The Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) requires 90 credits, 60 credits beyond the Master's degree in music.  The doctor of musical arts concentrations are composition, conducting, and performance. While these concentrations share some of the required coursework, each is also distinct in course requirements. Professional musicians earn the DMA to enhance and extend their knowledge and practice within their area of specialization. The DMA student focuses on the profession of music performance, as well as the theory and practice of the discipline.

Admissions

Applicants to all graduate programs at George Mason University must meet the admission standards and application requirements for graduate study as specified on the Graduate Admissions policy page. Specific graduate admissions requirements can be found on the College of Visual and Performing Arts Graduate Admissions requirements page.

Policies

For policies governing all graduate degrees, see AP .6 Graduate Policies. See College of Visual and Performing Arts for policies specific to the college.

Transfer of prior earned credits

Students must have a master's degree to be eligible for admission to doctoral programs in the College of Visual and Performing Arts. 

Students are permitted to transfer credits from a master’s degree into a doctoral program per the stipulations outlined under policy AP.6.5 Credit by Exam or Transfer.

Banner Code: AR-DMA-MUAR

Degree Requirements

Total credits: 90

The following degree plan is based on a student who receives approval for a transfer of 30 credits. Students who do not receive approval for the 30 credits of transfer coursework should choose additional credits in consultation with their advisor.

Placement Examinations

Prior to the beginning of the first semester of doctoral studies, the student must complete placement examinations in music theory, music history, and musicianship (including aural skills and keyboard skills). Positive scores on the placement exams may reduce or eliminate prerequisites for courses in music history and music theory. Recitals can be scheduled only after completion of any necessary prerequisites in music theory, music history, and musicianship.

Doctoral Coursework

The doctoral student must maintain a minimum of 3.00 GPA in courses presented on the degree plan, which may include no more than 6 credits with a grade of C. The GPA calculation excludes all transfer courses and Mason extended studies or non-degree credits not formally approved for the degree.

Students must complete the following required courses as well as those in their chosen concentration:

Select 3 credits of Music Theory coursework from the following:3
Graduate Jazz Improvisation
Topics in Music Theory
Analytical Techniques
Graduate Orchestration
Advanced Jazz Improvisation
Graduate Jazz Arranging
Topics in Jazz Studies
Advanced Topics in Music Theory
Doctoral Seminar in Analysis
MUSI 830Doctoral Seminar in Music History3
Two credits of2
Doctoral Recital
Total Credits8
1

Must be taken within the student's first 2 semesters.

Concentration in Composition (CPO)

Select 3 credits of Music Composition coursework3
Graduate Orchestration
Graduate Jazz Arranging
Topics in Jazz Studies
Graduate Topics in Music Composition
MUSI 751Interactive Music Composition3
Select 3 credits of Musicology/Music Theory Electives3
Graduate Jazz Improvisation
Topics in Music Theory
Analytical Techniques
Graduate Orchestration
Advanced Jazz Improvisation
Graduate Jazz Arranging
Topics in Music History and Literature
Topics in World Musics
Topics in Jazz Studies
Advanced Topics in Music Theory
Advanced Topics in Music History
Graduate Topics in Music Composition
Doctoral Seminar in Analysis
Doctoral Seminar in Music History
MUSI 614Music Theory Pedagogy3
Select 3 credits of approved graduate electives3
MUSI 810Doctoral Seminar in Analysis3
Fifteen credits of15
Doctoral Applied Music in Composition
Select 3 credits of Musicology coursework from the following:3
Topics in Music History and Literature
Topics in World Musics
Advanced Topics in Music History
Doctoral Seminar in Music History
MUSI 780Doctoral Research Methods in Music3
Total Credits39

Concentration in Conducting (CDC)

Select 5 credits of approved graduate electives 15
Select 3 credits of Musicology coursework from the following:3
Topics in Music History and Literature
Topics in World Musics
Advanced Topics in Music History
Doctoral Seminar in Music History
MUSI 770Advanced Topics in Pedagogy3
MUSI 780Doctoral Research Methods in Music3
MUSI 810Doctoral Seminar in Analysis3
Fifteen credits of15
Doctoral Applied Music in Conducting
Four credits of4
Doctoral Major Ensemble
Select 3 credits of Musicology/Music Theory Electives from the following3
Graduate Jazz Improvisation
Topics in Music Theory
Analytical Techniques
Graduate Orchestration
Advanced Jazz Improvisation
Graduate Jazz Arranging
Topics in Music History and Literature
Topics in World Musics
Topics in Jazz Studies
Advanced Topics in Music Theory
Advanced Topics in Music History
Doctoral Seminar in Analysis
Doctoral Seminar in Music History
Total Credits39
1

Approved electives could be from music history, music literature, world music, music theory, conducting, music education, secondary Applied Music, ensemble (including chamber music), or relevant nonmusic courses.

Concentration in Performance (PFM)

Select 15 credits of Graduate Applied Music from the following:15
Doctoral Applied Music in Keyboard
Doctoral Applied Music in Voice
Doctoral Applied Music in Woodwind
Doctoral Applied Music in Brass
Doctoral Applied Music in String
Doctoral Applied Music in Percussion
Select 3 credits of approved graduate electives 13
Select 3 credits of Musicology coursework from the following:3
Topics in Music History and Literature
Topics in World Musics
Advanced Topics in Music History
Doctoral Seminar in Music History
Select 2 credits from the following:2
Graduate Chamber Ensemble
Advanced Topics in Applied Music
MUSI 770Advanced Topics in Pedagogy3
MUSI 780Doctoral Research Methods in Music3
MUSI 810Doctoral Seminar in Analysis3
Select 4 credits from the following:4
Doctoral Major Ensemble
and Advanced Topics in Applied Music
Doctoral Major Ensemble
Advanced Topics in Applied Music
Select 3 credits of Musicology/Music Theory Electives from the following3
Graduate Jazz Improvisation
Topics in Music Theory
Analytical Techniques
Graduate Orchestration
Advanced Jazz Improvisation
Graduate Jazz Arranging
Topics in Music History and Literature
Topics in World Musics
Topics in Jazz Studies
Advanced Topics in Music Theory
Advanced Topics in Music History
Doctoral Seminar in Analysis
Doctoral Seminar in Music History
Total Credits39
1

Approved electives could be from music history, music literature, world music, music theory, conducting, music education, secondary Applied Music, ensemble (including chamber music), or relevant nonmusic courses.

Graduate Committee

The Graduate Committee will evaluate the progress of the student annually. Continuation in the program is subject to the endorsement of this group.

Comprehensive Exams

After the completion of required courses (excluding dissertation credits) or during the semester when completion of those courses is anticipated, the student will take comprehensive examinations. The written exams will be followed by a one-hour oral exam to clarify issues included in the written exams.

Doctoral Research

Select 13 credits from the following:13
Dissertation Proposal (a minimum of 3 credits)
Dissertation (a minimum of 7 credits)
Total Credits13

Advancement to Candidacy

Before doctoral students may be advanced to candidacy by the dean of the College of Visual and Performing Arts, they must complete all coursework required by the program faculty, be certified in all relevant doctoral research skills, pass the comprehensive exams, and be recommended by the Graduate Committee, the director of graduate studies, and the director of the School of Music. Students advanced to candidacy after the add period for a given semester must wait until the following semester to register for MUSI 999 Dissertation.

Dissertation

The dissertation is the capstone experience of doctoral study. Students in the DMA Performance Concentration have two options or tracks for the dissertation:

  1. a traditional written, monograph-style dissertation, encompassing a substantial work of research on a topic related to music performance,
  2. a performance dissertation, encompassing a research document of more limited scope, together with one additional performance recital.

DMA Performance students thus perform a total of either three or four recitals over the course of doctoral study, depending on their track: two recitals completed during coursework under the course number MUSI 890, one lecture recital completed as part of the requirement for MUSI 999 (see below for description), and a fourth recital during 999 for those students admitted to the performance dissertation track. More information on the two tracks can be found in the School of Music Graduate Student Handbook.

At the time of matriculation in the doctoral program, students are advised into either the written dissertation track or the performance dissertation track, and their coursework, recital schedule, and trajectory are planned accordingly by their applied instructor and academic advisor.

The dissertation will be guided by the Dissertation Committee consisting of at least three members of the music faculty. Typically, either the student's Applied Area Director or another member of the music faculty will chair the committee.  The Director of Graduate Studies of the School of Music may be part of the committee; if not, they will serve ex officio.

Dissertation Proposal and Proposal Defense

A doctoral student preparing for dissertation will enroll in MUSI 998: Dissertation Proposal, which culminates in a dissertation proposal defense.

  • For the written dissertation track, students will submit to the dissertation committee a dissertation proposal, which will provide a central research question or questions, include a substantial literature review, identify proposed research methods, and discuss possible implications of research project for the field of music study and performance.
  • For the performance dissertation track (within the performance concentration), students will submit to the dissertation committee a performance dissertation prospectus, which will provide a proposal for the research document, detail the topic, resources, and repertoire for the lecture recital, and list the proposed repertoire for the additional performance recital

Dissertation Lecture/Lecture Recital

Students in the DMA program with concentrations in Performance and Conducting are required to complete a lecture recital (min. 60 minutes) related to the dissertation topic during MUSI 999.

Students in the DMA program in Composition are required to complete a culminating, large-scale composition (performance encouraged but not required). They must also complete a lecture (min. 30 minutes) related to the dissertation topic. N.B. The dissertation is an independent research document and may or may not be directly related to the composition.

Final Defense and Graduation

When all degree requirements have been satisfied, including completion of the doctoral dissertation, the doctoral candidate may request a doctoral defense. Approval for the defense must be obtained from the Dissertation Committee, the director of graduate studies and the director of the School of Music, and the dean of the College of Visual and Performing Arts. Notice of a defense must be circulated to the university community two weeks before the defense date.

All relevant rules regarding schedule, fees, and other matters as described in the catalog must be followed. All copies of the dissertation materials and fees must be paid before the doctoral degree is awarded.