CCOG for MUS 191P Winter 2025


Course Number:
MUS 191P
Course Title:
Class Piano I
Credit Hours:
2
Lecture Hours:
10
Lecture/Lab Hours:
20
Lab Hours:
0

Course Description

Introduces piano techniques through a variety of contemporary and historical musical styles. Covers the study of 5-line staff notation and rhythms in simple meters. Includes scales and piano fingerings, major and minor keys, melody and accompaniment, performance and sight-reading. No previous piano experience required. Recommended: concurrent enrollment in MUS 111, MUS 111C, and MUC 130A. Audit available.

Addendum to Course Description

This course is required for students who plan on majoring in music at a four-year institution and is strongly recommended for any student wishing to study music theory. The course is open to all students.

Intended Outcomes for the course

Upon successful completion of the course students should be able to:

  1. Demonstrate playing major and minor key melodies which use beat divisions and longer in simple meters with a simple accompaniment.

  2. Perform common chord progressions using the primary and secondary triads in all major keys.

  3. Demonstrate sight-reading and performing short melodic fragments that outline pentascales in major and minor keys using beat divisions and longer.

  4. Perform positions and inversions of major-key triads.

  5. Harmonize and play a short major-key melody using primary triads.

Course Activities and Design

Group and individual playing

Outcome Assessment Strategies

The primary assessment method will be through applied keyboard exams and exercises. Other assessment methods may be used, including:

Qualitative and/or quantitative examinations
Homework assignments
Listening assignments
Concert reports
Research project
Class participation

Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)

  • Piano keyboard, octave designations

  • Introduction to 5-line staff notation, treble & bass clefs, and the Grand Staff

  • Simple meter (4/4, 3/4, 2/4)

  • Practice techniques

  • Rhythmic durations and relationships

  • Major keys, major key signatures, major scales with piano fingerings (ascending and descending, one octave, separate hands)

  • Minor keys, scales, key signatures, minor Scales with piano fingerings (ascending and descending, one octave, separate hands)

  • Parallel and relative Keys

  • Diatonic intervals (m2-P8), half step (semitone), whole step

  • Diatonic triads in major keys- major, minor, diminished

    • Arpeggios, hand-over-hand, ascending and descending

    • Root position and inversions

    • Chord labels

  • Augmented triad

  • Scale degree names 

  • Triplets, swing rhythms