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Jack Boss
(541) 346-5654
jfboss@uoregon.edu
Jack Boss is associate professor of music theory and composition
at the University of Oregon. He received B.Mus. and M.Mus. degrees
in composition from Ohio State University in 1979 and 1981, and
the Ph.D. in music theory from Yale University in 1991. At Yale,
his teachers included Allen Forte, David Lewin, and Claude Palisca.
His doctoral dissertation, advised by Allen Forte, was titled "An
Analogue to Developing Variation in a Late Atonal Song of Arnold
Schoenberg." It shows that motives in Schoenberg's song "Seraphita," Op.
22, No. 1, are controlled by processes strikingly similar to Schoenberg's
notions of "developing variation" and "musical
idea."
Boss's articles may be found in the Journal
of Music Theory, Music Theory Spectrum, Perspectives of New
Music, Music Theory Online, and Intégral. He is presently working on
a survey of Schoenberg’s twelve-tone music for the Yale
University Press Composers of the Twentieth Century series. Like
his dissertation, most of his publications deal with motivic structure
and large-scale coherence in Schoenberg's music. Other articles
consider motivic processes in Beethoven's piano sonatas and parallels
between text and musical structure in the music of Bernard Rands.
Boss has also given a large number of scholarly presentations
throughout the U.S., England and Ireland on different aspects
of Schoenberg's music and theory.
Boss has written a number of
solo piano and chamber compositions, which have been performed
at composers guild concerts (such as the Cincinnati Composers
Guild) as well as colleges and universities around the US.
Before
coming to the University of Oregon, Boss taught at Brigham Young
University for three years (1992-95), Ball State University for
one year (1991-92), and Yale University for one year (1990-91).
He served as undergraduate theory coordinator at BYU and also
coordinated the freshman theory and aural skills program at Yale.
His courses at the University of Oregon include undergraduate
form and analysis, Schenkerian analysis, post-tonal analysis,
the history of music theory in the 19th and 20th centuries, graduate
20th-century music history, graduate seminars on topics including
Schoenberg's vocal music and neo-Riemannian analysis, and an undergraduate
composition course that integrates the theory of late 19th and
early 20th-century music with composition.
Boss is involved in
professional service at the national and regional levels. He was
reviews editor for Music Theory Online, the Society for Music
Theory's electronic journal, from 2001-2006 and served as a member
of the SMT's Professional Development Committee from 1995-2000.
He was reviews editor, associate editor, and editor-in-chief of
the Journal of Music Theory from 1989 to 1991, and has served
on the editorial board for the Journal of
Music Theory Pedagogy since 2005. He has been president of the West Coast Conference
of Music Theory and Analysis since 2003, and has helped determine
their programs for numerous meetings. He has also served on program
committees for the Rocky Mountain Society for Music Theory.
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