Skip to main content
Connecticut College
  • About Connecticut College
  • Academics
  • Admission & Financial Aid
  • Alumni & Life After Conn
  • Athletics
  • Campus & Community
  • Career Preparation
  • Human Resources
  • Student Experience
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Libraries & Technology
  • CC Magazine
  • Site Map
Make a gift CamelWeb Today at Conn

Specialized Resources

  • Accessibility Services
  • Admission Deadlines
  • Admitted Students
  • Admitted Student Statistics
  • Arboretum
  • Arts and Culture
  • Bookshop
  • Campus Map
  • Clubs and Activities
  • Counseling Services
  • Directions to Campus
  • Essays That Worked
  • Financial Aid Services
  • Health Services
  • International Students
  • Interviewing
  • Libraries
  • Orientation
  • Request Information
  • Residential Life
  • Majors and Minors
  • Student Blog
  • Sustainability
  • Technology Services
  • Title IX: Sexual Respect
  • Transfer Students
  • Tuition and Fees
  • Transportation
  • Visit Campus
  • Academic Advising
  • Academic Calendar
  • Academic Resource Center
  • Arboretum
  • Arts and Culture
  • Camel Card Office
  • Campus Safety
  • Campus Map
  • Career Services
  • Class Schedules
  • Clubs and Student Engagement
  • Connections
  • Counseling Services
  • Course Catalog
  • Equity and Inclusion
  • Environmental Health & Safety
  • Global Focus
  • Health Services
  • Libraries
  • Residential Life
  • Sustainability
  • Technology Services
  • Title IX: Sexual Respect
  • Transportation
  • Academic Advising
  • Academic Calendar
  • Arboretum
  • Arts and Culture
  • Banner Self-Service
  • Camel Card Office
  • Campus Map
  • Campus Safety
  • Center for Teaching & Learning
  • Course Catalog
  • Course Information and Schedules
  • Equity and Inclusion
  • Employee Benefits
  • Environmental Health & Safety
  • Facilities Management
  • Human Resources
  • Instructional Technology
  • Libraries
  • Moodle
  • Sustainability
  • Technology Services
  • Title IX: Sexual Respect
  • Wellness Program
  • Academic Calendar
  • Academic Resource Center
  • Alcohol and Drug Education
  • Arboretum
  • Arts & Culture
  • Athletics Calendar
  • Bookshop
  • Camel Card Office
  • Campus Map
  • Campus Safety
  • Career Services
  • CARE Team
  • Commencement
  • Counseling Services
  • Equity and Inclusion
  • Fall Weekend
  • Applying for Financial Aid
  • First-Year Student FAQ
  • Global Focus
  • Health Services
  • Libraries
  • Orientation
  • Parent enewsletter
  • Parents Council
  • Residential Life
  • Resources for Parents and Families
  • Student Employment
  • Tuition and Fees
  • Visiting New London

 

  • Area Attractions & Events
  • Area Hotels
  • Arboretum
  • Arts and Culture
  • Bookshop
  • Campus Map
  • Campus Safety
  • The Children's Program
  • Community Learning/Volunteering
  • Directions
  • Events and Catering
  • Equity and Inclusion
  • Reserving Harkness Chapel
  • Local Restaurants and Dining
  • OnStage Performances
  • Transportation
  • Alumni Directory
  • Alumni Events
  • Alumni Association
  • Arts and Culture
  • Bookshop
  • Campus Map
  • Fall Weekend
  • Global Focus
  • Libraries
  • Library Databases
  • Notable Alumni
  • Email Help
  • Replacement Diploma
  • Reunion
  • Sponsor an Internship
  • Support the College
  • Title IX: Sexual Respect
  • Transcripts
  • Update Your Info
  • Volunteer
  • Post a job or internship
  • Explore employment programs
  • Learn about funded internships
  • Home 
  • Home 
  • News 
  • News Archive 
  • 2020 
  • Music 201

Music 201: Volume 2

Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones summed it up when he said, “songwriting’s a weird game” that can be tricky to make sense of.  

But last fall, 14 students dove deep into the creative wizardry and technical processes that collide to form song. 

The seminar, Music 201, “On Songs and Songwriting,” was taught by President Katherine Bergeron and her husband, Butch Rovan, and examined different genres of song from critical and analytical perspectives. 

Students were asked to study songwriting through a blend of listening, reading, writing and performing before recording an album of their original songs in collaboration with both Bergeron and Rovan. 

Author of the book Voice Lessons, Bergeron is also a trained singer and music historian, while Rovan is a multi-instrumentalist, composer and professor of music at Brown University. His broad range of musical skills and experience were an asset in such a multilayered seminar. The fall 2019 semester marked only the second time Music 201 had been offered, and the new batch of songs were performed for the College at a concert in December. The album will be available later this spring.

“This course is a joy to teach,” Bergeron said. “It’s incredible to observe the students’ growth in both confidence and sophistication over the space of just one semester. The songs on this year’s album display a wide range of styles, from hip-hop to alt-country to heavy metal to everything in between.”

For Ryan D’Alelio ’22, Bergeron and Rovan’s approach to teaching songwriting took a welcome venture outside the fundamental conventions of music theory in ways that opened up the creative floodgates.

“We were able to explore the inner workings of how a song is constructed, and I was able to expand my abilities as both a listener and a songwriter,” D’Alelio said.

Even for a veteran musician like Rovan, the students in the seminar brought an exciting energy to the songwriting process.

“The collaborative spirit of the class was infectious,” Rovan recalled. “The students inspired us and each other, working together to realize their songs both in a live performance and in the studio. And they inspired a large audience of fans who filled Fortune Recital Hall for our final class concert.”

The students all came from different musical backgrounds, each with their own individual styles, tastes and talents, from vocalists to guitarists and piano players. And, of course, several students dabbled in a bit of everything, such as Adam Khan ’22, who sang and played the ukulele and a bit of guitar and piano as well. 

“President Bergeron and Butch’s deep passion for music made classes so enjoyable, and created a really fun and engaging environment,” Khan said. “I also thoroughly enjoyed the final performance, because it definitely bolstered my confidence in songwriting and singing.”

At the end of the day, the most valuable piece of the experience may well have been the relationship-building and collaborative skills the students learned writing, performing and recording together. 

“Song is the oldest form of musical expression,” Bergeron and Rovan explained. “It’s a medium that builds community and builds trust.”




February 5, 2020

Related News & Media

Recent News

Where the need is greatest: Students help Ukrainians abroad

Where the need is greatest: Students help Ukrainians abroad

Student News

Admirabilis Kalolella ’23 wins Rising Black Scientists Award from Cell Press

Admirabilis Kalolella ’23 wins Rising Black Scientists Award from Cell Press

Student News

Connecticut College
270 Mohegan Avenue
New London, CT 06320
1 (860) 447-1911
admission@conncoll.edu
Web Privacy Policy
Web Accessibility Notice

Website Navigation

  • About Connecticut College
  • Academics
  • Admission & Financial Aid
  • Alumni & Life After Conn
  • Athletics
  • Campus & Community
  • Career Preparation
  • Human Resources
  • Student Experience
Make a gift CamelWeb Today at Conn
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Directory
  • Employment
  • Libraries & Technology
  • CC Magazine
  • Site Map
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn