Skip to main content

Musicology

Minor

Important information at a glance

Degree: Bachelor (Minor)Language of Instruction: GermanStart of studies: Winter and summer semesterAdmission: Unrestricted admissionStandard period of study: Depending on major

The field of musicology is traditionally divided into three areas: historical musicology, music ethnology, and systematic musicology. At the Frankfurt Institute, historical musicology is represented by two professorships, a co-opted professorship, and an academy professorship, all of which cover the full breadth of music history in their teaching. Current focal points include research on interpretation, modern editorial philology, 20th-century music, the history of opera in the 18th and 19th centuries, and cultural studies questions. Music ethnology, represented by one professorship, focuses on teaching both traditional and popular music from around the world. Additionally, courses on popular music and on music, media, and digitality are offered from both music history and music ethnology perspectives. Through a cooperation with the University of Music and Performing Arts (HfMDK), there are regular opportunities to integrate musical practice into musicology teaching.

The Frankfurt Institute of Musicology, which currently has about 600 enrolled students, is part of the Faculty of Language and Culture Studies (FB 09) at Goethe University. It provides students with a stimulating environment in many ways: The diverse expertise of the faculty enables a wide range of thematic offerings in teaching, with a focus on music history and music ethnology. In addition to emphasizing European music from the 17th to the 21st centuries and global musical cultures, popular music is also addressed. Concepts such as cultural transfer shape the discourse alongside traditional, analysis-based methods of music research. Through a partnership with the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics (MPIEÄ), courses in systematic musicology, music aesthetics, and music psychology are also regularly offered. Students gain core knowledge specific to historical musicology and music ethnology, explore contemporary issues in music cultures in all their diversity, and develop methodological skills related to interpretation and performance, music and media, as well as music and digitality.

Structure and content

Musicology can be studied as a major or a minor.

Course of study

1st–2nd Semester

Two required modules on methodology and musical propaedeutics, as well as analysis  

3rd–6th Semester

Two out of four elective modules for thematic specialization:  

  • Historiography/Music History  
  • Music Cultures: Local/Global  
  • Interpretation/Performance  
  • Media Contexts  

1st–6th Semester

Optional Area

Study regulations

The study regulations govern the structure, organization, and content of the degree program as well as the examination system. They form the basis for your studies at Goethe University.