Why Study Music at American University?

A music degree that offers breadth, depth, and flexibility to build a fulfilling career in the arts, along with faculty who will guide you on your path as a 21st-century artist.

That’s why!

Explore Our Innovative Curriculum

Chamber Singers rehearsing in AU Museum gallery.

The Music Program gives students room to find their passions and carve their own paths as artists and scholars. Grounded in the history, theory, and performance traditions of Western art music, our students pursue excellence across all genres and musical forms.

A diverse array of top-flight ensembles, classes in world music, jazz, rock, and renowned performer-teachers will expand your horizons. From the introductory colloquium to your senior capstone, our Music Program lets you follow what inspires you.
BA Music BA Pop Performance/Enterprise

Please see also degree program Admission Auditions.


Bulletins

Get your tickets to our fall music performances! Tickets are free for AU students or $10-$15. 

AU Launches New BA in Popular Music Performance and Enterprise

New degree blends passion for performance with hands-on experience in music, audio technology, and business for success in today’s music industry. 
Full story


Person in hat leans over guitar to play

Prepare for Your Encore

Have your moment in the spotlight. With our focus on undergraduate education in performance fields, you don't need to wait until you're a graduate student to sing your first role, play a concerto with the orchestra, solo with the jazz band, feature with the wind ensemble, or record your own EP.

Professor Osman Kivrak

We're Committed to You:
Know Our Music Faculty

Our expert faculty will mentor you through your time at AU and beyond.

Music Faculty

AU Symphonic Band

DC As Your Lab

Our program partners with many of the most prestigious arts organizations of the nation's capital.

Learn Beyond the Classroom

Faculty Spotlight: Dr. Maya Cunningham

Maya Cunningham is an ethnomusicologist, an Africana Studies scholar, a jazz vocalist, and a cultural activist. Her research focus is on African American cultural identity and traditional African and African American musics.

She is an expert in African American music and expressive culture, African American history, African American jazz, South African jazz and early African American traditional musics. Cunningham works with indigenous African/African Diasporic theoretical frameworks, cultural theories in African American Studies and semiotics, coupled with ethnomusicological research and analysis to explore underrepresented aspects of cultural identity in Black musics.

Maya Cunningham has a PhD in Africana studies with a concentration in ethnomusicology from the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her PhD studies include graduate certificates in Ethnomusicology, African Diaspora Studies, Public History, and Ethnographic Research. She has earned three Masters of Arts degrees: an MA in Afro-American Studies from UMass Amherst, an MA in ethnomusicology from the University of Maryland, College Park, and an MA in jazz performance from the Aaron Copland School of Music at Queens College. She received a Bachelor of Music in jazz studies from Howard University. Cunningham received a 2022 Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship and a Fulbright research fellowship in 2017. Cunningham’s forthcoming monograph is titled Jazz Malungaje: Understanding the Cultural Identity Implications in African American Jazz from the South African Jazz Tradition. The project responds to African American Jazz as a historically contested terrain in the United States public narrative and in jazz historiography.

Cunningham’s cultural activism includes public impact work like designing ethnomusicology-driven curricula and programs based in Black music, and other world music traditions, to advance culturally centered music education for students from marginalized ethnic groups. She also curates exhibitions, public programs and broadcast media about Black music and culture.

Maya Cunningham.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes! It’s common for music majors to double major. Many students have double majored in Audio Technology, Political Science, Psychology, and other areas of study. 
 

Yes, all AU students are welcome to take music classes.

Yes, all AU students are welcome to audition for and participate in ensembles.
 

No. The Audio Technology Program is separate from the Music program. However, they are both housed within the Department of Performing Arts.

No. Musical Theatre is part of the Theatre/Musical Theatre Program. There is a separate SlideRoom application and audition for this program.  
 

You can store your instrument if you are enrolled in an ensemble in the Music Program.