Studying Music Abroad
By Allison Engel & Daniel Anderson
https://youtu.be/F8hhsAmkDgU
For many students, studying abroad is one of the must-have experiences of college. In a speech to incoming freshmen last August, USC President C. L. Max Nikias encouraged students to do just that.
“When you take in the world from an unfamiliar angle, you gain a new vantage point,” Nikias said. “Take advantage of the USC opportunity to study abroad.”
In the spirit of global exchange, several new initiatives are currently in development at the USC Thornton School of Music to make studying abroad easier than ever for young musicians.
A New Perspective
Music students have traditionally had fewer opportunities for international study than other disciplines, often because of strong ties to individual teachers who provide one-on-one training. Thornton aims to be one of the first schools in the U.S. to overcome this challenge.
“Over the past several years it has become increasingly clear that our undergraduates – and their parents – are interested in an international experience as part of their education at USC,” said Robert Cutietta, dean of USC Thornton.
Last week, Dean Cutietta traveled to Gothenburg, Sweden, to attend the annual meeting of the Association of European Conservatories (AEC). USC Thornton, which recently became an associate member, is one of only a handful of American universities and conservatories to hold membership in the association.
“We are thrilled to be securing partnerships across Europe, and I was very pleased to learn that so many of our international colleagues view Thornton as one of the most innovative schools in the U.S.,” said Cutietta.
To celebrate its new role, Thornton produced a short video for the international community showcasing many of the qualities that make the school unique, including its location in the creative capital of Los Angeles.
New Partnerships
Joining the AEC is only one of several initiatives currently underway. In January, USC Thornton will welcome Veera Vallinkoski, a music production student from the Sibelius Academy in Finland, who will study at Thornton for one semester while Curtis Green, a junior in Composition at Thornton, will study in Helsinski as part of a new partnership between the institutions.
A collaboration with the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester, England, is also in the final stages and others are soon to follow. And this May, 20 students from USC Thornton and the USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance will travel to Paris, France, after final exams for an immersive, three-week course called Maymester.
To manage these new initiatives, Thornton has engaged Mist Thorkelsdottir as senior advisor for international relations. Previously a senior administrator at conservatories in Sweden and Iceland, Thorkelsdottir has been busy setting up partnerships with European institutions for several months now.
“We are looking at having alliances with as many as 10 institutions in Europe, with 10 to 20 students every year incoming and outgoing,” she said. Thorkelsdottir is currently in talks with schools in Germany, Austria, Norway and the Netherlands, with other possibilities in Finland, England, France and Italy on the horizon.
Thinking Globally
In addition to these exciting new initiatives in Europe, USC Thornton is considering new study opportunities around the globe. The school was one of only two American institutions invited to form the Pacific Alliance of Music Schools in 2014, forging new links with schools in Australia, China, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore and Taiwan.
This January, faculty member Jonathan Patterson will attend the Global Music Camp in Natal, Brazil, along with a select group of USC Thornton students. Last summer, Vice Dean Lucinda Carver accompanied a student string quartet to a festival in the French countryside. And each July, Richard Smith of the Studio/Jazz Guitar program brings a group of Thornton students to the Institute of Contemporary Music Performance in London for a 10-day cultural exchange.
Thornton is also an enthusiastic participant in USC’s International Artist Fellowship program. This year, two of the seven fellows are pursuing advanced studies at the school: Classical guitarist Bokyung Byun of South Korea and Canadian Wesley Chu in piano performance.
“Our goal is that every USC Thornton student will have the opportunity to seek a meaningful international experience during their four years here,” Thorkelsdottir said.
Dean Cutietta agreed. “I’m amazed at how much we have been able to put into place since announcing this initiative six months ago,” he said. “It seems that everyone is ready for this to happen. We are just getting started, and the possibilities are limitless.”