Admissions Admission to the Jacobs School of Music is done by a live or recorded audition only. The overall acceptance rate is generally about 25 percent for undergraduate students and about 30 percent for graduate students. However, acceptance rates vary greatly between programs. Each freshman class contains about 200 new students.
Ensembles The school is home to two contemporary music ensembles: the New Music Ensemble, founded by former professor
Frederick A. Fox in 1975, and currently directed by David Dzubay, and
NOTUS, a 24-voice choir that specializes in contemporary choral repertoire and especially the works of living composers. Directed by
Dominick DiOrio, the ensemble frequently premieres works by students, faculty, and emerging professional composers and frequently tours nationally.
Opera The opera program at the Jacobs School has presented more than 500 productions since it began in 1948. Indiana University Jacobs School of Music Opera Theater currently produces five operas and one musical each year. It frequently performs classics by composers such as
Donizetti,
Mozart,
Puccini, and
Verdi, and also Baroque operas by Handel as well as contemporary works by
Mason Bates,
Jonathan Dove, and
Jake Heggie, among others.
Programs of study The school offers Bachelor of Music (B.M.), Bachelor of Music Education (B.M.E.), Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Master of Arts (M.A.), Master of Music (M.M.), Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), and Doctor of Music (D.M.) degrees. Jacobs also awards a Performer's Certificate or Artist's Diploma. The school offers degrees in Historical Performance, and it is possible for students to enroll in a unique degree program available at Indiana University known as the Bachelor of Science in an Outside Field (B.S.O.F.) in some select areas of study. ==Facilities==