For the second consecutive year, 17³Ō¹Ļās Music Department has been named as one of the countryās top music business programs by Billboard magazine.
17³Ō¹Ļ is one of 26 schoolsāand one of only two liberal arts collegesālisted in Billboardās annual alphabetical accounting of top music programs that includes USC, UCLA and NYU. āItās worth noting that among the highest-achieving young executives in the music business, as profiled in Billboardās 2019 ā40 Under 40ā feature, nearly 40% said they were graduates of a liberal arts program,ā the magazine says in its .
"We are delighted that Billboard has once again recognized that the strength and distinctiveness of our music program flow from our dual commitment to the liberal arts and to our Los Angeles location," says David Kasunic, associate professor of music and department chair.
āA liberal arts college in one of the worldās music business capitals, 17³Ō¹Ļās robust music department has added the new Choi Family Music Production Center, housing a recording studio, control room and music production/film scoring computer lab,ā Billboard reports. āThe space was designed by Peter Grueneisen of nonzero\architecture, known for his work for Sony Music, DreamWorks and Hans Zimmer, among others.ā
Oxyās music faculty include Grammy-nominated and Emmy-winning composer Adam Schoenberg; singer-songwriter Ramona Gonzalez ā09, the Johnston-Fix Professor of the Practice in Songwriting; TV/film/games composer; and Max Foreman, Mellon Professor of the Practice of Audio Engineering. Foreman began offering a class in live sound engineering this spring; the department is currently collaborating with Warner Music Group CEO Steve Cooper ā68 on an expanded music business course for this fall.
Oxy alumni include such prominent music industry figures as manager Ian Montone ā89 (Jack White, LCD Soundsystem); music attorney John Branca ā72, Billboardās 2016 Lawyer of the Year; music attorney Richard Leher ā66 (Rolling Stones, Pearl Jam); Welz Kaufmann ā83, president and CEO of Chicagoās Ravinia Festival; and the late Guy Carawan ā49, musical director of Tennesseeās Highlander Folk School, credited with turning āWe Shall Overcomeā into a civil rights anthem.