enrolled for the first time in a Bachelor’s or Master’s program from September 2019 and concerned by the calculation of the GPA).

The main difference involves the taking into consideration of the calculation of the Grade Point Average or GPA for the graduation of students under the academic regime with GPA; the GPA does not consider the graduation of students under the academic regime without GPA.
For the grades and the calculation of the GPA, see section 7.a (graduate).

Program Learning Outcomes (PLOs)

Common to the Master Program

At the end of the program of M_MM, the student will be able to

  • analyze the structural grammar of a musical work used in scientific research, clearly describing its semiotic framework and the principles underlying its cognitive neuropsychological processing;
  • design a musicological research project within a subdiscipline well mastered by the student, on a research topic within their reach, by appropriately formulating objectives, research questions, and hypotheses, in line with the epistemological standards of the chosen field;
  • carry out musicological research on a subject familiar to the student, employing appropriate methodological tools, and adhering strictly to the epistemological standards of the selected subdiscipline as well as to the ethical principles of scientific research;
  • adhere to the ethical standards governing research and musicological disciplines;
  • communicate research findings effectively, both orally and in writing (in French, English, or Arabic), by constructing a clear, credible, and well-argued discourse that meets recognized methodological standards;
  • produce a well-structured and thoroughly written research thesis (minimum 15,000 words) within the musicological subdiscipline of the chosen concentration, demonstrating originality and scholarly relevance;
  • defend this research before an academic jury, presenting a coherent and well-argued synthesis of the work, clearly outlining the scientific approach, highlighting key findings, and responding convincingly to questions from jury members.

Specific to the Program

At the end of the Master in music and musicology, MTM option, the student is capable

  • to develop a scientific research project in technology (sound or computer) applied to music, culturally contextualized concerning Lebanon and the Levant. This his research being original, relevant, ethically compliant with scientific research standards, and well written;
  • to implement the results of advanced research in digital music and sound technology in professional music production settings.
Job Prospects

Graduates of this program shall become researchers in musicology.

Program Structure

General Common Requirements


Code Course Credits
MRCH 701-AC00 Musicological Research Methodology
Musicological Research Methodology
MRCH 701-AC00
3

This course briefly explains the progress of research in the field of musicology, including music education and music therapy. It is based on teaching the student researcher the steps of designing a coherent and rich research work. In principle, the design will be divided into six stages: (1) Analyze the topic staring by defining its main objective, and stating the problematic and the associated hypotheses; (2) Explain in depth the method of collecting and reviewing the appropriate sources and data: selection, reading, and summarization; (3) Build the text in its three stages: introduction, expansion, and conclusion; (4) Edit the research work: sections, references and writing using Word; (5) Develop the strategy of e-search: navigation and techniques of finding the proper information; (6) Basic typing skills: Text processing.

(3 Cr.)
MUMS 154-AC00 Introduction to cognitive neuropsychology of music
Introduction to cognitive neuropsychology of music
MUMS 154-AC00
3

This course offers an introduction to the cognitive and neural mechanisms involved in musical production and reception, integrating contributions from cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience. It explores the brain’s processing of musical information, from composition and interpretation processes to auditory perception, drawing on experimental research, the analysis of brain lesion effects, and advances in neuroimaging and neurochemistry. The course examines the mechanisms of musical perception, learning, and memory, in connection with neuroplasticity, and focuses on the emotional dimensions of musical processing, particularly in relation to brain reward circuit and stress regulation. It also traces the evolution of research on musical perception through the study of polyphonic tonal music and modal monodic traditions.

(3 Cr.)
MUMS 158-AC00 Analysis of traditional Mashriq musical utterances
Analysis of traditional Mashriq musical utterances
MUMS 158-AC00
3

This course proposes a musical analysis of modal semiotic essence carried out on examples borrowed from the monodic musical traditions of Mašriq, eastern and Mediterranean part of the Arab world. As for modal semiotics, it consists of a study of musical sound signs and their significant references, which has as its field the musical statements governed by modes, ways of being of a musical text on the melodic level. This approach poses the system consisting of all the modes of this territory as a melodic tongue that traditional usage declines in the form of temporally articulated musical texts and whose rhythmic stylistic schemes or traditional norms configure the metric and rhythmic component, regulate the syntax and structure the general form. This method is based on a modelling taking the form of a transformational rewriting that is divided into four components: (1) musical phonological, (2) musical morphological, (3) modal syntactic and (4) introverted vs extroversive semiosis. The first part of this analysis course is devoted to the acquisition of the basic tools for this type of analysis, The second part is devoted to the implementation of this approach and related tools and the development of recorded traditional music sequence analyses.

(3 Cr.)
MUMS 155-AC00 Experimentation involving music: between ethics, statistics, and artificial intelligence
Experimentation involving music: between ethics, statistics, and artificial intelligence
MUMS 155-AC00
3

This course aims to introduce students to scientific experimentation methods applied to music. They will learn to design reliable experimental protocols, use appropriate statistical tools, and leverage artificial intelligence resources for the analysis and categorization of musical data. Particular attention will be given to ethical issues, methodological biases, and scientific responsibility in the collection, processing, and publication of results. By the end of the course, students will be able to conduct rigorous experimental studies, critically interpret results, and situate their work within a broader reflection on the human and technological challenges of contemporary musical research.

(3 Cr.)
SRCH 103-AR00 Research Seminar – Master in Music and Musicology
Research Seminar – Master in Music and Musicology
SRCH 103-AR00
3

This research seminar provides support to the apprentice researchers enrolled in the first year of the master in music and musicology, all concentrations combined. It focuses on interdisciplinary research (in neuromusicology, music therapy, musical education, general musicology of monodic modal traditions, computer music, musical sound technologies, musical performance) culturally contextualized, therefore having as an object of musical study the modal monodic music notably from Western Asia. One part of the seminar is devoted to the epistemological and methodological discussion of questions relating to research undertaken by students, the other being dedicated to the presentation of state-of-the-art reports, reviews of articles and sessions and work in progress.

(3 Cr.)
MUMS 155-AC00 Introduction to Music Computing in the Light of Artificial Intelligence
Introduction to Music Computing in the Light of Artificial Intelligence
MUMS 155-AC00
3

This course presents music computing in its applications useful for musicological research, musical learning and music production. In fact, it is a discipline that involves aspects of sound synthesis, assistance with musical composition, even musical composition without human assistance. This discipline has greatly developed with the recent rise of artificial intelligence, at the same time as it has become more accessible to the public. This course aims to provide apprentice researchers in musicology with some tools allowing them to develop their skills in this future field.

(3 Cr.)
Specific courses


Code Course Credits
TMIX 304-AC00 Project on Artificial Intelligence Implementation and Musical Sound Engineering
Project on Artificial Intelligence Implementation and Musical Sound Engineering
TMIX 304-AC00
3

This course explores the possibilities offered by artificial intelligence in the field of music production and sound engineering. Through concrete examples, specialized platforms, and audio assistance tools, students will experiment with the capabilities of AI while maintaining a critical perspective on its use. Emphasis will be placed on the human role in the creative process, viewing AI as a source of inspiration, partial automation, and decision support. The course concludes with the creation of a personal project that combines AI technologies with traditional expertise.

(3 Cr.)
TMIX 305-AC00 Musical Sound Technology Project 1
Musical Sound Technology Project 1
TMIX 305-AC00
3

This course provides in-depth guidance for personal projects related to music sound technology, in preparation for a master’s thesis. It aims to support students in conceptualizing, planning, and executing a research-creation project or an artistic, pedagogical, or technical experimentation. The course is designed to be flexible and adaptive: the topics explored will partly emerge from the students' chosen subjects, while also addressing current issues such as the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in traditional music, challenges in processing sung Arabic text, or musical composition tailored to educational contexts.

(3 Cr.)
TMIX 306-AC00 Musical Sound Technology Project 2
Musical Sound Technology Project 2
TMIX 306-AC00
3

This second part of the course “Personal Project in Music Sound Technology” guides students through the final development of their research or creative project. It offers personalized support, in-depth practical application, and professional shaping of the projects initiated in the first semester. Students consolidate their artistic, pedagogical, or technological approaches through technical workshops, critical feedback, testing phases, and experimentation. In parallel, they explore modern presentation tools, including the creative and critical use of artificial intelligence to generate voice-overs, images, videos, or communication materials. The goal is to document and showcase their work in a clear, accessible, and engaging format, tailored to the nature of the project. The pedagogical approach remains flexible and adapted to each project: traditional Arabic music, educational initiatives, sound design, sonic storytelling, algorithmic music, or AI-assisted composition.

(3 Cr.)
MEMO 506-AM00 Research and Creative Thesis in Music, Technology, and Media
Research and Creative Thesis in Music, Technology, and Media
MEMO 506-AM00
6

The research-creation thesis in music, technology, and media is developed by the second-year master's student in Music and Musicology, specializing in Music, Technology, and Media, under the supervision of a qualified faculty researcher. It aims to guide the student in conceptualizing, planning, and executing a research project focused on musical sound technology or a research-creation/technical experimentation project with cultural contextualization. The language of writing is French, English, or Arabic, depending on the student's linguistic skills. This written work must adhere to the style sheet adopted by the FMM, implement APA (7th edition) bibliographic standards, and consist of at least fourteen thousand words.

(6 Cr.)
SRCH 105-AR00 Research and Creative Seminar in Music, Technology, and Media
Research and Creative Seminar in Music, Technology, and Media
SRCH 105-AR00
3

This seminar provides support for apprentice researchers enrolled in the second year of the Master's program in Music and Musicology, specializing in Music, Technology, and Media. It focuses on research centered on musical sound technology and practice-based research related to technical experimentation within a cultural context. Part of the seminar is dedicated to epistemological and methodological discussions on the students' ongoing research, while the other part is devoted to presenting state-of-the-art developments, article reviews, and work-in-progress sessions.

(3 Cr.)